Offshore
/ Tech wild year
/ Oil goes negative
/ Gold breaks $2,000
/ Brexit
/ Tesla
Local
/ Sasol
/ Top40 green for the year & just off all-time highs
/ Even the Rand recovered most of the losses and trades better than 5 years ago
/ Budget deficit
/ Lots of business rescue, but less than I expected
I've lived a lot of years but no matter how many, none like this one. What is has done is force us to reflect on things. Frankly to reflect on pretty all things as everything got turned upside-down.
As an example, I 'had' to live in Johannesburg because of my TV work. Well, now we know that isn't the case as I have been doing weekly TV shows from my lounge since March. In the future, I continue doing TV work from my lounge, and that the lounge could be anywhere with high-speed Internet.
I also remember hard lockdown surrounded by all my 'things'. They did not make my life beautiful, I missed people and experiences.
I also remember my portfolio crashing and not even checking how bad it was. Markets recover, sure this recovery was swifter than anything I have seen before and made no sense. But markets often don't make sense and fighting them is fruitless.
It also gave us a real-time chance to measure a number of important investment considerations.
I did not get everything right, that truthfully is never the aim. But I also did not sit stuck like a deer in the headlights.
Point being, 2020 has been wild and we should reflect, reflect lots on our lives and or portfolios. If we do that right then we'll be stronger in the future.
Lastly, watch out for the push back. Lots of incentives to return to how it was, but is that what you want? Did you like the old way or do you see a new improved way or a blend? Decide and then make it happen.
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Offshore
/ US$908billion stimulus plan proposed for the US
/ US markets at new highs
/ Salesforce buying Slack for US$27.7billion
/ Pfizer vaccine starts being administered this week in the UK
/ Oil moving higher
/ Gold bounces need to get above US$1,860
Local
/ Sasol update, likely rights issue will be smaller
/ Locusts in NC, WC & FS and returning rains
/ Barloworld results (and price surge)
/ Vukile benefiting from non-metro malls
/ Top40 closes Friday at third-highest level ever
/ Comair returns to the skies but not the market
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JSE Direct is an independent broadcast and is not endorsed or affiliated with, nor has it been authorised, or otherwise approved by JSE Limited. The views expressed in this programme are solely those of the presenter, and do not necessarily reflect the views of JSE Limited.
Offshore
/ U.K. economy is forecast to contract by 11.3% this year, "the largest fall in output for 300 years," Chancellor Rishi Sunak tells MPs
/ Musk now the worlds second richest person
/ Janet Yellen tipped for Biden cabinet as Treasury Secretary
/ China imposing tariffs on Australia, especially their wine.
/ Down Jones trades above 30,000 for the first time.
/ Black Friday 2020 online shopping surges 22% to record $9 billion, Adobe says
Local
/ Huge $5billion share buy-back from Prosus and Naspers
/ Firstrand update "the earnings trend for the four months from 1 July 2020 to 31 October 2020 is reflecting a better than anticipated rebound."
/ EOH CEO, Steven van Collier testifies at the Zondo Commission
/ Lewis results and dividend results on a dividend yield of +11%
/ Acquisition and baby range expand Mr Price’s markets
/ Gold under serious pressure
[caption id="attachment_24206" align="aligncenter" width="888"] Adcorp Daily[/caption]
Disclaimer upfront, I have been buying Bitcoin because I like to own things that are going up, my average entry price is R204k. This is a trade, so I will take my money at some point.
Looks certain to make new all-time highs and US$20k surely sooner rather than later.
Not a bubble this time, as it was in 2017. That doesn't mean can't collapse or can't become a bubble.
Interestingly the narrative has changed, the talk of Bitcoin for payments, something I said was a long long way off, is no longer the biggie. Now it really positioning itself as an alternative asset. Remember how blockchain would save the world?
But here's what was really interesting to me, the market cap of Bitcoin. ±US$400billion! Less than Tesla, in fact very tiny. Consider how many exchanges, blogs, shows and chatter about this one asset that is so very small. The size also restricts large institutions getting involved.
For comparison, gold is about US$9trillion, NYSE about US$30trillion and total US debt US$27trillion.
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JSE Direct is an independent broadcast and is not endorsed or affiliated with, nor has it been authorised, or otherwise approved by JSE Limited. The views expressed in this programme are solely those of the presenter, and do not necessarily reflect the views of JSE Limited.
Offshore
/ Another Monday another vaccine ~ Moderna
/ 12 million Americans are on track to lose unemployment benefits in December if Congress doesn't extend key programs that were part of the CARES Act passed in March.
/ JPMorgan forecasts negative GDP in the first quarter, the first Wall St. bank to begin forecasting a negative reading. JPM expects the economy to bounce back in
/ Amazon moving into the pharmacy business
/ Boeing 737 Max is back
/ Bitcoin heading for new highs & FSCA proposes making cryptocurrencies an asset class.
Local
/ Moody’s & Fitch downgrade SA further into junk.
/ Somebody wants City Lodge East Africa hotels
/ Results; Stor-Age*, Astral Spar
[caption id="attachment_24160" align="aligncenter" width="888"] Brait monthly chart[/caption]
In the last few years, we've seen a bunch of stocks being delisted from the JSE and in pretty much all cases existing shareholders get paid out and no longer hold the stock.
Anchor (JSE code; ACG) are now proposing a delisting at 425c, but with an option to remain invested in an unlisted Anchor.
I have never held an unlisted share outside of companies I have founded or worked for a few simple reasons;
That said Anchor will very much still be in the public eye and this is not usually the case when a stock delists. That will help act as a guard rail (not that they need it) so maybe it will be fairer to minority shareholders.
Certainly, I think the 425c offering is very cheeky and I still don't want to hold unlisted stocks, for many this time may be the exception.
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JSE Direct is an independent broadcast and is not endorsed or affiliated with, nor has it been authorised, or otherwise approved by JSE Limited. The views expressed in this programme are solely those of the presenter, and do not necessarily reflect the views of JSE Limited.
Offshore
/ Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine news
/ U.K. economy expands by 15.5% in the third quarter, the most on record yet adds another Sterling150billion in stimulus
/ Disney reports first loss in 40 years, but Disney+ hits 73m subs
/ Emirates eyes return to profitability in 2022 only
/ Deutsche Bank proposes a 5% tax for people still working from home after the pandemic
/ DoorDash files IPO plans, NYSE listing
Local
/ Lockdown level 1 lite?
/ Growth Point raises R4.3billion
/ SA’s unemployment rate 30.8% in Q3
/ Sun International update gives great insight into leisure locally.
/ Telkom results
/ MultiChoice results
Interesting to see the JSE All Share up circa 14.4% over the last 6. months yet its biggest constituent Naspers only up 3.71% over the same period. A lot of underlying and broad strength. @SimonPB @CAPITALSIGMAza @smalltalkdaily
— Mark Tobin (@mtobinwex) November 11, 2020
Somebody strikes it big in one field, and now they think they're the smartest person in any field.
A CEO of a successful company leaves to start a new company, they just assume it'll work and investors believe them. We see this all the time.
The successful business person thinks they know how to run the government.
Heck, we see it during this pandemic when suddenly every second person was (and often still thinks they are) an epidemiologist.
There are some exceptions; Elon Musk and Steve Jobs two who come to mind.
The successful person also readily ignores the role of luck in their success. Fooled by Randomness by Nassim Nicholas Taleb.
The answer is simple. Just because somebody is great in one area, do not assume that they have any skills in any other area.
* Phrase stolen from Anton Harber
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Offshore
/ US elections over
/ US unemployment rate 6.9%
/ Ant IPO cancelled
/ BoE no change & QE increased by £150 billion to £895 billion
/ Berkshire Hathaway bought back a record $9 billion in stock in the third quarter
Local
/ Rand strength
/ Results; Dis-Chem, Richemont & Foschini
/ Aspen vaccine JV with J&J
Globally one of the key responses to the pandemic is and will be, infrastructure spend. Who are the potential winners?
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JSE Direct is an independent broadcast and is not endorsed or affiliated with, nor has it been authorised, or otherwise approved by JSE Limited. The views expressed in this programme are solely those of the presenter, and do not necessarily reflect the views of JSE Limited.
The US election is some twelve days away and while the pundits have Biden as the clear favourite to become president and the democrats maybe even taking control of the senate. How much should one start adjusting ones portfolio?
Lot's of talking heads are spinning one story or the other as to how to position accordingly, of course, that's if the results go as they expect.
And sure, a Biden win will likely see changes to taxes in the US, a large stimulus come February and maybe a more social friendly budget (such as the Affordable Care Act from Obama).
But these talking heads are firstly short-term traders and really as a trader one should be responding to price action, not trying to predict legislation and the impact?
For a long-term investor chopping and changing every time there is a new president in the White House (or any other house) surely means you're strategy is not robust enough?
What I mean here is that politicians, political parties, polices and the like come and go. Sometimes quickly sometimes slowly. But our long-term portfolio needs to be able to manage all of these changes without having to consistently adjust things.
I always invest with one core long-term theme in mind that guides my investing. A globally growing middle class as people move into the cities and their quality of life and wealth improves.
From here yes tax rates and the like will have an impact. Bu not so significant that I'll have to switch stocks never mind strategy.
As a long-term investor make sure you have a simple and hence robust strategy that is largely immune to the noise emanating from politicians.
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JSE Direct is an independent broadcast and is not endorsed or affiliated with, nor has it been authorised, or otherwise approved by JSE Limited. The views expressed in this programme are solely those of the presenter, and do not necessarily reflect the views of JSE Limited.
Short answer, they won't start trading again and you'll get very little or no money back.
First SARS gets paid, then staff and debt holders and if anything is left shareholders will receive a few cents.
Now here's the thing. The company may survive and start trading again. Certainly, Comair and Phumelela look set to continue operations, but with new shareholders.
This is very much part of the business rescue process, the rescue part is about turning debt in equity and also new capital taking new equity. Existing shareholders get left carrying nothing.
Now, sure this sounds way harsh, but this is how investing works. We buy a business and we get all the rewards, reward that is unlimited in how big is can be. But if things hit the wall, we're last in line. So our downside is limited at 100% loss, but the upside is unlimited.
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Offshore
/ The Congressional Budget Office estimates that, for the 2020 fiscal year, the U.S. deficit will be $3.13 trillion (15.2% of GDP). This number would cause the total U.S. national debt to come in at 102% of GDP in 2020, the first time since 1946 that the U.S. debt has been larger than its economy.
/ A new stimulus package on or off the table?
/ The U.K. economy grew by 2.1% in August, less than half the pace anticipated
/ JPMorgan says U.S. Capital Gains Tax hike (proposed by Biden) may briefly hit stocks
/ Robinhood says some customer accounts may have become the target of hackers
/ New iPhones expected on Tuesday, with 5G
Local
/ President Cyril Ramaphosa will address both houses of parliament on Thursday to unveil the long-awaited economic recovery plan for the country.
/ PPC results
/ Canal+ buys 6.5% in Multichoice
/ Spur update, strong recovery but early days.
/ FNB lists 20 ETNs over US-listed stocks.
/ Balwin results and the scuffle around Mooikloof
Cash is always king. Not only is it why we invest, to make cash. But cash is easy to see in the form of dividends and very hard to fake (albeit we have seen businesses take debt to pay a dividend, and if you do see this - run).
I've spoken before about the flood of rights issues hitting the market and we've seen about R50billion so far this year. But now we're hitting the crunch.
Early in the lockdown I warned that investors should have a good hard look at their companies asking if they'd need to raise capital and if the announced capital raise would be enough.
Key for me is that tough times are often tougher in year two. I remember this very clearly from the 2008/9 crisis albeit offset a bit by the world cup in 2010. But for example, Standard Bank retrenched staff in late 2010, some 18 months after markets had bottomed.
The other key point is that this pandemic crisis is far from over. Not only risks of seconds waves (France second wave is way worse than the first and Paris is shutting bars again). Delayed stimulus in the US will hurt the worlds largest economy which is very much experiencing a K shaped recovery.
So take a hard look at a stock cash flow, sure dividends are down or even cancelled. But is there positive cash flow? Is it likely to be increasing or decreasing? How will a tough 2021 impact the cash flows?
In short, will the company survive without a rights issue? Is yes, then it's worth having a look at but they can still mostly expect another 1-2 years of tough trading conditions.
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JSE Direct is an independent broadcast and is not endorsed or affiliated with, nor has it been authorised, or otherwise approved by JSE Limited. The views expressed in this programme are solely those of the presenter, and do not necessarily reflect the views of JSE Limited.
Offshore
/ Trump Covid-19 with elections 4 weeks away.
/ US unemployment 7.9%
/ Disney to lay off 28,000, American Airlines 19,000 & 12,000 United Airlines
/ Palantir lists with direct listing
/ Airbnb listing progressing with $20billion valuation
Local
/ Unemployment numbers
/ August CPI 3.1%
/ Capitec results
/ Alviva results
/ Ascendis Health results (issued, cancelled and re-issued)
/ Remgro results, discount to NAV at 40% (lots of deep discounts to NAV)
/ Sasol sells 50% for $2billion
Day 188 of lockdown.
Less than five weeks until the US votes and then who knows how long to count the votes and get Trump out of the White House. The first debate on Tuesday shows what a mess the next few weeks will be.
After the debate, US futures markets were down some 0.75%, was it the debate or just markets? Maybe a bit of both.
Here's the thing. Some white man will win and be installed in January 2021. Market pundits will tell you it matters which. Remember the fear about a Clinton win and what it would do for markets back in 2016? Sure it became moot as Clinton lost, but the idea that one or the other will be better or worse for markets has scant evidence
Mostly it is trolling by one side or the other. The idea that one is anti markets is nonsense, both are ardent capitalists and sure Biden will keep the Affordable Healthcare Act, as an example, but after almost a decade in place, it has not broken markets. Biden may also want some minimum wages etc. Radical ideas for hardened capitalists, but there are minimum wages in many states - and non are bust as a result.
Raising taxes? Not on corporates, that boat has sailed and can't be recalled. On individuals, they can go up and while the rich will moan, what the NYT showed us on the weekend is that the rich don't pay tax anyway.
So how does one position a portfolio head of the election?
Elections are noise and best ignored and sure they may create volatility - but volatility creates opportunity.
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JSE Direct is an independent broadcast and is not endorsed or affiliated with, nor has it been authorised, or otherwise approved by JSE Limited. The views expressed in this programme are solely those of the presenter, and do not necessarily reflect the views of JSE Limited.
Day 181 of lockdown.
How often do we not buy a stock only to watch it move higher and regret not buying as we think we missed the bus. Then it just continues moving higher and higher?
The mistake we make is that we think there is a limit to the upside of what stocks can do. But consider for example Capitec* (JSE code: CPI), 2000c during the last crisis and it eventually it some R1,500.
There are plenty of other examples, most recently gold miners.
The problem is that while we want a ten-bagger stock we truthfully struggle with the concept of such huge gains. Further, as I have mentioned before a ten-bagger first has to be a one-bagger and as such buying when it's on the move reduces risk markedly.
So we need to double down on our work. What makes this an excellent stock, no the best stock, to own. What are the real fundamentals and growth prospects and will the rest of the market catch on?
Lastly, use a PEG ratio. Is the expected HEPS growth higher than the PE ratio?
This is far from a perfect science, but don't abandon the bus just because you missed the first one.
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JSE Direct is an independent broadcast and is not endorsed or affiliated with, nor has it been authorised, or otherwise approved by JSE Limited. The views expressed in this programme are solely those of the presenter, and do not necessarily reflect the views of JSE Limited.
Offshore
/ BoE, Fed and BOJ all left rates unchanged, BoE ‘explores’ negative rates.
/ TikTok deal with Oracle (and Walmart) confirmed.
/ Wechat ban from midnight, 3.3million users in America and China threatens to expand its “unreliable entities list”. But “TRUMP'S PROHIBITION ON WECHAT IN U.S. IS PUT ON HOLD BY JUDGE”
/ OECD ups global 2020 gdp, but drops ours
/ Snowflake IPO price of $120 and it opened $245.
/ Apple has lost 22.6% from its intraday record high of $137.98 on 2 September, losing around $532 billion in market value.
Local
/ MPC no change and next move expected to be up, late 2021.
/ Level 1 and open borders
/ Comair rescue plans approved and will delist from the JSE, will resume flying in December
/ Eskom takes 139 farms from Municipality of Matjhabeng as security against R3.4bn debt.
/ Results; Pan African Resources, Woolies and Discovery.
Day 174 of lockdown. Level 1?
South Africa is through the peak of the pandemic.
The Lancet Covid-19 Commission classifies 1 case per 100k population as low levels of transmission and WHO says 5 per 100K. The former equates to around 600 new cases per day and the latter 3,000 and we under 1,000.
A second wave remains a real threat, but we're in level 2 with rumours that we'll move to level 1 as the president is speaking Wednesday evening. That'll surely mean borders opening (with restrictions) and maybe some lifting on large event restrictions.
So, should we be rushing out to buy SA Inc. shares? Certainly, they ran hard last week but have come back a bit since then.
Probably we should, but cautiously. Have a shopping list but also have a list of what you want to see;
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Offshore
/ US markets remain volatile as Nasdaq has worst week since March
/ LVMH Tiffany deal is off/delayed
/ Brexit talks going all messy
/ UK economy grew 6.6% in July as gradual recovery continues
/ Opec turns 60
Local
/ Q2 GDP -51%, or -16.4%
/ Firstrand results
/ Shoprite results
/ Aspen sale & results
/ Zeder CEO quits and the company is looking for a new strategy
/ White & yellow maize above R3k a ton
Day 167 of lockdown.
Jeez peeps are buying SA Inc
Top movers in Top40 and MidCap pic.twitter.com/6zgQO5DmHS— Simon Brown (@SimonPB) September 9, 2020
We're seeing lots of really bad results now that companies results include the second quarter. But the market is expecting this and in many instances not even selling the stock down much if at all as the bad results roll in.
The flip side is that when we see some decent results the market loves that news and sends the stock soaring higher.
This is because right now our expectation is for bad results so good is a pleasant surprise. I have often spoken about the fact that results or other announcements are often not about the actual numbers, rather it is about the expectations relative to those numbers.
What we are seeing is in part a two-part market. Remembering back in hard lockdown when the question was if the rebound would be V-shaped? Or perhaps W, U with some even suggesting L shaped. Well, Old Mutual says actually it is K shaped.
This makes sense. In the US the upper leg of the K is big tech socks with the rest being the lower leg of the K.
Locally miners are the upper leg and financials the lower leg.
So now we can put this together, K shaped recover and the market-loving positive surprises. Hunt out those top quality companies in the lower leg as they're cheap and if they're quality they'll not only recover but will do so quickly and with great profits. This is where we'll find stocks that still have great upside potential.
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JSE Direct is an independent broadcast and is not endorsed or affiliated with, nor has it been authorised, or otherwise approved by JSE Limited. The views expressed in this programme are solely those of the presenter, and do not necessarily reflect the views of JSE Limited.
Offshore
/ US unemployment 8.4% (Temporary Census work (+238,000 jobs) accounted for around one-sixth of the August gain of 1.4 million jobs)
/ Thursday sell-off with Friday red, but less bad. Monday closed for labour day.
/ India bans another 188 Chinese apps
/ Carnival Corporation's Costa Cruises to Restart Cruise Operations This Weekend out of Italy.
/ Tesla does not go into the S&P500. Instead Etsy, Teradyne and Catalent added. IN order to get into the S&P500 “Companies must be U.S. based, and listed on either the NYSE, the Nasdaq or the Cboe. They also must have a market cap of more than $8.2 billion, and report four straight quarters of profit as determined by U.S. generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP).”
Local
/ Prosus has now gone into the Euro Stoxx 50 and EUR2bn passive inflows should support the share price.
/ Local GDP on Tuesday
/ Results; Truworths, Northam & Implats, Libstar and ADvTech
/ Spur execs leaving (four going by year-end including CEO & COO).
/ Icasa delays spectrum auction to March 2021
Day 160 of lockdown.
We're now able to travel between provinces, visit friends and family, go out for dinner and even back to the office. Leisure is back, but is it investable yet?
So who are the first winners as we ease out of hard lockdown?
On the one hand, pent up demand is real. I was at a bush lodge over the weekend and it was full and trying to find somewhere for the September long weekend is proving tricky. So people are out spending. Reports from restaurants in late August are they were packed but then I was at dinner on a wet and cold Tuesday evening and things were quiet.
So the current surge is likely very much just pent up demand and money saved. But what's important is how long this pent up demand lasts and what's real?
JSE – The JSE is a registered trademark of the JSE Limited.
JSE Direct is an independent broadcast and is not endorsed or affiliated with, nor has it been authorised, or otherwise approved by JSE Limited. The views expressed in this programme are solely those of the presenter, and do not necessarily reflect the views of JSE Limited.