TOL as of June 17, 2017
Chinese Water Torture
The markets have been dripping downwards and I think that this may continue for a while longer.
It may start to hurt later, just like a Chinese Water Torture, where that 10,000th drop to hit your face, will probably feel like a stone. Therefore, it's better not to be too complacent in this type of dripping market.
Anyway, the drops now are not big enough for the bargain hunters to come out or for the shorts to cover yet.
However, there are some exceptions eg. Kroeger (KR), where it dropped about 30% in 2 days. It's just too tempting and I have taken a position in it. If it rebounds slightly next week, I will probably sell it.
Finally, my Market Indicators below are still not showing any sign of danger. So I think that it's stilll safe to buy any convincing story. Having said that, I have increased the Liquidity Risk score from 6 to 7, on the worsening Money Supply numbers in China.
Market Risk Indicators: Still not in Danger Zone yet
1. Euphoria: 8 (Low: 1; High: 10) - Inflows into ETFs; Margin Debts; SWFs; Central Banks
2. Credit Problems: 7 (Very Good: 1; Very Bad: 10) - Housing, Auto; Student Loans; Credit Cards; Junk Bonds
3. Recession: 6 (Strong Economy: 1; Depression: 10) - GDP; Taxes; Factory Output; Housing; Auto; Retail
4. Liquidity: 7 from 6 (Very Liquid: 1; Tight 100) - QE (Feds, ECB, BOJ, PBOC); Interest Rates; Rotation (Bonds)
5. Inverted Yield: 6 (Low Inversion: 1; High Inversion: 10) - Rising Interest Rates; Slope; Inversion
6. Valuation; 8 (Safe: PE15; Danger: PE30) - PE S&P 24, Nadsaq 26; Revenue; USD; Lower Tax Rates; Repatriation of Foreign Funds; Deregulation
7. Geopolitical Issues: Increase to 8 from 7 (Peaceful: 1; War: 10) - North Korea; Syria; Iran; South China Sea; Afghanistan; Europe
Total: 50 out of 70 (71%); (Safe: 50%; Danger: 80%)
Commodities: Risk-Off (Data as of Saturday)
1. Oil - Lower. US$44.70 from US$45.91 last week from US$47.78 two weeks ago.
Vested in RH Petrogas; Support: US$48; US$42; Resistance: US$53
a. Glut 0.5m bpd - rebalancing in 3Q? Supply 98.3m bpd; Demand 97.9m bpd
b. Global Stockpiles: 2.5b barrels; US: 33m barrels; Industrialized: 292m barrels > 5 yr avg
c. US SPR: 700m barrels; To sell 190m barrels from 2017-2025; To sell half now?
d. US imports 8m bpd (Total Demand of India and Japan combined)
e. US Oil Capex: US$1t; 4100 "Drilled but Uncompleted" (DUC) Wells for activity
f. US Supply: +500,000 bpd
g. China (4th largest producer) - Reserve life fallen from 10 years to 6 years
h. China Supply: -7%; -300,000 bpd
i. Saudi Aramco's IPO in 2018. Incentive for Saudis to maintain high oil prices
j. China: SPR reached 51/90 days; 2017 Imports to decrease?
k. Summer driving is here
l. OPEC: Cutting 1.8m bpd; 9 months extension on May 25
m. Libya: +300k bpd; Brazil +200k bpd; Canada +200k bpd; Nigeria +200k bpd; Iraq +500k bpd
n. US Fracking: +0.5m bpd US$60; +1m bpd US$70; +0.4m bpd 2017; +1m bpd 2018
o. Refinery maintenance over; Big drawdown of 3.6m barrels
p. IEA: Lowest amount of new discoveries in 2016; Supply shortage in 2020?
q. OPEC: Floating oil storage has dropped by one-third in 2017
r. About 10 Very Large Crude Carriers (VLCCs) have been chartered since May, for oil storage
viewtopic.php?f=33&t=7550&start=210
2. Natural Gas - Flat: US$3.03 from US$3.04 from US$3.01. Not vested
a. Support US$2.80; US$1.70; Resistance US$4.00
b. Heating, Cooking, Transportation (CNG), Ammonia (Fertiliser), Hydrogen (Chemical Industry), Fabrics, Glass, Steel, Plastics Paint etc
c. High: US$13.69 (2008); Low: US$1.61 (March 2015)
d. Natural Gas Rigs: Dropped from 1,606 (2008) to low of 81. Now at 129
e. Panama Canal Expansion: Europe & Asian markets expanding
f. Suppy increasing by 4% pa; Demand growing by 7% pa
g. Natural-gas stockpiles rose 2b cubic feet versus expected 7.8b cubic feet
h. Storage levels is about 15% above the 5 yr average
i. Mild weather in February and March caused inventory drawdowns to slow.
j. Glut of LNG will persist in the 2020s but the market will tighten in the late 2020s
viewtopic.php?f=33&t=1863&start=130
3. Gold - Lower. US$1256 from US$1269 from US$1279. Record US$1920.
Vested - Physical Gold Coins;
a. Global Gold: 33,000 tons; US 8000 tons; IMF 3000 tons; Germany 3000 tons
b. Electronics, Coins, Central Banks Reserve, Jewellery etc.
c. 250 oz of paper contract for every oz of physical gold holding on Comex?
d. Output fell by 100 metric tons (3%), from 3,150 in 2015 to 3,050 in 2016
e. Demand increasing in Muslim countries as Gold is now a halal investment
f. Rising USD & Interest Rates, would not be good for gold
g. Gold only occupies 0.03% of US investments. In 1981, it was 8%
h: India Demand: Since 2010, cooled off each year. 2017: 700 tonnes; 2020: 900 tonnes
i. China Demand: Since 2013, tumbled 32.9% from 940 tonnes to 630 tonnes last year
viewtopic.php?f=33&t=7589&p=202084#p202084
4. Silver - Lower. US$16.65 from US$17.16 from US$17.55
Support: US$16.50; Resistance: US$18.50; Range High: US$49
a. Solar Panels, Data Storage, Antibacterial products, Silver Coins, Jewelery etc
b. Demand: 1.2b ounces in 2015
c. Supply: 0.9b ounces in 2015
d. 35% (7700 metric tons) for Electronics
e. 25% (5500 metric tons) for Bullions & Coins
f. India imports more Silver than the US
g. JPM has 67m ounces
viewtopic.php?f=33&t=7589&p=202084#p202084
5. Coffee (Arabica) - Lower. US$124 from US$127 from US$125
Low: US$127; US$120; High: US$175; US$300 (2011). Not vested
a. 150m Americans drink coffee daily (400m cups); World: 2.25b cups
b. USA imports US$4b of coffee yearly
c. Supply: 152m bags; US$19b trade; Deficit 3.5m bags;
d. Demand 155m bags. By 2030, rising to 200m bags; 5% growth pa
e. Arabica (Brazil) - 50m bags; Risk - higher temperatures and pests
f. Robusta (Vietnam: 20% global); Instant Coffee; 40% more caffeine
g. Breaking price for coffee: In 2011, reached US$300
h. Rust Disease in Central America, lowered supply by 30% over past 3 yrs
i. By 2050, suitable land will halved and demand would have doubled
j. Central America replacing coffee with cocoa, due to climate change
k. Growth: USA +1.5%; China +5%; India +4%
l. Bumper crops in Brazil, Colombia and Honduras
m. Record Arabica crop 2017? Price +30% in US for 2016
n. Robusta crop down 6% yoy; Price +60% in London for 2016
o. Illy: Rebalancing in 2017
p. Brazil: biggest coffee producer, producing 1/3 of world’s coffee
q. Europe: largest importer, accounting for 1/3 of world’s consumption.
r. Coffee is the most traded commodity in the world, following crude oil.
s. Coffee crops to fall 9% in Brazil in 2017; Arabica -13%; Robusta -4%
viewtopic.php?f=33&t=3812&start=80
6. Uranium (U3O8 UXC) - Higher. US$19.85 (Jun12) from US$19.25 (Jun5) from US$19.25 (May29)
Vested Cameco (CCJ)
a. Breakeven: US$40 per lb
b. Range: $20 (2005) to $136 (2008); 580% rise in two years
c. Global production: 158m lbs pa; 15% of Supply from decommisioned weapons
d. Global Demand: 160m lbs pa to 225m lbs pa (2025)
e. Stockpile: 1b lbs (till 2022?) ; Companies normally store 5 years supply
f. Japanese Demand: 13 lbs pa; Starting 26/54 reactors? Currently, only 3 online
g. Number of Nuclear plants: +8 pa for next 20 yrs, 440 to 595; Current 456
h. 61 new reactors under construction; 149 planned; How many would be built ?
i. China: 35 existing plants; Building 21; 2017: 7 Ready: To build 177 more?
j. India: 22 existing nuclear plants; Currently building 5; To build 64 more?
k. 25% long-term supply contracts expiring in 2017-18; 75% between 2017-2025;
l. Russia withdrew from Nuclear deal in Oct 2016
m. Paris Climate Deal - how will it affect Nuclear Energy?
n. Some buyers are locking in long term contracts at US$40, twice spot rates
o. Kazakhtan reducing supply by 10% (40% of global production)
p. Competition: Natural Gas, Solar, Wind, Wave etc
q. Nuclear: 20% of the electricity generated in the U.S
r. Supply: 50k tonnes; Demand: 68k tonnes; 2k tonnes enriched for weapons
s. 1b pounds has to be purchased for long-term contracts over next 5-10 years
t. Average reactor needs 600,000 to 700,000 pounds to run for a year
u. US: 100/420 reactors; Importing 95% of its uranium requirements
v. 200 nuclear reactors will be shut down over the next 25 years, mostly in Europe
viewtopic.php?f=33&t=705&start=80
7. Zinc - Lower; US$2524 from US$2537 last week
a. Supply Deficit 1.2m tons;
b. High US$4400 (2007); Low $1600 (Jan 2016)
c. Used to prevent rusting, zinc oxide (paints), brass (copper), coins, fertilizer
d. Zinc inventories at the LME have dropped to their lowest level since 2009
viewtopic.php?f=33&t=367&start=208.
8. Palladium - Higher; US$864 from US$857 last week
a. Support: US$600; US$500; US$200; Resistance: US$800; US$900;
b. Catalytic Converters, Electronics, Dentistry, Medicine, Hydrogen Purification, Chemicals, Groundwater Treatment, Jewelry and Fuel Cells
c. Auto industry consumes 80% of supply
d. Demand by Auto industry doubled in past 10 years
e. Growth Demand: 3% a year for next 4 years
f. Russia and South Africa produced 3/4 of the world's mined palladium supply.
g. Heading toward its 8th annual supply deficit in 2017; 650,000 ounces in 2016
h. Vehicle: PALL (not vested)
i. US Auto Sales weak
viewtopic.php?f=33&t=7070&start=10
9. If there's a crash, Commodities would not be spared.
10. The High USD is not good for Commodities
11. Global economy may worsening eg. potential trade wars etc
Equities - Risk-Off ( Data as of Saturday every week )
1. US Equities - Flat. 2433 from 2432 last week from 2439 two weeks ago.
a. Resistance: 2650
b. Bought Kroeger (KR); Traded SQQQ (Inverse Nasdaq 3x) and TZA (Inverse Russell 3x);
viewtopic.php?f=11&t=7643&start=200
2. HK Equities - Lower. 25626 from 26030 from 25924
a. Support: 25000, 23250, 21575; Resistance: 27500; 28200
b. Bought China Construction Bank (0939)
viewtopic.php?f=10&t=7470&start=120
3. Shanghai Equities - Lower. 3123 from 3158 from 3106
a. Support at 2950; 2450; Resistance 3450;
b. Sold A50 ETF (2822) listed in HK
viewtopic.php?f=10&t=7190&start=210
4. Spore Equities - No Trade
5. Japan Equities - Lower. 19943 from 20013 from 20177; No Trade
a. Stronger Yen is a concern.
6. Malaysian Equities - No Trade
7. Australian Equities - Sold Bellamy's Australia
8. Korean Equities - Lower; 2362 from 2382 from 2372
a. Expecting Trump to take action against North Korea within 2 years
b. Vested 7326 (Inverse KOSPI ETF listed in HK
Currencies- Risk-On
1. USD to JPY - JPY Weaker. 110.75 from 109.74 last week from 109.86 two weeks ago
a. 52 week range is 76 to 126
viewtopic.php?f=32&t=4205&start=180
2. SGD to MYR - SGD Stronger; 3.0621 from 3.0551 from 3.0735
3. AUD to USD - AUD Stronger. 0.7629 from 0.7566 from 0.7479
a. The range is 0.70 (2016) to 1.10 (2011)
viewtopic.php?f=32&t=5256&start=130
4. AUD to SGD - AUD Stronger. 1.0538 from 1.0421 from 1.0280
a. The range is 0.98 (2016) to 1.36 (2012)
5. AUD to MYR - AUD Stronger. 3.2275 from 3.1833 from 3.1585
a. The range is 2.20 (2008) to 3.41 (2017)
6. EUR to USD - EUR Weaker. 1.1209 from 1.1254 from 1.1344
viewtopic.php?f=32&t=5523&start=100
7. USD to HKD - HKD Weaker. 7.7908 from 7.7585 from 7.7693
a. 52 week range is 7.7452 - 7.8296.
b. Will they remove the peg to the USD during the next crisis?
c. Will China ask HK to depeg from the USD?
viewtopic.php?f=32&t=3529&start=40
8. USD to MYR:- MYR Weaker. 4.2293 from 4.2073 from 4.2232
a. 52 Week Range is 3.27 to 4.54
b. Lowest: 4.885 (1998)
c. Decoupling of the MYR and Oil?
d. Macquarie: 4.90 (Dec 31, 2017)
e. UOB: 4.35 (July 2017)
viewtopic.php?f=32&t=397&start=60
9. USD to SGD:- SGD Weaker; 1.3813 from 1.3773 from 1.3739
a. High 1.70 (2004); Low 1.20 (2011)
b. Expecting the SGD to drop against the USD over the next few years
viewtopic.php?f=32&t=136&start=100
10. USD to CNY:- CNY Weaker; 6.6763 from 6.6475 from 6.6612
a. Expecting the CNY to continue dropping against the USD
viewtopic.php?f=32&t=7720&start=90
11. GBP to USD:- GBP Stronger. 1.2799 from 1.2802 from 1.2958
a. Will not be investing in the GBP versus the USD, as I think that it's in a multi-year decline
viewtopic.php?f=32&t=333&start=80
12. GBP to MYR:- GBP Stronger. 5.4145 from 5.3880 from 5.4724
a. Which has more effect? Brexit or Malaysian Election?
13. Dollar Index - USD Weaker. 97.16 from 97.27 from 96.72
viewtopic.php?f=32&t=7616&start=60
Others
1. Sentiment - Complacent?
2. Headwinds
a. Global
i) Derivatives (US$700t);
ii) Debts (US$225t, 225% GDP);
iii) Corporate Debt (US$50t);
iv) Institutional Investors (US$0.5t)
b. China
i) Debts (US$23t); 2020: US$50t
ii) Debt / GDP = 277%
ii) Corporate Debts (US$18t)
iii) Local Government Debts (US$3t; >30% GDP)
iv) Mortgages: 1/4 Credit; 1/2 New Loans in 2016
v) Bad Debts (US$2t)
vi) US$Debt (US$1.1t)
c. US (Warning Signs)
i) Unfunded Debts (US$170t);
ii) Unfunded Liabilities for Medicare, Medicaid; Social Security (US$106t)
iii) Unfunded State Pensions (US$3t)
iv) Unfunded US pensions: US$6t from US$300b in 2007
v) Bank Debts (US$60t);
vii) Current Deficit US$20t
viii) Corporate Debts (US$5.5t);
ix) Household Debts (US$13t);
x Mortgage Debts (US$8t);
xi) Foreigners Holding of US Treasuries (US$6.3t);
xii) Margin Debts: US$550b; up 20% yoy
xiii) US ETFs (US$2.8t); US$7.8t benchmarked to S&P 500
xiv) US Feds Leverage (113 to 1);
xv) StockMarket Cap/GDP (200%);
xvi) Risk Parity Funds (US$500b)
xvii) Revolving Credits (US$1t)
xviii) Hedge Funds: Net leverage 73% while gross exposures is 230%
US (Expected Defaults)
i) Auto Sub-Prime Debts (US$1t); If 30% default: US$300b
ii) Students Loan (US$1.4t, +20% pa, 42m people); If 40% default: US$550b
iii) Junk Bonds ( Maturing 2017-2021) - US$1.5t; If 10% default: US$150b
iv) Oil Debts (US$2.5t); if 10% default: US$250b
d. Europe
i) NPLs: US$1.3t
ii) Italian NPLs: US$0.4t (18%)
e. Emerging Markets:
i) US$ Debts (US$10t)
ii) Corporate Debts (US$18t)
iii) Expected Defaults: US$100b (15% of EM debts) in next 4 years
3. Tailwinds - Low Interest Rates, Cash Sidelines (US$50t); QE Programs US$18t - US (US$4.5t), ECB (US$3.7t), Japan (US$4.4t) & China (US$5.1t); Negative Yield Bonds (US$4t from US$10t); US Foreign Funds Repatriation (US$2.5t); Cash US Corps (US$1t); Cash Japanese Corp (US$2t); Buybacks, US Household Net Worth (US$90t); EM Consumption;
4. Risk Management:-
a. Global Diversification
b. Asset Class Diversification
c. Diversity of Industry & Company Exposure
d. Currency Hedging
e. Tactical Asset Allocation
f . Inverse ETFs and Put Warrants
5. Properties
a. Spore Properties
i) Prices declined by 11% since 2013
ii) Developers sold 8,000 homes in 2016 compared to 7400 in 2015;
iii) Supply: 13,000 in 2017; 9300 in 2018; 7300 in 2019
iv) The existing stock of unsold homes may take 2-3 years to sell
v) Americans became the 2nd most frequent buyers of high-end homes
vi) More than 800 condo units were resold at a loss in 2016 as economy slows
vii) Prices fell 3% in 2016 for third straight yearly decline
viii) >80% more homes are being auctioned
ix) Unexpected relaxation of the curbs, implies market is weaker than expected
x) Developers sold 977 units in Feb 2017, compared with a 382 units in Jan 2017
xi) 2100 homes remain unsold in 57 projects; Penalties total about S$647m
viewtopic.php?f=10&t=7750&start=40
b. Malaysia Properties
i) Knight Frank: Supply of about 44,000 high end condos in KL as of 1H 2016
ii) NAPIC: About 23% of residential & commercial properties from 1Q 2016 unsold
iii) Volume and Value of transactions declined 14% and 11%, in first 3Qs of 2016
iv) Prices moderated for 4 years, from +11.8% in 2012 to +5.3% in 3Q 2016
v) Stamp duty for properties > RM1m, raised from 3% to 4%, effective 1/1/2018
vi) Properties purchased on DIS between 2010 and 2014, are now on the market
vii) NAPIC: 3Q 2016 vs 2Q 2016, total transactions dropped 9.3%
viii) 600,000 houses are in planned supply; Altogether houses total 6.4m
ix) NAPIC: Supply inflated to 94,124 units compared to 82,837 units in 2015
x) 51,453 units of the 94,124 are in the luxury category, indicating over-supply
xi) Residential properties put on auction up 15% yoy
viewtopic.php?f=10&t=4220&start=150
c. China Properties
i) Various new curbs in more than 20 cities
ii) Beijing is +23.5% yoy
iii) Shanghai is +31.2% yoy
iv) Shenzhen is +36.8% yoy
v) Guangzhou is +21.1% yoy
vi) 40% of smaller cities saw their housing investories drop to <12 mths
viewtopic.php?f=10&t=8150&start=30
d. HK Properies
i) Price has surged almost 370% from 2003 to Sep 2015
ii) 18,000 new units completed in 2016.
iii) 34,000 flats in pipeline for 2017; 96,000 units in next 3-4 years (up 40%)
iv) About 7600 people left HK in 2016 vs 7000 in 2015
v) Margins have decreased to 25% from 40%
vi) DB: Prices to drop 11% in 2017
vii) CS: Prices to drop 22% by end 2018
viii) Bocom: Prices to drop 20%-30% by end 2017
ix) Citi: Prices to drop 15% in 2017
x) Centaline: Prices to increase 20% by Dec 2019
xi) DB: Prices to drop by 50% in 10 years on ageing population and ample supply
xii) UOBKH: Demand 21,000 pa; Supply 18,000 pa for 2017-19
viewtopic.php?f=10&t=7785&p=202051#p202051
e. London Properties
i) Savills: Prices will not rise until 2019
ii) Hard Brexit: 9,000 jobs axed immediately (1.1m jobs affected)
iii) London's population @ 8.7m. New households @ 50k pa. Supply 20k pa
iv) CEBR: Property prices in London to fall 6% in 2017
v) Molior: Homes built without buyer secured - 10,829; 24% rise yoy
vi) Molior: 2 years to sell homes under construction
vii) Rightmove: Decline of 5% by end 2017
viii) Prices surged about 86% since 2009
ix) Knight Frank: Prices will be flat for 2017
x) Expensive homes in Inner London -4.2% yoy; Cheaper outer suburbs +1.7%
viewtopic.php?f=11&t=3673&start=80
6. Yield on 10 Year US Treasuries - Lower. 2.15% from 2.20% from 2.16%
a. Low 1.32%; High 2.69%.
b. New regulations on Money Markets are decreasing yield for US Treasuries
7. Interest Rates:-
a. Expecting interest rates to rise slowly over next two years
b. About US$9t or about 20% of the world’s bonds now have negative yields
c. US Feds: Three rate hikes in 2017? Four rate hikes in 2018 ?
d. Yield on 2-year German bonds hit record lows, trading at -90 basis points
e. US feds raised interest rates by 25 bps to
f. HKMA raised its base rate by 25 bps to 1.5%
viewtopic.php?f=16&t=7319&start=70
8. JNK (SPDR Barclays High Yield Bond ETF) - Lower. 37.07 from 37.13 from 37.28
9. Baltic Dry Index - Higher; 855 from 849 from 830; Low 290; High 2330 (2013)
The above is to help me crystallize my thinking. It's not a recommendation to Buy or Sell. Use the above comments at your own risk and please do feel free to provide me with your kind thoughts and comments
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