Junk at your service

With the size of US junk bond market at $1.2trillion last year, we witnessed a huge outflow of about $60bn from junk rated debt due to rate hikes (resulting weaker investor confidence) and sharply falling oil prices in December 2018.

As investors are calibrating that Federal Reserve might have gone on hold with rate hikes, they have been pulling money out of leveraged loans (in which they invested enormously at the beginning of this year owing to better yields than junk bonds which looked expensive after their prices jumped last year) for 13 consecutive weeks, according to Lipper. For the last three weeks, they have been pouring money into junk – bond funds including $3.86bn of inflow this month that was biggest since July 2016.

However, this surge in junk bond investing have suppressed the risks that already existing leveraged loans pose to financial system. According to BIS, the total of leveraged loans and high yield bonds outstanding in Europe and US has doubled to about $2.65 trillion since the financial crisis.

Risky companies got highly levered in pursuit of higher profit however, they forgot that this would leave them in a vulnerable position and shake them with higher borrowing costs. “Diminished ability of highly levered companies to service high interest costs would worsen their refinancing opportunities” warned analysts at Moody’s Investors Service.

The point of relief in this storm is indecision of Federal Reserve and ECB whether to raise borrowing costs which have made the possibility of crisis remote and also because the rate of defaults among companies is low, at less than 2 percent with S&P Global Ratings and Moody’s Investors Service both forecasting a modest rise to about 2.5 percent this year.

(with inputs from Apra Sharma)

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-02-22/junk-debt-market-s-2019-rebound-may-obscure-a-gathering-storm

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-02-20/leveraged-loans-are-better-value-than-junk-bonds-investor-says

https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2019-02-20/subprime-corporate-debt-leveraged-loans-could-cause-next-crisis



Charts That Matter- 5th Feb

The credit cycle is not going to change because central banks keep rates low. Households and corporates see the real risk in the economy.

Dramatic rally in U.S. high-yield bonds so far this year has reduced the debt’s risk-reward proposition with stocks. Investors are earning the least extra yield to own junk bonds versus the earnings yield on the S&P 500 since October.

China’s share of global GDP has surged from ~3% to 17% over past 2 decades. China climb helped lift other EM economies their share of global activity rise from 16% in 2000 to 23% in 2017, JPM calculated. US lost some ground but rise of EMs largely at expense of other DMs like Japan

Fear and Greed. The interesting part is where it was 1 month ago and 1 yrs ago.

Week in Review

Summary

  • Turkey continues to get crushed across the board with 10-year blowing out another 40
    bps on the week to over 21 percent ….(they might have negative GDP growth next
    year)
  • EM bond markets hammered….(India behaving well)
  • Euro periphery spreads widening with Italy out to 282 bps over German bunds….(at
    one point of time they were at par)
  • EM FX weaker led by South Africa….(this is next Turkey)
  • The dollar index closed above crucial level….(imp level to watch)
  • Global stocks weaker; (the U.S. closed higher on narrow breadth and thanks to Walmart)
  • Fewer and fewer country ETFs are green on the year
  • Lumber bouncing after vicious bear market….(lumber is a leading indicator of US
    economy)
  • Crude weaker….(some reprieve)
  • No shine for the metals with Dr copper now down 20 percent YTD….(not a good sign)

(Global Macro Monitor)

Getting Rich vs Staying rich

Abraham Germansky was a multimillionaire real estate developer in 1920s. He also loved stocks, betting heavily as the market boomed. As the crash of 1929 unfolded, he was wiped out.

And that was basically the end of Abraham Germansky.

Germansky disappeared on October 24th, 1929. The New York Times posted a short story near the back of its October 26th edition, with Germansky’s lawyer, Bernard Sandler, asking for information on his whereabouts. It tells a powerful story in just a few words:

Later that week another investor in the same city had a very different experience.

Jesse Livermore returned home on October 29th to a wife who, seeing news of the day’s record market crash, was prepared to console her husband and return to a life of frugality.

Jesse said that wasn’t necessary. He was short the market and made more money in the crash of 1929 than during the rest of his life combined.

“You mean we are not ruined?” his wife asked, according to Livermore’s biography.

He replied: “No darling, I have just had my best ever trading day – we are fabulously rich and can do whatever we like.” He made, in one day, the equivalent of $3 billion.

Polar opposite stories. *Germansky went broke, Livermore became the richest man in the world.*

But fast-forward four years and the stories end up nearly identical.

Livermore made larger and larger bets, and went on to lose everything in the stock market. Broke and ashamed, he disappeared for two days in 1933. His wife set out to find him. “Jesse L. Livermore, the stock market operator, of 1100 Park Avenue missing and has not been seen since 3pm yesterday,” the New York Times wrote in 1933. He returned, but his path was set. Livermore eventually took his own life.

*The timing was different, but Germansky and Livermore shared the realization that getting rich is one thing. Staying rich is quite another.*

Everything in the economy is cyclical. Nothing great or terrible is likely to stay that way for long, because the same forces that cause things to be great or terrible also plant the seeds to push them the other way.

Bull markets make stocks expensive, expensive stocks leave little room for error, and little room for error increases the odds of bull markets ending. Same thing in the other direction. Recessions cause pessimism. Pessimism causes underproduction, underproduction leads to scarcity, scarcity leads to a new boom.

*People and companies, whose behaviors are changed by their own success, are vulnerable to the same cycles.*

I’ve noticed a pattern: *Getting rich can be the biggest impediment to staying rich.*

It goes like this. The more successful you are at something, the more convinced you become that you’re doing it right. The more convinced you are that you’re doing it right, the less open you are to change. The less open you are to change, the more likely you are to tripping in a world that changes all the time.

*There are a million ways to get rich. But there’s only one way to stay rich: Humility, often to the point of paranoia.* The irony is that few things squash humility like getting rich in the first place.

It’s why the composition of Dow Jones companies changes so much over time, and why the Forbes list of billionaires has 60% turnover per decade.

Andy Grove, Intel’s founder, put it this way: _“Business success contains the seeds of its own destruction.”_ Scrappiness and the ability to think differently turns into complacency and the desire to keep things the same. Harvard Business Review wrote about Grove’s management philosophy in 1996:

Grove believes that at least some fear is healthy — especially in organizations that have had a history of success. Fear can be a healthy antidote to the complacency that success often breeds. A touch of paranoia — a suspicion that the world is changing against you — is what Grove prescribes.

Michael Moritz, the billionaire head of Sequoia Capital, was asked by Charlie Rose why Sequoia was so successful. Moritz mentioned longevity, noting that some VC firms succeed for five or ten years, but Sequoia has prospered for four decades. Rose asked why that was:

Moritz: I think we’ve always been afraid of going out of business._

Rose: Really? So it’s fear? Only the paranoid survive?

Moritz: There’s a lot of truth to that … We assume that tomorrow won’t be like yesterday. We can’t afford to rest on our laurels. We can’t be complacent. We can’t assume that yesterday’s success translates into tomorrow’s good fortune.

Not skill, or market insight, or even hard work. Fear and humility.

Humility doesn’t mean taking fewer risks. Sequoia takes as big of risks today as it did 30 years ago. But it’s taken risks in new industries, with new approaches, and new partners, cognizant that work worked yesterday isn’t what will work tomorrow.

IBM and Xerox did this when they shifted from hardware to services.

Netflix did it when it cannibalized its DVD business to invest in streaming.

GE has reinvented itself about every 20 years for the last century, going from a lightbulb company to a dishwasher company to a bank to a wind turbine company.

Each could have looked at their past success and concluded they were doing the right thing, patting themselves on the back. But they didn’t. They were, for the most part, paranoid, eager and willing to jettison past success in an attempt to keep up with where the world was heading next.

It’s not easy to do.

For decades people used Coke, Gillette, and American Express as examples of companies whose success was so solidified – whose moats were so deep and protected that you could foresee their dominance indefinitely. But now all three are under attack. Coke’s is fighting 13 consecutive years of soda decline. Dollar Shave Club came out of nowhere to take 14 percentage points of market share away from Gillette. And as Charlie Munger, one of AmEx’s largest investors said this week: “If you think you know what the state of the payments system will be 10 years out you’re in a state of delusion.” Only the paranoid survive.

We don’t know much about Abraham Germansky – only that he went from rich, to broke, to disappeared. But we know a lot about Livermore, whose life was well documented.

Livermore was was one of the most skilled people in the world at getting rich. But few people in the early 20th century had a harder time staying rich. He made and lost at least four fortunes, never going more than eight years without flirting with bankruptcy.

After his third wipeout, Livermore recognized his mistake: Getting rich made him feel invincible, and feeling invincible led him to double-down with leverage on what worked in the recent past, which was catastrophic when the world changed and the market turned against him.

He reflected:

I sometimes think that no price is too high for a speculator to pay to learn that which will keep him from getting the swelled head. A great many smashes by brilliant men can be traced directly to the swelled head._

“It’s an expensive disease everywhere to everybody”he said.

Abraham Germansky was a multimillionaire real estate developer in 1920s. He also loved stocks, betting heavily as the market boomed. As the crash of 1929 unfolded, he was wiped out.

And that was basically the end of Abraham Germansky.

Germansky disappeared on October 24th, 1929. The New York Times posted a short story near the back of its October 26th edition, with Germansky’s lawyer, Bernard Sandler, asking for information on his whereabouts. It tells a powerful story in just a few words:

Later that week another investor in the same city had a very different experience.

Jesse Livermore returned home on October 29th to a wife who, seeing news of the day’s record market crash, was prepared to console her husband and return to a life of frugality.

Jesse said that wasn’t necessary. He was short the market and made more money in the crash of 1929 than during the rest of his life combined.

“You mean we are not ruined?” his wife asked, according to Livermore’s biography.

He replied: “No darling, I have just had my best ever trading day – we are fabulously rich and can do whatever we like.” He made, in one day, the equivalent of $3 billion.

Polar opposite stories. *Germansky went broke, Livermore became the richest man in the world.*

But fast-forward four years and the stories end up nearly identical.

Livermore made larger and larger bets, and went on to lose everything in the stock market. Broke and ashamed, he disappeared for two days in 1933. His wife set out to find him. “Jesse L. Livermore, the stock market operator, of 1100 Park Avenue missing and has not been seen since 3pm yesterday,” the New York Times wrote in 1933. He returned, but his path was set. Livermore eventually took his own life.

*The timing was different, but Germansky and Livermore shared the realization that getting rich is one thing. Staying rich is quite another.*

Everything in the economy is cyclical. Nothing great or terrible is likely to stay that way for long, because the same forces that cause things to be great or terrible also plant the seeds to push them the other way.

Bull markets make stocks expensive, expensive stocks leave little room for error, and little room for error increases the odds of bull markets ending. Same thing in the other direction. Recessions cause pessimism. Pessimism causes underproduction, underproduction leads to scarcity, scarcity leads to a new boom.

*People and companies, whose behaviors are changed by their own success, are vulnerable to the same cycles.*

I’ve noticed a pattern: *Getting rich can be the biggest impediment to staying rich.*

It goes like this. The more successful you are at something, the more convinced you become that you’re doing it right. The more convinced you are that you’re doing it right, the less open you are to change. The less open you are to change, the more likely you are to tripping in a world that changes all the time.

*There are a million ways to get rich. But there’s only one way to stay rich: Humility, often to the point of paranoia.* The irony is that few things squash humility like getting rich in the first place.

It’s why the composition of Dow Jones companies changes so much over time, and why the Forbes list of billionaires has 60% turnover per decade.

Andy Grove, Intel’s founder, put it this way: _“Business success contains the seeds of its own destruction.”_ Scrappiness and the ability to think differently turns into complacency and the desire to keep things the same. Harvard Business Review wrote about Grove’s management philosophy in 1996:

Grove believes that at least some fear is healthy — especially in organizations that have had a history of success. Fear can be a healthy antidote to the complacency that success often breeds. A touch of paranoia — a suspicion that the world is changing against you — is what Grove prescribes.

Michael Moritz, the billionaire head of Sequoia Capital, was asked by Charlie Rose why Sequoia was so successful. Moritz mentioned longevity, noting that some VC firms succeed for five or ten years, but Sequoia has prospered for four decades. Rose asked why that was:

Moritz: I think we’ve always been afraid of going out of business._

Rose: Really? So it’s fear? Only the paranoid survive?

Moritz: There’s a lot of truth to that … We assume that tomorrow won’t be like yesterday. We can’t afford to rest on our laurels. We can’t be complacent. We can’t assume that yesterday’s success translates into tomorrow’s good fortune.

Not skill, or market insight, or even hard work. Fear and humility.

Humility doesn’t mean taking fewer risks. Sequoia takes as big of risks today as it did 30 years ago. But it’s taken risks in new industries, with new approaches, and new partners, cognizant that work worked yesterday isn’t what will work tomorrow.

IBM and Xerox did this when they shifted from hardware to services.

Netflix did it when it cannibalized its DVD business to invest in streaming.

GE has reinvented itself about every 20 years for the last century, going from a lightbulb company to a dishwasher company to a bank to a wind turbine company.

Each could have looked at their past success and concluded they were doing the right thing, patting themselves on the back. But they didn’t. They were, for the most part, paranoid, eager and willing to jettison past success in an attempt to keep up with where the world was heading next.

It’s not easy to do.

For decades people used Coke, Gillette, and American Express as examples of companies whose success was so solidified – whose moats were so deep and protected  that you could foresee their dominance indefinitely. But now all three are under attack. Coke’s is fighting 13 consecutive years of soda decline. Dollar Shave Club came out of nowhere to take 14 percentage points of market share away from Gillette. And as Charlie Munger, one of AmEx’s largest investors said this week: “If you think you know what the state of the payments system will be 10 years out you’re in a state of delusion.” Only the paranoid survive.

We don’t know much about Abraham Germansky – only that he went from rich, to broke, to disappeared. But we know a lot about Livermore, whose life was well documented.

Livermore was was one of the most skilled people in the world at getting rich. But few people in the early 20th century had a harder time staying rich. He made and lost at least four fortunes, never going more than eight years without flirting with bankruptcy.

After his third wipeout, Livermore recognized his mistake: Getting rich made him feel invincible, and feeling invincible led him to double-down with leverage on what worked in the recent past, which was catastrophic when the world changed and the market turned against him.

He reflected:

I sometimes think that no price is too high for a speculator to pay to learn that which will keep him from getting the swelled head. A great many smashes by brilliant men can be traced directly to the swelled head.

“It’s an expensive disease everywhere to everybody”he said.

America’s favourite brand …..and Apple is not one of them

Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos once said: “If you make customers unhappy in the physical world, they might each tell 6 friends. If you make customers unhappy on the Internet, they can each tell 6,000 friends.” As the infographic below shows, the founder of ‘earth’s biggest bookstore’ certainly seems to have kept this wisdom in mind, building his company into the ‘most loved’ brand in the United States.

A recent survey by Morning Consult revealed that Amazon currently enjoys a nationwide-best net favorability of 76 percent. Close behind the Seattle-based retail giant is Google, with a 75 percent score. The top ten is dominated by American companies, with one exception; Japanese tech firm Sony makes it into joint eigtth position with Home Depot and Lowe’s with 70 percent.

The World’s Most Respected ‘Made in’ Labels

Statista’s Made-In-Country-Index (MICI) 2017 has shed light on the worldwide reputation of products produced in 49 different countries (plus the EU). The survey of more than 43 thousand consumers – representing 90 percent of the global population – delves into the standing of ‘Made in’ labels around the world, revealing the national brands with the most respect.

The ‘Made in’ label was originally introduced by the British at the end of the 19th century to protect their economy from cheap, low quality and sometimes counterfeit imports from Germany. It is therefore rather ironic that Germany now sits atop the ranking as the most respected label in the world. Coming in a close second is Switzerland while the founders of the system find themselves in a still very respectable fourth place. The United States is joint eighth with France and Japan.

India is not on this chart but as per data by (MICI)India ranks 42 in the list of most respected labels with an index value of 36

This chart shows the world’s most respected ‘made in’ labels in 2017.

Peer into Post-Apocalyptic Future of Antimicrobial Resistance

ABOUT 4 MILLION years ago, a cave was forming in the Delaware Basin of what is now Carlsbad Caverns National Park in New Mexico. From that time on, Lechuguilla Cave remained untouched by humans or animals until its discovery in 1986—an isolated, pristine primeval ecosystem.

When the bacteria found on the walls of Lechuguilla were analyzed, many of the microbes were determined not only to have resistance to natural antibiotics like penicillin, but also to synthetic antibiotics that did not exist on earth until the second half of the twentieth century. As infectious disease specialist Brad Spellberg put it in the New England Journal of Medicine, “These results underscore a critical reality: antibiotic resistance already exists, widely disseminated in nature, to drugs we have not yet invented.”

Read more

https://www.wired.com/2017/03/peer-post-apocalyptic-future-antimicrobial-resistance/?mbid=nl_31817_p2&CNDID=31755630

What I read this week

Engineered to fail: Are IT recruits untrainable because they cheat in college?

It all started with a statement by Srinivas Kandula, chief executive of information technology major Capgemeni India, at a business event in Mumbai earlier this month.At the event, Kandula said: “I am not very pessimistic, but it is a challenging task and I tend to believe that 60-65 per cent of them [IT recruits] are just not trainable.” Then Dheeraj Sanghi, a professor at the Indraprastha Institute of Information Technology-Delhi, wrote a blog post on the quality of the country’s information technology engineers attributing this to alleged copying in engineering institutions across the country. The professor, who has also taught at the Indian Institute of Technology-Kanpur, wrote that information technology and computer science students in India are falling behind because they have not learnt much in engineering college. He wrote: “I have always been amazed at the Indian software industry. That it can grow so fast and become so big despite the abysmal quality of education in our colleges. “A lot of people have talked about poor quality curriculum, poor quality faculty, poor infrastructure, poor school education, and so on. I disagree. There is a much simpler explanation for this: Copying in our colleges, besides laziness.”

Read More

https://scroll.in/article/830400/are-information-technology-recruits-not-trainable-because-they-cheat-in-college-even-in-iitsRead More

 

India sales manager index .. at odds with GDp data

The Sales Managers Index provide the earliest monthly data on the speed and direction of Indian economic activity. The Indian Sales Managers Index for February, shows the after effects of the December demonetisation policy which was intended to crack down on corruption and “black money”. The February Headline SMI has fallen to an index level of 60.2 in unadjusted terms, the lowest level in over 3 years. Managers are reporting a big drop in monthly sales for both the consumer and industrial sectors, with small to medium size businesses that predominantly deal with cash transactions, being hardest hit. February SMI data suggests an erratic situation for Indian businesses as they meet market challenges with considerably lower levels of confidence, slower monthly sales and higher prices caused by the currency situation. This data by worldeconomics is contrary to the GDP numbers published by Govt this week which shows that demonetisation did not have any adverse impact on the economy ……..strange indeed

Read More

http://worldeconomics.com/SMI/India-SalesManagersIndex.efp

 

Art Bubble bursting……Russian Billionaire Takes 74% Loss on $85 Million Gauguin

Russian billionaire Dmitry Rybolovlev paid €54 million or $85 million for a landscape by Paul Gauguin in a private transaction in June 2008. This week in an auction, he incurred a whopping 74% loss on his store of value “investment” as reported by Bloomberg: The Gauguin was one of four Rybolovlev pieces offered for sale on Tuesday. Another work, a Mark Rothko painting, will be auctioned March 7. Rybolovlev — with a fortune of about $9.8 billion according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index — invested about $2 billion in 38 works, from Leonardo da Vinci to Pablo Picasso. They were procured privately by Swiss art dealer Yves Bouvier, known for creating a network of tax-free art storage warehouses in Singapore and Luxembourg.

He has already sold three for a loss totalling an estimated $100 million. The five works at Christie’s, all estimated below their purchase prices, were expected to deepen the loss. In May 2015, bouvier warned about the bubble in the  fine art “investment market or indeed the Hyperinflation in Art Investment Market after a Picasso sold for $179 million.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2017-02-28/that-85-million-painting-bought-as-an-investment-now-down-74

These are the biggest tax havens of earth

In some places around the world, even rich residents don’t pay income taxes.

An analysis of personal top income tax rates released Thursday by Howmuch.net revealed that residents of some countries — many of which are in the Middle East — don’t pay any income taxes at all. The analysis cross-referenced the country’s top personal income tax rates with gross domestic product per capita to highlight countries with both low taxes and a healthy economy.

While Bermuda has “the most extreme combination of tax rate and GDP per capita in the world,” it’s got other downsides like a high cost of living, a 14.5% payroll tax for some employers and high customs duties that are typically 25%. The Cayman Islands also have a high GDP per capita and no personal income tax, though companies do have to provide pensions for employees, the report reveals. Many of the countries on the list of tax havens are in the Middle East. While the governments in these countries may not tax income, “these countries often have significant oil resources which are taxed by the government,” the report reveals. In Qatar, for example, oil and gas businesses get taxed at a 35% rate. UAE is also a favourite destination for millionaires leaving India for greener pastures.

Read More

http://www.marketwatch.com/story/top-10-tax-havens-around-the-world-2016-02-11

Snap is more valuable than these household names

Snap’s IPO valuation of $24 billion is quite a tall order for a company that has never turned a profit and warned investors that it never might. The company is now valued at 59 times its total revenue for 2016. Even for a fast-growing tech company that is a lot. Facebook in comparison has a price-to-sales ratio of around 14.

As Statista chart illustrates, Snap is now valued considerably higher than many American household names. That includes companies such as Ralph Lauren and Harley-Davidson that have been around for decades and probably will be for decades to come.

 

Modern day Bankruptsy of a developed country

“Greece is a developed country by most meaningful metrics. However, its well-documented financial struggles in the last decade have caused doubt in some quarters: Things became so bad in 2013 that index provider MCSI downgraded Greece from a developed economy to an emerging market economy.”

After the birth of currency Euro, it rose from 80 cents to 1.60 to a dollar. However, this tended to produce deflation, not inflation as imported prices fell putting pressure on domestic manufacturers and tourism became expensive thereby reducing earnings from tourism etc. and reducing sales. Deflation also increases the value of govt debt. To service the debt that doubled, they also then began to raise taxes more aggressively and this then was much like strip-mining the economy.
Germany benefited from the Euro because they were manufacturing products and selling them into Europe and did not have to worry about currency fluctuations.  The movement of creating a euro was to eliminate currency risk so the German manufacturers could sell their products throughout Europe.
Greece’s top three main industries are tourism, shipping, and industrial products. By joining the Euro, Greece lost the attraction of a cheap holiday for tourists and shipping prices rose. Greece is nowhere near attaining those manufacturing characteristics, and is often one of the smallest in this regard compared to Germany, Japan, and China. However, the Greek-owned fleet of ships remains where it has been for a very long time, at the TOP of the global ranking of shipowning nations. Joining the Eurozone has hurt Greek shipping increasing its cost and opening the door to competition. China is moving upwards rapidly in shipping, and potentially could overtake both Greece and Japan (the second largest) to become number one shipowner within a decade. Greece has not benefited from joining the Eurozone and this has been the greatest myth which has hurt the Greek people tremendously.
European tourism began to move outside the Eurozone for vacations because it was cheaper. Greece has an economy with a public sector accounting for about 40% of GDP and with per capita GDP about two-thirds that of the leading Eurozone economies, this has contributed greatly to its debt crisis. Tourism provides 18% of GDP, so joining the Euro was a complete disaster for tourism and when the government is 40% of GDP and produces nothing to export, the debt crisis simply escalates. A country which relinquishes its right to print its own currency can default. As Martin Armstrong writes “The likelihood of Greece have to exit the Eurozone is growing tremendously by the day”.

who thought a day will come when a developed economy will default on its debt?