Friday 27 March 2009

THE BULL SLIPS IN OIL


When you get down and have a close look, the All Share index pretty much went nowhere this week. This will have surprised and disappointed several people, especially Governor Mboweni who had gone to all the trouble of ordering extra biscuits and summoning the MPC a month early and getting them to support his plan to lop 100 basis points off the repo rate. While the prospect of cheaper money did very little for the share market, the currency actually strengthened quite a bit especially against the euro this week.
This too is not really supposed to be how the rand should respond to a rate cut. Those of us without years of training in economics and finance had been led to expect that investors would race to buy shares in those companies which sell items that are sufficiently costly that people need to borrow money to buy them, and now with cheaper money … Well you know how the story goes. Perhaps the inflation numbers which showed that food is rapidly becoming such an item is causing a rethink about cars and houses and flat screen TVs
And then over in the USA details of the shape of the next lifeboat full of money to be launched began to emerge. The plan is for taxpayers to lend cash to private businesses that would like to sift through the garbage in the basements of the many, obviously stupid, enterprises who failed to distinguish tasty assets from toxic assets. These new publicly funded geniuses have nothing to lose but someone else’s money and presumably will select from the dross only those IOUs that they hope might deliver. The rest they will leave in the dumpster. There’s a small but very interesting matter of deciding the price to be paid by the smart to the stupid for the allegedly toxic asset that now actually does have a buyer! Presumably the plan is then for the new owners to spruce the assets up a bit and then sell them on for a profit (who to you might wonder?) and repay the government loan. Cynics like me note that this does nothing to inoculate the truly toxic and if the plan fails, the number of troubled enterprises just grows larger.
Back home it seems that an outfit named the Gauteng Enterprise Propeller is in trouble. This has nothing to do with the uproar around the farewell present for the departing CEO of the state airline. As usual the details of the misuse of public money are murky but it does inevitably involve lavish travel and catering in overseas destinations instead of helping poor people propel themselves into enterprises. An equally mysterious organisation named the South African Fryer Oil Initiative are getting into a state about extra virgin (never did follow this one) olive oil which apparently isn’t even olive oil let alone any kind of virgin. So beware anyone straying from the traditional pap and wors fare.
Whoever has the awful task of listening to all these tapped telephone conversations must have had an especially bad week. Can you even imagine the hours and hours of argument about where or what Tibet was and whether or not this Dalai Lama chap was related to Dali Tambo. All South Africans must be deeply saddened by the diplomatic gaffe of refusing this man a visa and then embarrassed by the feeble and nonsense excuse for doing so.
While it is excellent news about the Indian cricket tournament coming here I wonder if much thought has been given to how dew-soaked the fields become at night at this time of year. That trick when the mower tows a thick rope around the outfield is very funny but not much good at drying the grass. Which takes me sadly to the Lions who I fear will not be lifting the Super 14 cup this year.
James Greener
27th March 2009.

Friday 20 March 2009

QUANTITATIVE EASING – STRETCHING BY NUMBERS?


Central bankers are busy fellows these days. Most of their energy however is going into combing through dictionaries looking for words that will disguise what they are up to. Their objective is to make money sufficiently plentiful and cheap to entice people to resume their earlier profligate ways and to borrow and to spend. As well as actually handing it over to anyone with a pulse and a suitably bad record of decision making, they are keenly pursuing a new plan of buying pretty much everything that anyone offers to them. This stunt has also been labelled “growing the balance sheet”. The phrase suggests to me that they hope to convince everyone including themselves that much of the rubbish that they are buying actually has a value and that someone, sometime will want it back. I don’t think so. In most cases the cash that they are doling out is freshly minted. Little wonder then that the US dollar has started to go softer again. The helicopters promised by Governor Bernanke are now airborne.
I am amused at the outrage expressed by the politicians who are watching what capitalists do with money they have begged from the government. They use it to keep themselves in the style to which they have become accustomed. After all, their own businesses had failed to do just that, so what else is one supposed to do with the bail-out booty? Socialists are shocked. This was not their plan. They failed to spot that with labour already in oversupply, there was no need for the bosses to allocate any of the state’s handout to the workers (aka voters)
There will be some satisfaction among the bureaucrats, however. They will be noting the worldwide stock market recoveries and congratulating themselves on turning the investors’ mood around. Here on the southern tip our own central bank has declared that the Monetary Policy Committee will meet soon and often and presumably they will wield a big chopper on interest rates. Some enthusiastic younger analysts are talking about local rates being halved by year end. The excitement has seen the All Share index soar effortlessly above 20 000. I am content to wait and watch for pullbacks to resume the nibbling that I have suggested before. I am certain that the bear is not through with our markets yet.
Also never far away are those who are pleased to aid government in any of its efforts to give away public money. Local Government Minister Baloyi is reported this week to be worried that charlatans are claiming benefits in the names of the deceased and issued the following request. "We really call upon citizens to confirm your alive status". Does this mean that 50 odd million of us need to troop off to a dingy office somewhere and breathe on a mirror? If the government can’t keep track of who is alive and who is dead, it just deepens my suspicion about the accuracy and usefulness of most other statistics compiled by them. This week, even the despicably efficient revenue service (what a misuse of the word) gave an encouraging hint that it too might be losing the plot. It emailed warning notices about taxes due without specifying the taxpayer to whom the notice referred.
Anglo American plc gave up on gold mining this week and was lucky enough to find someone eager to take their last shares in AngloGold Ashanti off them. AngloGold have reported a loss in 10 out of the last 13 quarters so despite the emotion of this separation it does seem like a smart idea. Maybe they will resume paying dividends again soon.
It is far too early to get optimistic about the cricket at Newlands and the only reason the Lions are not at the bottom of the Super 14 log is that they have played 2 fewer games than the Cheetahs. At least the sun is out again here in the kingdom.
James Greener
20th March 2009.

Friday 13 March 2009

BULL IN FULL FLOW



Incredible amounts of wealth have been destroyed by the decline in the prices of almost every asset as we descend into this deep and terrifying depression.  One exception has been government bonds where the so-called safe-haven status of a piece of paper issued by the same legislature that was responsible for overseeing the aforementioned crash is in great demand. Investors apparently feel that the guarantee of getting back their capital and a tiny bit of interest is meaningful. But I worry that the repayments will be made in currency that in most cases will be freshly printed.
This explains why people are eager to believe that the share market bull is back, fit and well. There is no doubt that the bear market has to end sometime but I am certain that now is not that time. It will take a while before the massaged and tardy official numbers confirm it, but most wage earners who are not employed by government are increasingly worried about keeping their jobs and paying their bills. Prudent people are certainly not interested in borrowing any money – even at near-zero rates – for flat screen TVs and overpriced cars. And it seems that the banks have at last learned that it is unwise to lend to imprudent people!
Governor Mboweni is off to London to attend a G20 meeting and his speech in Cape Town today was delivered by a flunky. It reportedly warned that “portfolio flows are fickle”. Presumably he suspects that foreigners invest in our markets in order only to make a profit. Just as soon as losses threaten they flee for the exits and callously take their money with them instead of steadfastly leaving their cash down here on the southern tip to turn into manure and trickle down among the grass roots. If he thinks that the ebb and flow of foreign money has something to do with his and his cronies stewardship of the economy he is right but he should not take it personally. Switzerland surprised a few folk this week and dropped interest rates. Money promptly left the shadow of the Alps (some may even have popped up here) and the Swiss franc swooned. It is down more than 4% against the euro. This must be a great worry for anyone with a secret horde in a numbered account. Lichtenstein also announced that in future they will be more hospitable to foreign tax collectors who call round for a chat. Times are getting tough for anyone who believes their money needs privacy.
Privacy is certainly already lacking for Mr Madoff, who the authorities speedily put behind bars for stealing $65billion. In the rush however, there was no opportunity for the judges to ask him where he stashed the cash he nicked. Is there any truth behind the rumour that Bernie’s people have been seen talking to Shabir’s people about how to arrange a suitably impressive sick note? Just a couple of years in the prison hospital and Bernie will be off to join his loot.
The news that SA is responsible for 40% of the carbon dioxide emissions in Africa is not surprising. Recall that the gas is exhaled unceasingly by every one of us. But the country groans under the weight of an excessive number of politicians who never stop talking in order actually to do something. And now it is election season. May I suggest to those attending the conference on Carbon Capture in Joburg this week that it is not this non-poisonous gas that needs to be controlled.
The only cricket to concern us this weekend is the equally embarrassing squabble that has broken out between the selectors and the managers.
James Greener
13th March 2009.

Friday 6 March 2009

THE BEAR IS STILL MARCHING


Judging from the way that the turnover on the JSE has soared every time the All Share index has tried to break below the 18 000 level, it seems that folk believe that this number is somewhere near the worst the bear can do. I will be surprised if this is the case. I believe that sellers will outnumber buyers for still some time yet. I think there is widespread denial and misunderstanding of just how severe the economic situation in the USA has become and that it may get even worse. Next I think that there is also an unrealistic hope that there are other countries and people able to pick up the slack and create demand to replace the faltering US consumer. And then finally I regret that the campaigning for next month’s general election back here is providing too many opportunities for our alleged and hopeful leaders to expose their shortcomings to the world and scare off investors.
One splendid example of this emerged this week when a candidate reportedly stated that “… businesses should be urged to hire (staff)” I trust that someone has now taken her aside to explain that in the real world one hires a staff member only if the extra revenue that could be generated by the new pair of hands will leave a profit after all the costs of that new person are accounted for. Only in government is headcount a growth target. Next up we were treated to a lecture about carbon footprints and climate change by a man whose science training may be limited to virus control by showering. And then there was the cabinet minister who implied that her department regards her either as too untrustworthy or too dim to reveal the workings of the new passport to her.
In almost every category except crime and tax collection (more or less identical endeavours) South Africa is moving down the world ranking tables. Even our shot at getting to number 1 in test cricket is not going very well. And we are pretty hazy when it comes to diagnosing health conditions for parole.
Actually we must be very near the best in the world when it comes to bank stability and solvency. All the big boys have now announced and there were no really bad surprises (like losing a few billion dollars between now and when they last tried to buy a corporate jet). Overseas, some bright spark has come up with an idea to subject applicants for public handouts to “stress testing”. My view is that this will be a pointless exercise as in effect the market does that automatically and all the time. Don’t give anyone one any public money and the survivors will be the ones that pass the test! Those that fail at least will do so without taking the taxpayers money into the black hole along with themselves.
At the airport last night I noticed that the screen that displays the day countdown to kick-off in the soccer world cup was blank. There are several possible explanations for this but it is ominous that the cabinet found time to discuss the problem that so far very few locals appear to have bothered to apply for tickets for many of the matches. In our inimitable way we are all doubtless expecting that in order to avoid embarrassment of empty stadiums, the organisers will on the day call rent-a-mob, who for the price of a tee-shirt, cap and a Coke  (sorry, Pepsi) will ship in people to cheer for Croatia or wherever. The mobs will be in great need of employment by then because their present deployment in disrupting university classes, trashing meeting venues and threatening opposition voters will have come to an end.
These early morning games from the other side of the world have good and bad sides. Surfers miss the early waves but the pubs open for breakfast. The Lions had better take advantage of their bye weekend. Practice is needed!
James Greener
6th March 2009.