Friday 25 June 2010

AND THEN THERE WERE SIXTEEN

Politicians in the US have reportedly come up with a raft of new rules and regulations for their banks. These will ensure that there will never again be any crisis or credit crunch. Isn’t that comforting? I wonder if the new rules include any which forbid banks to lend money to people who are unwilling or unable to repay it. That seemed to be a source of much of the trouble last time. Hopefully the fellows who run banks had long ago spotted this and made a note that it was a poor business model.
Governments are usually not well placed to offer advice on how to run things. Here on the southern tip, the state owned and run organisations are hardly in great shape. So bad are they that at least two different teams have been assigned to go and find out what’s wrong with them. Worryingly, the so-called independent team appears itself mostly to be independent of the experience and knowledge to run any successful business while the ministerial team is the one which to date has been in charge of the ailing enterprises. No clear winner there.
After tonight the soccer stadiums in Nelspruit and Polokwane will no longer be required by FIFA and the folk there must be wondering what they should now do with them. Identical problems will soon occur elsewhere. By tonight half of the teams who arrived for the competition will have made use of the international departures hall. However, President Zuma  assured an audience this week that there are plans to fill the seats in these arenas with paying spectators in the years ahead, but forgot to mention what they might be watching. Here in Durban, rather excitable voices have been shouting about how magnificent it would be to host the Olympic Games on the shores of the Indian Ocean. Now it would be nice to harness the vibe and the energy that the world cup has generated and flog off the millions of unsold flags (the Bafana t-shirts have passed their sell-by date) but should we not do the sums first please.
News that the Chinese currency would in future become more flexible was accompanied by film clips showing clerks feeding wads of notes through counting machines. While this demonstrated that without doubt the yuan (or is it he renminbi?) note itself is already quire flexible, the markets dithered about whether this was good or bad news for the prices of anything. Similarly Britain’s emergency budget allowed for the word austerity to be given a good outing and markets bounced around. The sorely needed deficit reduction appears as usual to rely more on raising income than cutting expenditure. No one has the courage to tell voters the truth that amounts paid and promised to state employees, pensioners, welfare recipients and other vote buying entitlements over the last few decades were way too generous and will probably be unsustainable in the new world order.
Nevertheless, the great and good of the G-20 nations have ensured that there are sufficient funds to jet them off to Toronto this weekend. Here, after pretending to be surprised by the presence of the baying protestors – who have also travelled to Canada for the occasion – the delegates will meet behind closed doors to compose grave yet optimistic statements before seeking out lunch. Wisely the new Aussie prime minister feels she has more pressing tasks at home. She is so right.
Provided they have not gone home in sympathy with their soccer colleagues, Italy will meet the ‘bokke in East London tomorrow for what we all hope will be a better game. At least it won’t last 11 hours like that tennis match or 90 minutes without a score like some other game I could mention.
James Greener
25th June 2010.

Thursday 17 June 2010

THE RECOVERY SMELLS FISHY


While we have all been looking elsewhere, the bull has been hoofing balls into the back of the net. The JSE All Share index has even pierced the 28000 level after a quiet and unnoticed 10 day climb which included a public holiday and a close-out. The dollar gold price is nosing northward and exploring new territory. The rand has outperformed both the euro and the pound sterling quite markedly so far this year – although it is reasonably steady versus the US dollar.
If you need something to fret about have a look at what the bear is up to in the Chinese stock markets where he has clawed 20% out of it in the past two months. Are we wrong to be placing too much hope on China leading the world out of recession with its insatiable demand for raw materials? Another worrisome feature is that despite eighteen months of the official interest rate being held at almost zero and bucket loads of supposedly stimulatory cash being tipped into the economy, the US is not yet looking all that lively. US citizens are still rightly worried about getting and keeping a job, paying the mortgage and reducing debts incurred at much higher levels. Consuming is not on their agenda.
However, back here in the kingdom, the harbour strike is over, the ships have docked and the containers have been unloaded and unpacked just in time to satisfy a surging demand for symbols of patriotism. Tons of non-FIFA licensed colourful flag-bedecked trash for decorating your car, house, dogs and children have engulfed the nation. Visitors too are catered for and every back-pack has a dreaded vuvuzela in home strip poking through the flap. Wooden giraffe sales are nowhere. Clothing retailers must have been smiling this week too with the surge in demand for winter wear from visitors who arrived believing that old line about “Sunny South Africa”. The nasty cold snap that swept over the southern tip is a suggestion that the global warming models are still short of some good science. We may have set a record for the coldest venue for a SWC match ever played.
My earlier contention that there was not going to be any beer available in the stadiums was confirmed. The official supplier of the alleged globally branded beer-like beverage was so worried that 20 fake Dutch fans in sponsored orange dresses might be threatening his insipid brew that he ran off bawling to FIFA. Humour and intelligence played no part in that self-important organisation’s response and armed police were used to deal with the problem. Without that magnificent misjudgement the pretty lovelies would have raised no more attention than any party of girls in short skirts deserve. Now the whole world wants to see the pictures and taste the beer they were promoting
Is this really the base of another bull run? The factors which make that seem unlikely include the fact that the historic price earnings ratio of the All Share index is rich at 17.5. At the start of 2009 it was on 9. Very few company announcements in the last few months have been bubbling with excitement about their business prospects in the near future. The plus side of course is that some companies have tried to slim down during the recession in preparation for a speedy recovery when the orders begin to flow. The dividend yield of the same index is also a very meagre 2.2%. Some of this parsimony has been the result of attempts to restore reserves and increase dividend cover but that is still not a great yield even when compared to taxable interest at around 6%pa. Generally this is not value territory and not a typical starting level for a major bull market.
It will be a relief to watch the oval ball again even if the ‘bokke and the Italians will have to trek westward to Witbank for the game. And the sardines have arrived. May you also have a great weekend.
James Greener
17th June 2010.

Friday 11 June 2010

BALL MARKET

The country will pretty much close down at 2pm today and wont notice or care if the Dow collapses and the gold price soars to the levels where they equal each other. The odds of those two prices approaching and meeting each other are probably lower than what you will get for Bafana lifting the trophy and yet the nation is wonderfully and firmly convinced that miracles can happen. It is going to be great fun anyway and we shall all be quite safe as I have just seen a submarine glide past on its way to check the beach next to the stadium. I hope it was one of ours.
World Cup fever is rampant and party time is here. The vuvuzelas are droning on everywhere and how FIFA must be regretting that they failed to get their sticky paws on the rights to that plastic tube and also to that other unique South African attitude to a safety item – the makapara. This must be the only place in the world where the hard hat has been converted to a fashion item with zero safety . And don’t forget the Jabulani. That’s the new football that will be in use during the tournament and which allegedly behaves erratically, especially in the thin highveld air. Perhaps it will liven things and with luck more than a few goals might be scored in the tournament. Us rugby bores like a scoreboard that ticks over..
The world’s markets are also very erratic with no trends emerging anywhere. On the JSE this month so far, the big 4 (BAT, SAB, Anglo, Billiton) are all up but the rest of the market is very mixed with the banks still being sold off, despite FirstRand offering an optimistic trading statement. Value is still elusive. I am in no hurry yet for the SWC circus to end but it is going to be very interesting to see what the effect of playing hosts will have on the various indicators. The rand might be the first to react to the departing hordes. Some consumer prices appear to have risen while others appear unaffected or even lower. It will be difficult and a long time before anyone will be able to tease out the contribution to GDP that 6 years of preparation and 4 weeks of party have injected. The Gautrain seems like a fine legacy even if we are going to be left with some large and empty stadiums. It is claimed that a big part of Greece’s current troubles are the roosting of loan chickens that were sent off to raise money for that country’s Olympic Games. Certainly here in SA the state has been borrowing a lot of money of late so we will need to keep an eye on the repayment schedules in a few years time.
The politicians just don’t get it do they? The auditor general, the minister of finance and even I have been urging them to cut back on unnecessary spending. But this week the Free State government have been placing full page four colour advertisements boasting about holding a conference that will unlock the potential of their flat cold slice of land. This is about as meaningful as a CEO promising to unlock value. The recently departed and unlamented Eskom chief did just that when he pocketed a chunky performance bonus for the year when that business made a loss. The Telkom boss is also on his way. Lock the cash box tightly chaps.
Tucked in among the noise is a very important test for the ‘bokke in Cape Town tomorrow. The French have even more capacity than the Welsh showed last week to deliver a scare. Again I am uneasy. It is all happening under that mountain this weekend. Actually, there is quite a lot happening on the beach here too.
James Greener
11th June 2010.

Friday 4 June 2010

BLOW BUT DON’T THROW YOUR HORN

The “sell in May and go away” period has passed but perhaps it is meant to apply only in the Northern hemisphere. Some voices, however, are suggesting that “flog everything and flee” is still the best strategy for equity investors – particularly in the USA. Their views rely quiet heavily on the patterns and pictures they claim to be able to see in the charts of prices and indices. Apparently they all point sharply downwards. In fact there are also some worrying fundamental facts which suggest that the US especially may be about to experience another wave of mortgage defaults which could lead to a further fall in property prices and liquidity problems for the banks. Thereafter follows the familiar lament of declining investor confidence, job losses and economic contraction. While there has been enormous support for the Dow whenever it tries to break below 10 000, I think the bear will win that battle but hopefully not as far as the 3 000 level that one opinion has offered. The dread phrase “double dip recession” is popping up again. The Rand Refinery reports that demand for Krugerands has soared 50%. People are definitely seeking insurance.
Like most other share markets the JSE is jittery and unable to develop a trend. Buyers are around but are unwilling to pay up to get their shares. A disappointing number of companies which have reported recently have chosen not to pay dividends, but those that do have mostly increased their distribution compared to a year ago. If there is a genuine and sustainable business recovery taking place it is very patchy and hard for investors to profit from.
Surely the state-owned near monopoly business of generating and selling electricity should be staid, unexciting and financially predictable. Their market is captive, their suppliers are amenable and the technology well proven. Nevertheless Eskom is never out of the headlines with stories about boardroom putsches, operational calamities and ridiculously volatile results. One suspects sadly that corruption and incompetence are probably dominant features of that utility. The much trumpeted news of their return to profitability appeared alongside the Durban municipality announcement of a 23% increase in electricity tariffs. That is a huge number and will undoubtedly have a big impact on consumers’ future spending patterns. It is hard not to think that the economic recovery is up against some very strong headwinds.
No such problems however face FIFA who are delighted to announce that they have increased their income by 50 percent since 2006 in Germany to 2010 in South Africa. Helping them reach this wonderful milestone are two sleek grey warships which as I write are cruising past a few miles offshore keeping a keen watch out for pirates. South Africa has ignored all suggestions that it should take an interest in helping to counter the rampant piracy around the Horn of Africa. Now we see why. Our forces are assigned to the far more threatening brigands who are clustered at the traffic intersections selling world cup paraphernalia that has not been blessed by FIFA. Is everyone involved in the beautiful game really happy with the plan to destroy tons of t-shirts in a country where even illegal clothing is welcome now that winter has arrived? Have you spotted that the Lords of the Round Ball have discovered a way to renege on their commitment to allow the vuvuzela to blast its way into soccer history? They have warned that should a single one of these plastic tubes be flung onto a pitch, then that will be evidence of its use as a weapon and bingo – a ban will be issued. Watch this space.
Nevertheless the city is definitely starting to get revved up. Flags and “mirror gloves” are blooming and the cleaned up beach front is wonderful. This is going to be great party. All I have to do now is learn the offside rule. I am a little anxious about the ‘bokke in Cardiff though.
James Greener
4th June 2010.