Economic Outlook

Worry About the Real Stuff

 

“A ship in harbour is safe, but that is not what ships are for..”

This morning: There are plenty of positive news stories emerging as the global economy reopens, but also an increasing number of real-world tangible threats emerging. The Pandemic has affected economies from top to bottom, and many issues won’t be resolved overnight. For markets the issues to consider aren’t just inflation or market bubbles, but how supply chain issues and instability could continue to impact sentiment.

The ongoing Covid horrors in India, and yet more negative politics noise is dominating the new screens, but the global economy is reopening fast. Ignore the doomsters and focus on the reality… the global economy is open, and that means a host of new supply chain, logistics and market pricing crises to worry about! Yay!

This morning there is plenty of positive news. South Korea’s economy posted brisk Q1 growth after a shocking 2020. The Germans have lifted their expectations for 2021 growth to 3.5% and 3.6% in 2022 on the back of recovery. (Wow, if even Europe is recovering, there must be hope.) The UK’s Confederation of Industry (CBI) is ultra-positive, reporting the sharpest upturn since 2018 in sales as the British economy reopens. There is equally positive news from around the planet.

Of course, there will always be problems – like the rumours of a planned right- wing coup in France (a number of retired generals apparently hankering for a repeat of the Algeria crisis). Or how about yet more allegations of Tory Sleaze…? Yawn! (If you voted for Boris on the basis of his integrity, then more fool you..) The Biden Tax hikes are getting all kinds of attention, and could impact market sentiment – although its largely a case of outraged Libertarians disbelieving the temerity of a President daring to propose they pay their fair-share.

But these political events are all intangibles. There is plenty of real stuff we should focus on in markets.

Housing

US Home Prices (aye, remember them….) surged 12% in February. That’s the biggest jump since 2006… which is one year before things went to hell in a handbasket on the back of a US housing bubble driven by over-easy money.. Hmmmm.. housing boom, easy money? What’s that ding-ding-ding sound in the back of my head?

There are some really interesting trends in the US homes data – like the hottest property areas are up in the Rocky Mountains. The median US home gained $36k over the last year.  Prices rose in all the 20 major US cities covered by the Case-Shiller indiex – Phoenix, San Diego and Seattle were top performers.

The gains in US homes – and here in the UK – is fuelled on the same old reasons – lack of supply, FOMO fears of missing out and being unable to get the ladder, and now on folks moving to find better places to live than dirty old cities if they can work from home The pandemic has allowed home buyers to build up savings, and the home market is an obvious place to put it – especially when interest rates are so low.

Bingo! That’s the danger: more money chasing a limited number of assets! Home prices are being fuelled on a relative interest rate effect. The gains from housing look much more attractive than savings, so folk are borrowing more (at ultra-low rates) to spend on housing. A boom is fuelling a boom. Home prices are suffering from similar distortions as we’ve seen drive financial asset prices (stocks and shares)!

Dare I suggest a bubble is forming in home prices? Someone is bound to tell me not to worry – house prices always rise…. Don’t they?

Global Shipping and Inventory

t’s not just semiconductor chips that are in short-supply. As the blockage in the Suez demonstrated, its shipping and the logistics involved to get goods to consumers that enables spending. Get it wrong, or de-stablise the process, and the whole global economy goes into shock. If the Chinese want to administer a coup-de-grace to the Western Economy, then hacking Amazon into shut-down would be a place to start.

Over the last few months we’ve seen container ship box rates balloon up to 4x higher – but speaking to a ship broker yesterday he believes rates will normalise. That may change on any geopolitical instability, but rates will largely depend on levels of global inventory.

There is genuine scarcity of chips, which is being addressed by new production. There is also scarcity of goods that were in high demand through the pandemic – for instance, exercise bike production cannibalised the production of normal bikes which remain in short supply. It will take time for furloughed and closed business to resume production – which will drive scarcity price hikes.

That scarcity affects everything from fridges to plane engines – which in turn will impact shipping. If the shippers aren’t getting paid for transporting fridges and toasters, they will seek ways to hike their prices for other goods, but shipping costs could normalise in the short-term because of shortages of goods in transit, rather than the global economy regaining equilibrium.

As inventories recover, we could see shipping prices stage a sharp rise again. A sudden spike in shipping, driven by recovery or through instability (like Taiwan) could well spook markets.

Iron and Steel  

China has been in the grip of a strong recovery since last year– earlier this week, steel futures set new record highs. Iron ore prices are also at new tops. Prices for steel products in China (and therefore elsewhere) are set to rise – fuelled partly on the back of expectations prices are set to rise, but also on fears the Chinese government’s plan to reduce steel production to look climate compliant will create shortages. In short, it’s a hot market for steel in China.

Now the rest of the world is playing catch up. Steel prices have tripled from the pandemic lows as manufacturing, home building, large construction projects and infrastructure, new retail and commercial building, and even shipbuilding are all reopening and demanding metal! I was reading about Swiss Steel Group – a speciality steel firm that’s seen Q1 sales increase 12%.

However, a number of critical bottlenecks are emerging– including access to shipping, getting mines reopened and sourcing new supplies when companies find their pre-covid suppliers have gone bust. Iron ore shipping prices spiked this month by over 25%, driven by China demand. Prices are close to the last peak in 2019. Everyone wants Capesize dry-bulk freighters to bring Brazilian and Australian coal to China!

A further bottleneck could emerge from the uncertainty around Liberty Steel – the aerospace industry has already warned the UK government that Airbus and Rolls Royce are vulnerable if there is any shortage in high strength steels. Trying to find alternative supplies in a market that’s in “take-off” would be very difficult – and any slowdown at Rolls Royce would have a massive multiplier effect on its supply chain.

One little know effect on steel prices is a lack of scrap metal. Scrapping old ships is a major source of high-quality scrap for new steel. India is a major source, but is closed due to new Covid strain hammering health services. There is also a shortage of oxygen as Indian supplies are all earmarked for hospitals – and as the news programmes reveal, a burgeoning black market in the gas. Bangladesh and Pakistan seem unaffected and are getting a much higher slice of the scrap market.

These are just three areas of the real economy worth watching; home prices, supply chains and raw materials. Will they create boom or bust, inflation or opportunity? Who knows? Keep an eye on the space.

 

The numbers behind Elons massive Q1

Tesla posts record net income of $438 million, revenue surges by 74%

KEY POINTS
  • Tesla reported record net income of $438 million during the quarter, as well as earnings of 93 cents per share on $10.39 billion in revenue.
  • In its earnings release, the company said it has weathered chip shortages that have plagued the auto industry in part by “pivoting extremely quickly to new microcontrollers, while simultaneously developing firmware for new chips made by new suppliers.”
  • On an earnings call, CEO Elon Musk said the delayed new version of the company’s Model S sedan will be delivered starting in May 2021, and Model X deliveries will begin in the third quarter of the year.

Tesla reported first-quarter results after the bell on Monday. The company beat expectations handily, buoyed by sales of bitcoin and regulatory credits, but the stock dipped as much as 3% after hours as investors digested the numbers.

Here’s how the company fared in the quarter, compared with analyst estimates compiled by Refinitiv:

  • Earnings: 93 cents per share vs. 79 cents per share expected
  • Revenue: $10.39 billion vs. $10.29 billion expected, up 74% from a year ago

Net profit reached a quarterly record of $438 million on a GAAP basis, and the company recorded $518 million in revenue from sales of regulatory credits during the period. It also recorded a $101 million positive impact from sales of bitcoin during the quarter.

READ MORE

 

 

 

 

 

Mike’s Editorial

We don’t care how much money government wastes – and then 2 minutes later we say there’s not enough money for clean drinking water, healthcare for people with intellectual disabilities and homelessness.

Interesting week that was…

 

“Never judge another knight without first knowing the strength and cunning of the dragons he fights…” 

This morning: The successful mass pushback on the European Super League may seem a minor issue contained in the sports arena, but it highlights growing voter dissatisfaction with politics, wealth inequality, questions who will pay for funding recovery, and just how much longer the speculative bubbles can continue as the world changes.

 Tis seldom a Scotsman will say this, but Happy St George’s Day

As another weary weeks wends to its close, it might actually have been one of the most significant for months. Lots has happened under the surface – a host of seemingly unrelated events that all seem to be moving in a common direction – mass political pushback.

The collapse of the breakaway European Super League was a slap in the face to the sport barons, but a more general warning to corporate rentiers they can’t take their customers for granted. The strength of public reaction against the hopes of the club owners to monetise their teams was surprising in the terms of passion and vehemence. It’s been warning on corporate “over-reach” and a useful reminder to politicians who they answer to. Not the bosses, but the voters.

Here in the UK, the government immediately sided with the football fans, distracting newsflow from a party mired in allegations of political sleaze – from VIP PPE contracts to the ease with which rich entrepreneurs have apparently been able to tap-up government for favors and contracts. Greensill is a case in point – although I suspect the Labour Party is wasting its time trying to connect dots on their allegations about James Dyson and his offer to supply ventilators at the depth of the first-wave corona-crisis.

The general feeling remains politicians have got a mite too close to corporate wealth. The public are appalled at the way in which failed politicians have jumped into exceedingly well paid sinecures; ex-chancellor George Osbourne joining exclusive investment bank Robey Washaw, former deputy-prime minister Nick Clegg moving to Facebook, while ex-Labour Chuka Umunna joined JP Morgan (as head of ESG!)

There is a knock-back coming. Politicians are being reminded no matter what they may “owe” for business donations and support, they don’t own votes. (Well, not yet.)

Meanwhile, corporates are being punished. JP Morgan’s ESG rating has been “slashed” by an CRS ratings agency Standard Ethics to “non-compliant” and “contrary to sustainability best practices” as a result of its willingness to fund the ESL project. Let that be a lesson to them… I suspect more pain is coming their way.

Meanwhile, Biden’s tax proposals on corporates and the wealthy have spooked the… wealthy. Markets are roiled. This surely isn’t the way the US government is supposed to act… clearly its role should be to pump trillions into markets to artificially inflate stock prices, making the rich richer…? This is dangerous territory. New fangled notions like the rich should pay taxes commensurate with their wealth could be something of a game changer. No doubt Biden’s foolishness spells the end of absolutely everything. Sell now and head for the hills.

Seriously though, our CIO at Shard Capital, Mike Hollings observed, “while everyone is cheering the massive fiscal stimulus, it’s abundantly clear governments now need to address how they pay for it”. Politically, wealth inequality is going to be front and centre when it comes to paying the costs of pandemic. Over the next few years, its going to dominate discussion. Mike added: “The fiscal tailwind of deficit financing is destined, in due course, to meet the fiscal headwinds of higher taxes..” Twas ever thus.

READ MORE

 

Be skeptical of fads, fashions and trends and operate within your circle of competence

Warren Buffett could teach traders in dogecoin, GameStop and other hot trends a few things about ‘Mr. Market’

As the old joke goes, St. Peter had some bad news for an oil prospector who appeared at the pearly gates of heaven: “You’re qualified for admission,” said St. Peter, “but, as you can see, the section for oil prospectors is packed. There’s no way to fit you in.”

After a moment, the prospector asked to say just four words to the present occupants. That seemed harmless to St. Peter, so the prospector yelled, “Oil discovered in hell!”  Immediately, most of the oil prospectors stampeded out for the nether regions. Impressed, St. Peter invited the prospector to move in and get comfortable. The prospector paused, saying “No, I think I’ll go along with the rest of them.  There might be some truth to that rumor after all.”

Let that be a warning to CEOs and shareholders. Steering clear of rumors and self-delusion has been one of Warren Buffett’s key rules, ingrained into Berkshire Hathaway BRK.A, -0.43% BRK.B, -0.41% shareholders for years. We all need to hear such lessons repeatedly because reality’s temptations are always at war with our ideals.

The serial frenzies in meme stocks like GameStop  GME, -2.19% and cryptocurrencies like dogecoin DOGEUSD, -8.17% make this a good time to contrast what investors should do from what many seem to do. Comparing Berkshire’s and crypto’s faithful is apt given their outsized followings: an estimated 30 million Americans have traded cryptocurrencies and 30 million are expected to stream this year’s Berkshire virtual annual meeting on May 1.

Buffett defines Berkshire as a corporation with a partnership attitude. The value of each investor’s stake will rise (or fall) in lock step. This contrasts with how many seem to view companies with meme stocks or most of the crypto space. There, the culture is casino-like, where a small few stand to reap unimaginable riches while the overwhelming majority lose their shirts.

Moreover, Berkshire’s culture emphasizes patience and permanence. The company ideally holds investments and businesses forever and encourages its shareholders to hold indefinitely, through thick and thin. In the world of meme stocks and cryptocurrency trading, a strong norm favors immediate payday profits to be taken off the board.

Read More