Showing posts with label Hang Seng. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hang Seng. Show all posts

Sunday, April 13, 2025

An Uneasy Week with Long Concerns - Weekly Blog # 884

 

 

 

Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings

 

An Uneasy Week with Long Concerns

 

 

Editors: Frank Harrison 1997-2018, Hylton Phillips-Page 2018

 

                             

 

The Week that Was

Harkening back to an old London-based television program focused on the week’s changes, the following items of interest and perhaps importance crossed my computer screen:

  1.  Two brief bear-market type rallies.
  2. The US dollar broke par on Friday, finishing at 100.102. (Marcus Ashworth of Bloomberg believes that as much as some try to find a successful substitute, it can’t be found.)
  3. Price signals – The Baltic Dry Index fell to 1274 vs 1729 a year ago; The ECRI industrial price index fell to 113.27 or -4.33% from a year ago. (This index measures the prices of industrial materials needed for production e.g. metals.)
  4. Only Precious Metals and Dedicated Short mutual fund averages gained for the week ended Thursday.
  5. Volatility increased in the week, with InfoTech stocks leading with gains of +9.67% while the Hang Seng Index fell -8.47%. (Normally the high/low spread is closer to high single digits than 18 percentage points.)
  6. Market liquidity may be a major contributor to the market indices ranking year to date; DJIA -6.94%, S&P 500 -10.43%, and NASDAQ -15.14%.
  7. Both analysts at Morgan Stanley and those contributing to Seeking Alpha Quant Ratings downgraded mid-cap investment bankers and mid-sized fund manager stocks. (Compared to their larger peers they rely almost exclusively on their brains, rather than a combination of brains and capital.)

 

Longer-Term Implications

  • Howard Marks believes we have seen the best economic period in history.
  • Marcus Ashworth believes we have entered the beginnings of a new phase this week.
  • President Trump has told associates that he can tolerate a recession, but he is afraid of a depression.

 

Question: Do any of the elements mentioned in this blog aid or lead to a change in your thinking?

 

 

 

Did you miss my blog last week? Click here to read.

Mike Lipper's Blog: Short Term Rally Expected + Long Term Odds - Weekly Blog # 883

Mike Lipper's Blog: Increase in Bearish News is Long-Term Bullish - Weekly Blog # 882

Mike Lipper's Blog: Odds Favor A Recession Followed Up by the Market - Weekly Blog # 881



 

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Sunday, June 4, 2017

Signs of Enthusiasm, China Concerns, Centurions are Coming



Introduction

Because I like to think about different timespans as an improved way of managing money, I look at different stimuli in terms of impacts on those timespans. The focus of most commentators is on the short-term, which can be described as until the next performance reports all the way out to the rest of the market cycle. Some focus on intermediate periods that follow after the current cycle. And very few will focus on the long-term needs in terms of their responsibilities. Nevertheless, it may be useful to arrange some of the stimuli that bombard us each day.

Short-Term

On the very day of the publication of the statement of President Trump  “Pittsburg Not Paris,” the three major US stock indices went to new highs. The enthusiasm for stocks is global with five markets showing 2017 gains of over 20% through Friday: NASDAQ +27.06%, Bovespa +25.57%, Hang Seng +24.87%, IBEX 35 +22.31%, and FTSE 100 +21.9%. While a number of the gainers are being driven by advances in Emerging Markets, it is not as usual supported by or led by commodity prices.

Based on past history, two cautionary notes should be observed. The first is a reported statement from an old friend and "bubble watcher" Jeremy Grantham: "The US market has entered an era of permanently higher valuations." (A look at history questions whether any valuations can be permanent. This is Bull Market talk.) The second was noted in Barron's based on the work of Bespoke which commented that April margin balances were the fourth consecutive month of record levels. Bespoke observed that the last two bear markets have occurred after margin balances have peaked.

At the moment I view all of these inputs as cautionary signs. In the past, important peaks have been the result of greater amounts of enthusiasm with higher performance numbers, new "geniuses" and considerable leverage. I am not predicting this, but at prior peaks I have seen a number of mutual funds that reported gains of +100% or more. At this time we do not see people changing their lifestyles and marriages based on their new theoretical wealth.

China May Dominate Intermediate Periods

The generally accepted view is that China will become the globe's number one economy within the foreseeable future. My own opinion is to always be cautious about generally accepted views, they have proven to be wrong too often in the past. In addition, the Chinese economy and society are highly leveraged operationally and financially and things can go wrong. At the moment, I feel confident that China will become the most important variable in determining future investment policies around the world. With those thoughts in mind I will summarize two important inputs. The first is from our friend Byron Wien's reaction to his recent trip to Asia (including China) speaking with institutional investors. The second are the views expressed by the portfolio managers and investment strategist with which I visited recently.

Byron Wien's China Briefs

  • Capital formation is growing 4% with inflation at 3%.
  • Leverage is the major problem with total social and financial borrowing  250% of GDP.
  • Interest payments are 14% of GDP.
  • Shadow banking interest rates are 14%.
  • Regulators will permit banks to convert non-performing loans into equity.
  • Return on equity for private companies has dropped from 18% to 9%.
  • Equity market valuations are high at 20x with meager growth.
  • Middle class expected to reach 60% by 2020 from 43% in 2015.
  • Population is rapidly aging and expected to reach 370 million in 2050 vs. 170 million in 2015.
  • Healthcare expenditures are 5.5% of GDP.
  • Life Insurance covers 2% vs. 10% in developed markets.
  • The solution to excess industrial capacity and jobs is "One Belt One Road."


Matthews Asia's Mindset

In response to the expected downgrade of China's credit rating, Moody’s* points out that the bulk of the excessive leverage exposure is in the largely State Owned Enterprises (SOE). I believe most of these loans are held domestically by government owned or controlled banks. The key social issue is jobs. Luckily the majority of employees work for private companies that are profitable. Actually the private companies are growing their earnings, but the periodic waves of speculation have been reacting to both global and internal political trends depressing their prices. (This is just the opposite of India, the best performing large market this year, where earnings have not met expectations. The enthusiasm for the current political and monetary conditions has driven the stock market higher.)

*Held in the private financial services fund I manage

Matthews Asia sees future opportunities in both Micro caps and some of the under-followed "A" shares. In its portfolios that invest in China, Matthews Asia is investing in both the creation and the use of technology applied to health care and related aging needs. With China being such a big part of Asia's future, one would assume that in the long-run Matthews Asia believes that China will be a positive for Asian investing.

My long-term concern about China is that the global history of railroad and port building with too much leverage can create unexpected volatility.

"Beware of the Centurions" in the Long-Term

If my memory of military history is correct, in the conquering armies of Rome the key maneuvering units were comprised of one hundred men commanded by a Centurion. It was the Centurion that transformed a diverse group of undisciplined men into a well trained disciplined military unit. We are entering an era when an increasing number of people will be at least 100 years young, and we and they are unprepared for this transition. A thoughtful piece by John Mauldin alerts us to the demographic fact that increasingly we will be dealing with people that pass the century mark. As individuals and as a society we are not prepared for this change. For example when Social Security was initiated in this country it was based on the belief that men would retire at 65 and die at 67. This was conservative in that people born in 1930 had a life expectancy of 56 for men and 62 for women. Compare that with life expectancy for those born in 2007 to be 103 and 104 respectively, in the US. This is a global phenomena with six other developed countries’ expectancies in the same range. Japan is the leader with 107 years.

One of the unspoken conceits of investors is that they are not the average person. To the extent that they can prove that by being wealthier, the top 20% on average in terms of wealth, are expected to live five years beyond the average. The poorest are expected to die two years earlier than the average. I can understand the distinction because of diet, less risky manual labor, and quality of health care. I don't know what assumptions are built into these projections as to the developments in medicine, agriculture, working conditions, and psychological health. Further my basic training at the Racetrack and the US Marine Corps questions trusting averages but has a distaste for being in the middle of any group.

Regardless of the projections, as societies we are not doing a very good job of caring for the present seniors. Fundamentally the reason for this is we have insufficient dedicated capital. This is a global problem impacting all the developed world and many of the developing countries. Almost every government-sponsored pension plan is underfunded to meet the present retirees, let alone prepared for the Centurions.

Strange as it may seem, I see this is an opportunity for investment gatherers and managers. As Centurions grow in number, increasingly they will exercise their votes at both the local and national levels. I expect at some point we will evolve into a two level tax system where there will be charged a higher level for consumption spending, perhaps some type of VAT, and a lower bracket for retirement spending. Whether any unused capital can be passed on without a tax, I don't know. Further our laws and practises will react to some concept of age discrimination in favor of utilizing the best people for the job in one form or another. Unless we do something, the Centurions will weigh heavily on our productive capacity.

Critical Investment Question: Rank which is most important to you and your investments: (a) short-term market outlook, (b) impact of China, or (c) providing increased retirement capital. Please share your thoughts with me.
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Sunday, March 28, 2010

Are We at a Turning Point
or at a Vantage Point?

Shortly we will be receiving first quarter reports from various funds, investment managers and the media. Most will mark that we have passed the one year anniversary of the agreed bottom on March 9th, 2009. The reports will boast of the 40-70% gains off the bottom. Few will focus on the fact that most accounts have not shown a positive return for the last two or three years unless they were significantly in domestic fixed income securities. Almost none will reference their performance high water mark that was reached often in the fall of 2007. As we receive this happy news, the critical question before us is, “So what?”

Does the recovery mean that we can go back to investing as we did in the middle of the “aught,” the philosophies of 2005? Or does the recovery give us the opportunities to modify our investment approaches? In other words, have we reached a turning point to embark on a new strategy? Or are we at a vantage point, able to look both backwards and forwards to make slight mid-point corrections to our trajectories?

I recognize that most of us have difficulty identifying turning points as they occur. With that in mind, I do not see that we are at a turning point. However, I see we are at a vantage point; that a number of trends are changing within the markets. For this kind of analysis, price charts are of value. The following briefs summarize what I see:

1. The near term weakness in the Euro is probably over for awhile. (The structural weaknesses will probably not be addressed until the political will becomes stronger.) In effect I am covering the bet of my view earlier in the year that the dollar would rally.

2. A number of national stock market indexes appear to be ready to change direction. The most prescient of these is the Hang Seng. Perhaps in sympathy, Brazil’s Bovespa is also looking like it is having trouble making progress. Surprisingly, and in contradiction to those trends, the Jakarta Composite is breaking out on the upside. The two major Japanese stock indexes, the Nikkei 225 and the Tokyo Stock Price Index, (commonly known as TOPIX), seem ready to follow suit.

3. In our US market, the industrial group which has led the stock price recovery is the financials. For sometime, further attempts to rally these prices have failed in spite of the recent strength in both Citi and JP Morgan. I find it difficult to believe that a sustained economic recovery won’t be good for the financials. The structure of financial markets is rapidly changing, which may make past history less relevant in thinking about the future. For example the venerable New York Stock Exchange, where I was a member, will produce more revenues from derivatives than the cash markets this year. Leading firms are also making more money out of trading these derivatives, commodities and currencies, suggesting that we are in a different world.

I am not paid to be an observer, but an investment advisor. Each of our accounts has significant differences in terms of its time horizons and ability to assume market price risk of loss. Due to these differences, I find that I am executing different accounts in very different ways. For the first time in a number of years, I have taken a little off the equity allocation of the most aggressive of the accounts. For those more conservative accounts with a low tolerance for yields close to zero, I am selectively adding to their long term equity positions with the belief that over the next several years they will benefit from increasing dividends.

These different tactics are an example of what I believe to be different horses for different courses. The clients’ needs should dictate how an account is managed, not the same house opinion for all accounts.

What do you think?


___________________________________________

To Members of Mike Lipper's Blog Community:

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Sunday, March 21, 2010

Twenty, Forty, Sixty:
We are Going Global

In a space of just about one week I have been presented with three different examples of people thinking out of their comfort zone. The most remarkable of these is from a freshman at a liberal arts university whose email asked three questions:

1. Describe the growth of international business, and how this growth will impact multinational corporations and national economies in the future.

2. How will companies in the U.S. compete with companies in China, India and other emerging markets in the future?

3. You are the Vice President of International Business Development for Evergreen Solar. How can you use the resources of the international financial institutions to support your projects in India?

None of these questions were asked of me by my Ivy League University. I took many years, with help of the US Marine Corps and some basic analysis work to acquire the background to answer the questions that are preparing this student for the commercial world when she graduates. What is wonderful is that she is comfortable being asked these questions and recognizes how important the answers are to her future.

My reply to her starts with the fact that individual consumers and investors have already become transnational in their outlook and action. Few of the academic world and almost no governments have made the jump over the border into different time zones and customs. While Coca-Cola might be able to meet its debt service requirement without relying on non-US sales, I doubt that it can continue to pay its dividend out of purely domestic operating income.

We received our game plan for success in this global transnational world on or about our first birthday. There were two documents produced in 1776 that shaped our world. The first is our Declaration of Independence, which is a model for a lot of the world. The second and conceivably more important was the publication of The Wealth of Nations, which preached the development of comparative advantage. Author Adam Smith, a canny Scot, figures out if each person could do something better (read cheaper in many cases), we could trade with each other to fulfill many of our basic needs. Merchants became rich being the connectors of this system. One of my rules in looking to get and keep customers is being prepared to do things that make my clients richer. This precept works around the world.

The question as to “Evergreen Solar” is of interest to me in that we have energy technology stocks in our otherwise financial services portfolio. We need to do more work to find whether they are good investments. In general, I shy away from companies that require good connections with the government. So I would look eventually to commercial financing.

Forty

One of my sons has been asked to develop an Internet-based sales pitch to be used by mutual fund wholesalers distributing to retail brokers or advisors. As this was his first specific effort along this line, he asked for suggestions on what he should focus. I suggested Global funds. I believe everyone is impacted by overseas prices and trends, be they farmers, local retail merchants and just about every other economic activity in the US. Global investing is not exclusively investing in foreign companies. As a matter of fact, some of the very best global companies are US based. The critical difference is that as a global investor you are looking for the most rewarding investments, wherever they are.

Sixty

As it is my nature to be generous, “Sixty” could be the average age of a combined Executive and Investment Committee which will meet early this week. Some of the time may be spent on investment guidelines which I feel are outmoded in a number of aspects. One issue of concern regards the asset allocation buckets for US Equities, Non-US Equities and Emerging Markets. These are artificial separations which have nothing to do with the risks and rewards in various securities. Whether we like it or not, almost all our large companies manage their currency risks, some do it well, others do not. Because China is going to be the second largest economy in the world at some point, the allocations system should accommodate it in a large bucket. I am also very concerned by the non- investor friendly court systems in China, India, Japan and California, etc. These factors should be taken into consideration by the managers we hire and not be the purview of a corporate governance document.

Eighty

I only hope that in 80 years our preferred measure of account is the US dollar and that smart kids in our colleges are making fewer mistakes than we have.

What are your thoughts?

___________________________________________

To Members of Mike Lipper's Blog Community:

For readers who would like to stay current on my uncommon perspectives regarding investing and world markets, join the community by subscribing, at no monetary cost, just your time and interest as well as occasional responses. Simply click the "To Receive Blog via Email" box on the left-side of the screen.

For those already receiving my blog by email, if you would like to recommend this blog to a relative, friend or colleague, the sign-up is located on the left-hand portion of the screen at www.MikeLipper.blogspot.com .