Timing & trends

Its not what you know.. Its what the market believes that matters

 

“Love is like socks – you got to have two and they have to match.”

This morningIt’s not what you know about value – it’s what the market believes that matters when it comes to price. Will Call My Agent win the streaming wars? And will widespread adoption fuel a massive boom in Socks… just as the shills say has happened in Bitcoin?

Yes, I did write Socks. That was not a typo.

This morning I am very much gratified to the Thunderer of London for pointing out there are now more Trabants on German roads than Teslas. 3000 refurbished Trabbies were (re)registered last year. If you’ve never driven one…. the Trabbie is said to be great fun. (People lie. It’s not.)

There is something of a race underway to be least effective government here in Yoorp. The UK the government has spent £30 odd billion on a test and trace system that does neither (but has made lots of MP’s chums exceedingly rich.) But, at least the Brits have tried. In Brussels they just failed to deliver at all in terms of a vaccine roll out. Which means someone has to accept blame. Which is yet another benefit of Brexit for Yoorp – blame the perfidious Brits! I am willing to take bets on how long before borders are closed…

If anyone has got any definitive data to explain the truth on who is closing their borders to vaccines and who is not, please share. I want to know where vaccines are made and delivered from and who signed what and when in terms of contracts. There is so much noise out there. The EU says the UK won’t share our toys, but we say yes we will.. who is telling porky pies? One rather feels the EU’s relationship with the UK is going same way as Megan Markel’s.

As for markets, well… who knows?

The greatest truth about markets is it’s not what you think you know that matters. It’s what other people collectively think they know that counts. You may be a bone fide financial genius knowing the exact value of everything – but the market is just an enormous calculating machine. It may completely ignore your value and set a very, very different price.

All of which means I can’t really explain why Tech stocks were off on a tear yesterday. Maybe it’s the cheques American’s are about to get through the post as a result of Stimulus Package 1.9? A relief rally? Or short-covering? Time to load up more on my Tesla leveraged short ETF I think.

Or maybe it was GameStop saying it’s going to become an ecommerce business (the whole point being it the company’s insistence on remaining highstreet retailer that attracted all the shorts earlier this year!) I wonder how long before GameStop is taken out by a SPAC?

When it comes to value I’m struggling to know what makes tech stocks – including great names like Apple, Amazon, Microsoft et al – worth so much more today than they were a year ago as Lockdown started to bite? What’s changed? That’s my intellectual contribution to the debate – they are good companies and worth holding, but not at these prices.

But the world does change. One thing I like more and more is Netflix – but that’s largely due to She-Who-is-Mrs-Blain and I having a new top series to watch: “Call My Agent”. It’s a remarkable and genuinely clever French programme that actually makes Parisians seem likable! Of course, we all know the denizens of Paris are the worst people in the world, making New Yorkers and Londoner’s appear calm and reasonable. Until I suddenly worked out last night I care far more about these characters than I ever had on any UK drama. The hook of the programme is having genuine French stars play themselves, often irreverently.

It set me thinking? I am becoming a closet Frogophile? The other great hit of the year has been “Emily in Paris”.  Gosh! I have a sudden urge to learn French and start watch French art-house films. Is it just me?

It’s interesting – a year ago I was a Netflix uber-bear on the basis mounting competition would swamp them. Disney would dominate quality programming, while Apple-TV would be savvy watching. A host of new cheaper entrants from Britbox to Starzplay would eat its lunch. But its not happened. Apart The Boys, Lower Deck, and The Expanse on Prime, Netflix gets most of our viewing. Apple has failed to deliver much. Disney even less so after you’ve watched all the Jeff Goldblum programmes.

For the life of me I can’t work out Telsa.. but hey-ho. Up 20% in a day? Whatever. Whom am I am to argue. I shall use it as a selling opportunity.

Meanwhile… Time to Go Long Socks

Don’t be blindsided (as Harry might say) by yesterday’s gains in Tesla and Bitcoin! Increased Adoption – word of the day – is fuelling a massive rally in socks.

I suspect many in the market might be missing the equally spectacular gains we predict in Socks. Following yesterday’s announcement from PayPal reminding us it accepts payments for Socks, the whole Sock sector is set to surge on increasing adoption and transactional ease.

The widespread adoption of foot apparel by leading bankers, investors and hedge fund managers, and now leading internet payment systems, is driving massive new demand. Although the sock market crashed during last summer’s sock-meltdown, analysts say that was a simple seasonal factor – caused by an unusual warm spell in Cornwall, and leading to many well known financial influencers being seen not wearing socks.

Now it’s increasing Sock adoption that’s driving the market. Analysts at the Sockcoin.com, the leading Sock Exchange, are predicting Socks will hit $1 million by May on the back of increasing adoption by major players across markets. Ralph Axeminster-Twill, COE of Sock.com, “socks are no longer on the periphery, but are increasingly being adopted as a valid investment thesis. With major financial players expected to return to offices from April, we expect to see even faster adoption, and in many cases the favouring of socks as a core investment and even fashion statementWe are seeing many Gen X,Y and Z customers putting a portion of their total wardrobe into Socks. Socks have gone mainstream on the back of increased adoption.

Cathy Topshop of Threadbare Capital explained her decision to go long socks during the summer proved an inspired one; “We were on holiday but one day it was quite chilly so we went to something called a car boot sale and since the vendor could not change my £50 note, I bought his whole stock. Since then we’ve analysed the Sock market from toe to heel, and concluded it absolutely meets our Disruptive Innovation investment parameters. Our investments across Sock markets and driven returns on our AFF fund by 150%.”

Topshop’s Alternative Footwear Fund “AAF” has seen its 10% position in Sockscale Capital Trust, a fund entirely invested in Socks, cause some issues. The NAV of the Trust has turned negative, raising doubts on Threadbare’s ability to meet margin calls when Sock prices dipped last week. However, leading bank in New York and London have now agreed to provide sock clearing facilities – again accelerating the adoption of Socks across the investment community.

Perhaps the most exciting moment in the Sock expansion was last weeks $2bln SPAC of venerable 250 year loom-using Yorkshire sock-makers Paget and Son by SPAC Thatcher IV. Described as a: “high-tech opportunity to monetise the intrinsic value of craft socks through algorithms, difficult sums and 2 hour drone-delivery to anywhere in the country”, the merged firm rose 20% on Monday, crashed 40% on Tuesday and rose another 60% on Wednesday as Reddit Investors piled into the Sock Narrative.

However, a number of observers believe the Sock market is turning into a bubble. “The problem is the lack of duration”, said Noel Partington, the market’s harshest critic. “People find they fade in the wash, and there is little security. Sock gnomes are always nicking them, leaving single socks, and until that systemic weakness can be addressed, its difficult to be certain of the market and sock wallets.

Other issues, including the multiplicity of Sock offerings is an issue. “The whole sock market was invented by Rukymoto Sockatoshi in his critical 2010 paper on the digitisation of the shoe/foot interface, but alternative sock offerings like the slipper sock and tights are triggering heresy in the market”, said some bloke on a market stall.

Another view comes from Bill Blain of Shard Capital who reckons there is room for both proper socks to go walking, and a nice pair of deck shoes sans socks in the summer. He advocates a balanced neutral position neither pro or anti sock.

Meanwhile, proponents of Cryptocurrency Buttcoin are peeved that Sock marketing scams have been using their line about the INCREASING ADOPTION of cryptocurrencies as just about the only argument to buy them. They dismiss Socks as a scam no one will ever need with no logical underpinning.

Hmm.. Unlike Buttcoin.. I think Socks are here to stay…

Maximize your tax planning before our debt-ridden government comes looking for more

 

If not for the minority government, many wealthy Canadians would be facing a world of hurt

We are now a few months into 2021 and markets, for the most part, have been performing quite well as they look beyond COVID-19 lockdowns to the looming economic recovery. There is one issue, however, that is still keeping us awake at night due to its potential impact on Canadian investors, and that is the question of tax hikes.

The federal government has racked up a huge amount of new debt during the pandemic: Its deficit spending leads the G7, and the country’s total debt-to-GDP ratio is now worse than that of Greece. We think that if not for Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government being held to a minority, many wealthy Canadians would be facing a world of hurt, as the temptation to raise taxes would be significant.

And the political dynamic in the country could be in for a shakeup.

Just last week it was reported that Elections Canada had ordered 240,000 see-through masks and 19 million single-use pencils — 56 times the usual number of writing implements — possibly in preparation for a pandemic vote. At the same time, a House of Commons committee has suggested chief electoral officer Stéphane Perrault consider allowing telephone voting, something which has never before been permitted in a Federal election.

While it is too soon to say for sure whether we will be heading to the polls, it can never hurt to have a plan in place to ensure your affairs are being managed in as tax-efficient way as possible. Even if nothing happens in the near-term at least you will have identified some areas for immediate improvement in your financial planning.

For those wondering where to start, try to answer two important questions

Remember that return projections are only part of the puzzle, and shouldn’t be the main driving force behind a proper wealth plan.

A review of investments should only come once your goals are derived and good old-fashioned tax and wealth-transfer planning are integrated.

For those wondering where to start, try to answer two important questions.

First, how are you living currently both from a lifestyle and value perspective and how do you expect this to change in retirement? This can include time with family, how often one wants to travel, adding a vacation home, cutting back on work hours or moving to a single-income earner, a change in careers, going back to school and/or taking an early retirement.

The second question, especially for those already in retirement, is how much do you want to leave behind and who do you want to leave it to? There are three options when it comes to this — family, philanthropy or the CRA — and few if any we’ve come across (especially here in Alberta) have a desire to leave it to the Federal government.

Technically Speaking: The Bull Market Is On Shaky Ground

 

Last week’s sell-off left the “bull market” on shaky ground.

The big question for investors at the moment is whether the 11-year old bull market is ending or is this just a “pause that refreshes?” 

While the optimistic “hope” is that this is just a pause within a continuing “bull market” advance, from a money management standpoint getting the answer “right” is vastly more important to long-term investing outcomes.

The easiest way to approach this analysis is to start with the following basic premise:

“Bull markets are born on pessimism, grow on skepticism, and die on euphoria.” -Sir John Templeton

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The Best Way To Rob A Bank Is To Own A Bank

 

I think that the collapse over the past week of Greensill Capital has a lot of systemic risk embedded within it, particularly as the fraudulent deals between Greensill and its major sponsors – Softbank and Credit Suisse – come to light. And that’s not even considering Greensill’s second tier of sponsors – entities like General Atlantic and the UK government – all of whom are up to their eyeballs in really dicey arrangements.

“You thought you were in an arm’s length arrangement where all your fellow investors had a pure financial interest,” he said. “Imagine you then found that, in fact, some of your co-investors were funding themselves.”

This is the first Big Fraud I’ve seen in 13 years with the sheer heft and star power to ripple through markets in a systemic way. Not since Madoff.   

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International Solar Investing

One of the many priorities outlined by the new Biden administration in the US is the priority his team has placed on re-establishing America’s commitments to addressing climate change. American leadership is being lauded and this renewed focus is being echoed throughout the world. While this is good news for the climate, it’s also putting additional wind in the sails of ESG investing as portfolio managers and Boards reset their investment agendas to put people and the planet front and centre.

As most observers look to the US and the potential growth of the solar sector resulting from Biden’s goals, people may not be aware of the significant investments in solar energy made in other jurisdictions like South Korea. The US solar module market has been valued at ~USD $11.2 billion (aggregate installed capacity of 76.1 GW in 2019 with the market forecasted to grow at a CAGR of ~18.6% from 2020-2027). Meanwhile, the South Korean solar module market, while smaller, was valued at ~USD $4.5 billion with an aggregate installed capacity of 10.9 GW in 2019. Surprisingly, the South Korean market is now forecasted to grow at an even faster rate than the US, with a CAGR of ~21.2% from 2020-2027… CLICK for the complete article