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Mr. Soros: I'm only rich because I know when I'm wrong.

Saturday, March 31, 2007

Regarding DuFu

Hello,

Yes, dufu was featured by Asia Analytica. here is the link:
here

  • Dufu Technology Corp Bhd (RM0.76) is shaping out to be one of the market’s cheapest and overlooked stocks — ironically because it was listed on the wrong day — Feb 28, 2007, right when the recent global equities crash started. As a result, investors would have dumped their shares in panic, and the stock was further forgotten in the ensuing sell-off.
Born on the wrong day. Bad timing.. but is this really a justifiable reason to invest in the stock? You can trade and you can speculate but investing? That for me, it's a rather lame excuse to buy a stock by itself.


  • Dufu’s business model is similar to Notion VTec Bhd (RM0.595), which we have long liked. The company produces precision component parts for hard disk drives (HDDs), such as disk clamps and disk spacers (where it has an estimated 30% share of the global market), as well as non-HDD components for the telecom, industrial safety and sensor and consumer electronics sectors.
See? I do not understand this issue at all. If DuFu business model should be compared to Notion, then perhaps the investing public should ask a rather simple logical question. Which is better? DuFu or Notion? To suggest that there is a huge differential in pricing as an excuse to buy, is rather a no-no in my opinion.

Hey, it's just an opinion, hor.

So how good is Notion?

Notion current earnings is 27 million. Previous fiscal year it did 22.3 million. Indicating another solid fiscal years with storng earnings growth of around 22%. Net profit margins based on current earnings is extremely, very impressive at 27%.

Dufu? All one has is to refer to is a set of IPO proforma numbers. It did a 8.3 million in earnings with a net profit margin of only a mere 7.5%. ( see
Quarterly rpt on consolidated results for the financial period ended 31/12/2006 ). The managment projects an earnings of 11 million for current fiscal year. That's about a growth expectations of 32%, in case you are wondering. Well for a company with no proven listed track record, would you base ur investing based on management's projections?

Simple common sensing asking... if given a choice, based on these simple yardsticks, which would you go for? And if so, isn't it clear why the other one, Notion, trades at a much higher earnings multiple?

So why shouldn't DuFu trade at a higher earnings multiple?

How about asking why within the same business model industry, why isn't DuFu as profitable as Notion? Or why isn't DuFu earnings much higher? Remember Notion is earning around 27 mil and Dufu only 8.3 million (based on a current earnings). Why? Is there a gulf in class in how both business are managed?

How?

Now let's look at what the article's reasonings..


  • Attractively priced at 6x P/E
    Due to its ill-timed debut, Dufu’s shares have fared badly. From an IPO (initial public offering) price of 70 sen, its shares rose to as high as 95.5 sen on its debut, but have since slid to 76 sen.

    Ironically, its IPO was already priced very low to start with — at 5.7 times 2007 earnings. By comparison, Notion’s IPO exercise in mid-2005 was priced at a forward P/E (price-earnings ratio) of 10.9 times — and its shares have since roughly doubled, including dividends. At 76 sen, Dufu’s shares are trading at just 6.2 times 2007 earnings — well below the market’s 17 times average. Incidentally, its valuations are roughly half of Notion VTec’s, which trades at 11 times financial year (FY) September 2007.
Priced very low during IPO.

However, shouldn't the analyst explain the simple fact that the 2007 earnings is based on management's earnings growth projection of 32%?

32 percent.

How many times have we not see ipo earnings projections that are missed by some 50% or more?

Ah, do not get me wrong, I am not judging DuFu's ability to perform but all I am asking is a simple what if thingee? What if DuFu's earnings projections is simply too optimistic?

Then, isn't the reasoning that DuFu is priced very low during its IPO, is perhaps not an accurate statement to make?

how?

The writer than continues to describe Notion's awesome performance since listing in 2005. Look at Notion numbers.. tell me if their stellar performance in the market isn't justifiable? See
here



          Sales   Earnings margin
2005 79.288 18.643 23.51%
2006* 90.230 24.543 27.20%
ttm 100.541 27.172 27.03%

06 Q1 19.435 4.979 25.62%
06 Q2 20.316 5.535 27.24%
06 Q3 22.370 5.456 24.39%
06 Q4 28.109 8.573 30.50%
07 Q1 29.746 7.608 25.58%
Impressed? 
Should DuFu trade at the same earnings multiple? Maybe but we have no data. 
And most of all, isn't it way too early to insinuate that? 
Why don't DuFu show us its ability first? Yes, let's see some track record first.

Wouldn't that be a more rational investing decision?
  • Although Dufu is smaller and less profitable than Notion (due to its higher proportion of lower-margin HDD components), we believe the valuation discount is far too large. HDD components comprise 86% of Dufu’s sales, compared with 55%-60% for Notion.
The writer than acknowledges the issue I have been rumbling on.

DuFu is simply smaller and less profitable than Notion.

That is a fact.

So would you accept Asia Analytica reason as stated below?


  • Dufu is diversifying its product range to improve margins. Asset valuations are also attractive. Dufu has 90 million shares issued and a market capitalisation of RM68.4 million. Its shares are trading at 1.2 times estimated end-2006 pro-forma NTA (net tangible assets) of RM56.1 million (or 62.3 sen per share).
    This suggests a small premium of just RM12.3 million for a 20-year-old company with secure multi-national relationships and Second Board listing status.

    We believe Dufu should conservatively trade at RM1.21, based on 10 times 2007 earnings. This is 10% below Notion’s P/E, and a steep 40% discount to the broader market’s valuation.
    If we apply Notion’s similar P/E, Dufu’s shares could trade to RM1.34. In any case, we believe Notion’s shares are still very undervalued at current levels.
How?

I hope this set of second opinions helps and I have no idea how DuFu will trade in the near future.

rgds

Friday, March 30, 2007

What about Megan?

My Dearest Moo Moo Cow,

Yeah, what about Megan? It seemed that it has been ages since you blogged on it. Your last blog posting was on July 6th 2006.
Megan: Part XIX

Megan just reported its earnings.

Again if you just look at its numbers, it does look nice.




But... my dearest Moo Moo Cow, you know very well that investing is not based just on numbers.

And the cash flow CLEARY shows the extreme poor health of Megan.



How?

See the net decrease in cash & equivalent yet again?

Burning and burning all the cash my Moo Moo Cow!

When will it ever end?

And if that is not bad enough, last July 6th, you mentioned that Megan total borrowings now stands at 838.669 million!!!!!

Now?

Have a look yourself... 888.131 million in debts!!!!!

How?

Burning all the cash and the debt bubble keeps on increasing!!!!!

Past postings here...


  1. Megan
  2. Megan: Part II
  3. Megan: Part III
  4. Megan: Part IV
  5. Megan: Part V
  6. Megan: Part VI
  7. Megan: Part VII
  8. Megan: Part VIII
  9. Megan: Part IX
  10. Megan: Part X
  11. Megan: Part XI
  12. Megan: Part XII
  13. Megan: Part XIII
  14. Megan: Part XIV
  15. Megan: Part XV

That 'Roti' Man

My Dearest Moo Moo Cow,

That roti fella, Silver Bird, recorded huge losses again. It said it lost some 18.2 million for its first quarter of its current fiscal year.

It's really not looking good at all.

This is what the company said.

  • For the quarter under review, the Group registered revenues of RM 154.5 million compared with RM 141.4 million in the corresponding period of previous year mainly due to higher revenue by 19% from MultiCom Division. However, the Group incurred a loss before taxation of RM 18.1 million for this quarter compared with a profit of RM 1.2 million in the corresponding period of previous year partly due to share of losses from the jointly controlled company amounting to RM 8.4 million.

    The Group registered a loss before taxation of RM 18.1 million for the current quarter compared with a loss of RM 53.9 million in the preceding quarter. The improved results for the 1st quarter were principally due to recovering return rates. This translated into higher revenue of 7%. There is no provision for impairment of assets in this quarter compared with the previous quarter where RM 35.9 million was provided and written off as impairment of assets.
Eh? So they lost less money.

but... but... would you call this as an improvement?

My dearest Moo Moo Cow, for me, a loss is a loss is a loss.

No?

What is most worrying for me is their cash flow. Have a look below and you be the judge..

Look at the rate the cash vanishes!!



How?

I do love my 'roti' but not this one!!


Past blog postings:
Silver Bird
Silver Bird: Part II
Silver Bird: Part III
Silver Bird: Part IV
Silver Bird: Part V
Silver Bird: Part VI
Silver Bird: Part VII
Silver Bird: Part VIII
Regarding Silver Bird Yet Again

What about Charlie?

My Dearest Moo Moo Cow,

I really have to bring this issue up to you: Why is there so little stuff about Charlie Munger?

Why?

Don't you like him?

Here is a decent article from Morningstar.com posted last year on good old Charlie: An Afternoon with Charlie Munger


  • Here are some of his nuggets of wisdom.

    Opportunity Cost

    "There is this company in an emerging market that was presented to Warren. His response was, 'I don't feel more comfortable buying that than I do of adding to Wells Fargo.' He was using that as his opportunity cost. No one can tell me why I shouldn't buy more Wells Fargo. Warren is scanning the world trying to get his opportunity cost as high as he can so that his individual decisions are better."

    When you are evaluating any investment, you must compare it to every other available investment, including ones you may already own. Instead, many investors collect stocks like baseball cards and the resulting portfolio bloat will likely not increase returns or reduce risk. So when you hear about the new hot stock in the next can't-miss sector, ask yourself two questions: (1) Do I understand the investment as well or better than one I already own? (2) Is the risk and reward profile of the investment superior to all other alternatives? If the answer is "no" to either questions, it is probably best to stay away.

    Rationality

    "Rationality is not just something you do so that you can make more money, it is a binding principle. Rationality is a really good idea. You must avoid the nonsense that is conventional in one's own time. It requires developing systems of thought that improve your batting average over time."

    Munger is an evangelist for the virtues of rationality and his outstanding investment record is testimony to a lifetime of disciplined thought. To succeed as an investor, one has to make good decisions that are anchored in reality and free from emotional and cognitive distractions. At GrowthInvestor, we are searching for companies with significant market potential, rising demand, an economic moat, and growth-oriented management for purchase in the portfolio. This is not merely a checklist, but a research process focused on helping us make the most-rational decisions. If we make enough rational decisions, we will eventually have the returns to show for it.

    Envy

    "Harvard and Yale concentrated with venture capitalists that got the best calls and brainpower. Very few firms made most of the money, and they made it in just a few periods. Everyone else returned between mediocre and lousy. When returns happened, envy rippled through institutional money management. The amount invested in venture capital went up 10 times post-1999. That later money was lost very quickly. It will happen again. I don't know anyone who successfully resists this stuff. It becomes a new orthodoxy."

    Munger and Buffett often say that envy is worst of the seven deadly sins because it is the only one that isn't fun to commit. When a group of people make money, others are compelled by an irresistible force to get a piece of the action, even though prices have risen so far above fair value as to guarantee disappointing returns and there are much better alternatives available. I am completely puzzled by this behavior, but I am also glad it exists.

    Learning

    "We all are learning, modifying, or destroying ideas all the time. Rapid destruction of your ideas when the time is right is one of the most valuable qualities you can acquire. You must force yourself to consider arguments on the other side. If you can't state arguments against what you believe better than your detractors, you don't know enough."

    Carl Jacobi, a noted 19th-century mathematician, counseled his students to "invert, always invert" when they encountered a particularly vexing problem. I think this is a great way to approach investing. After you compile all the reasons you should buy a stock, invert the question and state the reasons why you should not buy the stock. By doing this, you ensure that your research process is more complete.

    Mistakes

    "Chris Davis [of the Davis funds] has a temple of shame. He celebrates the things they did that lost them a lot of money. What is also needed is a temple of shame squared for things you didn't do that would have made you rich. Forgetting your mistakes is a terrible error if you are trying to improve your cognition. Reality doesn't remind you. Why not celebrate stupidities in both categories?"

Did you enjoy it? Did it make cow sense to you?

I really like this part.

  • When you are evaluating any investment, you must compare it to every other available investment, including ones you may already own. Instead, many investors collect stocks like baseball cards and the resulting portfolio bloat will likely not increase returns or reduce risk. So when you hear about the new hot stock in the next can't-miss sector, ask yourself two questions: (1) Do I understand the investment as well or better than one I already own? (2) Is the risk and reward profile of the investment superior to all other alternatives? If the answer is "no" to either questions, it is probably best to stay away.

How?

(1) Do I understand the investment as well or better than one I already own?

(2) Is the risk and reward profile of the investment superior to all other alternatives?

If the answer is "no" to either questions, it is probably best to stay away.


Thursday, March 29, 2007

MEMS: Part VI

My Dearest Moo Moo Cow,

Just how are you doing? Have you been having a go at them weeds yet again?

I do remember your very posting. Yeah, honestly I do. Let me prove it you. Your very last line in that posting you wrote this..

  • Oh... comes 2007.... i wonder if any1 will remember this ..

Yes?

See? I do read and I do remember.

Sometimes.

Anyway, you were rambling on and on and o, on how some folks justify by their recommendations by assigning extremely optimistic earnings estimates to the stock. Yeah, some call them as rocket numbers. Hey, but let's not be too critical, shall we?

Here is that said posting again which was posted on Oct 2005: S&P coverage on Mems




  • Profit & Loss



    FY Jul./MYR mln 2004 2005 2006F 2007F

    Revenue 33.8 48.3 80.3 223.1

    Net Profit 8.2 13.7 17.9 47.6

Well, I just read S&P write-up. What I am interested in is comparing them projection then against their latest report.



  • Profit & Loss

    FY Jul./MYR mln 2004 2005 2006F 2007F

    Revenue 33.8 48.3 50.2 88.4

    Net Profit 8.2 13.7 14.0 20.9


WOW!


Exactly. (just for info.. rhb research has even more optimistic numbers on MEMs! .. and neither do i have anything against MEMs, yeah i do think they are ok but its just that the market has been too high optimistic about it, so optimistic that MEMS has always performed below expectations due to the high yardstick placed on it!)


Anyway, there is something I do like what S&P reports.


They are prudent enough to disclose their past recommendations and the assigned target prices.




See? S&P even have a SELL on it with a TP of 0.38!!!

Yeah, wow!!!

And rightly put in your posting: It Pays to Read!

  • HOW many retail investors take the trouble to fully read research recommendations that brokers issue, especially when these recommendations are on small caps or second liners? From observation and anecdotal accounts from dealers, the answer is: very few. Instead of scrutinising reports to judge if the assumptions or projections are reasonable, there is a strong tendency among small investors to just look at the heading and target price of a research report before jumping in (or out, as the case may be)....

    How to achieve this? A good starting point would be for retail players to read critically the dozens of reports issued each week before taking the plunge, especially for companies that have no earnings yet but whose shares have risen to all-time highs. This way, brokers will be forced to be more circumspect in recommendations, while investors may well be spared the pain of large losses in the future. Who knows, if everyone does this, all concerned may actually learn something in the process.

How?

For quick references to the past blog postings on Mems:

  1. Mems..
  2. Mems: Part II
  3. Mems: Part III
  4. Mems: Part IV
  5. Mems: Part V

Regarding That Fountain View Again.

My Dearest Moo Moo Cow,

You have missed out a news report when you posted on that Fountain View Again this morning.

  • 28-03-2007: Fountain View ED ordered to restitute RM27.99m to company
    Fountain View Development Bhd executive director Datin Yam Yuet Chew has been ordered to restitute RM27.99 million to the company for breach of Bursa Malaysia Securities Bhd listing requirements (LRs).

    She was also fined to the tune of RM700,000. Yam was among Fountain View's eight current and former directors who were all publicly reprimanded by Bursa Securities and/or fined.

    In a statement on March 28, Bursa Securities said it was publicly reprimanding Fountain View for breach of paragraphs 9.16(1)(a) and 8.23(1).

    Paragraph 9.16(1)(a) states a listed issuer must ensure that each public or press announcement is factual, unambiguous, accurate, and contains sufficient information to enable investors to make informed decisions.

    Paragraph 8.23(1) relates to the provision of financial assistance to directors, employees, subsidiaries, sub-contractors or immediate holding company.

    Apart from the two paragraphs, Yam and another executive director Taufek Yahya were also in breach of paragraph 8.23(2)(a) which states that directors must ensure the financial assistance or advances were not detrimental to the company.

    Taufek was fined a total of RM150,000 for breaching the LRs.

    Another person who breached the rules was Tiew Chai Beng, who was fined RM5,000, while Loh Yoon Wah and former director Kington Tong were fined RM2,500 each.

    Also reprimanded but not fined were Fountain View's chairman Datuk Abdul Rashid Maidi, former director Lim Peng @ Lim Pang Tun and former chairman Datuk Miskon @ Miskam Setera @ Setero.

    Bursa Securities said Fountain View had breached paragraph 9.16(1)(a) for failure to take into account the adjustments as explained in the company’s announcement on May 26 last year in its fourth quarterly report for the financial year ended Dec 31, 2005.

    It had reported an unaudited loss after taxation and minority interest of RM5.364 million for the year ended Dec 31, 2005 versus an audited loss of RM68.488 million.

    Bursa Securities said the difference of RM63.124 million represented a 1,176.8% deviation.

    It said Fountain View breached paragraph 8.23(1) in respect of the payments made to Bizvista Success Sdn Bhd in 2004 totaling RM27.99 million on behalf of Wright Mart Sdn Bhd and Burke Greenville Sdn Bhd prior to its board of directors’ approval for the proposed subscription of Wright and Burke on May 26, 2004.

    Bursa Securities said such financial assistance was prohibited under paragraph 8.23. Yam was directed to rectify the breach by restituting to Fountain View the RM27.98 million paid to Bizvista within 30 days.

    The breach of paragraph 8.23(2)(a) was in relation to the failure to ensure that the advances to a contractor, Matrix Home Sdn Bhd, totalling RM31.1 million were fair and reasonable.

Asia Decoupling?

My Dearest Moo Moo Cow,

This issue is extremely interesting. Can Asia decouple itself from the US??? Can?

Here is a good posting on this issue from Morgan Stanley's Stephen Roach : Asian Decoupling Unlikely



  • In recent weeks, I have met with senior policy makers in both China and India. It is clear to me that in both cases the authorities are in the process of shifting their policy arsenals toward meaningful restraint. In China, the direction comes from the top in the form of growing concerns expressed by Premier Wen Jiabao about a Chinese economy that he has explicitly characterized as “unstable, unbalanced, uncoordinated, and unsustainable” (see my 19 March dispatch of the same name). Since those words were first uttered at the end of the National People’s Congress on 15 March, Chinese authorities have been quick to respond. There was a monetary tightening the very next day and the securities industry regulators have issued new rules that prevent companies from purchasing equities with proceeds from share sales. The former move is aimed at cooling off an overheated investment sector while the latter move is addressed at dealing with a frothy domestic stock market that increased by 100% in the six months ending in late February. I am more convinced than ever that Beijing is now deadly serious in attempting to regain control over its rapidly growing economy in an effort to shift the focus from the quantity to the quality of growth. This is good news for China but could be disappointing for the decoupling camp that expects rapid Chinese economic growth to remain resistant to any downside pressures.

    India is similarly positioned. The Reserve Bank of India does not take overheating and cyclical inflationary pressures lightly. I was actually in Mumbai the day the RBI tightened monetary policy last month (13 February), and it was clear to me in my discussions at the central bank that it meant business. The RBI’s official statement following that action said it all: “(A) determined and co-ordinated effort by all to contain inflation without unduly impacting the growth momentum is not only an economic necessity but also a moral compulsion.” Our Indian economics team underscores the risk of another monetary tightening prior to the 24 April policy meeting. At the same time, the government’s annual budget contained measures that would cut tariffs on food and other price-sensitive manufactured products. Indian authorities are fixated on a mounting cyclical inflation problem and appear more than willing to take a haircut on economic growth to achieve such an objective. Our current economic forecast reflects just such an outcome – a downshift to 6.9% GDP growth in 2008 following average gains of 8.7% over the 2005-07 period.

    There is a second factor at work that is also likely to challenge the view that hyper growth is here to stay in Asia – the region’s persistent reliance on external demand as a major driver of economic growth. This is less a story for India, with its relatively small trade sector, and more a story for the rest of Asia. China is at the top of the external vulnerability chain. Its export sector, which rose to nearly 37% of GDP in 2006, surged at a 41% y-o-y rate in the first two months of 2007. Moreover – and this is an absolutely critical point in the decoupling debate – the United States is China’s largest export market, accounting for 21% of RMB-based exports. As the US economy now slows, the biggest piece of China’s export dynamic is at risk. So, too, are the large external sectors of China’s pan-Asian supply chain – especially Taiwan, Korea, and even Japan. Lacking in self-sustaining support from private consumption, the Asian growth dynamic remains highly vulnerable to an external shock. That’s yet another important reason to be very suspicious of the case for global decoupling.

    Decoupling and global rebalancing go hand in hand. A decoupled world is very much a rebalanced world – and vice versa. Recent trends admittedly lend some support to the decoupling thesis – especially a booming Asia economy but also a seemingly remarkable cyclical revival in Europe. The European upsurge is a welcome development, but perspective is key. At most, it will add 0.2 to 0.3 percentage point to our baseline case for world economic growth. Asia, especially China and India, is a very different story. This is a much larger segment of the global economy and is growing at rates that are three times as fast as those in the developed world. An Asian economy that only barely widens its growth multiple relative to the rest of the world could well drive global decoupling on its own.

    That’s unlikely to be the case, in my view. Not only does Asia remain vulnerable to a US-centric external shock, but the region’s two most powerful growth stories – China and India – are now both very focused on matters of internal sustainability. The Premier of China has put his reputation on the line in attempting to bring an unstable, unbalanced, uncoordinated, and unsustainable Chinese economy under control. The Indian government is equally focused on an anti-inflationary policy tightening. Looking backward, both of these economies have been on an exceptionally strong growth path that – if left to its own devices – could play an increasingly important role in powering a decoupled world. Looking forward, however, it’s likely to be a very different story. With growth prospects in China and India tipping to the downside at the same time the US economy is slowing, the global economy is likely to be a good deal weaker than the decoupling crowd would lead you to believe.

That Fountain View Again.

My Dearest Moo Moo Cow,

Saw this news article:
Fountain View, directors reprimanded

I've added some comments in green bold


  • By Azlan Abu Bakar
    alan@nstp.com.my

    March 29 2007

    FOUNTAIN View Development Bhd and its directors have been publicly reprimanded by Bursa Malaysia Securities Bhd for breaches of several listing requirements.

    Among those reprimanded were non-executive chairman Datuk Dr Ir Abdul Rashid Maidi and former non-executive chairman Datuk Miskon @ Miskam Setera @ Sutero, who had resigned in June 2004.

    Bursa Malaysia said Fountain View had failed to take into account adjustments made by the company in its fourth quarterly report for the financial year ended December 31 2005.

    In that financial year, the company had reported an unaudited loss after tax and minority interest of RM5.36 million,
    compared to an audited net loss of RM68.48 million in the annual audited accounts. (WOW!!!!! 5.36 million and rm68.48 million is a lot, isn't it? Really!!!! What if there is the issue of intent???)

    The difference of RM63.12 million represents a 1,176.8 per cent deviation.

    Fountain View was also found to have breached the listing rules in respect of payments of RM27.98 million made to Bizvista Success Sdn Bhd during the period of February 10 to April 5 2004.

    The payments were made on behalf of Wright Mart Sdn Bhd and Burke Greenville Sdn Bhd prior to its directors' approval for the proposed subscription of Wright and Burke on May 26 2004.

    Its directors were reprimanded, among others, for failure to ensure that the advances to a contractor (Matrix Home Sdn Bhd) amounting to RM31.066 million in relation to a property development project in Alam Mutiara were fair and reasonable to Fountain View and not to the detriment of the company and its shareholders.

    Bursa Malaysia said the penalties were imposed after taking into consideration all circumstances of the matter and upon completion of due process.

    The directors were fined between RM2,500 and RM500,000 respectively.
Seriously only fined between rm2,500 amd rm500,000???

How can?

Remember: The difference of RM63.12 million represents a 1,176.8 per cent deviation.

Ken?

Previously blogged:
Fountain View of Shame.


  • Saw this on theEdge

    Fountain View defaults on principal, coupon payment totalling RM81.7m
    By Gan Yen Kuan, 03 Nov 2006 8:57 PM

    Fountain View Development Bhd (FVDB) said it had defaulted on the coupon payment and redemption of its loan stocks totalling RM81.71 million due on Nov 3.


    MORE>>

    Some issues not to be forgotten.

    Friday may 13, 2005

    The Selangor Turf Club's purchase of four million shares in a property company was in keeping with the club's constitution, according to a speech by the club's chairman, Tunku Datuk Seri Shahabuddin Tunku Besar Burhanuddin.
    In his address at the Turf Club's AGM yesterday, Tunku Shahabuddin said the Turf Club invested RM20mil, or RM5 a share, in Fountain View Development Bhd.
    The investment was made after careful research, with legal and financial advice, and was expected to provide an annual return on investment of over 10% a year
    May 19th 2005

    SC begins probe into Fountain View trades
    By SHAHRIMAN JOHARI
    THE Securities Commission (SC) has launched its probe into disruptive stock market price movements by delving into dealings involving Fountain View Development Bhd shares.

    The securities industry watchdog wants to talk to dealers who have traded substantial amounts of shares of the property developer which have since crashed, senior stockbroking executives said.

    The SC visited two stockbroking firms on Monday, looking for a dealer who is alleged to be the “mastermind” behind the unusual trading of Fountain View shares.
    And not to be forgotten...
    Auditors identify RM400m deals that made Plantation & Development insolvent
    By MAISARA ISMAIL
    NDEPENDENT auditors of Fountain View Development Bhd, formerly Plantation & Development (Malaysia) Bhd (P&D), identified some RM400 million worth of transactions made between 1997 to 2001 that left the group practically insolvent.

    The findings were included in an investigative audit report, issued by the new management at P&D to fulfil Securities Commission’s (SC) requirement.

    P&D, a Practice Note 4 company before it was restructured and bought over by Fountain View, racked up RM450.2 million losses from 1997 to 2001.
    The selldown was a huge issue back in 2005.

    Cover Story: Low-down on the selldown
    Stories by Lim Ai Leen & Risen Jayaseelan


    Of the 34 brokers in town, at least 30 were hit when Fountain View Development Bhd crashed two weeks ago. It was unprecedented. Usually, it is the retailers who are hit. But now, the banks and brokers are feeling the brunt of the selldown in several speculative counters. Seasoned hands in the stock-broking industry say it is a new phenomena. Why are the stockbrokers being battered by speculative activities? Is it due to the changing landscape where the demand to perform is so high that brokers raise their appetite for risk?
    What happened on Bursa Malaysia last week was not the norm. Nearly all brokers and many banks were hit when several counters hit limit down. "Those who were not affected are those who are not in the market at all," quips a broker.
    Normally, speculative stocks see their prices rise and fall time and again, with hardly anyone batting an eyelid. At best, these movements elicit an "unusual market activity" inquiry from Bursa Malaysia and a standard-form reply denying any knowledge from the company concerned.
    Last week's selldown has caused the Securities Commission (SC) to summon stockbrokers for a meeting this Monday and to issue a statement promising an investigation, and punishment for the "wrong-doers".

    Monday June 27th 2005

    Securities Commission arrest duo

    BY YAP LENG KUEN

    PETALING JAYA: The Securities Commission (SC) has arrested two individuals in relation to trading of shares in Fountain View Development Bhd.
    Sources close to the SC told The Star that the two, one of whom was arrested yesterday morning and the other in the afternoon, would be charged today at the Kuala Lumpur Sessions Court.
    One of them is believed to be a major shareholder of Fountain View, a property developer company and oil palm plantation owner that was listed via a reverse takeover of Plantations & Development Bhd at the end of 2003.
    The article continues..

    The sources indicated that investigations were still ongoing in relation to trading of shares. This included those of Fountain View which had made a good debut on the stock exchange. It had ended its maiden day at RM2.70 compared with its reference price of RM1.
    Fountain View, which had traded to as high as about RM5 for almost a year, recently fell to just over 40 sen at one stage.
    Its share price plunged 90% in just five days in late April and early last month, which brought down its total market value from a peak of RM2bil to just RM200mil, a loss of RM1.8bil.
    This was one of the biggest and fastest collapses of market value of a listed company in corporate Malaysia.
    And another article..

    Fountain View board "mum" on director's arrest
    By Tamimi Omar


    More than 100 shareholders of Fountain View Development Bhd turned up for the AGM at a hotel in Petaling Jaya on June 27, after reading press reports that a director, Datuk Chin Chan Leong, would be charged with share price and trading manipulation.
    Most of the investors were anxious about the latest development following Chin's arrest and queried the directors about the arrest, recent selldown on the shares and also future direction of the company.
    The meeting started at 10am and finished nearly 11am, but the shareholders told reporters later that none of the directors addressed any of their questions.
    Chin, a former controlling shareholder in Fountain View, claimed trial on June 27 to two charges of manipulating the trading and price of the shares between November 2003 and January 2004. The court granted Chin bail at RM1 million, with one surety,
    A remisier with Avenue Securities Sdn Bhd at the time, Joanne Hiew Yoke Lan, was charged with abetting Chin in both offences. The court set her bail at RM200,000 in one surety.
    “Generally, we are all very unhappy,” said one shareholder and added: “They (the board of directors) refused to answer our questions on the arrest and would not comment on the share price performance of the company”.
    Another shareholder blamed the authorities for the current situation, saying that it failed to act quickly when the situation on the stock market was deteriorating.
    Fountain View hit a high of RM6.15 in the first week of January and hovered at RM4.70 and RM5.50 before a sharp plunge in late April. It hit limits down for four consecutive trading days from April 28 to May 3.

Given all these issues that had happened before... how?

Anyway... i do remember some comments about 'investing' in Fountain View based on its NTA back in 2005. Yup, incredible. Invest in based on NTA despite all these known issues.

And the end result?



Wednesday, March 28, 2007

About them Adjustable Rate Mortages

My Dearest Moo Moo Cow,

Give this new article posted on CBS Marketwatch a GOOD read: 'Tsunami' of adjustable-rate mortgage resets coming. Scary, eh?

Here is what they are saying:

  • More than $2.28 trillion worth of ARMs were originated in 2004, 2005 and 2006, at the peak of the recent housing boom, according to a study released this week by a unit of real estate data company First American.

    Some of these loans have already reset at higher interest rates, but a lot more have yet to reset.

    This year, almost $370 billion worth of first ARMs are resetting. More than $250 billion worth will reset in 2008 and 2009 and another $700 billion will do so in 2010 and beyond, the First American study estimates.

Potential Market Risks.

My Dearest Moo Moo Cow,

A good Wednesday afternoon to you. And I am guessing that you have missed your lunch again. Am I correct?

Stumbled on this blog posting on The Bigpicture

The market hazards are simply put as as..

  • U.S. consumer spending dives. Perhaps the surest ticket to a bear market in stocks would be for Americans to close their wallets — either because they're spent out or because they're nervous about their finances or their job outlook.
    This is so obvious that it might well be overlooked as a risk. Investors have no recent experience with a consumer-led recession. The last one was 17 years ago, in 1990. The 2001 recession, by contrast, was led by a plunge in business outlays.
    • Corporate earnings shrink. Wall Street is fully expecting a slowdown in profit growth this year with a weaker domestic economy. But an outright decline in earnings might be a shock investors couldn't handle.
    Bad news: The margin of safety is dwindling. Total operating earnings of the Standard & Poor's 500 companies are expected to rise a mere 4.3% this quarter from a year earlier, according to analyst estimates tracked by Thomson Financial. That would be less than half the pace of the fourth quarter and the slowest growth in nearly five years.
    • The dollar's value tanks. The U.S. economy has been built on foreign money over the last two decades. Massive inflows of capital from overseas have been needed to cover the nation's trade and budget deficits. Other countries' saving underwrites our spending.
    What would happen if foreigners lost their appetite for U.S. assets? Granted, that question has been asked so many times since 1990 that Wall Street is downright bored with it. Which means that a dollar crisis would be exactly the kind of thing to catch most investors by surprise. A fast slide in the buck could be a sign that the allure of U.S. investments is fading with foreigners.
What do you think?

Would you agree with what the LA Times author, Tom Petruno, has written?

Tuesday, March 27, 2007

West Coast Highway?

My Dearest Moo Moo Cow,

It simply amazes what they publish in our financial business news. It really does. Have a look at today's so-called financial news (really Moo, how about they calling it the Daily Coffe-Shop Talk?): 'West Coast Highway on track'


  • 'West Coast Highway on track'
    By Francis Fernandez
    bt@nstp.com.my

    March 27 2007


    THE Cabinet is likely to discuss this week the implementation of the RM3.12 billion West Coast Highway project,
    sources said.

    The project was mooted 11 years ago, approved by the Works Ministry, but put on hold in 1997 after the Asian financial crisis.

    Sources said under the terms agreed by the Economic Planning Unit (EPU), the Government will pay the contractor some 18.9 sen per meter to build the country's third-largest highway which spans 216km.

    This will give the contractor, Konsortium LPB Sdn Bhd, an internal rate of return of about 15 per cent per year.

    The highway, which aims to link Banting and Taiping, was supposed to cost some RM6 billion, but under the revised plan, the project will cost just over RM3 billion.

    The project was awarded in 2002 to joint venture firm Konsortium LPB.

    Talam Corp Bhd, once the country's biggest builder of low-cost houses, owns 40 per cent of the joint venture company that will build the highway, while its associate Kumpulan Europlus Bhd, formerly Larut Consolidated Bhd, owns a 20 per cent stake.

    The finalisation of the revised terms of the West Coast Highway project has been stalling the planned purchase of a 25 per cent stake in Kumpulan Europlus by IJM Corp Bhd, the country's second largest builder.

    IJM is proposing to acquire a 25 per cent stake in the loss-making Kumpulan Europlus, with an option for another 5 per cent for 28 sen a share.

    The emergence of IJM will likely help stabilise Kumpulan Europlus, which suffered a net loss of RM323.4 million for the financial year ended January 2006, as well as help in the restructuring of Talam.

Everything is simply based on SOURCES SAID.

Aren't you really sicked and fed-up with such news reporting??

And worse still, how many times have we not see the companies mentioned in such articles where these so-called un-named sources are quoted to be saying this, this, this and that and that are denied by these companies?

Look at the very line... the sources even had the guts to tell the press what our cabinet will discuss this week.

WOW!!

Exactly my dearest Moo Moo Cow.

It never does end, does it?

Monday, March 26, 2007

Looking Back: Yikon

My Dearest Moo Moo Cow,

This series of posting is interesting indeed.

Dec 24th 2005: Gold and Yikon.

  • It's about that time of the year when we have the local financial newspapers highlighting the past events for 2005 and also the potential outlook for 2006. And sometimes, these papers arranges and moderates roundtable discussions on issues regarding the stock market. The Star Business had one such roundtable discussion which caught my attention (see Investors need longer time horizon ).

    Now in this discussion, there was this talk on this one stock that caught my attention: YIKON

    If you click on it, you would find a stock on a fantastic run.

    Just twelve months ago, this stock was trading at a low of 82 sen. Stock closed yesterday at a price of 4.76. (a pull back from a recent high of 4.90)

    Natutrally the bragging rights belong to that investment manager who did mention this stock as his stock pick in one such roundtable discussion in July 2005.

    This is what he mentioned then:

    The fifth one, I will pick a situational play, Yikon. It's like your Lion Parkson, but this one's just got a licence, the first given by the Chinese government to have country-wide goldsmith shops.

    They got a national licence, not a provincial one, to set up goldsmith shops all over China.


    They have started deploying shops this year in major cities.


    The shops are doing pretty well in in the department stores and stand-alone shops. They are putting their right people there, which is very important.


    Profit margins are better than in the Malaysian market where there is a glut.


    Year to date, this stock has been the second best performing in Malaysia, up 140%.


    This is what was mentioned in today's article:

    I still retain Yikon as my top pick. When I introduced the stock, it was RM2.50 a share and now it's RM4.40 after six months. The counter has been ignored. Not much research has been done due to the fact that it's a second board stock.

    But look at its business model, which comprises 100% gold exports, and gold has done very well. I think gold will continue to go up from about US$510 an ounce now to my target of US$800 or US$900 in two or three years.


    Given Yikon's 100% exports to Hong Kong, can you imagine a Malaysian company exporting gold to Hong Kong, the Middle East, and India and China, and with its franchise of goldsmith shops in China? The potential is great.


    They have opened 11 goldsmith shops in China, and are opening a 12th one next month. Of course, its current PE is very high, but I think people are looking at its potential in China. Yikon is the only gold manufacturing company in Malaysia, and is cash rich.


    The company has a huge state-of-the-art plant in Penang. If you look at the Singapore company that manufactures gold wafers like them, you can see that Yikon's technology and machines are far more advanced than those of its Singapore counterpart, which is a smaller company.


    Yikon buys scrap gold and processes that into pure gold wafers. The gold jewellery you buy is 91.6% pure and Yikon makes pure gold wafers of 99.9% purity.


    Of course, I am envious! Imagine making an investment in a stock a year ago at less than a dollar (err.. getting at the absolute low would probably be asking too much, isn't it?) and the stock is now trading at around 4.76!!

    How come I dun have this stock? How come?

    Why I no buy the bugger?

    Wouldn't it have been nice if we knew this would happen?

    And it would be even nicer if i had bought the stock. Tiok boh?

    I would be getting my new car and I would probably be in an island enjoying my holidays right now... yeah... wouldn't it be nice?... yeah... dream on Buster!

    And let's just be honest... such a buy is beyond me. Way beyond me!

    There is simply no way I would and could have jumped into this little ship sailing away to the island of my dreams.

    So what then? Am i being 'Jay' here or what?

    Nope!

    Now since, i had a post about learning from our mistakes, well, from an investing point of view, I think i should be asking myself this: Did I miss this opportunity or perhaps this stock was one of them stocks in the sharemarket that is simply beyond my circle of competency?

    Well, the best way is to have a good at Yikon itself.

    What kind of track record does Yikon have? Was it impressive?

    Here is what Yikon has earned has done since fy 2001. (read from left (2001) to right (latest)




    6.711 million -> 5.80 million -> 1.940 million -> 0.704 million (fy 2004).
    Hardly impressive right?

    Would I have invested in such a stock?

    Would you?

    Hence, what was mentioned in today's roundtable discussion really amuses me.

    Yeah gold is doing extremely well but what Yikon itself?

    Is Yikon doing well?

    Was the association that since gold is doing good, Yikon should also do good, justifiable?

    Here is four of Yikon's most recent quarterly earnings.

    1. Quarterly rpt on consolidated results for the financial period ended 31/10/2004

    Sales 10.776 million
    Net loss 0.158 million! (ahem)

    2. Quarterly rpt on consolidated results for the financial period ended 31/1/2005

    Sales 7.179 million
    Net profit 0.079 million.

    3. Quarterly rpt on consolidated results for the financial period ended 30/4/2005

    Sales 4.163 million (waa declining sales??)
    Net profit 0.057 million.

    4. Quarterly rpt on consolidated results for the financial period ended 31/7/2005

    Sales 9.136 million (huge improvement)
    Net profit 0.169 milion.

    So we have.. a total trailing net profit of only 147 thousand! (ytd net profit 3 quarters is slighty better at 306 thousand!)

    And more interesting is the following commentary reviewing Yikon's current year-to-date performance from the management own notes attached to their last earnings report.


    The turnover of the Group has reduced by 32.8% in the current reporting quarter as compared to the preceding year. This is mainly due to reduced in sales of gold in current quarter. Sale of gold only occurs when customers settle their purchase in cash rather than physical gold. However, this does not lower the gross profit of the Group as the margin derives from the sales of gold is negligible.


    Hmmm... interesting... very interesting... 'margin derived from sales of gold is negligible wor!'.

    Anway, Yikon has a current most recent 4 quarters earnings of only 147 thousand (ah.. its annualised earnings is perhaps higher... at around... 400 thousand... LOL!!... and oh, of course, currently, Yikon's PE is extremely high!)

    Oh btw... at around 4.76... Yikon is valued at some 194 million!!

    Based on such financial performance, do you think that such valuations are justifiable??

    Wah!

    So how?

    Did i miss a good investment opportunity?
    Would i have purchased Yikon as an investment then?
    How about now?

    Nah.. i really dun see myself making such an investment. No way Jose!

    Is a missed opportunity a mistake?


    Yes, the stock price is on a fantastic golden run.. but.. there is no way i could make a justification to invest in such a stock.



    And when such things happen, i just have to remind myself that perhaps this is one of them thingys that it's not destined for me ler..

    As my granny used to say, "What's not yours is not yours. See open a bit lah!"

    You just cannot win everything in anything, can u?



    hey it's Christmas Eve dude...

    Yeah... yeah.... :)

    Oh... one of me buddy posted me a really farnee card..... enjoy lah: Click here!

    here's wishing everyone.....

    A Merry, Merry Christmas!


    Ho Ho Ho!!!!

There's another update here: Gold and Yikon: Part II

Fast forward March 2007.

Yikon just reported its earnings:






Just imagine if an investot had followed what was said here: Investors need longer time horizon
  • StarBiz: Your picks, Kok Kheng.
    Kok Kheng: As mentioned earlier, I'm very cautious about next year's stock performance. Six months ago, at a roundtable discussion here, I recommended Tanjung Offshore, Berjaya Sports Toto, JobStreet, DiGi and Yikon. All have done well, especially Yikon, which I think has about doubled in price, and it was my best call.

    I still retain Yikon as my top pick. When I introduced the stock, it was RM2.50 a share and now it's RM4.40 after six months. The counter has been ignored. Not much research has been done due to the fact that it's a second board stock.

    But look at its business model, which comprises 100% gold exports, and gold has done very well. I think gold will continue to go up from about US$510 an ounce now to my target of US$800 or US$900 in two or three years.

    Given Yikon's 100% exports to Hong Kong, can you imagine a Malaysian company exporting gold to Hong Kong, the Middle East, and India and China, and with its franchise of goldsmith shops in China? The potential is great.

    They have opened 11 goldsmith shops in China, and are opening a 12th one next month. Of course, its current PE is very high, but I think people are looking at its potential in China. Yikon is the only gold manufacturing company in Malaysia, and is cash rich.

    The company has a huge state-of-the-art plant in Penang. If you look at the Singapore company that manufactures gold wafers like them, you can see that Yikon's technology and machines are far more advanced than those of its Singapore counterpart, which is a smaller company.

    Yikon buys scrap gold and processes that into pure gold wafers. The gold jewellery you buy is 91.6% pure and Yikon makes pure gold wafers of 99.9% purity.



Sick of Jim Cramer??

My Dearest Moo Moo Cow,

Aren't you sick and bored till death about Jim Cramer ranting in his pathetic revelations in his video interview?

Aren't you?

Hey, saw this posted on youtube. Yeah, probably should ask Cramer to learn from him!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mfLZm9zSkaA

Hoooooyeah!!!

rgds

A look Back

My Dearest Moo Moo Cow,

A good Monday Morning to you. Saw this interesting commentary posted on SmartMoney.com which i thought you might be interested in. A Look Back at a Raucous Month in the Stock Market

The following paragraph is interesting, really.

  • According to A.G. Edwards, $12.6 billion and $1.8 billion flowed into broad international and emerging market funds, respectively, in the weeks before the original 416-point drop. Those numbers were extraordinary. International stocks had already enjoyed a stellar 2006, returning 27%, and almost 75 cents of every dollar invested in mutual funds went chasing that performance. But January's fund flow estimates were double and even triple the amounts of some previous monthly periods. Any time that much money flows in the same direction there are bound to be some nervous investors.
Rgds

Friday, March 23, 2007

A call for Help: Help Aisya...

My Dearest Moo Moo Cow,

It would be nice if folks could help:
Please give her some light, give her some hope





For more info, please read this : Spare Your Change: Help Aisya...

  • *New note to all who have been directed here from Jeff Ooi's
    ·
    Screenshots

    I have been getting quite a lot of calls, sms's and emails regarding little Aisya. For those who want to keep in touch with how Aisya and her family are getting on and the status oF donations, please kindly leave a link to your blog/email in my blog (under comments lor-but under this post, please), and I will keep you updated as best I can.

    Here's the latest on Aisya:

    Little Aisya went for surgery to create eyelids for her last December, using tissue from her lips. Unfortunately, the operation has backfired, because her eyelids have fused back together. Doctors have decided (this is according to Aisya's mum) that there will be no more surgery for Aisya for another 2 years, as surgery is difficult for her young (and small) body and immune system. So it would be another two years before they re-attempt to create eyelids for her, and later, try and fit her with artificial eyeballs. That is the time when the family will need financial help the most.

    At present time, donations is solely for the family to survive on a day-to-day basis as Aisya's dad has lost his job (he's the sole bread-winner), and if there is any left, they can start a small account in case of emergency, and Aisya needs surgery (let's say they suddenly get a call to say they found someone who can help her see)...

    At the present moment, with present technology, it looks like little Aisya will never be able to see, because the little girl has only whites of the eyes.

    Donations can always come in kind. For example, you could offer to sponsor Aisya's diapers for a year. Or if you're some boss, you could offer her dad a job. Or if you're a broke college student like me, you could help by spreading Aisya's plight on your blogs, or simply remember her in your prayers.

    I did not ask Aisya's dad for his account number as I am afraid some unscrupulous people out there might somehow misuse that for their own personal gain. Thus, all cash donations will have to be in the form of a cheque under the father's name. Write the cheque to: SHAHIDAN BIN YANG GHAZALI, and send it to Aisya’s home at:

    45, Persiaran Putra 5,
    Bandar Baru Putra,
    31400 Ipoh, Perak

    Shahidan's Phone: 017-5586069; Hayati's (Aisya's mum) Phone: 017-5746317.


    I brought this case to my college's (Inti International College Penang) student body; they recently passed the tin around and we got about RM 2 K, which will be handed to Aisya's family shortly.


    *Original Post*

    Sigh...This blog is about little Siti Aisya Syazreen, a 3-and-a-half-year-old who has got no eyes, literally...Little Aisya suffers from a very rare syndrome called Fraser Syndrome, where children born have got no eyelids, and some even with no eyes...

    Darling Aisya is one such little girl...

    Her story appeared in

    ·
    The Staron the 24th December, 2006:-

    ·
    Special Mum for a Special Child

    When I first met Aisya, I was shocked, and I was overwhelmed...Honestly, I wanted to just reach out and hug her, but I was also afraid...Afraid that if I did that, I would be hurting this little girl, who looked so fragile, her body might snap in half if I so much as touched her...I was afraid, because I had never seen someone like her before...

    Aisya's dad is the only one working in the family, and he recently lost his job...You can just imagine how difficult it is. Raising children is never easy, but with an extremely special child like Aisya, a stable income is all the more neccesary...

    Inti International College Penang has taken the initiative to raise some money for her within the circle of students...Final results have not been finalised yet...

    I am appealing to anyone out that who has some extra to spare to think of little Aisya and her family...It doesn't have to be big; remember, as cliche as it is, it's the thought that counts...Every gesture will help...

    Think people, how would you feel if you cannot see, and cannot hear well? Think how you feel if everywhere you go, people are afraid of you? Think how you would feel if even your hands look different?

    Because that is what Aisya is going through everyday...She can't see, she can't hear well, and even her fingers are deformed...

    I am appealing to the human side of all those out that: Spare your change for little Aisya...I can be contacted at 016-5422774 for further details on how to contribute to the family...I won't be dealing with any of your money as I will put you in touch with the family directly.

    Cheerio...

How? If you could, please help...

Thanks!

Are you a fan of IBD?

My Dearest Moo Moo Cow,

Stocks, they simply went up all around, didn't they? In the US, they are talking about the stocks gaining 4 days in a row. Our markets weren't shappy at all: KL Shares End Broadly Higher and according to that Bernama market rap link, the markets were lifted with the so-called first quarter windows dressing and most importing the abolishment of the real property taxs and the very seductive corporate tax exemptions in the Iskandar Development Region project.

How?

Where was the doomsday and the so-called perfect financial storm?

Let's check out what FSO's market commentators are saying in their market wrap: IBD Follow Through Day Moves Market Into "Confirmed Rally"

Here is a snippet of that posting:

---------------------

IBD Follow Through Day Moves Market Into "Confirmed Rally"
BY MARTIN GOLDBERG, CMT

Wednesday’s rally brought about an Investors Business Daily (IBD) follow through day thereby putting the market in “confirmed rally” mode. IBD’s word on the stock market as of Tuesday evening was, “market in correction.” But with Wednesday’s action, the benefit of the doubt moves from the bears to the bulls all within a single day. In recent years, the IBD method has been as good as any in predicting the intermediate term position of the stock market. Also relevant is the fact that what they consider to be leading stocks are acting well. While a cynic can throw several rationales at the recent action of the stock market, one trades against IBD’s method at their own significant risk. With regard to IBD, when you find a hot guru, it pays to follow his advice. Trading against the methodology of the hot guru can be both demeaning and expensive.

Below you see the daily chart of the Nasdaq composite. Last Wednesday’s mid-day turnaround which put the market up well off of its lows of the day was considered to be the initial rally. It is relevant that when the Nasdaq composite broke below 2,340 mid day last Wednesday, that was an apparent new low. The quick turnaround flashed a signal that the market’s character had not changed and bears were in for a rapid and tradable rally against their position. Once again, it was a losing proposition to sell into apparent weakness and once again, it was a winning proposition to buy an apparent break of technical support. Over the five days ending on Tuesday, it appeared suspect to the bullish case that the market was advancing, but on anemic trading volume. But when 2,410 was broken and then successfully tested this Wednesday morning, and the Fed said what the market wanted it to say, an IBD follow through day was produced. (The trading volume on Wednesday was only average, and would have been less than average except for the relatively high trading volume in the Nasdaq 100 ETF.)



-----------------

How now My Dearest Moo Moo Cow?

Are you fan of IBD's follow through day?

And since we are talking of IBD and ultimately market timing, would my Moo Moo Cow see this as a confirmation of a change in trend and use it as a comfirmation market timing entry signal?

Would you my dearest Moo Moo Cow???

Thursday, March 22, 2007

The Delima

My Dearest Moo Moo Cow,

Just received this piece of article in my mail-box. It's fantastic really.

  • The Trader's Dilemma

    By Dale Baker

    February 20, 2007

    Whenever the markets slip a bit, we hear that buy-and-hold investing "never works."

    The short-term traders make two main arguments against fundamental analysis: 1) You can't rely on company-provided information, and 2) markets are just an amalgamation of buyers and sellers at a given oment in time, so all you can do is chase the nervous herd every day to make a profit.

    I think they're wrong on both counts.

    Knocking down the straw man

    The rise and fall of the dot-coms, plus the spectacular accounting frauds at Enron, Tyco (NYSE: TYC), HealthSouth (NYSE: HLS), WorldCom, etc., produced a new school of fundamental-analysis skeptics. Since a few companies were paper tigers or outright frauds, they argue, all companies run a risk of turning out the same.

    A freshman-level Logic 101 professor would knock down that straw man in a hurry. It's called a spurious correlation: "If some, then all" is not a viable hypothesis.

    If some people who get in an automobile are injured or killed, should I avoid all ground transportation? If an even smaller number who board an airplane are killed, should I avoid flying? If some prescription drugs have unknown side effects and adverse interactions, should I refuse to take all prescription drugs on principle?

    Of course not. If I avoided cars, planes, and prescription drugs, my life would be pretty limited. Investing is the same way.

    Who's the richest investor in America? Warren Buffett of the Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE: BRK-A) empire, of course. What philosophy does he follow?

    Value investing.

    How many superbillionaires made their fortunes in short-term trading? Not many. A few of the top hedge fund managers did, but not that many. Suffice it to say that they don't come close to Buffett on the 100 richest people in America list.

    The problems with excessive trading

    Trading sounds so easy in hindsight. One of the charting services has a commercial on CNBC that reminds me of a third-grade math class: "Look at this stock. It went up here, then it went down here. If you knew in advance where it was going, imagine the money you could make."

    Duh. And if I were the Prince of Wales' elder son, I would be the King of England one day. But I'm not. Only a very small, very select group of people ever become a monarch, just like only a few can untangle the mystery of technical analysis well enough to make a good living at it.

    traders face many more hurdles than investors.

    Diversified investors have to pick 20-40 stocks for a good-sized portfolio, decide when to buy, follow the news, and then decide when to sell. They can buy and hold for years if they like; Buffett often says he wouldn't mind if the arkets closed for a year or two.

    A trader, on the other hand, often makes more than 1,000 "round-trip" trades every year. That's more than 2,000 buy-and-sell decisions in several hundred stocks. The odds of making bad decisions go up exponentially with the number of decisions you have to make.

    Traders get smug when the market dips and they're sitting mostly in cash, but they go strangely silent in sustained runups where the 100% invested fundamentals guy makes his big returns for the year. A trader who goes to cash after every trade has to go out and find new trades each and every day to keep up with the investor. The fundamentals guy can wake up in the morning, decide his portfolio is fine, do nothing all day, and still beat the markets over time.

    The list of stocks that doubled, tripled, quadrupled or better since the market lows in 2003 goes on and on. It's a classic tortoise-and-hare story.

    The hare is flashy and full of energy, but he's also easily distracted and likely to burn out before the finish line.

    The fundamentals investor has to endure market setbacks and protracted periods of boring portfolio performance. Over time, however, the small number of well-informed decisions he makes should bring a superior return.

    The argument that a stock is only worth what the herd will pay for it right now comes from the efficient-market hypothesis. It says you can never do better than what the market offers right now, because the multitude of players know so much that all possible information is already priced in to the stock.

    Nonsense. If markets were efficient, I couldn't make a living. Even with rudimentary fundamental analysis knowledge, you can find undervalued stocks whose hidden sterling qualities have not been priced in yet. Otherwise, no stock or portfolio could ever beat the market indices. But every year, thousands of stocks do better, and at least several hundred fund managers do the same.

    So can you.

Wednesday, March 21, 2007

Say Moo

My Dearest Moo Moo Cow,

If you are interested in some investing discussion, there are two topics of interested posted on Sahamas: Pintaras Jaya and Bandar Raya Developments

Rgds

US Market Wrap

My Dearest Moo Moo Cow,

Just how is my Moo Moo Cow doing? Confused? Unsure? Uneasy? I know, the US Market has rallied for the second straight day.

As reported on CNN market wrap:

  • NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Stocks gained Tuesday, rising for a second straight session as investors welcomed a strong report on housing and the start of the two-day Federal Reserve policy meeting.

    The Dow Jones industrial average (up 61.93 to 12,288.10,
    Charts), the broader S&P 500 (up 8.88 to 1,410.94, Charts) index and the Nasdaq (up 13.80 to 2,408.21, Charts) composite all added between 0.5 percent and 0.6 percent.

    Treasury prices rose, lowering the corresponding yields. The dollar was mixed versus other major currencies. Oil and gold prices ended higher.
    The major gauges have now risen 7 out of the last 9 sessions.

Can't be that bad, can it?

How about some second opinion?

Did you check out Frank Barbera's commentary on FSO: Let the Sunshine In...

Oh, yeah it's highly technical.

  • What a difference a few days can make. Last week, when we penned these commentaries, the S&P was plunging toward a retest of its lows with strong support clearly pegged in the 1360 zone. We wrote at the time that,


    Against this backdrop, a medium term low of some degree should form with prices rising in coming days to establish a “failing” right shoulder high. The momentary relief of a stock market rally says nothing about larger problems, and is the reflex action of crowd psychology gone a few steps ‘too far’ right out of the gate. In the case of the S&P 500, the 20 week or 100 day lower band closed today at a reading of 1360.50, and that area should be major support if tested tomorrow."

    As it happened, the sell off did indeed continue into the next trading session where prices fell to a reading of 1363.98 at which point, they began to reverse sharply higher. Since putting in that important short term low, the stock market has been solidly back in rally mode, with the S&P 500 rising four out of the last five sessions and ending today back above 1400 with a close of 1410.94 (a gain of nearly 50 S&P points since last week's intra-day low). Has our outlook changed? To this point, not one bit. We continue to view this advance with the broad stock market as very likely akin to the ‘eye of the storm,’ wherein the sun can shine brightly for a brief period of time. In our view, the stock market rally now underway should still most likely be viewed as a ‘right shoulder’ rally which would still be targeting prices above 1425 to 1430, and as high as 1450. Thus, for the time being at least, both the US and Global Capital markets have regained their footing. This thesis is also supported by the fact that the Japanese Yen has sold off against the Dollar, representing at least a partial stabilization in the unwinding of the Yen-Carry Trade. With liquidity trends stabilizing, we have also seen a healthy recovery in commodity prices with the Precious Metals stabilizing as seen with Gold back above $650, Silver back above $13.00 and Platinum back above $1200.

    Another question that needs to be addressed, in all fairness, relates to the bullish possibility that what we have just seen is a correction and nothing more, and that in the weeks to come, the rally could continue and make new, even higher 52 week highs. In our view, we will remain from “Missouri” on that one, and insist that if the market is going to re-vitalize a damaged bull trend, it will have to “show us” by pushing into new high ground and staying there for several weeks.

    This is not an impossible outcome, but is less likely given the severity of the recent decline and the fact that it is a high probability that more housing and economic pain lies directly ahead. As a result, the correct approach to the stock market going forward will be one that focuses on relatively short term trends for “traders” and stock/sector selection for more medium term investors. In the final analysis, where stock market “tops” are concerned, prices have not “completed” a top until there is a top visible on the charts, and a top from which prices have broken down. To this point, the farthest on point for this market would be that a top is under construction. True bearishness cannot spring from the wellhead until a top is constructed and prices have actually broken down. In the real McCoy, the actual construction of a top is usually measured in weeks, by a series of rapid fire back and forth swings, with prices ultimately breaking down in violent fashion. For the S&P a ‘would be’ topping formation would need to see a few important elements. First of all, it is important to note that the 100 day moving average (or 20 week MA shown last week) is now flattening out. This is a big change from the strongly advancing moving average seen during Q3 and Q4 2006. With the flattening out of the middle band, we will also see the lower band begin to flatten out in the weeks ahead, and over time, the upper and lower bands will likely begin to “pinch in,” converging toward one another. A powerful top, would ultimately break down (Point A) below the recent lows in the 1360 area, and in the process downside penetrate a declining 100 day lower band. In the world of technical analysis, moving down to a rising lower band, and moving down through a declining lower band are two entirely different animals.



    What was seen last week, while scary, had the protective overlay of a rising 100 day lower band; in other words, support rising underneath the market that could “catch” the market as it fell. In real “bear turns,” this is normally a ‘one off’ event. Put another way, the first crack at this band, prices always hold and usually recover nicely (what we are seeing now). The second crack at the lower band, and the whole edifice begins to topple over with a mess of much larger proportions gets underway.

    At present, we have time to judge and make sense of what will come next, and for now we do not want to pre-judge the stock market too harshly. We remain acutely aware of the fact that in recent years the great credit bubble has ballooned to such epic proportions that, if a real unwinding were allowed to take place at this late date, the consequences would most likely be both a capital market crash and an economic crash of epic proportions. Michael Panzner's “Financial Armageddon” (excellent read) springs to life with a speed of frightening proportions. For the “powers that be,” all bears need to remember that every effort will be made to avoid this unwinding, and to prevent the US Humpty-Dumpty from falling off the proverbial wall. In this sense, if a Fed-engineered “re-inflation” has any real chance, then keeping the stock market buoyant amid the Real Estate/Housing Correction is vital, and with the housing slump accelerating, now would be the right time to start pulling out all the stops where the stock market is concerned. Since not one of us can know what lies ahead, the best we can do is watch closely and try to evaluate where things presently stand.

How my dearest Moo Moo Cow?



Tuesday, March 20, 2007

MIDF

Previously on MIDF: More on MIDF

As expected, here's the reply.

  • We refer to the query from Bursa Malaysia Securities Berhad ("Bursa Securities") dated 19 March 2007 in relation to the above article appearing in The Star (Bizweek, page BW4) on Saturday, 17 March 2007 ("Article").

    We wish to inform that MIDF is not in a position to make any comments as MIDF is not involved in any manner on what has been reported in the Article. At the same time, MIDF has not been advised by its shareholders or any other parties of any corporate exercise in relation to the Article.

    As requested by Bursa Securities, we will make enquiry with Permodalan Nasional Berhad ("PNB") in respect of the above matter and will make the necessary announcement upon receiving a response from PNB.

    This announcement is dated 20 March 2007.

The Four U.

Morgan Stanley's Stephen Roach latest editorial: Unstable, Unbalanced, Uncoordinated, and Unsustainable

Lessons from a mess...

My Dearest Moo Moo Cow,

Take a look at this editorial posted by moneycentral commentator,
Bill Fleckenstein (he writes them Contrarian Chronicles on moneycentral) : Warning: This mess will only get worse




  • Bubbles have a way of masking what would otherwise be self-evident truths. And, as the credit bubble in real estate dies a dramatic, not-pretty death, a very simple truth has resurfaced: It's not a viable business when you lend money to people you know can't pay it back. If the late, "great" subprime sector had a tombstone, that would be a fitting epitaph for New Century Financial and others.

    It's a fact that also eluded those folks who are paid to analyze company fundamentals, i.e., the
    dead-fish community. Regular readers are aware of my long-standing rant on this topic. Primarily, I focus on the species that follows tech stocks. However, those who follow the financial-stock industry are no less clueless. In particular, they appear not to realize that what they're trying to analyze is the unanalyzable, i.e., a black box.

    Who kNEW? Case in point: New Century Financial (
    NEWC, news, msgs). I have spilled plenty of ink on the subprime industry, including this one-time poster boy for lower-tier lending. But as New Century collapsed, most "analysts" continued to like it until the bitter end. Recently, with the stock poised to go under, Piper Jaffray finally decided to cut it to "underperform," on the heels of a UBS downgrade. Not long before that, Bear Stearns had upgraded its opinion of New Century.

    Apparently, dead fish are constantly seduced into buying companies whose fundamentals are clearly deteriorating by two false reference points,
    both of which revolve around the notion of cheapness.

    Sometimes they'll say a stock is cheap because it's "down from" some kind of big price. For instance, they called New Century cheap at $15, since it was down from $50. It closed Friday at $2.34. Obviously, that concept is wrong, but you see it trotted out all the time.

My dearest Moo Moo Cow, leaving the issue of the subprime out, there is a great investing lesson here. The issue of cheapness! See how dangerous it was to consider New Century cheap at $15 just because ot fell from $50? Well what was cheap simply got cheaper. New Century fell to $2.34!!!!

WOW!!

  • The other false reference point is that a stock is cheap because its price-earnings ratio is low. The mistake there: People do not understand the caliber of the fundamentals that drive the E part of the P/E -- the price-to-earnings ratio. New Century appeared cheap, but the business that drove the earnings was not viable. So, it's not enough to look at the obvious numbers and state something is cheap. One must look behind the scenes and see what the business dynamics are in order to determine whether the earnings are, in fact, sustainable.

My dearest Moo Moo Cow. That's another fantastic important lesson to learn. Investing is simply much more than looking at the PE. Remember PE simply does not equate to the quality of the company. It merely states that the stock is selling at a cheap valuation in the market versus its earnings. Wouldn't it make sense to understand why is it happening? What's wrong with the stock?

  • 'Cheap' is more than skin-deep

    Which leads me to the housing stocks. They have been described as cheap because their P/Es look low. When P/Es seem to be reasonable, people feel safe and bottom-calling appears to work, as we saw last fall and during the winter when housing stocks continued to rally on repeated bouts of bad news. However, with the unraveling of the mortgage-finance mechanism, it's hard to see how house sales can do anything but plummet. Therefore, housing stocks really aren't cheap, even though the P/Es recently made them appear that way.

    Now the gaping hole in the side of the mortgage market appears to be impacting the price of housing stocks -- just as it will surely impact home sales in the coming months, causing that vast river of denial running through Wall Street to dry up. And, as it does, people will be able to see that there is a gaping hole in the economy, because there's nothing to fill the gap left by an implosion in the housing market.

    Tech: Tethered to the economy But for now, bulls cling to the illusion of safety in the tech sector -- which is why those stocks held up pretty well last week, even as everything related to housing and finance was hit. It's almost comical the way they try to hide in semiconductor-equipment stocks, as though they are T-bills with upside, unconnected to the economy.

    That's where we are today. The housing market is on the verge of tanking, ditto the economy, but the dead-fish community and bulls at large -- of which there are very many -- are still trying to proclaim that the stock market is at bottom. Just as they did with housing stocks -- until ignoring the obvious stopped working.

How now, my Moo Moo Cow?

Price Versus Value

My Dearest Moo Moo Cow,

One of article that I have truly enjoyed most is the following piece....



Price vs Value

There is this wonderful article written in Dec 2003 by
Shih Wing Ching called Price versus Value.

  • Price is Superficial, Value is Real. Put it simply, price is superficial while value is something real. Price is a product of trading but value still exist without trading.
  • For example, water is a highly valued substance. Its physical nature and chemical property determine that it is a necessity of life. But water has a low price as it is easy to find. However, water is very rare in deserts. When someone is in lack of water to keep him alive, he will be willing to pay the greatest price in exchange for the inner property of water and that is the value of water. From this we can see that value is intrinsic and constant, while a price is based on the relationship between supply and demand.
  • In stock markets, the quality of a company, which reflects its value, changes very slowly, but the trading price of its stock moves every day. It is because people have different projections on a company's quality and the number of interested buyers vary every day, thus causing a change in supply and demand and that prices can float freely without being bound by value.
What's that famous sport saying?

Oh yeah....

Form is temporary but class is permanent. :s18: :s18: :s25: :s18: :s18:

In the share market, the traded share price dictates the value of a company based on the supply and demand of the stock. But as we all know, this traded share price represents the temporary form. The class or the quality is what's known as of permanent value. :s18:

  • Buy Value, Sell Price. Generally speaking, a price always moves around value and goes up and down.
  • For most of the time, a price is either too low or too high and it moves from one extreme to another, i.e. it moves from seriously too high to seriously too low.For example, property prices were seriously too high in 1997 but they were extremely too low in August 2003, and afterwards, they will gradually become more rational and then become seriously too high. Investors should buy when the price is below the value and sell when the price is above the value.
  • To buy or not mainly depends on value. Investors should consider if it is worth it to buy and they should not count every nickel and dime, worrying at what price the seller bought it at and how much he has earned from the trade. When selling, investors should consider if the price is too high and whether it has sufficiently reflected its potential value.
  • Most shareholders only watch the movement of stocks but forget to understand the value quality of a company. To understand the quality of a company, the first step is to look at its financial conditions such as the levels of assets, liabilities and cash. Moreover, we have to look at its business competitiveness in the market, its competitors and its earnings outlook. More importantly, we have to look at the vision, ability and integrity of the management. If a company treats its shareholders badly, it is better not to touch its shares.
Buy the Value, sell the Price!

Well said. I like the last paragraph the most. Let me repeat again...

Most shareholders only watch the movement of stocks but forget to understand the value quality of a company.


  1. To understand the quality of a company, the first step is to look at its financial conditions such as the levels of assets, liabilities and cash.
  2. Moreover, we have to look at its business competitiveness in the market, its competitors and its earnings outlook.
  3. More importantly, we have to look at the vision, ability and integrity of the management.
  4. If a company treats its shareholders badly, it is better not to touch its shares.
Don't forget point 3 and point 4!

Another way to describe the integrity is 'What is the value a crooked company?'

:s18: :s18: :s25: :s18: :s18:

Wait don't go away yet. The last part of the article is even better!

  • Theory Correct, Practice Difficult. Buffet is an all-time winner with such investment strategies but it is not easy to put those strategies into practice. The value which we refer to here is not as simple as the net asset value of a stock. There are lots of components which are difficult to quantify. For example, to measure the management's vision, ability and integrity is difficult enough, how can we know its value has not been reflected in its share price? Moreover, companies are not in a static state and the external environment is always changing. A company can be competitive today but can it maintain its competitiveness tomorrow? God knows. So, it needs extremely high level of wisdom to judge how valuable a company is. Without the wisdom similar to Buffet's, it is not easy to follow his strategies to earn money. I have seen quite a lot of funds which boast that they use the same investment strategies. Their performance is not outstanding but just moves in tandem with the broader market. To small shareholders, it is even harder to put this theory into practice. Unless they have at least billions of funds in hand, it is impossible for them to meet with a company's management as easily as the fund managers or analysts can. Without access to know more about a company, it is difficult for small shareholders to tell the real value of a company. They cannot have full confidence in their judgment.
The highlights in red and more important the highlights in blue are soooooo important!

And last but not least, this paragraph is worth remembering!

  • Under this circumstance, Buffet said he will be prepared to hold the stock for a longer term in order to wait for the right time. The problem is that the environment is changing night and day and a company's competitiveness varies according to the environment. Some companies may be worth investing but their investment value may disappear before being picked by shareholders. The situation is like the concubines of an emperor in ancient China, they might have already lost their beauty before getting the emperor's appreciation. ( :s54::s49: :s54:)
The issue of the environment changing night and day and that a company's competitiveness varies according to the environment is such an important issue for those who wants to buy and hold a stock long term.

When the company's competitiveness advantage is not strong and durable, what are the chances of success if one buys and holds the company's stock?

Which is why the ROI (review of investment is so important). One cannot simply buy a stock and hold it forever and ever, till death do us part, hoping that the stock will one day give a very generous return.

It just does not work this way. The change in the environment could cause a good stock turn bad for many years. And if the management is not able, this could turn into a permanent disaster!

So are all stocks for the long run? This is such a fallacy! It just does not work this way. One cannot simply buy any stock and hold it long term and ASS-U-ME (die do i have to pay copyright for this little tiny word? :s25:) that they will guaranteed success!


Saturday, March 17, 2007

More on MIDF

My dearest Moo Moo Cow,

Your last updated posting on MIDF:
Update on MIDF



  • Previously: MIDF: Another Speculation

    Today MIDF replied to the querry:



    • We refer to the query from Bursa Malaysia Securities Berhad ("Bursa Securities") dated 13 March 2007 in relation to the above article appearing in The New Straits Times (Business Times, page 40) on Tuesday, 13 March 2007 ("Article").

      We wish to inform that MIDF is not in a position to make any comments as
      MIDF is not involved in any manner on what has been reported in the Article. We also wish to inform that MIDF has not been advised by its shareholders or any other parties of any corporate exercise in relation to the Article.

      As requested by Bursa Securities, we will make enquiry with Permodalan Nasional Berhad ("PNB") in respect of the above matter and will make the necessary announcement upon receiving a response from PNB.

      This announcement is dated 14 March 2007.

    How????

Well, my dearest Moo Moo Cow, I am not sure if you realise that there's another article on MIDF. Yes, I wonder what's really happening here? Why is our financial news so keen on selling the idea of parties being interested in buying MIDF? Why?

I have no idea, my dearest Moo Moo Cow but do have a read. The bold green italics are stuff I do not understand.

  • KFH in talks to buy MIDF stake?
    Saturday March 17, 2007

    KFH in talks to buy MIDF stake?

    By JOSE BARROCK

    KUWAIT Finance House (KFH) is believed to have commenced base-level negotiations with state-controlled Permodalan Nasional Bhd (PNB) on the possibility of KFH taking equity in investment banking outfit Malaysian Industrial Development Finance Bhd (MIDF), people familiar with the matter tell BizWeek. (which people? This is exactly like sources, no? )

    PNB is MIDF's largest shareholder. It has a direct 20.3% stake, while Amanah Saham Bumiputra, a unit trust fund it manages, owns 49.2%.

    At press time, it is not clear how much KFH may fork out as the negotiations are still at an infancy stage, with details on pricing hard to come by. It is likely that the deal may only take place after MIDF has been taken private. (now, my dearest Moo Moo Cow, if they are NOT CLEAR, how can they run this story? - err.. "macam-macam boleh" (translated: anyhow also can) issit?)

    There were news reports last week stating that PNB was considering the privatisation of MIDF at RM2 a share. This would mean PNB spending about RM600mil to undertake the exercise. (wasn't the story denied? why are they still continuing on it? why?)

    When queried by Bursa Malaysia on the reports, MIDF said it was not in any position to comment, and it had not been advised on any such dealings by its shareholders. ( see? )

    Industry sources say PNB may sell some shares in MIDF once the privatisation exercise is concluded and rope in KFH as a shareholder. (ahh.. finally! here comes the Source!)

    This move to acquire a stake in MIDF marks the second attempt by the Middle East-based banking group to strengthen its footing in the domestic banking sector, something KFH has been looking at since last year.

    The first try was via a plan to acquire equity in Rashid Hussain Bhd and its unit, RHB Capital Bhd (which controls RHB Bank Bhd). However, the Employees Provident Fund has won the bidding contest.

    To date, KFH has set up several branches offering Islamic banking facilities, but organic growth may be too slow a method for the bank to make an actual impact.

    “The possibilities are aplenty between the two (PNB and KFH). MIDF is actually a decent company, but it has largely been overlooked. MIDF has its core business in investment banking, asset management, and also development financing,” says an industry source. ( Look who's talking? An industry source! Oh, less we forget, it's just possibilites!)

    “It is possible that KFH may team up with MIDF and even initiate Islamic investment banking activities. PNB, after all already has a commercial bank, Maybank (Malayan Banking Bhd), and a merchant banker in Aseambankers (Bhd). So there are a number of possibilities with MIDF, which will also avoid duplication of facilities being offered.”

    For the financial year ended December 2006, MIDF posted a net profit of RM122.8mil on the back of RM557.6mil in sales. The company’s net profit surged by more than 100% from 2005, largely due to the sale of an associate company for RM43.6mil and the surrendering of two discount house licences for RM70mil.

How my dearest Moo Moo Cow?



And what about Jim Rogers Views?

My dearest Moo Moo Cow,

Found a news article posted on reuters which I believe you would be very much interested in.

Top investor sees U.S. property crash

  • MOSCOW (Reuters) - Commodities investment guru Jim Rogers stepped into the U.S. subprime fray on Wednesday, predicting a real estate crash that would trigger defaults and spread contagion to emerging markets.

    "You can't believe how bad it's going to get before it gets any better," the prominent U.S. fund manager told Reuters by telephone from New York.

    "It's going to be a disaster for many people who don't have a clue about what happens when a real estate bubble pops.

    "It is going to be a huge mess," said Rogers, who has put his $15 million belle epoque mansion on Manhattan's Upper West Side on the market and is planning to move to Asia.

    Worries about losses in the U.S. mortgage market have sent stock prices falling in Asia and Europe, with shares in financial services companies falling the most.

    Some investors fear the problems of lenders who make subprime loans to people with weak credit histories are spreading to mainstream financial firms and will worsen the U.S. housing slowdown.

    "Real estate prices will go down 40-50 percent in bubble areas. There will be massive defaults. This time it'll be worse because we haven't had this kind of speculative buying in U.S. history," Rogers said.

    "When markets turn from bubble to reality, a lot of people get burned."

    The fund manager, who co-founded the Quantum Fund with billionaire investor George Soros in the 1970s and has focused on commodities since 1998, said the crisis would spread to emerging markets which he said now faced a prolonged bear run.

    "When you have a financial crisis, it reverberates in other financial markets, especially in those with speculative excess," he said.

    "Right now, there is huge speculative excess in emerging markets around the world. There will be a lot of money coming out of emerging markets.

    "I've sold out of emerging markets except for China," said Rogers, long a prominent China bull.

    Even in China, the world's fastest expanding economy,
    Rogers said stocks were overvalued and could go down 30-40 percent.

    But he added:
    "China is one of the few countries in the world where I'm willing to sit out a 30-40 percent decline."

    The last stock market bubble to burst was the dot-com craze which sparked a crash from March 2000 to October 2002.

    When the last bubble burst in Japan, said Rogers, stock prices went down 85 percent despite the country's high savings rate and huge balance of payment surplus.

    "This is the end of the liquidity party," said Rogers.
    "Some emerging markets will go down 80 percent, some will go down 50 percent. Some will most probably collapse."


Look Out the Window, Moo!

My Dearest Moo Moo Cow,

In today's FSO market wrap, market commentator, Brian Pretti, has made an excellent post called Looking Out the Window

Listen to what he's trying to say..




  • Many moons ago in what seems a lifetime far, far away, Barton Biggs was not running a hedge fund, but rather found himself penning weekly strategy commentaries at Morgan Stanley. I was pretty much a religious devotee in terms of checking in on what Barton had to say about life at the time. I can distinctly remember a particular piece written before the equity peak early this decade he titled, “Looking Out The Window.” The gist of the article was that Barton felt investment professionals of the era spent far too little time simply looking out the window and thinking. From my perspective, he was conceptually right on the money. But little did Barton know at the time, the world of instantaneous 24/7 information flow was about to accelerate in a very big way. In today’s world, who has time to look out the window when their eyes are glued to the screen?

    In the spirit of the “Looking Out The Window” commentary written by Barton, and in light of the events we’ve lived through in the financial markets over the last few weeks, I thought I’d spend some of my own time simply looking out the window and reflecting on what financial market messages of the moment may be suggesting to us. Personally, I’m as guilty as anyone in terms of following the day-to-day information overload flashing on the screen in colors my mind now reacts to virtually unconsciously. Filtering out white noise in this information miasma world of the moment has become one of my most important daily activities. And as crazy, or overly simplistic as this may sound, in looking out the window I try to force myself to distill recent market events into one or two macro ideas. What’s the big message here? How are recent market events interconnected? Do I have enough individual pieces of the puzzle to allow me to step back and see a larger picture perhaps unseen by those following every price tick in red and green?

Think my dearest Moo Moo Cow. What's the big message here? The subprime mortagage has taken centerstage in light of the decline (some would call it the burst of US housing bubble, my Moo Moo Cow) of the US housing market.

And what about the impact of this subprime woes?

Now that's an issue that needs consideration, yes?

First Mr. Pretti asks the assumption that global liquidity will be plentiful. Would this last?

  • At least in my mind, two key points of financial market consensus thinking for some time have been that global liquidity/credit is and will continue to be plentiful. Additionally, I believe the thought that the Fed and their global central banking friends stand ready and willing to put out any and all financial market forest fires at a moment’s notice has driven the pricing of financial risk, or really lack thereof, in many an asset class (conceptually toward zero in many cases). First, it’s been such a good while now since we’ve run into any macro financial market speed bumps, if you will, that credit spreads in the world of fixed income a number of weeks back stood at levels most investment professionals probably thought they would never see in their careers. Of course these wildly tight intermarket spreads have been explained away in the headlines by the force of the carry trade, the magnitude of the global savings glut, the layering of risk and leverage in the hedge world, etc. As you know, Wall Street always has a rationale for what has already happened, but they often come up a bit short in seeing what’s to come. The following is simply an example of tightness in credit spreads up to this point. And without showing you decades of this relationship, you’re going to have to trust me that reversion to the mean and cycles of spread widening and contracting are virtual guarantees in the credit markets.



    At least for now, the events in the world of sub prime paper have turned a bit of this complacent consensus thinking on its proverbial head. Credit spreads in sub prime have blown out, and many a sub prime lender has simply been blown away in the winds of credit market repricing. This has happened fast. Moreover, as I see it, when looking at the pyramid that is mortgage financing in this country, we’ve just stripped away the entire bottom layer of the credit pyramid. So what happens to the real world of nominal dollar housing sales when your marginal buyer has now been shut out of the game? Can pricing really hold up in thin air above the now non-existent bottom level of the mortgage credit structure? The mortgage credit food chain of recent years just lost its most important marginal driver. And as always, change at the margin can be incredibly powerful in terms of ultimate trend change.

    That’s in the real world of housing prices. What about the world of trading paper promises backed by these very same real world houses called collateral? As you most likely know, intermarket credit spread widening has not been contained to sub prime residential mortgage paper at all. Alt-A mortgage paper and high yield bond spreads have also widened. We are seeing actual repricing of risk, but looking ahead the most important question is ultimate magnitude of this repricing as it directly bears on the character of the credit market. A credit market that has underpinned the economy. I think it’s very important to realize that many of the holders of this now deteriorating in credit spread paper are levered investment players. So the question isn’t solely how mortgage backed, asset backed, high yield, etc. paper will act as “investments” in the marketplace ahead, but rather how the levered holders of this paper will react in terms of human decision-making. My own observation is that levered holders of a deteriorating asset spend very little time looking out the window and thinking. Know what I mean? What’s the upshot of all of this? Quite simply we find ourselves in a credit contraction driven by the repricing of risk in credit markets by levered holders of sub prime and other high yielding paper. And quite importantly, we are now in the process of testing how leverage will respond to changing market conditions and financial asset prices. Isn’t this exactly what has started? It sure looks this way to me when I’m looking out the window.

How? And what equities?

  • As you know, I’ve really been focusing on the credit markets up to this point. And it’s really no wonder as they are ground zero for the current credit cycle that has been so supportive to both our financial markets and real economy, especially this decade. So what about equities? Are they weighing in on what may be this very important change in macro financial asset risk based repricing? Again, in looking out the window and taking the time to think about longer-term views of life, I believe the answer is definitively yes. Although the coincidental drop in equity markets a few weeks back was blamed on Chinese officials, Greenspan mentioning the word recession, and the BOJ raising short term interest rates a wildly monumental quarter point, these short term rationales may all be noise. I firmly believe what the equity markets may also be seeing is this forward potential for a repricing of risk in many financial asset classes of the moment. A few pictures that, at least to me, paint a story.

Are they weighing in on what may be this very important change in macro financial asset risk based repricing?

How my dearest Moo Moo Cow? Do read the entire article...

Cheers!

Friday, March 16, 2007

More Dr. Faber stuff!!!

My Dearest Moo Moo Cow,

It would appear to me that you are in awe of the write-ups from Dr. Marc Faber. I have here a piece of article written by Dr. Marc Faber.


Enjoy my dearest Moo Moo Cow!

When Too Many Investors Think Alike, Nobody is Thinking!

by Marc Faber.

  • “As a general rule, it is foolish to do just what other people are doing,
    because there are almost sure to be too many people doing the same thing.”

    William Stanley Jevons
    (1835–1882)

INTRODUCTION

A friend of mine, Marcel Tjia, whose father was the founder of Indonesia’s PT Astra Group and who had the misfortune to work for me when I ran Drexel Burnham Lambert’s Hong Kong office in the 1980s, sent me the following tale:

  • It was autumn, and the Red Indians on the remote reservation asked their new chief if the winter was going to be cold or mild. Since he was a Red Indian chief in a modern society, he couldn’t tell what the weather was going to be. Nevertheless, to be on the safe side, he told his tribe that the winter was indeed going to be cold and that the members of the village should collect wood to be prepared.

    But, being a practical leader, after several days he got an idea. He went to the phone booth, called the National Weather Service and asked, “Is the coming winter going to be cold?”

    “It looks like this winter is going to be quite cold indeed,” the meteorologist at the weather service responded.

    So the chief went back to his people and told them to collect even more wood.

    A week later, he called the National Weather Service again.

    “Is it going to be a very cold winter?”

    “Yes,” the man at the National Weather Service again replied, “It’s definitely going to be a very cold winter.”

    The chief again went back to his people and ordered them to collect every scrap of wood they could find.

    Two weeks later, he called the National Weather Service again.

    “Are you absolutely sure that the winter is going to be very cold?”

    “Absolutely,” the man replied.

    “It’s going to be one of the coldest winters ever.”

    “How can you be so sure?” the chief asked.

    The weatherman replied, “The Red Indians are collecting wood like crazy.”

Now, this tale may seem to be irrelevant to today’s investment environment. However, when I continually hear and read about “excess liquidity”, “sustainable record corporate profits”, “new highs”, “Goldilocks economy”, and that “central bankers today are smarter than in the past”, I wonder whether the 19th-century economist John Ramsay McCulloch wasn’t on to something when he wrote: “In speculation, as in most other things, one individual derives confidence from another. Such a one purchases or sells, not because he has had any really accurate information as to the state of demand and supply, but because someone else has done so before him” (J. R. McCulloch, Principles of Political Economy, 2nd ed., London, 1830).

What McCulloch omitted to add is that speculators not only buy assets because someone else has done so in the past, but because they expect that in the future someone else will enter the market and purchase the asset from them at an even higher price, since “excessive liquidity” will surely push asset prices higher.

This is certainly the view of Stanley Gibbons (Guernsey) Ltd, one of the world’s largest stamp dealers, who recently sent me an email offering guaranteed return contracts on a basket of rarities stamps. According to Adrian Roose, a director of Stanley Gibbons, “The actual returns which will be achieved are expected to exceed the minimum returns based on the quality and rarity of items included within investment contracts and backed up by a 50 year history of long term price appreciation in the rare stamp market averaging 9.5% per annum.” (The returns, in British pounds, on the guaranteed contracts offered by Stanley Gibbons vary according to the duration of the contact as follows: 4% per annum for four years, 5% per annum for five years, and 6% per annum for ten years.)

According to Stanley Gibbons, the 35-year history (decimal) of the Great Britain Rarities Index shows that stamps within the index haven’t dropped in value in any five-year period. “This highlights the long term stability of the rare stamp market, underpinned by many millions of stamp collectors worldwide.” The GB Rarities 30 (Rare Stamp Index) has increased as follows: 1970–1975: 83.2%, 1975–1980: 593%, 1980–1985: 10.3%, 1985–1990: 8.6%, 1990–1995: 5.3%, 1995–2000: 29.4%, and 2000–2005: 70.4%, which works out to an average annual increase of 10.6%. (All Stanley Gibbons’ portfolios are offered with free insurance and storage — with a proof of ownership certificate, free annual valuation, and no further management fees.)

My readers shouldn’t assume that I have mentioned stamp guaranteed return contracts as an investment because I will receive a commission from Stanley Gibbons for any clients I introduce to them, or because I recommend stamps as an investment. I haven’t invested in stamps and don’t intend to do so. However, I do admit that I inherited boxes filled with stamps from my grandparents, who owned a hotel and, therefore, received mail from all over the world. The stamps were diligently cut from the envelopes and put aside, and for a while when I was a child I put them in albums. Unlike my superb electric train, which I stupidly sold in the mid- 1960s in order to buy a flashy secondhand Italian Motobi motorcycle, whose life expired shortly thereafter, I held on to the stamps, which are stored in my 91-year-old mother’s attic.

The reason I have mentioned stamps as an investment is because they show clearly the depreciating value and erosion in the purchasing power of paper money over the last 50 years or so. Moreover, not since I started out in the glorious business of investments in 1970 have I seen so much conviction among investors that all asset prices will continue to increase in value based on “excessive liquidity” and “money printing”.

Let me explain: to date, I have experienced four investment manias of epic proportions. By “epic proportions” I mean investment bubbles that, when they burst, caused serious economic pains to either an important sector of the economy, a whole country or an entire region. Those four investment manias were the parabolic increase, between 1970 and 1980, in the prices of precious metals, oil, mining and energy-related equities, as well as the Kuwaiti stock market, whose market capitalisation in 1980 exceeded that of Germany.

The second “big” investment mania surrounded Japanese equities and real estate, and Taiwanese equities, in the late 1980s. It culminated in Japanese stocks commanding a larger market value than the combined values of the US, British, and German stock markets. At the same time, the trading volume in Taiwan frequently exceeded the daily turnover on the New York Stock Exchange! Then, in the 1990s, we had several rolling investment manias in the emerging markets, which ended with the devastating Asian crisis of 1997, and the Russian crisis and LTCM in 1998. In the fourth and last great investment mania, the object of speculation was the TMT sector on a worldwide scale and we all know very well how that ended.

These four “epic” investment manias — I have omitted mini manias such as the US casino stock boom in 1978 ahead of the opening of the Atlantic City casinos; the 1978–1980 Philippine oil frenzy, which collapsed when no meaningful oil deposits were discovered; the 1983 personal computer mania (remember Commodore, Wang, Televideo, and Atari?); the 1986–1987 US stock market and leveraged buyout (LBO) boom; the 1993–1994 Mexican investment euphoria; and the 1996–1997 Hong Kong property market surge — all had one common feature: they were concentrated in just one or very few sectors of the economic or investment universe and were accompanied by a poor performance in some other asset classes.

CHRONOLOGY OF MAJOR INVESTMENT MANIAS IN RECENT TIMES

The 1970–1980 Precious Metals Boom

Best-performing assets: Silver, gold, oil, and platinum. Energy-related shares and mining companies, the Kuwaiti stock market, and Japanese equities (the Nikkei rose from 1,900 in 1970 to 8,000 in 1981, while the Yen strengthened from US$1 = ¥369 in 1969 to US$1 = ¥177 in 1978.

Worst-performing assets: Bonds and the US dollar against hard European currencies and bonds. Bonds performed much worse than anyone could have imagined in the early 1960s, when bond yields never exceeded 6%, but subsequently rose to more than 15%. What may be relevant to the current environment is that, with the exception of a brief period in 1970, bond yields in the US were consistently lower than nominal GDP.

Characteristics of the period: Very high volatility in stock prices and sector rotation within the commodities bull market. (This is the reason I describe the 1970s as a precious metals boom rather than as a commodities boom.) Sugar, wheat, corn, and soybeans peaked out in 1973 and coffee and cocoa in 1977. Precious metals and oil topped out in 1980, but the CRB had already made its inflation-adjusted high in 1974.

A homebuilding, REIT, and shipping investment frenzy from 1971 to 1973 collapsed in 1974. Moreover, the leaders of the late sixties (conglomerates, electronics, and growth stocks in a variety of industries) and the nifty fifties (stocks such as Polaroid, Xerox, Avon Products, Burroughs, Digital Equipment, Mohawk Data, etc), which performed superbly from the1970 low up to 1973, didn’t do well for the rest of the decade as the leadership had shifted to energy and mining stocks.

Consumer price inflation accelerated largely due to easy monetary policies, which kept interest rates below the rate of inflation and below nominal GDP growth.

Consensus at the end of the 1970s: Oil and precious metal prices will continue to rise, consumer price inflation will accelerate, the dollar will become worthless, and bonds are certificates of confiscation. Kuwaiti stocks will never decline because there is so much liquidity about!

The 1980–1990 Japanese Asset Boom

I realise that one could use as a starting point for the Japanese asset boom the early 1950s, and certainly 1970 since Japanese equities quadrupled between 1970 and 1981. But because I am focusing here on epic investment booms I personally experienced, and also because there were no symptoms of a mania in Japanese equities in the 1970s, I use the early 1980s as a starting point.

Best-performing assets: Taiwanese, Japanese, and Korean stocks; Japanese and Taiwanese real estate.

Worst-performing assets: Middle Eastern and Latin American stock markets (following the 1981 Petrodollar crisis), commodities, Texas banks, oil servicing and mining companies.

Characteristics of the period: Stocks and bonds around the world soared and vastly exceeded the expectations investors had in the late 1970s and early 1980s regarding their future performance. Also, whereas the Dow Jones and the Nikkei had already performed well between 1982 and 1985, most Asian stock markets — such as those of Korea, Taiwan, the Philippines, and Thailand — took off only after 1984–1985. (The increase in Japanese asset prices created a positive domino effect around the region.) The inflation scare of the late 1970s only dissipated very slowly. Bond prices tumbled in 1983–1984 and in 1986–1987. US bond yields were consistently higher than nominal GDP.

Equities underwent a serious correction in 1983–1984 and in 1987. And whereas by the end of the decade US and European equities had failed to exceed their 1987 highs — or did so only marginally — Japanese, Taiwanese, and Korean stocks continued to soar. From its 1987 high at 26,600, the Nikkei rose to 39,000 at the end of 1989. The Taiwanese stock market rose from around 500 in 1985 to 4,700 in 1987, dropped by 50% to 2,300 in the 1987 crash, and then soared — with another almost 50% correction occurring in 1988 — to 12, 500 in early 1990.

In the US, LBO became a buzzword and the decade ended with the demise of Drexel Burnham Lambert (February 1990) and the S&L crisis. In Japan, Zaitech and Tokkin funds became buzzwords.

Consumer price increases decelerated (disinflation) and the US dollar remained very strong between 1980 and 1985. The US dollar doubled against the Deutsche Mark during that period. Thereafter, it resumed its downtrend and declined by more than 50% between 1985 and 1987. As was the case in the 1970s, volatility in bonds, equities, commodities, and currencies was extremely high.

Consensus at the end of the 1980s: Forget about investing in US equities, as Asia will continue to outperform. Japanese banks, insurance companies, and brokers will own all the world’s financial institutions by the end of the 1990s. Japanese and Taiwanese stocks will never decline because there is “so much liquidity around” and because “the government will support prices”. Japanese real estate prices cannot decline because there is a shortage of land. However, in the unlikely case that Japanese asset prices were to decline and lead to a recession in Japan, the few pundits who were then bearish about Japan expected the global economy and financial markets to suffer badly.

The 1990–1998 Emerging Markets Mania

Best-performing assets: Latin American markets between 1989 and 1994, selected Asian stock markets until 1994, Hong Kong real estate and property stocks until 1997, and Russia until 1998. Japanese bonds (until 2003).

Worst-performing assets: Japanese and Taiwanese equities and properties, commodities, and mining and metal stocks.

Characteristics of the period: Investors by and large failed to recognise that US equities would significantly outperform emerging markets and Japanese equities in the 1990s (see also below). The Latin American equity boom between 1989 and 1994 came to an end with the Tequila crisis. (The Brazil Fund rose from $6 in 1990 to $34 in 1994.) Thereafter, the Latin American and Mexican stock markets failed to make new highs in the 1990s.

And whereas, in Asia, Japanese stocks plunged from 39,000 in late 1989 to 14,000 in 1992 and thereafter traded in the 1990s between approximately 13,000 and 22,000, and Taiwan experienced a historic crash from 12,500 in early 1990 to 2,500 at the end of the year, other Asian markets (Malaysia, Singapore, and Thailand) reached new highs in 1994 and Hong Kong in 1997. (Hong Kong even made a new high in 2000 despite the 1997–1998 Asian crisis.)

Between 1994 and 1997, Asian stocks traded in a wide trading range amidst very positive sentiment among especially international investors. The Asian crisis came out of the blue and long after economic fundamentals had begun to deteriorate. (Most Asian countries had already gone from current account surpluses to deficits in 1990–1991, and vast overbuilding was already evident in 1994.) In US dollar terms, most markets declined during the crisis by between 70% and 90%.

The Russian Trading System Index calculated in US dollars (RTSI$ index) increased from 69 in 1995 to 571 in 1997 and fell during the 1998 Russian crisis to 38. (Currently, the RTSI$ is at 1900.) The 1990s were an extremely volatile and difficult period for emerging economies and their financial markets (equities, bonds, and currencies).

Consensus before the Asian crisis in 1997: A Latin American crisis such as occurred in 1994 (the Tequila crisis) is out of the question in Asia, because whereas Latin American equity markets had been boosted in the early 1990s by volatile foreign portfolio flows, Asia’s current account deficits were offset by strong and more consistent foreign direct investment flows! The already strong performance of US technology stocks in the early 1990s went largely unnoticed, whereas each time the Japanese market rallied investors believed that a new bull market had begun. Buzzword before the Asian crisis: “Foreign investors are buying!”

The 1990–2000 High-tech Boom

Best-performing assets: High-tech, media, and telecommunication stocks on a worldwide scale.

Worst-performing assets: Emerging markets and Japanese stocks (see also above), oil (until late 1998), gold, industrial commodities, metal and mining stocks, and “old economy” companies in general.

Characteristics of the period: Although it is common to put the high-tech mania in the 1995–2000 time frame, I use 1990 as a starting point. Above, I explained that we had a personal computer boom in 1982– 1983. Thereafter, US high-tech companies, with very few exceptions (Microsoft was one), performed miserably until 1990. In 1990, stocks such as Texas Instruments, Micron Technology, and Intel were selling for less than half their 1983–1984 highs. But between 1990 and 1995, Microsoft and Intel rose 10-fold, Micron Technology 60-fold, Texas Instruments 6-fold, and newly listed Cisco and Dell 50-fold and 15-fold, respectively.

The strong performance of high-tech stocks and the US stock market in the early 1990s went largely unnoticed by the investment community. After 1995, the high-tech mania took off in earnest, whereby newly listed companies such as Yahoo! (listed in 1996) and Amazon.com (listed in 1997) performed significantly better than more established high-tech companies such as Motorola, Texas Instruments, and Micron. Between 1996 and 2000, Yahoo! rose 200-fold, and Amazon.com rose 70-fold between 1997 and 2000, whereas between 1995 and 2000 Cisco soared 15-fold, Microsoft and Texas Instruments rose 8-fold, and Micron rose by just 112%. The bull market in high-tech companies was interrupted by minor corrections in 1995–1996 and in 1997, and by a severe correction in the fall of 1998. In 2000, mergers and acquisitions in the US hit an all-time record as a percentage of GDP, which hasn’t yet been broken.

The 1990s also saw in the US the proliferation of investment clubs, and the most popular books were about how novice investors such as the Beardstown Ladies could make a fortune in the stock market. Main Street Beats Wall Street described “how the top investment clubs are outperforming the top investment pros”.

In the meantime, mining and metal shares were hardly higher than in 1990 (Newmont Mining was down 67% from its 1990 high), although the US stock market had risen almost five times between 1990 and its 2000 peak.

The 1990s were also characterized by four major bailout and credit easing operations by the US Fed and the US Treasury: massive easing in 1990–1991 to bail out the S&L industry, in 1994–1995 in order to save Mexico, after the LTCM and Russian debacle in 1998 to bail out the financial system, and ahead of Y2K because of unfounded concerns that the new millennium would disrupt computer systems.

Consensus in early 2000: “New economy” stocks will continue to flourish, “old economy” stocks and commodities are out forever, the 21st century will be the century of the US, and “gold only goes down”. Fascinated with high-tech stocks, investors neglected to notice the extreme undervaluation of emerging stock markets and commodities.

COMMON FEATURES OF PREVIOUS EPIC INVESTMENT MANIAS AND DIFFERENCES TO THE CURRENT INVESTMENT ENVIRONMENT

I realise that documenting the chronology of previous investment booms is boring. It is nevertheless necessary to recognise the differences between previous investment booms and today’s unique investment environment.

As mentioned in my introduction, the feature most common to the previous investment booms was that a bull market in one asset class was accompanied by a bear market in another important asset class. Precious metals soared in the 1970s, but bonds collapsed. Equities and bonds rose in the 1980s, but commodities tumbled. In the 1990s, we had rolling bubbles in the emerging markets, but Japanese and Taiwanese equities were in bear markets while commodities continued to perform poorly.

Finally, the last phase of the global high-tech mania (1995–2000) was accompanied by a collapse of the Asian stock markets and Russia, as well as a continuation of the Japanese and commodities bear markets. By the late 1990s, most emerging markets (certainly in Asia) were far lower than they had been between 1990 and 1994. In the 1990s, emerging markets grossly underperformed the US stock market.

Currently, looking at the five most important asset classes — real estate, equities, bonds, commodities, and art (including collectibles) — I am not aware of any asset class that has declined in value since 2002! Admittedly, some assets have performed better than others, but in general every sort of asset has risen in price, and this is true everywhere in the world.

In the early phases of all previous investment booms, investors failed to recognise that the “rules of the game” had changed and continued to play the asset class that had been the leader in the previous investment mania. In the 1980s, every increase in gold and silver prices was perceived to be the beginning of a new bull market in precious metals (after silver prices collapsed in January 1980, prices doubled three times between 1980 and 1990 — all within a downtrend), while investors maintained a very sceptical view of bonds. In the early 1990s, investors failed to recognise the emergence of a high-tech sector uptrend, although, as explained above, high-tech stocks were already performing extremely well between 1990 and 1995. Global investors continued to believe in the merits of Asian stocks right to the end and actually stepped up their buying in early 1997!

Similarly, in the current asset inflation, investors have continued to focus on the high-tech bull market and have largely missed out on the huge increase in price of commodities, and of Indian, Latin American, and Russian equities.

At the end of each investment mania, investors believed in some sort of “excess liquidity” that would drive the object of the speculation forever higher. At the end of the 1970s, the “excess liquidity” related to the OPEC surpluses; at the end of the Japanese stock and real estate bull markets, “excess liquidity” centred around the enormous Japanese current account surpluses; during the 1990s emerging markets mania, “excess liquidity” was perceived to come from foreign buying and the Yen carry trade; and at the end of the high-tech boom the investment community believed that “excess liquidity” would come from record mergers and acquisitions, a reallocation of funds from bonds to equities, and easy monetary policies by the Fed (a belief that was fostered by the Mexican and LTCM bailouts and money printing ahead of Y2K).

But as Albert Edwards so eloquently explained in a recent scathing report entitled “Lies, rhubarb, poppycock, bilge, utter nonsense, caravans and liquidity” (see Dresdner Kleinwort Global Strategy Report, January 16, 2007), “liquidity is the hocus pocus of the investment world. It means totally different things to different people but is often cited as being a major driver for buoyant markets”.

Most presciently, Edwards explains that with respect to investment manias, “when markets are rallying but seem expensive, when new issues fly out of the door and when fundamental analysis often appears to fail to explain events, the safe haven for the market commentator is often to rely on the explanation that there is lots of liquidity” (see also below). I urge our readers never to forget these words!

What is peculiar to the current investment environment is that liquidity is supposed to come from not just one or two sources, but from everywhere! From OPEC surpluses, from the US Fed and other central banks, from the Asian current account surpluses (excess savings), from the Yen and Swiss Franc carry trade, from the large size of money market funds and bank deposits, from rising asset prices, leverage, and a tidal wave of private equity funds, and from artificially low interest rates. It’s no wonder that, given such beliefs, asset markets are all flying to the moon!

In all the previous investment booms we discussed, the bull market was interrupted by severe corrections. Gold corrected by more than 40% between December 1974 and August 1976, equity markets corrected violently in 1987 (Taiwan and Hong Kong dropped by 50%), and bonds corrected sharply in 1983–1984, in 1986–1987, and in 1994. In the high-tech mania, technology stocks corrected sharply in 1995–1996 and in 1998. Between its 1997 high and its 1998 low, the Russian stock market gave back almost all its previous gains.

In the current asset bull markets, we have, with very few exceptions (copper, zinc, oil, and sugar), not had a concerted and strenuous correction phase à la 1987 and 1998 (and certainly not in US equities).

As the advance in previous investment manias matured, its leadership tended to narrow considerably. At the end of the 1970s’ commodities bull market, only oil, copper, precious metals, and energy and mining shares were still rising. In Japan, most of the listed equities peaked out in 1987–1988, but financial stocks, including insurance companies, banks, and brokers, drove the index up until the end of 1989. In the rolling emerging market bubbles of the 1990s, most markets peaked out between 1990 and 1994 but some markets such as Hong Kong still managed to make a final high in 1997. In the TMT boom, the advance became extremely concentrated after 1999, with many tech issues only making marginal new highs in March 2000 or failing to better their 1999 peak prices.

In the current asset boom, we haven’t yet seen any significant narrowing of the asset markets’ advance (although Middle Eastern markets tumbled last year). Aside from a few commodities and US home prices and housing-related stocks, most asset prices are still rising, although admittedly with varying intensity.

A feature common to all great asset booms is that they were born from either an extremely low valuation in real terms, an extended base-building period, or from a lengthy and pronounced underperformance compared to other asset markets. In 1970, the gold price was no higher than in 1933, and down in real terms by 70% from its 1897 high. The Japanese asset boom, which had in fact begun back in the 1960s, led to the entire Japanese stock market having a stock market capitalization in 1970 lower than that of IBM. In other words, in 1970, Japanese equities were very inexpensive compared to the US stock market.

In 1982, US stocks had declined by more than 70% in real terms from their 1966 highs. And although, at the time, US equities were, adjusted for inflation, no higher than they had been in 1899, to be fair their total real return (including dividends) was far higher. Still, by 1982, including reinvested dividends, US equities were no higher than in 1961. Also extremely depressed were US bond prices, with bond yields at their highest level in the 200-year history of the US capital market. Taiwanese and Korean equities in 1984 were at about the same level they had been in the early 1970s and, adjusted for inflation, dirt cheap.

In the late 1980s, Latin American stock markets were, in US dollar terms, no higher than they had been in the late 1970s and far lower than in the early 1970s and early 1980s. In 1990, US high-tech stocks were selling for about the same prices they had reached at their 1973 peak and for around ten times earnings. Compared to the valuation of the Japanese stock market in 1990, US high-tech stocks were then extremely depressed.

The 2002 asset price increase in all asset classes also included some asset classes that started to rally from extremely low inflation-adjusted prices or low valuations compared to some other asset prices. Particularly low inflation-adjusted prices were evident for commodities (which bottomed out between 1999 and 2001). And whereas the Nikkei had massively underperformed US and European equities in the 1990s, and was therefore relatively inexpensive compared to these markets, emerging markets had both underperformed US assets since 1990 and were, adjusted for inflation, very depressed. However, not depressed (adjusted for inflation) or compared to other asset prices, were US equities. Moreover, following their 20-year bull market, US bonds — and especially Japanese bonds — were by no means depressed!

Every epic investment boom lifted prices far higher than anyone could have imagined (although I concede that in the mid-1990s, Richard Strong told me that if Japanese stocks could sell for 70 times earnings in 1989, US equities could also sell in future for 50 times earnings). In 1970, no one dreamt that precious metals would increase by more than 20-fold. In the early 1980s, it would have been considered heresy to forecast that the Dow Jones would double and bond yields would decline to less than 4%! And investors certainly didn’t expect the Japanese stock market, which had already quadrupled in the 1970s, to rise by almost another six-fold between its low in 1982 and its high of 1989. In the late 1980s, few people expected the Latin American markets would ever recover; and in the early 1990s, no one (including myself) expected US high-tech stocks to become the best performing asset class in the 1990s.

Since the current asset price increases got under way in 2002 — and contrary to the expectations of some of the perma-bulls on US equities — commodities, and emerging stock markets and economies, in which, fortunately, platform companies are largely absent, have performed substantially better than US asset prices. Since 2000, the Dow Jones has lost more than 50% of its value against gold and much more against industrial commodity prices. Moreover, since 2002, the Argentine and Russian stock markets, whose economies are perceived as “knowledge absent” when compared to the great “knowledge-based” American economy, are up ten-fold or more! Now, I will concede that the current “asset inflation” (a pompous and potentially dangerous notion, to quote my friends at GaveKal Research) may be far from over and that the end game in the current asset price increases is far from predictable, but, based on the experience of the previous four investment booms, it is likely that the significant diverging trends in the relative performance of asset classes (underperformance of US assets) will persist for far longer than is now expected.

Another common feature of the last stage of every asset boom was high trading volume, widespread public participation, high leverage, and money inflows into all kinds of money pools (Zaitech and Tokin funds, investment clubs, mutual funds, LBO funds, venture capital, private equity, emerging market, art and collectibles, and equity, commodity and index funds). In this respect, the current asset boom is no different than previous investment manias, except that it includes all asset classes and is taking place practically everywhere in the world.

In the four great investment booms we have described, and also in previous investment manias, once the boom came to an end, most, if not all, of the price gains that occurred during the mania were given back. In 1992, silver prices were lower than they had been in 1974. In 2003, the Nikkei was lower than at its high in 1981. In 2002, in dollar terms, most Latin American markets were no higher than in 1990 and most Asian markets had declined to their mid- or late 1980s level. By 1998, the Russian stock market had given back its entire advance since 1994; and in 2002, most high-tech and telecommunication stocks were no higher than they had been in 1996 or 1997. And in those manias where prices didn’t retreat in nominal terms to the level — or, as frequently happened, to below the level — from where the investment boom had begun (as was the case in 1932), prices retreated in inflation adjusted terms to those levels. Adjusted for inflation, in 2001 the CRB Index was far lower than it had been in 1971, while precious metals, oil, and grains were all either no higher, or lower, than they had been in the early 1970s.

Following all great investment booms, the leadership changed. The 1970s’ precious metal boom was followed by the boom in financial assets in the 1980s. The Japanese stock and real estate mania of the late 1980s and the emerging market boom of the early 1990s were followed by the parabolic rise of high-tech stocks in the late 1990s. Therefore, while it is possible that in a prolonged environment of “excess liquidity” all asset markets could continue to increase in nominal value, it is most unlikely that the leaders of the previous boom — the US stock market and, specifically, the TMT sector — will be the leaders of the current asset inflation. And whereas it may be premature to make a final judgment about this point, as the current asset inflation could last for much longer, so far the gross underperformance of US equities and especially of the Nasdaq (still down by 50% from its 2000 high) compared to the emerging markets and commodities seems to confirm that the leadership has indeed changed.

Best regards,
Marc Faber


WiMax

Ok the news out, dude.

  • KUALA LUMPUR, March 16 (Reuters) - Malaysia's telecoms industry regulator, the Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission, on Friday named four winners of licences to operate wireless broadband services.The firms are Bizsurf, which is 50-percent-owned by YTL E-Solutions (YTLE.KL: Quote, Profile , Research); MIB Comm, a unit of Green Packet Bhd (GRNP.KL: Quote, Profile , Research); Redtone International (RTON.KL: Quote, Profile , Research) and Asiaspace Dotcom, the regulator said on its Web site.WiMax, short for wireless interoperability for microwave access, allows super high-speed Internet access and file downloads from laptops, phones or other mobile devices over greater distances than previous technologies. Wimax can blanket entire cities with high-speed wireless connections and is a longer-range version of the popular WiFi technology used to connect to the Internet in public spaces like coffee shops. It is cheaper to set up and run than the high-speed 3G connection for mobile phones.
How now My Moo Moo Cow?

So news is out.

4 winners of wimax.

Err... time to show me the moola, eh?

So how big is the piece of cake? Anyone? What's the potential earnings?

At 0.93, ytle is valued at 1.181 Billion.
At 0.815, redtone is valued at 216.788 Million.
At 5.05, greenpacket is valued at 2.212 Billion.
err... who owns Asiaspace dotcom?

How???

Based at current valuations... can future earnings be used as a catalyst to boost the share price of these listed stocks?

More Speculation on RHB Capital?

Saw this headlines posted on Business Times today.

  • Newbridge has eyes on RHBCap
    The US private equity firm wants to buy as much as 20 per cent of RHB Capital, the parent of RHB Bank, say bankers familiar with the matter
What the article is saying.. (added some comments in green italic)
  • Newbridge has eyes on RHBCap
    By Francis Fernandez
    bt@nstp.com.my

    March 16 2007

    NEWBRIDGE Capital Ltd, a US private equity firm, now has its eyes on banking group RHB Capital Bhd (RHBCap), bankers familiar with the matter said yesterday. (no more sources said? But hey 'bankers familiar with the matter' same as sources, no?)

    This comes after it received Bank Negara Malaysia's approval last month to start talks to buy 20 per cent of EON Capital Bhd (EONCap), a smaller lender, from DRB-HICOM Bhd.

    Newbridge has "expressed interest" to start talks with the Employees Provident Fund (EPF), a pension fund that is poised to control the RHB group.

    It wants to buy as much as 20 per cent of RHBCap, the parent of RHB Bank, the bankers said. (which bankers???? err... them ahlong also a banker, no?)

    Apart from Newbridge, Kuwait Finance House (KFH), owner of the biggest Islamic bank in Kuwait, is also interested to have a stake in RHBCap.

    EPF early this month outbid EONCap and KFH to take control of Rashid Hussain Bhd (RHB), the parent of RHBCap, by offering RM2.25 billion cash to buy Utama Banking Group Bhd's 32.8 per cent stake in RHB.

    It will then make an offer to buy the rest of the shares in RHB and RHBCap. It also wants to make RHB Bank, now a 70 per cent-owned subsidiary, a fully-owned unit of RHBCap.

    EPF has also said that it will sell up to 35 per cent of RHBCap to foreign partners that can help improve the banking group's performance.

    Many had suspected that Newbridge's interest in EONCap hinged on the lender gaining control of its bigger rival RHBCap.

    However, executives involved in talks with Newbridge on the sale told Business Times that talks are still going on. (Oooh.. now it is executives!! Which excutives? A executive is such a broadbased definition, no? Anyone can be an excutive. yes?)

    Last year, Newbridge made a failed attempt to acquire a quarter of AMMB Holdings Bhd, the country's fifth largest bank. It lost out to the Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd, Australia's third largest lender.

    Newbridge is a unit of Texas Pacific group, a private equity firm, which said that it could devote up to US$10 billion (RM35 billion) for deals in Asia.

    The search for quality banking assets in Malaysia comes at a time when private equity firms are seeking cheap assets outside its traditional base in the US and Europe.

    Asian private equity funds commanded US$120 billion (RM421 billion) of total capital under management as of end-2005.

So my question is simple... if this Newbridge is really interested, surely it could have done better than having the press leak and run the story in such a manner. No?



Thursday, March 15, 2007

Dr.Marc Faber: A Modern History of Investment Booms

Posted by Dr. Marc Faber on The Daily Reckoning Australia: Modern History of Investment Booms

Some news articles:
Faber Likes Asian Property, Says Stocks `Vulnerable' and Market jumpy? Blame privateers

  • THE recent volatility and pull-back in Asian markets have prompted some investors to sound a familiar refrain: It's all the fault of the hedge funds.

    In the past two years, dozens of these funds have set up shop in Asia hoping to find relatively hidden lucrative opportunities, as markets in Europe and the US become more crowded and competitive. Their trading in equity markets has grown sharply: they were responsible for 22 per cent of the brokerage commissions paid on Asian cash equity trades in 2006, up from 5 per cent in 2004, Greenwich Associates says.

    Many small traders and brokers in the region argue that the growing influence of hedge funds in Asia has exaggerated market movements, particularly the declines that rocked global markets recently. They also say the funds contribute to higher volatility in Asian equity markets.

    Hedge funds are going to create even more unpredictable gyrations in the future, making things still more difficult for other investors, they say.

    On Wednesday, markets across Asia fell again on worries about the Western markets and the outlook for the US economy, with the Nikkei average in Tokyo falling 2.92 per cent.

    Regulators are keeping a close eye on these funds. Market regulators from Britain and Hong Kong are meeting Indian regulators in Mumbai in April to discuss hedge fund participation in markets. It is the first time India has hosted such a roundtable.

    A 15-fold increase in market capitalisation on Vietnam's stockmarket recently ignited fears among regional market analysts that Vietnamese regulators would impose capital controls to start shutting out foreign investors.

    Aggressive hedge fund managers normally take positions intended to profit from a market decline if they anticipate one. Many say the correction in late February was widely expected. In December, fund managers in Asia say they had begun warning of an imminent slide in markets.

    What is surprising about the February drop, though, analysts said, was how few hedge fund managers appeared to have profited from the market declines. Instead, they seemed to have been trying to take advantage of the bull market for Asian stocks and bonds by buying aggressively.

    Short selling - bets that certain stocks will fall - is not allowed in some Asian equity markets. But fund managers can mimic that strategy by using complicated financial derivatives and options to achieve the same effect. When stocks started to move down, though, investors jumped out, making drops even steeper.

    Referring to the sell-off that began in late February, Henry To, an investment adviser at MarketThoughts, said, "At the height of the selling, money managers in Asia were remarking that they have not experienced this kind of selling intensity since the height of the Asia crisis" in 1997 and 1998.

    A focus on hedge funds does not tell the whole story, though, emerging market veterans say.

    "The ferocity to which the market decline in China spilled over to the global markets is to some extent attributable to hedge funds," said Marc Faber, an investment adviser nicknamed Dr Doom for his bearish sentiments.
    "But today, it is not just the hedge funds that act like hedge funds - it is also the proprietary desks of banks like Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley."

    Because the compensation of traders at these banks is based on short-term trading profits, "when the market goes down they all sell," Mr Faber said.

    Wall Street investment banks have poured money and talent into proprietary trading desks in recent years, helping to earn record profits for their banks. Assets under management at these proprietary desks are difficult to quantify, but analysts at Keefe Bruyette & Woods estimate that these banks have more than doubled the amount of money in those businesses since 2001.

    Other factors are influencing the Asian equity markets. Hedge funds are "a growing player, and arguably a shorter-term player," said Hugh Young, managing director at Aberdeen Asset Management Asia. "But there is a lot of human emotion involved across the board," from hedge funds, traditional funds and other investors.

    A wide array of established hedge funds and the firms that serve them are setting up shop or expanding operations in Asia, including K2 Advisors and Bisys Alternative Investment Services.

    In some thinly traded Asian markets, the influx of new capital can be felt keenly.

    Trading volume of Asian interest rate derivatives tripled, to $US414 billion, in 2006 from the year before, Greenwich said, and the amount of credit derivatives doubled to $US67 billion. Greenwich Associates estimates hedge funds account for 30 per cent of the total trading in one of these assets, structured credit derivatives.

Melinda Doolittle's Mark Of Greatness

Hey, it's American Idol time and I came across this fantastic blog posting here.

Quote:

  • You may or may not like American Idol. But watch Melinda. It's not often that you see the mark of greatness in such bold relief. When you see what is possible, nothing less will suffice: the important thing in life is to find that arena of performance in which your talents and skills have you. Then you're not merely working a job or even a career: you're doing what you're meant to be doing.

Yeah.. i think she is simply awesome. What say you, Moo Moo Cow?


Stock Market Sucks!

Really now.

Just Google that phrase "Stock Market Sucks" ... and see how many hits it registers!

How?

Has the market been that bad for you?

Are we at fault?

Or does the stock market really sucks?

What about Fund Flows

Saw an intereting comment on the issue of Flow of Funds. here


10-Day Moving Average of the NYSE ARMS Index (January 1949 to Present) - 1) Eisenhower heart attack and aftermath 2) 1987 crash and aftermath... 3) The darkest days of the 1997 Asian Crisis... 4) The bursting of the tech bubble and aftermath... 5) The darkest days of the 1973 to 1974 bear market... 6) The crash that ended the *-tronics* boom in 1962 7) The panic selling on February 27, 2007 and aftermath...



As one can see from the above chart, the selling that we endured on the U.S. stock market during February 27th and the following four days was one of the most intense in history. Not only was this apparent in the U.S. stock market, but all around the world as well as the major global market indices plunged. At the height of the selling, money managers in Asia were remarking that they have not experienced this kind of selling intensity since the height of the Asia Crisis in October 1997.

(btw.. saw a citigroup commentary posting on this thread here )

Warren Buffett interview on CNBC

Missed Warren Buffett's interview on CNBC?

Copy this link into a new window and it will play on your windows player:

http://release.theplatform.com/content.select?pid=6kR_kPrAu5fnGgwgUq5KphwA11OOyp2R

Wednesday, March 14, 2007

Update on MIDF

Previously: MIDF: Another Speculation

Today MIDF replied to the querry:


  • We refer to the query from Bursa Malaysia Securities Berhad ("Bursa Securities") dated 13 March 2007 in relation to the above article appearing in The New Straits Times (Business Times, page 40) on Tuesday, 13 March 2007 ("Article").

    We wish to inform that MIDF is not in a position to make any comments as MIDF is not involved in any manner on what has been reported in the Article. We also wish to inform that MIDF has not been advised by its shareholders or any other parties of any corporate exercise in relation to the Article.

    As requested by Bursa Securities, we will make enquiry with Permodalan Nasional Berhad ("PNB") in respect of the above matter and will make the necessary announcement upon receiving a response from PNB.

    This announcement is dated 14 March 2007.

How????

Some commentary from Dr.Faber

Some commentary from Dr.Marc Faber on the Emerging Markets: here

  • Speaking about emerging markets, Investment guru Marc Faber says that he is negative on emerging markets because of surplus liquidity flow to risky assets.

    "Credit spreads may widen so I am negative on economy and especially the emerging markets because that's where the surplus liquidity flows to the risky asset classes whereas the US markets have grossly underperformed. Now, it will outperform the emerging markets for a while because it goes up but because it goes down less than India and China and more periphral markets," comments Faber.

    Expressing his view on the liquidity issue, Marc Faber says that the Central Banks are largely to be blamed for the excess liquidity.

    "The Central Banks are largely to be blamed for the excess liquidty because the philosophy behind US monetary policy is not to target asset prices but core inflation. Nobody lives by core inflation. Asset bubbles can be very dangerous and Bernanke will print money once asset classes deflate. As soon as Dow will be down more than 10%, the Fed will cut interest rates," he adds.

    The yen has appreciated against the US dollar. According to Faber, "You can cut interest rates but if lending and financial institutions tighten lending, it doesn't help very much and also the price of an asset depends on demand and supply. If demand has changed because psychology has changed and there was previous excess speculation in housing industry of buying second homes, that doesn't help. But that will weaken the dollar, US dollar is a doomed currency in the long run."

    Speaking on India, Faber says that the Indian markets could see a deeper correction going forward, "I think it's more than a correction. We had a rise till about February 9-10 and then a severe decline. I think we may move lower here and that the market is quite vulnerable."


How Now My Moo Moo Cow?

What about the mortgage defaults? Potential damage?

Well, here's a news article posted on Bloomberg: http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=avLcIK2vDO3Q&refer=home

  • March 12 (Bloomberg) -- Mortgage defaults over the next two years may climb to $225 billion, probably not enough to be a drag on the U.S. economy, according to debt strategists at Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.

    The forecast, based on an assumption of flat home prices, compares with about $40 billion annually in 2005 and 2006, according to a report today by analysts led by Srinivas Modukuri at Lehman, whose fixed-income research team has been ranked first by Institutional Investor magazine for seven straight years. Defaults may rise to $300 billion if home prices fall and tighter lending standards keep borrowers from refinancing, they wrote.

    Investors are growing concerned that surging delinquencies on the riskiest mortgages will the cause the economy to weaken, hurting other assets. About $170 billion of the defaults would stem from so-called subprime mortgages, which now total $1.2 trillion, New York-based Lehman said.



What about US?

Here's a good set of comments posted by fellow blogger, Salvatore_Dali

http://malaysiafinance.blogspot.com/2007/03/funds-flow-asia-getting-in-out.html

Give it a read...

Cheers!

How Now Brown Cow?

Here's an update worth reading posted by Mr.Frank Barbera at FSO, Torpedoed by Sub-Prime -- Again

Here's a snippet of what's written:

"2007 is going to suck, all 12 months of it,” said CEO of D.R. Horton, the nation's largest homebuilder, Don Tomnitz at the companies March 7th conference call. Criticized for bluntly speaking his mind, the rather extreme verbiage coming from a top drawer CEO underscores the outlook ahead with Tomnitz really telling it like it is. While his wording may offend more sensitive ears, the content of his message is at least honest, and probably on the mark -- a far better outcome than the seemingly endless industry lying, deceit, and cover-ups that has led so many in the falling housing market, proclaiming a bottom, and the “worst is probably” over at virtually every turn. Few industries have a lock on more disingenuous behavior than the homebuilders and realty crowd who “somehow’ manage to consistently find the world's most blindly optimistic economists, (i.e. shills). So much so, even the guys on Wall Street blush. After all, we are now treated to the admission by New Century Financial – the nation's #2 Sub-Prime Lender -- that they made an “inadvertent error” on the magnitude of $500 Million Dollars? -- only 500 Million!!!! -- Hello? Nope, nothing but honesty, and good intentions there…


From CBS MarketWatch Today



“NEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- New Century Financial Corp. shares were delisted Tuesday as the company provided updates on criminal probes and disclosed a $500 million error over debt obligations as it approaches an expected bankruptcy filing. The New York Stock Exchange said New Century's common stock and preferred securities "are no longer suitable for continued listing on the NYSE" just one day after the Big Board halted trading of the stock and Wall Street signaled a looming bankruptcy filing for the lender. The company, whose credit problems have erased nearly $3 billion in market cap in a matter of weeks, said it received a grand-jury subpoena for documents in a previously disclosed investigation by the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Central District of California, as well as formal notice of a preliminary Securities and Exchange Commission probe. New Century also said in a filing to regulators that its obligations to Credit Suisse First Boston Mortgage Capital were $1.4 billion, not $900 million as it previously reported. New Century called it an inadvertent error.”



And of course, we also saw the major headlines coming from Accredited Home (LEND) where a liquidity crisis is taking shape.



From CBS MarketWatch Today



“Accredited Home after said it's seeking more capital and exploring strategic options after paying about $190 million in margin calls since Jan. 1. The mortgage company, which operates in the troubled subprime loan category, said it plans to seek additional capital. Accredited Home is also seeking waivers and extensions of certain financial and operating covenants under its credit facilities. Keefe Bruyette & Woods on Tuesday downgraded Accredited home to underperform from market perform and slashed its price target to $7 a share from $26 previously. "Based on our new significantly lower volume and margin assumptions, we estimate that LEND will lose money for the foreseeable future which will likely trigger a liquidity crisis," KBW said in a note to clients”



Of course, it is this writer's continued view that we are a long, long way from any type of important cyclical economic low, either for the broad economy which is weakening, or for the real estate/housing market which is in a serious recession. Just look at the latest information regarding the number of Homes For Sale that are Vacant. Going back to 1955, the US Vacancy Rate has never seen this type of dramatic surge. One year ago, the number of vacant homes waiting to be sold stood at a total of 1.57 million homes.





Today, the number of vacant homes waiting to be sold has surged by 34% to a total of 2.10 million homes, by far the most rapid increase ever recorded. As a result, the US Vacancy Rate for owned units has jumped to a record 2.70%, up from 2.00% a year earlier, which is now virtually double the long term average of 1.40% for the vacancy rate. From 1955 to 2005, the vacancy rate had never been above 2.00%, highlighting another element of just what kind of boom/bust dynamics are now potentially at work in the present cycle.



In addition, with more than one million housing units of excess supply, there is strong evidence for the case that Housing Starts, already down 18% in the last 12 months, to a seasonally adjusted rate of 1.64 million, will need to fall considerably further before any type of important bottom is seen. In the past, soaring vacancy rates have been a fairly good leading indicator for additional downside pressure on Housing Starts. In the next chart, we plot the 12 month Rate of Change for the US Vacancy Rate using an inverted scale and overlaid against the graph of US Housing Starts. Notice that surging vacancies tend to be a leading directional gauge for more weakness ahead in the Housing sector. In addition, as time passes and inventories continue to build, odds are high that homeowners will soon begin offering these properties for rent, which will put downside pressure on rents as the supply of new rentals hitting the market increases.





In a separate report out today, the Mortgage Bankers Association noted that late mortgage payments shot up to a 3 ½ year high in the final quarter of last year, with new foreclosures surging to a record high as borrowers with tarnished credit histories have had trouble keeping up their monthly payments. According to the MBA, “Home loan delinquency rates showed an increase for a fourth straight quarter as sub-prime defaults rippled through the real estate market. Past-due payments on 43 million loans tracked by the survey have climbed with about 4.6 percent of mortgage holders now at least 30 days late. “This includes about 2.4 percent of prime borrowers and 12.6 percent of subprime customers with poor or limited credit histories” noted Nicolas Retsinas, director of Housing Studies at Harvard University at Cambridge, Massachussetts. "The delinquencies and defaults have started to soar -- a lot of these lenders started to make loans and lost track of some of the fundamentals.'' Separately, Grant Bailey, analyst at Fitch Ratings noted that "with delinquencies going up, the rate of the increase doesn't appear to have slowed down,'' and that delinquencies on subprime loans have doubled in the past 12 months. According to Bailey, “If you graph that, it's a pretty steep line”.

Tuesday, March 13, 2007

MIDF: Another Speculation

Amazing.

Are newsmedia created so that parties could publish and distribute their speculations freely?

Oh, I wonder.. if anyone do profit from these speculations.

  • PNB plans RM600m buyout bid for MIDF
    Fund manager Permodalan Nasional may pay about RM2 per share for the remaining shares it does not hold in Malaysian Industrial Development Finance
Key word: May pay.

Anyway, this is what's printed in the news.

You be the judge. I have added some comments in blue italic.
  • PNB plans RM600m buyout bid for MIDF

    March 13 2007

    PERMODALAN Nasional Bhd (PNB), a state-run fund manager, plans to make a RM600 million buyout bid for Malaysian Industrial Development Finance Bhd (MIDF), an investment bank, sources said. (Ah... the sources strikes yet again!)
    PNB may pay about RM2 per share or some RM600 million for the remaining shares it does not hold in MIDF.

    The fund manager and a unit trust fund it manages hold a collective 68.5 per cent of MIDF, a mid-sized investment bank, its 2005 annual report shows.

    The stock jumped 11 per cent to close at RM1.57 yesterday, its highest in three years. PNB officials could not be reached for comment. ( Hmm... who leaked the news out?)

    "It's possible. PNB already has Maybank and Aseambankers. I won't be surprised," says OSK Investment Bank's Chan Ken Yew. ( Nice to actually see some names mentioned. At least we know who said what. )

    MIDF shares have been languishing at its current level as investors prefer bigger rivals like Bumiputra-Commerce Holdings Bhd and Malayan Banking Bhd.

    PNB also controls Maybank, the country's biggest banking group.

    MIDF's stock is trading at a 25 per cent discount to its net asset per share of RM2.08 as at December 31 2006.

    MIDF more than doubled its net profit for 2006, mainly due to the sale of assets.

    It made a net profit of RM122.9 million while revenue was flat at some RM558 million last year. ( how much is PNB offering? 600Million? For a company making rm122.9 per year? Errr... how? Good deal or what? )

    Its profits were higher as it sold an associate company for a gain of RM44 million, RM70 million proceeds from giving up two discount house licences and a higher revenue of RM13.5 million from the asset management division. (ah, the profits were higher due to disposal of an associate company. So this could be a one-off gain)

    MIDF started its business 47 years ago as a development finance institution, helping to finance small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs).

    Today, it is a much bigger firm offering services in four core areas, namely investment banking (IB), development finance, asset management and industrial property.

    In February, MIDF managing director Mohd Najib Abdullah said that he expects the IB business to continue being the largest contributor to the group's profit.

    It recently won a mandate from the Government to give out RM750 million in loans to help companies automate their processes and also to develop the automotive industry.

    The loan schemes are to encourage companies to modernise and adopt automation for their manufacturing processes locally and for the automotive industry to encourage the making of components and spare parts.

How my dear old Brown Cow?

Oh, isn't it nice to see our newspaper being used as a wonderful tool for market punters to punt in the stock market.

Life is simply wonderful isn't it?

Cheers!

Monday, March 12, 2007

Melewar: Reply to Querry

Waiting anxiously to hear what Melewar got to say?

Here it is but oh don't ask..

  • We refer to the query letter by Bursa Malaysia Securities Berhad dated 12 March 2007 on unusual market activity in the trading of the Company's shares. The Board of Directors of MIG would like to confirm that to the best of their knowledge and after due enquiry, they are not aware of any of the following that may have contributed to the unusual market activity :-

    a) Any material development in the Company's business and affairs not previously disclosed ;
    b) Any rumour or report concerning the business and affairs of the Group except for the recent newspaper reports regarding the Company's bid for the Penang Monorail Project that may account for the unusual market activity. There is nothing material in these reports which the Company had not previously disclosed.


According to Sources: Melewar

So juicy and seducing was the story told by Star Bizweek ( According to Sources ) and Business Times ( According to Sources: Penang Monorail ) that Melewar closed the morning trade up some 30%!

This has prompted the SC to do the WAZZAP thingy, UMA (Unsual Market activity) on Melewar.

  • UNUSUAL MARKET ACTIVITY

    We draw your attention to the sharp increase in price and high volume in your Company's securities today.

    In accordance with the Corporate Disclosure Policy on Response To Unusual Market Activity pursuant to paragraph 9.11 of the Listing Requirements of Bursa Malaysia Securities Berhad ("Bursa Securities LR"), you are requested to furnish Bursa Malaysia Securities Berhad ("Bursa Securities") with an announcement for public release after making a due enquiry seeking the cause of the unusual market activity in the Company's securities.

    In this respect, you are also required to publicly confirm, amongst others, the following:-

    1. whether there is any corporate development relating to your Group's business and affairs that has not been previously announced that may account for the unusual market activity including those in the stage of negotiation / discussion. If yes, kindly provide the details including the status of the corporate development to enable investors to make informed investment decision;

    2. whether there is any rumour or report concerning the business and affairs of the Group that may account for the unusual market activity and in this respect, you are required to comply with paragraphs 9.09 and 9.10 of the Bursa Securities LR;

    3. whether you are aware of any other possible explanation to account for the unusual market activity; and

    4. your compliance with the Bursa Securities LR, in particular paragraph 9.03 on disclosure of material information.

    Please note that the contents of the announcement must be endorsed by the Board of Directors of the Company and the announcement must reach Bursa Securities by today via Bursa LINK.

Oohh.... what's up next? I wonder. I really wonder.

And Melewar Industrial Group, I actually blogged on this stock long ago. Well, it USED to be a highly good investment grade stock called Maruichi. Yeah, USED to be.

See past blog posting: Lawar kah Melewar? (blogged on Oct 2005)

According to Sources: Penang Monorail

On the weekend, I posted the following posting: According to Sources

In today's Business Times, here's another article talking about this project.

This is what's mentioned on the article:

  • Penang monorail bidders called for presentations
    By Francis Fernandez
    bt@nstp.com.my

    March 12 2007

    THE Economic Planning Unit (EPU) has started calling shortlisted firms bidding for a high-speed monorail project in Penang to make presentations, a senior executive at one of the companies said.

    The Penang monorail contract is worth as much as RM1.6 billion, and is one of the largest infrastructure projects on offer on the island.

    The Works Ministry, in August last year, approved plans for the project to go ahead. Subsequently, it was included in the country's latest five-year development plan.

    The EPU's approval is the final nod required before the proposal can be brought to the Cabinet.

    As many as five companies have bid to build the 51.2km rail line across the heart of Penang island in 28 months.

    Among them are MMC Metrail Sdn Bhd, Melewar Industrial Group Bhd, Malaysian Resources Corp Bhd (MRCB), Penang Port Sdn Bhd and the UEM group.

    Business Times was told that the top contenders are MMC Metrail and Melewar. Melewar has assembled a Russian-German infrastructure team to build the rail at a cost of RM1.58 billion, or RM30 million per km.

    This would be half the RM60 million per km average cost billed by KL Infrastructure Group Bhd for building a 65km monorail network in Kuala Lumpur.

    MMC Metrail is an associate of MMC Corp Bhd, an operator of ports and power plants. It has strong claims for the job.

    As early as October 2003, MMC Metrail, which is 20 per cent owned by MMC Corp, was reported to have won a letter of exclusivity to build a 37km light monorail transit linking Komtar in George Town and Bayan Lepas.

    Officials close to MMC Corp have never denied the existence of the letter, but they did not elaborate on its scope.

Interesting?

So many stories being told to the press.

Now I wonder, if the EPU has started to call the short listed companies to make presentations of their bids, why are there so many stories being told to the press? Why?

And these monorail projects, I wonder if such projects are even profitable...

Sunday, March 11, 2007

Great Article: Short-term versus long-term investing

Posted by Teh Hooi Ling, writer of the Show Me The Money column on Singapore Business Times: http://www.businesstimes.com.sg/sub/money/story/0,4574,226950,00.html?


Added some comments in blue.

Short-term versus long-term investing

YOU pride yourself as a long-term investor. But a stock that you bought two months ago has now doubled in value. You feel that the price has run up a bit too far, too fast.
Should you then sell the stock or continue to hold it? (Good issue isn't it?)

Or take the reverse. You recognise that we are in a secular bull market, with many of the world's economies poised for multi-year growth. The stock market recognises the big picture and is pricing equities at about their fair value to reflect the expected growth. In this near-perfect picture, assume somebody starts to have a panic attack and begins dumping his shares. Others then follow suit. The market is correcting sharply, and many are beginning to talk about the beginning of a bear. Do you then sell, or don't? (And again, this reflected on so many of us, recently. Sell or no?)

Those who have done their fair share of reading up on the art of investing will know that long-term investing beats short-term investing.

All those who are legendary in the stock market have a few common traits: their ability to block out the short-term noises, the confidence to stand out in the crowd, and patience.

Think Warren Buffett, John Neff, John Templeton, John Maynard Keynes.

Few short-term traders managed to amass the kind of wealth anywhere near these investment greats.

Buffett once famously said he wouldn't care if the stock market closed for a year or two. 'An active trading market is useful, since it periodically presents us with mouth-watering opportunities,' he said. What matters to Buffett is the underlying economic fate of the business he owns.

'Charlie and I let our marketable equities tell us by their operating results - not by their daily, or even yearly, price quotations - whether our investments are successful. The market may ignore business success for a while, but it eventually will confirm it,' he said.

And indeed, a study has shown that the relationship between earnings and share gets strong the longer the time-frame. With stocks held for three years, the correlation between earnings and share price ranged from 0.131 to 0.36. (A correlation of 0 means one set of numbers does not explain the other, while a correlation of 1 means both sets of numbers move in perfect lockstep.)

With stocks held for five years, the correlation ranged from 0.374 to 0.599. And for a ten-year holding period, the correlation increased to a range of 0.593 to 0.695.

When worry strikes

However, humans are predisposed to short-termism.

All of us try to be rational all the time, but emotion intervenes. An example is the recent sell-down of the market. You were sitting pretty on a profit of about 50 per cent last Monday. Then came the Tuesday sell-off, and your profit diminished to 40 per cent. The following day saw another 10 per cent of your profit wiped up. And Monday this week, a bigger 15 per cent was erased, and you were left with only 15 per cent of profit.

Now more people were getting worried. And numerous market experts were quoted in the papers as saying, 'Protect your profits'. So what do you do? You were afraid that you were missing some key indicators and that indeed the world's economy is slipping into a recession in the next few months, and you'd lose all you profits and even part of your capital. So, you acted to protect your profit. But the day after you sold, the market rebounded, and as of yesterday, you would have seen your profit rise back up to 35 per cent had you not sold to protect your profit.

Another reason which predisposes us to short-termism is the onslaught of information that we in this high-tech age receive every second, every minute.

A US professor of psychology, Paul Slovic, has done a study on the bookmakers who established the odds on horse races. The bookmakers were given five pieces of information and asked to set the odds on a horse race. The odds were then compared with actual results.

After that, they were given 10 pieces of information and asked to set the odds. Next, they were given 20 pieces of information, then 30, and then 40.

The more information they had, the more their confidence rose. But their accuracy did not improve. The same is true for economists and investments and all human beings.

Perhaps two things could happen. The more information we have, the more confident we become. And with that confidence, we tend to make more decisions, and those decisions become increasingly short-term and more likely to be wrong.

Alternatively, the more information we have, the more confused and indecisive we get. And we act in one way, change our mind, and reverse our position in double quick-time.

Jack Gray, a market strategist in Australia, once took a poll at a conference. He asked participants to vote on who was most responsible for the evident excessive short-termism. Apparently the media won, with 89 per cent shooting the blame at us! Others too were held responsible: regulators, fiduciaries, fund managers, asset consultants, trustees, etc.

Everyone in the investment chain was declared culpable to varying degrees.

'Everyone blames everyone else. Managers blame the demands of full disclosures and the frequent reports required by regulations. Managers also blame consultants who also demand monthly reports. Consultants say they ask for monthly reports because trustees demand them. Trustees blame the members of their fund for short-termism, who in turn, blame the media for emphasising short-term performance. The media claims it is merely reporting the news,' he wrote in his paper.

However, resisting the temptation to fiddle, to do something, is critical to being a successful long-term investor, but our evolutionary heritage acts against us, said Mr Gray.

'Survival decisions are triggered in the limbic system, a primitive part of the brain that provokes instinctive responses. That limbic system helped us survive in an unpredictable world of hunters and hunted. But behaviour that provided a survival advantage a quarter of a million years ago on the African veldt puts survival at risk in the jungles of Wall Street,' he said.

So what can make investors more long-term focused? Apparently as long ago as 1986, Warren Buffett has suggested a 100 per cent tax on short-term turnover. And recently a US academic Bogle, argued for an extra dividend for longer-term holders of a stock.

Mr Gray offers three steps. First, recognise cognitive, psychological and institutional barriers to long-termism. Second, filter out short-term signals that do not have longer term significance. He suggests that having a small number of like-minded investors can help in maintaining clarity and discipline. Finally, one should spend some time developing and writing down what one believes about investments and the market, and why? Is the market efficient, that is, does it fairly value stocks all the time? What is the evidence?

Investment beliefs should also include a long-term investment statement that articulates your beliefs about the relevance and benefits of long-termism and how these views will be reflected in decision making.

Now back to the two scenarios at the beginning of the article. Ideally, you'll want to sell in the first scenario in the hope of buying back at a lower price later. Chances are, when the price declines, you'll step back further in the hope of it stabilising before entering. And it's likely you'll end up getting back at a higher price.

As for the latter, many may succumb to the pressure and sell a good stock.

Such are the tricks emotion play on humans.

Saturday, March 10, 2007

Update on AsiaEP

Truly incredible. (Mou Tak Teng!)

On feb 6th, I mentioned AsiaEP in the following posting: AsiaEP

On Feb 24th, the Star Bisweek carried this article: Googling for growth

On March 9th the Edge reported the following: 09-03-2007: Goldman Sachs buys 5.7% stake in AsiaEP

On March 9th, KN came out with their guns blazing and gave AsiaEP a price target of rm1.97 ( the initial TP was just 0.99)

KN calls it the Goldman factor and this is their reasoning:

VALUATION AND RECOMMENDATION
While our FY07, FY08 and FY09 earnings forecasts remain unchanged (Please refer to our Initiation Report dated 6 February 2007), investors should not under-estimate the positive impact of GSI’s presence in asiaEP for the following reasons:

  • Emergence of GSI as a substantial shareholder in asiaEP could lend Itah SE instant credibility – a big vote of confidence on its business potential;
  • Presence of GSI could enhance deal possibility between asiaEP and other BIG SE players on Wall Street; and
  • Deal potential tends to inflate valuations.

We continue to rate asiaEP a STRONG BUY with a revised 12-month target price of RM1.97 (+99.0%), which is based on a FY09 P/E of 20.0x. Increasing foreign interests, who seem to better appreciate the company’s growth potential, to a large extent, drives the latest re-rating.

According to Sources

Posted on Star Bizweek:

  • Melewar eyes monorail project
    Melewar Industrial Group Bhd is believed to have emerged as the front-runner to bag the Penang Monorail project, and may secure the contract by end this month if all goes well, sources familiar with the matter tell BizWeek.

This is what mentioned in the article.

  • Saturday March 10, 2007

    Melewar eyes monorail project

    The RM1.2bil contact could be awarded by month-end

    BY JOSE BARROCK
    jose@thestar.com.my

    MELEWAR Industrial Group Bhd is believed to have emerged as the front-runner to bag the Penang Monorail project, and may secure the contract by end this month if all goes well, sources familiar with the matter tell BizWeek.

    It is understood that the Government could make an announcement pertaining to the award of the RM1.2bil contract, to Melewar as early as end of this month depending on several minor issues being ironed out.

    Melewar had bid for the building of the Penang Monorail, which is under the purview of the 9MP, sometime mid last year and had made a presentation to the Prime Minister Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, and the Economic Planning Unit in June the same year.

    The decision however was delayed due to rival bids made by several other parties keen to bag the large contract.

    However the bid by Melewar is believed to be in favour because of its lower costs, compared to that of the other bidders, which include Penang Port Sdn Bhd, a consortium made up of Scomi Engineering Bhd and KL Infrastructure Group Bhd, and MMC Metrail Sdn Bhd, which is a 20% unit of MMC Corp Bhd.

    According to the source Melewar’s 70% unit Melewar Integrated Engineering Sdn Bhd, which has expertise in engineering among others will spearhead the Penang Monorail initiative.

    Melewar Integrated Engineering’s managing director, Uwe Ahrens, owns the remaining 30% equity in the company.

    It is also a possibility that Melewar may rope in the requisite technical expertise via tie-ups with Russian and Swiss partners, who are familiar with building such railway lines in Europe, but the details of the companies and their backgrounds are still murky at press time.

    BizWeek understands that these tie-ups with the Russian and Swiss parties, was Melewar’s ace all along, and had brought down the company’s cost of building the light rail track to about RM30mil per kilometre, from RM60mil or thereabouts, which the other bidders made.

    With the lucrative contract in the bag, Melewar’s fortunes should get a shot in the arm, and its dismal earnings could improve.

    Melewar changed its financial year end from January to June, which means that for the 11 months ended December last year, the company posted a net profit of almost RM32mil on the back of about RM500mil in sales. The bulk of these profits were derived from its unit Mycron Steel Bhd in which it has about 54% equity.

    News of Melewar bagging the Penang Monorail first surfaced in late January this year, and caused a surge in its trading volume.

    Year to date, Melewar’s stock has gained some 16% and ended trading on Thursday at 96 sen.

How my dear old Brown Cow?



Tim Wood's 4-year Cycle Theory

Still anxious about the market?

Tim Wood has posted an interesting editorial on FSO Market Wrap: Another Look at the 4-Year Cycle

  • Well, my statistical analysis surrounding the 4-year cycle top in 2000 not only allowed me to make the call, but I missed the price target by a mere 200 points. That article was written in July 2001 with the Industrials well over 10,000 and this was later published in the November 2001 issue of Technical Analysis of Stocks and Commodities Magazine. It is these same technical and statistical methods that have and continue to tell me that the odds are the 4-year cycle low is still ahead of us, and that in all likelihood the 533 point decline seen for the week ending March 2nd was likely only the beginning.

Friday, March 09, 2007

Ok, what about them White Cow With Gray Tattoos??

So I have been asked why must that poor Moo-Moo Cow be Brown? Are all cows brown? And what about them White Cow with them cute little Gray Blackish tattooo all over their body? Yeah, what about them? Too sexy? :D

Anyway , yesterday I wrote about this:

Did you get to read it? No? Really no?

Let me paste it over here.

------------------

JIM: Okay, lets take a look at the stock market sell off. The first thing you have to understand which is there was no immediate economic impact on the economy, other than probably shaking up investor confidence, and I would suspect, John, we're going to see that show up in the consumer confidence polls.

And the other thing that it did – remember, was volatility was virtually nonexistent here if you looked at the volatility indexes (either in the bond market or the stock market) – and I mean this week the VIX went from almost 10 to closing out Friday at almost 19. So you almost had a doubling of the VIX in a single weak. It went straight up like a NASA space launch. So with volatility up, the traders kind of like that and Wall Street does because with no volatility, it's very hard to make money in the market.

The other thing that's happening is you're starting to see this ocean of liquidity some of which is beginning to dry up, although I was reading – we follow global money flows – and you take a look at Europe, M3 is up 9.8% year-over-year. The money supply here is up somewhere over 11%. But there's something that I think is rather different this time. And this is a concept that I don't think anybody in the market gets yet. Unlike previous crises as we saw in the 90s – remember the Peso, derivative crisis in 94, we had the Asian crisis in '97, and then '98 it was Long Term Capital Management and Russia, then it was Y2K and then it was 9/11. Unlike previous crises, capital may not flow this time into the United States as a safe haven because the US itself may be what is unnerving investors; and especially when you consider, John, that foreigners own about 25% or more – I think I've seen that figure – of our mortgages, and they own over 50% of our Treasury debt, and about 25% of our corporate debt. So if they do not contain the stock market swoon within 10%, this could turn into something more serious: seeing a major asset decline leaning to widening credit spreads – and then, as they say in the movies, Houston, we’ve got a problem. [3:07]

JOHN: Yeah. It's important to recognize that the crises that we saw at the beginning of the 90s, they were happening elsewhere and people could look over here as more of a safe haven, I guess you'd call it, but now we are going to be the center of this crisis. Everything has changed here.

JIM: Yeah. And a lot of people are saying that there really isn't a problem. I mean there isn't an immediate impact when you see something like this happen, John. It's the after effects that come afterwards. It's like when the Fed stops raising interest rates, there's usually a 12- to 18-month lag period before you start seeing the full effect of that which is now unfolding. The Fed stopped raising rates in June of last year. Now you're seeing the problem surface in the subprime market in the mortgage market which will be the topic of our next segment here. But if you look at what happened in the 90s, profits peaked in 1997, and it wasn't until 2001 that the recession followed. Many things have to happen before profitability peaks and we see a recession – so it's sort of a slow unwinding process. And one of the things you want to see is increased corporate borrowing; you want to start seeing higher interest rates. So it's worth considering that what we're seeing here could be the beginning stages of what I call this final end game of the dollar that's going to begin here in stages because really, the epicenter of this whole problem area is the United States itself; and what they are going to do I suspect (and that's why I see another reinflation effort coming in this market) is try to contain it because they do not have a safety valve completely put in place. In other words, China doesn't have its safety valve put in place yet, nor does Russia, nor does India, nor does OPEC, and that's what they are scurrying around the globe trying to put in place and resurrect this system that will hold up for them when basically our financial system collapses here in the United States. [5:20]

JOHN: Well, you know, if we look at the whole situation, at least where it stands right now, it's not really in anybody’s interest to have this whole thing collapse. There were no capital inflows to speak of, but nevertheless the bond market did well but gold did horribly, and people have been scratching their heads on this little conundrum, so I think that needs some elucidation here.

JIM: What they are trying to do, John, is I call this concept herding. And a typical response would be the stock market goes down, you flip out of your stock trades and you go over into Treasuries. Okay, it's a flight to quality as they say; there's a crisis. And that's exactly what they want done at this point. They want the dollar still to be viewed as a safe haven. So this whole kind chimera that is taking place here is they are herding people into bonds, trying to keep them into the dollar, into dollars even as the Dollar Index itself has been breaking down. And that's happened where we're now looking at interest rates that are almost all of the way back to the very low that they reached in December of last year. We're not quite there – we’d have to get another, let's say, go from 4.5 down to 4.4. But they are also herding. We saw that this week we had figures that were announced that inflation is still running high. What you don't want is people going into the gold market because that threatens the structure of dollar credibility and faith in the dollar. So as Nick Barisheff was commenting on how the PM fix was much higher and by the time they got to the United States, they hammered the gold markets here. That's what they are trying to do. And if they can hammer the gold markets, that forces liquidation. There were comments made that a lot of people were liquidating their gold stocks, their bullion holdings on margin calls if you were leveraged. So you saw a lot of that action take place in the hedge fund market as a lot of these guys that were leveraged, you know, where did they have profits? They had profits in energy, gold and precious metals. And so, that's what they were liquidating as they were covering margin calls that were presented against them. So that explained part of the movement, but it was also a herding movement that was done – I can remember I was being interviewed, I think it was Tuesday, by the Wall Street Transcript and he asked the comment (at the time of the interview, the Dow was down 524 points), “how bad do you think this is going to get?” And I said I would bet you we're going to see a miracle take place here very shortly. And that's exactly what happened. They came in. And Bernanke even mentioned this in his testimony this week that he's working very closely on the capital markets committee (or the Plunge Protection committee) in monitoring the situation. That’s because you could just see it take place; and sure enough in the middle of this interview as I was talking to the gentleman that was interviewing me, we went from being down 524 points to being down only 350 points – and that was where they managed to keep it contained. And I made another comment and I said I bet you it spikes in the morning and that would be a good time if you're short the market to go in and cover your shorts.

That's the thing. They’ve got to prevent this contagion from taking place, and they’ve got to keep the sheep contained and corralled. And that’s exactly what they are doing – they are trying to keep the sheep contained in the corral; they don't want them getting out of the corral and going across the road into the precious metals market. That’s because when that happens, it's a confidence and what they don't want to do is lose confidence in the dollar, so it's very important that they hammer the gold market. [9:12]

JOHN: Well, obviously, there's going to be an opening bell on Monday, and there's a lot of speculation as to where this is all going, so where do you see it all going? Obviously you're a big believer in metals, what did you do during this time when everybody else was saying, “well, see the metals aren't doing anything.”

JIM: Let's talk about where we're going. We're still seeing turmoil in the mortgage-backed markets, and so I would not be surprised in the weeks ahead if you're going to see somebody else in trouble whether it's a hedge fund, another subprime lender, or even a major lender. You're even starting to see the breakdown in stocks such as Countrywide. And all of this is going to spook investors and that's going to cause the markets to freeze up and everyone takes stock of the risks. And now people are paying attention to that risk, and you could see if this continues much longer that capital would begin to flow out of the United States, or at least not come in at the same rate. And once again, I go back to the month of December where we had interest rates spike – we had interest rates of 4.4% the first week of December – and during the month of December (remember, the United States needs to raise about 70 to 80 billion dollars a month just to pay its bills) we only had $15 billion in net foreign buying come into our treasury markets, and the dollar got in trouble. We also began to see interest rates rise, and that's when the Fed had to come out and start talking tough about interest rates – what they were trying to do was protect the dollar from collapsing even though what was happening is interest rates were going up. So they really need to be careful here that they keep this contagion contained, and it doesn't get out of control. That’s because one of the things they learned about the stock market crash in 87 when they went back and studied it, is you can't allow this thing to gather momentum as a snow ball running down a mountain because then they just lose control. So it was very important – you heard Bernanke talking wonderful things about the economy; the real estate market is self contained, it's not spilling over – we'll address that here in just a moment; and then also the turn around in the stock market the day it dropped 5 ¼ where you saw it in the futures pit, and they just turned it around intervening at the same time they had to hammer gold - you couldn't have gold spiking over 700 or we would have a real full-blown crisis on our hands. [11:46]

JOHN: So I'm going to gather from all of this, you're not panicked. You're enjoying this actually.

JIM: No. We were actually backing up the trucks on Friday, both in client accounts and myself personally, I bought silver bullion, bought a lot of it on Friday; and also my four favorite juniors, I loaded up to the gills; and I've got another semi-truck I'm sending down next week. [12:09]

JOHN: And I'm assuming it runs on ethanol, am I correct?

JIM: Yes. It's a green truck.

JOHN: It's a green truck. I'm assuming as well that when they do this type of thing, they hammer the energy markets, it's really a good opportunity is what it is.

JIM: It's an incredible opportunity. We're looking at revamping some of the things we have in energy because I expect more energy take overs. I've got one company I'm looking at now, John, that I'm going to buy at 25% of its enterprise value, so I don't expect this company to be around in the next 12 to 18 months. Same thing with late-stage juniors – we saw it with ago Agnico-Eagle; and you're going to see more and more of that as you take a look at these companies that are going to try to grow their resources, you're going to see more and more take overs. So you're absolutely right. I love it. The best time to buy is when there is blood in the street, when people are panicky and the sense of fear takes over, that's when we like to be buyers.

Thursday, March 08, 2007

How Now Brown COw?

Keeping an open mind on what is happening is certainly wise. FSO market commentator, Chris Puplava has another wonderful detail analysis on the going-ons: Blue Skies or Rough Water Ahead, Which Is It? Keeping an Open Mind.

Talking about FSO, the FSO team has a financial broadcast everyday Saturday. And here is the link to the transcript for last Saturday broadcast: Transcript for The BIG Picture

Most worthwhile reading of course is the section where they talk about the market: Stock Market Sell off: What It's Telling Us

Wednesday, March 07, 2007

How Now Brown Cow?

And this research article from Martin Armstrong suddenly became the talk of town.

http://www.nowandfutures.com/buscycle.htm

How Now Brown Cow?

Saw this very interesting comments posted by Ms.Claire Barnes of Apollo Investment Management. ( website: http://www.apolloinvestment.com/index.html )

6 Mar 07:The possibility of 'reversing Indonesia's anti-corruption drive' may set off a few warning bells for investors in a stockmarket which has more than quintupled over 4.5 years. Institutional integrity is not only important to economic efficiency; the number of problems over the years relating to security of company ownership and enforcement of contracts suggests to us that the valuation of shares should be discounted relative to other also-imperfect South-East Asian markets. More fundamental legal reform than ever seemed likely would have been desirable, but even the progress which was made now seems to be fizzling. Other market participants clearly take a different view of the risk-reward balance, but the fund is out of Indonesia for now - for stock-specific reasons, as ever, but there seem to be more promising places to seek replacements. Dissenting views, anyone?

How Now Brown Cow?

Ok, the markets has rebounded. Our marker has staged a strong rebound on bargain hunting according to Bernama market wrap and according to the report from CNN the Bulls stage comeback.

So how Brown Cow?

Has the market hit the bottom?

Here is FSO's market commentator asking probably the question that is on everyone's mind right now, Markets Hit Bottom: But Will It Last?.

And if you are on cautious side and you want to read more about the risks involved in the current market, do read the following articles, The big bet that could melt Wall St. , Subprime woes: How far, how wide? , The risk in subprime.

Oh, and do pay attention to this twin terror, Fannie, Freddie threaten economy .

Why Fannie and why Fredie?

Simple.

US$1.4 trillion.

As mentioned in the article, "Fed officials have often argued the combined $1.4 trillion investment portfolios held by the two companies are so large and unwieldy they present a systemic risk to the broader economy and should be curtailed."

Monday, March 05, 2007

How Now Brown Cow?

Here's another interesting comment posted: http://www.thekirkreport.com/2007/03/flip_the_chart.html

How Now Brown Cow?

Here's another article trying to explain what has happened. here


  • Two of the biggest culprits behind the rampant speculation in global markets are the Bank of Japan (BoJ) and the Swiss National Bank (SNB), whose lending rates are so low, that an estimated $330 billion of "carry trades" in yen and Swiss francs are swirling around the global markets. On Feb 28th, the BoJ's Atsushi Mizuno, pointed to the side effects of keeping low interest rates near zero percent. "It could cause distortions in global asset prices by speeding up capital outflows from Japan."


    And on January 24th, SNB Chairman Jean-Pierre Roth told the annual meeting of the World Economic Forum. "My current thinking on the Swiss franc, which is going against the fundamental elements in the Swiss economy, is that it's part of the exuberance in the financial markets," before vowing to crank up Swiss loan rates. The SNB started cranking up rates from near-zero in mid- 2004 to its current 2%.


    Interestingly enough, the latest plunge in global stock markets came on the heels of a hike in the Bank of Japan's overnight loan rate to 0.50%, its highest in a decade, and renewed warnings by Swiss central bankers of a tighter monetary policy in the weeks ahead, and threats of a short squeeze on speculators betting against the Swiss franc. Earlier, on February 10th, G-7 central bankers warned currency speculators that they could get burned betting in one direction against the yen.

Berkshire Hathaway Annual Letter

Here is the link to Berkshire Hathaway annual letter: http://www.berkshirehathaway.com/letters/2006ltr.pdf

Enjoy!

Friday, March 02, 2007

How now Brown Cow?

Here's something to chew upon: Global Market Brief: China's Engineered Drop

  • Feb. 28 and Beyond

    Follow-on crashes can come from one of three places.

    First, the Chinese believe their exchanges are massively overvalued (hence the engineered crash). They will do this again, and are not (yet) particularly concerned with the international consequences. China planned to dampen its own stock market, not the world's markets. Along with the rest of the world, Beijing did not expect the contagion effect to be so extreme. Yet, for now at least, China's own exchanges are its primary concern, and it will act according to that belief.

    Second, everyone else now is going to chew on the fact that Beijing did this intentionally. They will either agree with the Chinese that the exchanges are overvalued and that additional measures are needed, or they will be terrified that Beijing did this intentionally and not care about the reasons. Whether what is sold is a domestic Chinese firm or a foreign firm invested in China does not matter much. Neither does it matter if the stock is on an exchange in China or abroad. Either way, the reaction will be the same: Sell.

    Third, trading in 800 of the 1,400 stocks on the Shanghai exchange was suspended during the sudden drops Feb. 27; they have a lot farther to fall, even without any engineered drops caused by panicky selling.

    Considering the flaws on which the Chinese system is based, this certainly will not be the last engineered drop. In theory, the move will make foreign investors far more cautious before diving into the Chinese system, but as longtime Stratfor readers know, we have been wrong on the timing of that particular development before.


How Now Brown Cow?

Found a great set of comments posted: So what is Mr Market telling me?

Enjoy!

How Now Brown Cow?

Here's an interesting posting by my favourite market commentators at Financial Sense Online. In today's market wrap, Mr.Martin Goldberg wrote the following piece: Complacency Not Wrung Out

Here is a long snippet of what he wrote.

Put these comments into your consideration before making your next investing/trading decision.

  • For a number of reasons, the market is likely to sustain additional losses in the weeks ahead. While the market has been lulled into complacency, Tuesday’s action does not change anything regarding the public’s complacency toward the stock market. Nothing has been wrung out - in fact Tuesday’s action merely reinforces the existence of public complacency. Consider that in terms of historic perspective, there was nothing special about what happened on Tuesday. The magnitude of the drop, only a little over 3% on the S&P 500, was nothing tremendously unusual when taken in historic perspective.
  • Yet in spite of this rather benign price action, radio, TV, and newspapers were overwhelmed with news, guidance, counseling, cheerleading, discussing, predicting, and various proselytizing about the stock market. CNBC dedicated a night time show to guide their viewers to not get nervous and sell out at the bottom and to focus on bargain hunting. The stock market was the lead story in many news broadcasts both Tuesday evening as well as Wednesday. I’m told that they broke into the Oprah show with a stock market story on Tuesday. While it is refreshing to see the stock market lead, it is totally inappropriate for the market to become the lead story on action that is rather ordinary when taken in historic perspective.
  • The news stories all seemed to have the same tone. That is, “don’t worry folks; you don’t want to sell out at the bottom.” There was also a lot of talk and advice on “bargain hunting.” In addition, TV viewers were able to watch straight-faced comparisons between Tuesday’s action and that of the 1987 and 2000 crashes. While this may make for favorable TV ratings, there is no technical truth to such a premise. Below is a chart of the Dow Jones Industrials before and through the 1987 crash. In this case, a long standing uptrend beginning in mid-May was finally broken in early September. (The top occurred in late August – more than 30 days from the market top.) The broken trend was about one month old when the crash occurred.



  • By contrast, Tuesday’s action is likely to be the end of an uptrend instead the end of a downtrend as had occurred in 1987. This is clearly shown in the chart below. Tuesday’s action came only 5 days from a (possible) intermediate term top.
  • The chart below is an updated version from last week’s article, entitled “Market Behavior a Formula for Complacency.” It is clear that Tuesday’s action signaled a change in market character. As the market advanced, the volume diminished until the market finally turned. As it headed downward, volume accelerated. The lower Bollinger band, which served as support during the uptrend, was decisively broken on Tuesday. This is evidence that something has changed in the behavior of the stock market since the summer. Trading volume could not be produced during the uptrend, and as a result volume was produced through a break in the uptrend.

  • In addition, Tuesday and Wednesday’s action has produced market behavior not observed in history. Tuesday’s S&P 500 trading volume was the most ever! If not for Tuesday’s volume, Wednesday’s trading volume would have been the most ever. Over 7 billion shares were traded over these 2 trading days. With the market in a 4+ year bull, a change in behavior from diminishing volume to record breaking volume is likely to be signaling a change in price action as well.