Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Wow...

That's it - put a fork in me, I'm done. 


A four, five, six percent rally on a rumour from none other than Steve Liesman, from undisclosed sources... involving leverage and a structure that has been described as a CDO "squared"... and to date with no hint of confirmation. This market is a joke.

Sunday, September 25, 2011

Pascometer Alert!

If you frequent the excellent blog at Macrobusiness, you will be aware of perhaps the most wonderful contrarian indicator known to man - The Pascometer. 

The Pascometer is a contrarian indicator that I first came across after chuckling at this article some time ago. Contributors and commenters alike at Macrobusiness have followed subsequent articles with greater scrutiny than I, however many of Pascoe's predictions have played out in the exact opposite manner to the way he anticipated. See here.

So you can imagine my alarm when I came across this article today!
SPARE me stories about a weak Australian dollar: it's not. Trading around US98¢, the Aussie is 3 per cent higher than it was a year ago and 63 per cent higher than when the GFC smashed it in 2008.
So we're off 11 per cent from our brief August high of US$1.10 - big deal. The Reserve Bank's trade-weighted index at 72.3 is exactly the same as September 23, 2010, and down just 6.8 per cent from its peak. With any sort of perspective on the Aussie's journey, trading a few cents either side of parity is strong. Doing it when most of the developed world is having conniptions about the possibility of the financial equivalent of a nuclear winter is absolutely amazing.
Headlines about a ''weak'' or crashing Aussie just demonstrate that it's human nature to have the attention span of a gnat. Or do gnats accuse each other of having the attention span of a human?
Also, as usual, we tend to think it's all about us. Part of the Aussie's rally came from our economic credentials - our terms of trade, status as a China proxy, a strong, growing economy with relatively high interest rates. But a large part was just the flip side of the US dollar's weakness - a faltering economy, very low interest rates, massive and growing government debt, the government wanting a weaker currency, the Federal Reserve printing money, political paralysis and a bleak decade or so ahead.
None of those fundamentals has changed, so before thinking the Aussie has gone flaccid, consider that maybe the greenback has slipped a half tab of Viagra.
The headline alone made me want to charge off and buy as many out of the money puts on the AUDUSD as I could!


Here are my own personal views on the Aussie. If I'm wrong, so be it. In any case I think it would be a bit average to pass comment on Pascoe without putting my own opinion up for scrutiny.



  • The so called fundamental strength of the Australian economy is not as great as it would seem. Make no mistake, we are in a relatively wonderful position, vis-a-vis many of our global counterparts. I am grateful to be an Australian, to have a job I enjoy that puts a nice roof over my head and nice food on the table. I am surprised however that unemployment has not ticked up more quickly to date, given the concentration of our workforce in the retail and construction sectors, both of which are struggling immensely.
  • Australian consumers are short of confidence and are not spending as much as our "experts" have become accustomed to. Having borrowed uncontrollably in the good times, consumers have now chosen saving over spending, amongst considerable political & economic uncertainty. (I would also add fears over job security.) Such an environment (rising unemployment, restricted spending) may well to lead to a reduction in final demand across the economy and an easing of inflationary pressures. With an economy constrained by the burden of private debt, that by many measures, is comparable to - if not worse than - the United States at the height of the boom, I can see considerable cuts to interest rates as the RBA attempts to engineer some sort of rebound in economic activity.*
  • I have no idea whether China will continue to grow at 9%, 15%, 3% or -5% per annum for the next 10 years. But I would suggest that three months of contraction in leading economic indicators whilst struggling to contain inflation may not be a great sign. Recent moves in commodities, especially copper, may signal rough seas ahead as global economic growth falls off a cliff. Heck the CEO of Rio Tinto himself even noted customers have been delaying orders of late. 
If I'm on the money, interest rates here are coming down and they are coming down a long way. As the yield differential relative to other currencies narrows, and China ends up being as much a part of the global economic malaise as I believe it is, then the AUD has every chance of going much much lower from here. I don't see it at 60 cents, but it wouldn't completely surprise me. I do not see it rallying strongly though as the USD's "viagra" wears off.

NJH

*As an aside whilst people see their super account being decimated and property falling (it's able to fall? Dear God!) in nominal terms, I am not sure how effective these measures would be. At least we are not at the zero bound as far as monetary policy is concerned. Yet. 

**Secondly, a random thought I just had. Wayne Swan the best treasurer in the world? Please. 















    Thursday, September 22, 2011

    Soul Patts and Brickworks - Post Reporting, + Options

    No real surprises here this morning. I am not even sure if the cross shareholdings were addressed at the company's respective analyst briefings - I guess I will have to read tomorrow's AFR to see if there was any discussion on this front.


    One thing I did notice, was that Brickworks was increasingly transparent with respect to its extensive property holdings, and the potential values on offer upon successful rezoning of its land bank. It was almost as if the company was at pains to say "Here, look! Here is the hidden value on our balance sheet. Please take note of this. Please!!"


    I don't have a lot of time at the moment, however on the weekend I do plan to put together some updated valuations of both companies and will post them on my blog.


    In the meantime I am actually looking forward to tomorrow (now today). I have a very small ASX 200 put option position in play which looks like it is about to turn sharply in my favour. I am not going to tell you how small the position is, because it is embarrassing - suffice to say that the premium paid will not bankrupt me should the option expire worthless a month from now.


    I went in to the trade feeling as though there was about a 90-95% chance of losing my money. Volatility was not particularly low at the time either, so downside protection was not cheap and further skewed the odds against me. With that in mind, surely you must be asking, what the hell are you smoking man? Why make the trade? Well, there are were in fact a few reasons I thought I was an outside chance of making some money.


    Here is a brief summary of my thinking behind the position, rightly or wrongly. Time will tell. 


    1. The Eurozone is a complete and unmitigated disaster. I could not see any short-term resolution to the problems in Greece that could potentially provide a boost to markets.


    2. Global growth has been deteriorating for a few months now. I believed the recent market turmoil would cause further deterioration in the growth outlook and that economic data may continue to surprise to the downside. 


    3. In the outside chance that the Bernank disappointed yesterday, I felt commodities would take an absolute beating. This looks to be the case, with sharp falls in commodities accelerated by weaker than expected data out of China (on which I am already bearish). As I write oil, copper, silver and gold are all getting obliterated. 


    In summary, we have a dearth of political and economic leadership to take necessary steps to address the very real problems we face (however revolutionary those steps need be), a global banking system that is largely insolvent and under enormous stress with interbank spreads rising steadily day by day, and the commodities complex being trashed as people belatedly realise China too is in this mess up to their eyeballs. 


    Now could someone please remind me what the two most prominent sectors in the ASX 200 happen to be? Hmm, do materials and financial ring a bell? They should - and the fact that the resources and financials alone make up roughly 60% of the index is precisely where I see the potential for a large payoff, given the issues markets are presently facing.





    Wednesday, September 21, 2011

    Soul Patts & Brickworks

    Tomorrow both Washington H. Soul Pattinson (SOL) and Brickworks (BKW) will be reporting their annual results for the year ended 31 July 2011. Naturally as an investor in both of these entities (Brickworks is my second largest holding) I am looking forward to having a look at the accounts to see how things are progressing. What has got me a touch more excited is recent press speculation that the two companies may be looking to take some action with respect to the much maligned cross-shareholding structure that has been in place for many years. 


    I must admit I don't expect any revelations tomorrow but I would not be completely shocked if there was. Let us not forget that Rob Millner, chairman of both companies and to date a staunch defender of the diversification benefits offered by the cross-holdings, is also a shareholder like myself. I can think of $300 million reasons why it is also in the interests of the Millner family to see some sharp upward movements in the respective stock prices.


    Here's hoping!


    EDIT at 7am: I wouldn't mind seeing Soul Patt's lob a bid for the half of Brickworks that it doesn't own. Maybe a merger could be the way to go?









    Friday, September 9, 2011

    Greece - finished?

    Via Bloomberg, quite a mind-blowing chart. The Greek 1 year bond:





    What does it mean? I'd be lying if I said I knew exactly, other than it is not looking pretty. Germany and the Netherlands have now threatened to block rescue payments to Greece until stipulated targets are met - a move seen by some as a threat to eject Greece from the Eurozone. 

    Greece is now teetering on the precipice.


    Thursday, September 8, 2011

    Welcome

    "...as we know, there are known knowns; these are things we know we know. We also know that there are known unknowns; that is to say we know there are some things we do not know. But there are also unknown unknowns - the ones we don't know we don't know."

    So said former Secretary of Defence, Donald Rumsfeld. I thank Donald for providing the inspiration behind the title of this blog.