Friday 28 October 2005

STARTING TO FLAG


As you may recall, the first Twenty 20 international between the Proteas and the Black Caps was a dreary affair. This is doubtless due to the feelings of horror and despair that swept the local crowd when they unfurled their free 100% polyester South African flags. Almost as large as the colourful and proud pennant itself, was a label that offered stern instructions about how to launder the product and also the assurance that the manufacturer of the attached flag was “Officially Licensed”. The sting came in the three words that proclaimed: “Made in China”. Which dumb government department is using my money to employ people who issue licences to the Chinese to make my national flag? Desperate stuff.
A lot of people announced a lot of things this week.
Minister Manuel boasted about how much money he had collected in revenue this year which means that he will have to borrow less than budgeted to cover a smaller than expected deficit. In principal this falling demand for money ought to reduce its price. i.e. interest rates should go down. However, the worst kept secret in the market these days is that Governor Mboweni intends very firmly to raise interest rates just as soon as he can. He’s fretting about inflation and the interest rate lever is the only one that most central bankers have protruding from the floor in their 27th floor office with private washroom. He’s dying to give that lever a tug.
Anglo American’s secret was a lot better kept and the news of their major restructuring probably caught many investors unawares. It seems likely that we will  need to change our view and rating of this giant corporate as it undergoes this metamorphosis, but initially the market liked the news. Especially the bit about returning a billion dollars to shareholders. Am I alone in thinking it odd and sad that some one like Anglo can’t themselves find projects to spend that money on?
Probably they were thinking that we poor taxpayers are going to need loads of extra cash soon to help meet the terrifying new R20bn cost of constructing a special train in Gauteng. Leaving aside the fact that there is already a court battle raging between some of the partners in the construction of this baby – and R20bn is worth squabbling over – one does sort of wonder how anyone thinks they will get this kind of cash back, even over 20 years. We certainly won’t expect the answer to this sophisticated project finance calculation from the official who claimed that the escalation in the cost from R12bn over three years was due to inflation. That works out at an inflation rate of about 18%pa! But to be fair, he also admitted that the previous estimate omitted VAT! I wonder if the new wild guess leaves out the cost of money or some other small detail. I have little faith that anything other than the actual construction (no engineer will ever refuse to build something challenging and expensive e.g. Channel Tunnel) will turn out well.
My claim that the market will not again in this cycle, challenge the early October peak has come under pressure this week. Prices have shown a quite spirited recovery that fortunately has not yet blown the forecast out of the water. Nevertheless, the JSE month-end portfolios will be produced tonight and things will look a lot brighter than they did just a few days ago.
James Greener
28th October 2005

Friday 21 October 2005

BEARS FIND FISH


We are all now only too familiar with the host of rules and regulations that apply whenever we want to do something as simple as open an account or carry out some other mundane financial task. There must be computers world-wide stuffed full of records of  my mother’s maiden name, proof of my home address and the number of times I have spent exorbitant sums at angling supply shops.
This morning I discovered that my cheque for R72.00 made out to the City of Johannesburg, for a trailer licence, had been deposited into an account named Kolgans Visserye. This looked a bit fishy. The bank’s reaction on being told of this potential fraud was quite disappointing. My report was not the first to alert them to the possibility that a fishmonger appeared to be acting as the city treasury. And when I told them that I had received the licence, they lost interest completely suggesting that the city would not have issued it unless they had received my payment successfully. I am not comforted by this view, especially when we get yet another headline that R1bn has been written off by the city in unpaid accounts.
Investors in and clients of the New York broking firm called Refco, have also been obliged to write off very substantial sums. It seems that major fraud may be to blame for this, the fourth largest bankruptcy in US history. This collapse adds to my growing unease about the situation in the largest market in the world. The US long bond yields are again on the up and all those innovative mortgage schemes will surely begin to hurt the vitally important US consumer’s ability to spend. The Dow has ricocheted about a bit this week, driving the technical analysts into a frenzy of speculation about head and shoulder formations and the like.
But when it comes to bouncing, our own all share index has been giving us a foretaste of the unpredictable behaviour that we will see in the struggle at Loftus tomorrow. With moves of almost 5% from one day’s high to the next’s low, followed by a near complete recovery, the “timing is everything” school of investment has been getting a thorough testing. I hang on to my view that we have seen the top and that down is now the main trend for sometime.
Governor Mboweni has returned from an overseas junket and has been hogging the headlines with startling doubts about his performance in his previous job as minister of labour. And while we were trying to digest that one, he slipped in a hint that he thinks interest rates are too low. This had little impact on the equity market this morning which has lost scores of people to their half-term hideaways in the bush and on the beach. Turnover today will be about the lowest recorded this month.
Fortunately, other records this month include some decent rainfall in Gauteng and our new colleague from the Cape has been suitably impressed by the ferocity of the highveld thunder storms. We just don’t need one tonight please when I stroll down to Wanderers to watch SA take revenge on the Kiwis for lifting the tri-nations. It will be my first time at a 20-20 cricket game so I am interested to see it all.
Only two shares (Lonmin & Reunert) in the top 50 list are up so far this month. Who got that one right?
James Greener
21st October 2005

Friday 14 October 2005

GROWTH – BUT NOT AS WE KNOW IT

I would say that the question we posed last week has now been answered by the market. This action is not a mere buying opportunity but the birth of a pretty impressive bear market. So far, just the hair and the claws on one paw are visible. The teeth we have yet to see. And its eyes are not yet open. Almost every share has been wounded. None yet fatally so. The largest one still standing, is PPC. And Krugerrands are at a two and a half year high. If this is the start of a significant market melt-down then I don’t think it will do much for the cabinet’s grand plans for the economy. All kinds of fancy schemes to transfer assets will slip underwater if market prices dip significantly.
Suddenly the GDP growth story has become a mantra with everyone chanting their own favourite number. If only it was that simple. Most of us will have been puzzled by the news that the government this week have approved a “blueprint for 6% growth by 2010”. Why didn’t they approve a “blueprint” like that five years ago?  Could we see the current plans please? Will it involve government appointing and paying for more  legislators, regulators, inspectors, advisors and consultants? If so then it would seem unlikely that the rest of us will have much opportunity after filling in forms and preparing reports about what we thought of the forms actually to get much work done.
For example, the new National Credit Bill promises to “register consumer credit providers, conduct inspections, monitor compliance and investigate systemic market conduct problems…” Apparently the present system is “dysfunctional”. This view hardly fits with the 18% pa growth in personal credit extension reported last week. It seems as if everyone is already borrowing plenty of cash without even more folk coming along to monitor them.
Reserve Bank Deputy Governor Guma, pitched up at the podium yesterday to deliver the interest rate decision. He was so nervous, poor chap, that he surpassed the previous record for monotonous delivery. I gather that towards the end he said that there would be no change, but by then I was fast asleep. The market was already charging southwards and also paid no heed.
It is tempting also to ignore the JSE’s data on net foreign buying of equities. Do you believe that, with the exception of a very small amount (R22m) of net selling yesterday, every day so far this month the overseas investors have never bought less than R300m worth of shares. Last Friday – when the first signs of panic began to appear – the net buying is said to have exceeded R1.1bn worth! This really does not feel right.
I managed to publish some proper research this week and on the website you will find a discussion of the likely impact of interest rate increases on the prices of the banking sector preference shares. In short, I don’t expect them to decline by very much at all. But now that I have written that down, as well as the view that we now have bear market, you can be sure that I will turn out to be wrong on both counts.
Why does the market collapse only in October?
James Greener
14th October 2005

Friday 7 October 2005

BEING KEPT IN THE DARK


Our internet connection went on the blink this afternoon just as I was  about to press the SEND button on this edition of Tidemarks. The news from Telkom was grave. Technicians, they said, were being dispatched. I had visions of encampments of those candy-striped shelters being erected over manholes around the suburb and the blow torches being pressed into service as water heaters for the coffee. Chunky men in corporate t-shirts sitting on low stools with large blue handsets pressed to their ears. Black leather tool boxes snapped open and small cardboard note pads snapped shut. Our communication with the outside world depended on these guys. On a Friday afternoon. It looked bleak. But then, as you can see, we suddenly rejoined the globe, caught up with the markets and completed this letter.
There are half a dozen theories as to why the market at its worst point gave up almost 5% of its value this week. The word from the big institutional brokers is that there has been considerable foreign selling. These wicked overseas sellers are always a favourite bogey man and there is a little evidence to support this. The full picture provided by the JSE data will become clear only next week. Another favourite is that there is a “huge structured deal being done”. Usually this explanation is offered to the dealing room with lowered eyelids and knowing nods after a long whispered phone call. Screen watchers claim to be able to spot the “waves of stock” surging across the ticker.
Other more prosaic reasons may be found in the opinion that there has been a quite sudden turnaround in consumer sentiment and the main story in Biz Day this morning ran with this theme and gloomy quotes from some tame bears. This kind of thing can quite easily spook local sellers who almost all will have substantial book profits that they suddenly feel like banking. That petrol price is really starting to make its presence felt in the pocket of almost everyone who doesn’t walk to work.
I have no idea if this is the beginning of my long awaited decent sized correction. So far, the pull back has not yet erased even a fortnight of the All Share’s gain, although there have been some spectacular falls in certain shares, particularly Sasol and BHP Billiton. I think we shall need to be very vigilant next week to see if this action is either going to continue or whether we are just being offered a buying opportunity.
All this excitement in the market has quite diverted my attention from preparing my proposal for a Competitiveness Action Plan for the Local Competitiveness Fund of the Kwazulu-Natal Local Economic Development Support Programme. I have picked on this particular flock of tax-consumers before. There seems to be no end to their optimism that bureaucrats can make people’s lives better by spending their money for them. They are unlikely to accept my proposal for their Plan. It is short, cheap (free in fact) and contains suggestions like: resign, get real jobs and give the money back and come out here and see what actual competition is all about.
I am afraid I can’t get enthusiastic about this cricket series of Australia versus the rest of the world. As well as being uninteresting it also increases the chance of injury for players whose skills and fitness we are so sorely going to need later in the season.
May it rain on us this weekend.
James Greener
7th October 2005