Words from the (Investment) Wise for the Week That Was (October 12 - 18, 2009)
by Prieur du Plessis
Risky assets remained in favor during the past week, generally helped along
by fairly robust economic data and better-than-expected corporate earnings
reports. A number of bourses, crude oil, inflation-linked bonds and high-yielding
corporate bonds and currencies recorded fresh highs for the year, whereas gold
hit an all-time high of $1,070.20 per ounce.
Assets such as government bonds and the US dollar saw fading demand as safe
havens, now that the global economy is on the mend. Similarly, credit default
spreads tightened markedly and the CBOE Volatility Index (VIX) declined to
its lowest level since early September 2008.
The Dow Jones Industrial Index passed a psychological milestone this week
as the Index broke above the 10,000 level for the first time in a year, although
it then declined again to fall shy of the roundophobia number by four basis
points by the closing bell. The Dow first broke above 10,000 more than ten
years ago in 1999 and has since done so on 26 occasions. Yes, a ten-year buy-and-hold
index investor has had no capital gain over the period!
Meanwhile, according to the Financial
Times, a survey of 44 leading economists by the National Association
of Business Economics (NABE) showed the jobs that were lost during the Great
Recession are not expected to return before 2012, while anemic wage growth
of only 1% this year and 2.2% next year is forecast - the slowest two-year
period on record. "But the way that investors are almost relying on unemployment
to stay high [and central banks not to start exiting from the exceptionally
low interest rates any time soon] demonstrates that the recovery, in markets
and the economy, remains on shaky foundations," warned FT's investment editor, John
Authers.
The past week's performance
of the major asset classes is summarized by the chart below - a set of numbers
that indicates an increase in risk appetite.
A summary of the movements of major global stock markets for the past week,
as well as various other measurement periods, is given in the table below.
The MSCI World Index (+1.4%) and MSCI Emerging Markets Index (+2.1%) both
made headway last week to take the year-to-date gains to +25.6% and an impressive
+70.4% respectively. Interestingly, Chile is now only 1.5% down from its July
2007 highs and could be one of the first markets to wipe out all the financial
crisis losses.
Notwithstanding a down-day on Friday, US indices closed higher for the week.
The year-to-date gains remain firmly in positive territory and are as follows:
Dow Jones Industrial Index +13.9%, S&P 500 Index +20.4%, Nasdaq Composite
Index +36.8% and Russell 2000 Index +23.4%.
Top performers among stock markets this week were Sudan (+22.6%), Kazakhstan
(+8.9%), Cyprus (+7.6%), Egypt (+6.0%) and Hungary (+5.5%). At the bottom end
of the performance rankings countries included Nigeria (?4.2%), Thailand (-4.0%),
Qatar (-3.2%), Bahrain (-2.8%) and Ireland (?2.4%).
Of the 99 stock markets I keep on my radar screen, 76% recorded gains, 21%
showed losses and 2% remained unchanged. (Click here to
access a complete list of global stock market movements, as supplied by Emerginvest.)
John Nyaradi (Wall Street
Sector Selector) reports that, as far as exchange-traded funds (ETFs)
are concerned, the winners for the week included United States Gasoline (UGA)
(+11.1%), United States Oil (USO) (+8.9%), PowerShares DB Energy (DBE) (+8.8%)
and iShares S&P GSCI Commodity (GSG) (+7.4%).
On the losing side of the slate, ETFs included iShares MSCI Thailand (THD)
(-6.0%), Market Vectors Solar Energy (KWT) (-2.8%), Claymore/MAC Global Solar
Energy (TAN) (-2.6%) and ProShares Short MSCI Emerging Markets (EUM) (-2.5%).
Referring to the declining US dollar, the quote du jour this week comes from
85-year-old Richard Russell, author of the Dow
Theory Letters. He said: "Now I'll let you in on an awful secret. The US,
despite all its BS talk, really wants a lower dollar. The fact is that the
US is doing absolutely nothing to defend the dollar. Of course, if the Fed
wanted to defend the dollar they could halt their mass printing of dollars,
and they could raise interest rates. And Bernanke could win the 800 meter race
at the next Olympics at Rio.
"But let's be rational - how in God's name is the US going to pay off trillions
in debt? By raising taxes? Impossible. They could renege on the debt like Argentina
- unthinkable. But there is a way - they'll try to minimize the importance
of the debt with a cheaper, devalued dollar. That's the time-honored US way,
but loyal Americans don't believe it. If they did, gold would be selling at
$4,000 an ounce."
Russell added: "It's all so smarmy, but c'mon, what do you think the Fed has
been doing since World War II? It's been systematically inflating. They can't
fool me, I was around after the War, and I remember prices in 1945. Maybe the
chief culprit was Alan Greenspan, but Bernanke is carrying on. There's a lot
of inflating coming up. 'Strong dollar policy.' Bite your tongue, and give
me a break."
Other news is that the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) closed
another bank on Friday, bringing the tally of US bank failures in 2009 to 99
(124 since the beginning of the recession). Meanwhile, CreditSights, which
tracks the dismal data, predicts (via MarketWatch)
that we could be no more than 10% of the way through this cycle of bank collapses,
which is sure to be the worst run of closures since the Great Depression.
Next, a quick textual analysis of my week's reading. Although "bank" still
features prominently, the key words have started taking on a more normal pattern
compared with the crisis-related words that have dominated the tag cloud for
many months. "Recovery" is also gaining in prominence.
The major moving-average levels for the benchmark US indices, the BRIC countries
and South Africa (where I am based) are given in the table below. With the
exception of the Shanghai Composite Index, which is trading marginally below
its 50-day moving average, all the indices are above their respective 50- and
200-day moving averages. The 50-day lines are also above the 200-day lines
in all instances.
The US indices are creeping closer to the so-called 50% retracement levels
(i.e. regaining half the loss suffered between the October 2007 highs and March
2009 lows). The levels are: 10,346 for the Dow Jones Industrial Index and 1,121
for the S&P 500 Index.
The September highs and October lows are also given in the table as these
levels could define a support area for a number of the indices.
"We regularly note that the earnings reporting season often marks the end
of the market trend into earnings announcements. The reversal tends to occur
during the second week [last week] of reporting. Given this is expiration week,
which often creates a short-term peak on the usual manipulation, the odds favor
a short-term stock market peak late this week or next week. Of course any unexpected
ugly news, like negative revenue, earnings or guidance from several key companies
could commence a stock downdraft," said Bill King (The
King Report).
Talking of earnings, the third-quarter earnings season has progressed on an
upbeat note since Alcoa's results announcement on October 7 marked the onset
of the reporting cycle. It is still early days in this period, but 85% of US
companies have so far beaten earnings estimates. According to Bespoke,
the current beat rate is well above any other quarter since at least 1998. "Even
with analysts raising estimates significantly leading up to the earnings season,
companies have still managed to come in better than expected so far," they
said.
Additionally, Bespoke also
highlighted that while the earnings per share numbers grab the headlines, it
is what companies say about future quarters that impacts equity prices most
on their reporting days. As shown in the graph below, 20.3% of US companies
have raised guidance so far this earnings season. Bespoke's
report said: "The highest reading for this number has barely broken 15% in
any prior quarter this decade. And if we compare the percentage of companies
raising guidance versus the percentage of companies lowering guidance, no other
quarters come even close to this one. It will be hard to keep this up as the
earnings season progresses, but it's also shaping up to be a record-breaking
quarter on the positive side."
Importantly, one needs to assess what is priced in by the stock market. Useful
research comes from David Rosenberg, chief economist and strategist of Gluskin
Sheff & Associates, who said: "We re-ran our regressions with the latest
tightening in spreads and breakout in equity valuation and found that US investment
grade credit is now priced for 2.5% GDP growth in the coming year (was 2.0%
two months ago) and the S&P 500 is now de facto pricing in 4.8%,
which, by the way, is now basis points shy of what it was discounting in the
summer/fall of 2007. And, backing out the fair-value P/E from the corporate
bond market, and yields have been backing up sizably in recent weeks, we can
see that the S&P 500 is now pricing in $85 of operating earnings, which
we think will be, at best, a 2013 story. In other words, the rally continues
to move further away from the fundamentals."
However, Rosenberg's bearish prognostications are not universally accepted.
In a rebuttal (via Clusterstock),
Eddy Elfenbein created the chart below of profits as a share of GDP. "They're
clearly compressed, and if they revert to a historical standard, it means earnings
have some spring in them," said the report.
Jeremy Grantham, who has just announced his retirement as chairman of GMO,
put matters into perspective in a Kiplinger article,
saying: "The recent rally has been very speculative, favoring risky assets
over the past few months. I'm sorry if you missed investing at the market's
March lows, but don't compound the damage to your portfolio by chasing gains
in risky assets. We're at the beginning of a seven-year period of lean returns.
You should only be buying the highest-quality blue-chip companies, where valuations
are most attractive."
As stated before, share prices have moved too far ahead of economic reality.
This calls for a cautious approach in anticipation of the market working off
its overbought condition and fundamentals reasserting themselves. I will bide
my time while the fundamentals play catch-up.
Economy
"After improving steadily this past summer, global business sentiment has remained
largely unchanged so far this fall, consistent with a global economy that is
experiencing a tentative economic recovery. The recession is over but the nascent
recovery is not quickly gaining traction," according to the results of the
latest Survey of Business Confidence of the World by Moody's
Economy.com. "Businesses remain more upbeat about the outlook into next
year and broader economic conditions, and dourer when considering the strength
of their sales and intentions to hire. South Americans are the most positive
and North Americans generally the most negative."
As far as hard data are concerned, China's economy gained new impetus, according
to US
Global Investors. "Passenger car sales in September rose 84% year on year
to 1.02 million units. Housing starts jumped 56% in September from a year earlier,
the fastest pace of growth in at least five years.
"China's exports declined 15.2% year on year in September, the smallest contraction
in nine months, while imports dropped only 3.5% year on year as the domestic
economy continued to recover. Exports rose 7.7% on a month-on-month basis,
adjusted for seasonality." The stronger export performance follows a similar
trend in South Korea, Taiwan and Vietnam.
"Singapore, which led Asia into recession, on Monday pointed the way to further
regional recovery with strong third-quarter economic growth ... The Monetary
Authority of Singapore (MAS) said GDP expanded 14.9% on a seasonally adjusted
quarter-on-quarter annualized basis in the June to September period, after
a comparable revised increase of 22% the previous quarter," reported the Financial
Times.
Further good news on the global economic front came from Eurozone industrial
production that expanded for the fourth month in a row in August. Output rose
by 0.9% from July, when it increased by a revised 0.2%.
A snapshot of the week's US economic reports is provided below. (Click on
the dates to see Northern Trust's
assessment of the various data releases.)
Thursday,
October 15
• Inflation remains a non-issue, for now
• The quandary between initial claims and total continuing claims
Wednesday,
October 14
• Minutes of September 22-23 FOMC meeting - more of the same
• Q3 consumer spending expected jump likely, but muted growth in Q4
• Import prices are turning around
• Restocking - one of the conduits of economic growth in the months ahead
Further evidence that the recession that began in December 2007 has ended,
came from the Philly Fed report that was positive for the third straight month.
According to Bespoke, "the
last time this indicator was positive for three straight months was from September
through November 2007, which was the last three months leading up to the start
of the recession".
Dissecting the retail sales data shows that trends improved all over, with
the exception of auto-related sales due to "Cash for Clunkers". The chart below,
courtesy of Clusterstock takes
September's year-on-year sales change (Sep 09 versus Sep 08) and subtracts
August's year-on-year sales change (Aug 09 versus Aug 08). It thus shows the
change in the retail sales trend. "Yes, this matters: American retail trends
have to become less negative before they go positive," said the report.
The minutes of
the Federal Open Market Committee's (FOMC) September meeting indicated that
most participants thought the recession was over. Although they expected the
recovery to be weak initially, most members also upgraded their expectation
for near-term growth.
Participants generally expected inflation to remain low in the near term. "The
Fed is in the most favorable spot in the near term with regard to inflation
because the excess capacity in the economy allows the Fed to maintain a focus
on economic growth and leave inflation on the back burner, for now," said Asha
Bangalore (Northern Trust).
Cautioning against bullish expectations, David Rosenberg said (via MoneyNews)
that the economy was being held together by very strong tape and glue provided
by the Fed, Treasury, and Congress, and that the recovery would be weak.
He predicted the economy would stagnate this quarter and then grow no more
than 2% in 2010. The economy won't take on the "V" shape of previous rebounds,
Rosenberg said. "It's going to look like this whole string of lowercase Ws
for the next five years."
Week's economic reports
Click here for
the week's economy in pictures, courtesy of Jake of EconomPic
Data.
US economic data reports for the week include the following:
Tuesday, October 20
• Building permits
• Housing starts
• PPI
Wednesday, October 21
• Fed's Beige Book
Thursday, October 22
• Initial jobless claims
• Leading economic indicators
• FHFA Housing Price index
Friday, October 23
• Existing home sales
Markets
The performance chart obtained from the Wall
Street Journal Online shows how different global financial markets performed
during the past week.
"The emotional brain responds to an event more quickly than the thinking brain," said Daniel
Goleman, author ofEmotional IntelligenceandPrimal
Leadership. Let's hope the news items and quotes from market commentators
included in the "Words from the Wise" review will assist the thinking brains
of readers of Investment Postcards and
take the emotion out of their investment decisions.
Click here for
more thought-provoking items and quotes.
That's the way it looks from Cape Town (where we are blessed with balmy spring
weather at the moment).
Financial Times: Nobel economics prize for governance duo
"Elinor Ostrom and Oliver Williamson shared the 2009 Nobel Prize for economics
of Monday for their work on how economic transactions operate outside markets
in common spaces and within companies. Martin Wolf, chief economics commentator,
explains the value of the surprise winners' research."
Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust): Minutes of September FOMC meeting - more
of the same
"The minutes of the September 22-23 FOMC meeting contain the typical pros and
cons of Fed policy, with nothing standing out. The willingness of some members
to enlarge the size of the mortgage-backed securities purchase plan could be
raised to 'reduce economic slack more quickly than in the baseline outlook'.
At the same time, another member held the opinion that improvements underway
implied a reduction of these purchases. The importance of 'flexibility' to
expand purchases of assets in the event of a deterioration of economic conditions
was noted.
"The FOMC's views about inflation are noteworthy. The majority of the FOMC
views the inflation outlook during the next few quarters as roughly balanced.
There were those belonging to the significant disinflation camp, but they had
lowered the probability of this occurrence in the intermeeting period. In the
longer term, a few were reported to see 'risks tilted to the upside'. Inflation
expectations have been stable and allow the Fed to watch and wait and focus
on economic growth."
CNN Money: Foreclosures - worst three months of all time
"Despite concerted government-led and lender-supported efforts to prevent foreclosures,
the number of filings hit a record high in the third quarter, according to
a report issued Thursday.
"'They were the worst three months of all time,' said Rick Sharga, spokesman
for RealtyTrac, an online marketer of foreclosed homes.
"During that time, 937,840 homes received a foreclosure letter - whether a
default notice, auction notice or bank repossession, the RealtyTrac report
said. That means one in every 136 US homes were in foreclosure, which is a
5% increase from the second quarter and a 23% jump over the third quarter of
2008.
"Nevada continued to be the worst-hit state with one filing for every 23 households.
But even tranquil Vermont, where the foreclosure crisis has barely brushed
the housing market, saw foreclosure filings jump nearly 170% compared with
the third quarter of 2008. Still, that resulted in just one filing for every
5,023 households in the state - the best record in the country.
"The RealtyTrac report also unveiled the results for September, and it found
that there was slight relief from foreclosure filings. Last month, notices
totaled 343,638, down 4% compared with August. Unfortunately, that total accounts
for 87,821 homes that were repossessed by lenders.
"That deluge contributed significantly to the quarter's record 237,052 repossessions,
a 21% jump from the previous three months. So far this year lenders have taken
back 623,852 homes.'
"The foreclosure crisis may not diminish anytime soon. 'The fastest growing
area is in the 180 days late-plus category, the most seriously delinquent borrowers,'
Sharga said. 'It's going to be a lingering problem.'"
Source: Les Christie, CNN
Money, October 15, 2009.
CNN Money: Foreclosure fix not working
"Elizabeth Warren of the Congressional Oversight Panel says positive news in
housing is only part of the story."
Financial Times: Slow US recovery blamed on low demand
"Weak demand from battered consumers will be a 'major constraint' on the US
economy for the foreseeable future, a key White House adviser said on Monday,
as the administration mulls over further ways to spur demand and create jobs.
"Lawrence Summers, the director of the National Economic Council, has been
banging the drum for the $787 billion stimulus package in the face of Republican
criticism that it is not creating the jobs it promised.
"With political pressure building as unemployment nears 10%, the administration
is looking for additional ways to mitigate the problem, though it insists there
will be no 'second stimulus'.
"'It is not for me ... to preview policies that President Obama will announce
in coming weeks,' said Mr Summers in a speech to an economics conference on
Monday. But he said that while the economy had improved substantially, people
had to recognise that demand was hobbled and US consumers and exports should
be supported.
"'We need to recognise that lack of demand will be a major constraint on output
and employment in the American economy for the foreseeable future,' he said
at the National Association for Business Economics conference. 'Direct public
investment has a crucial role at a time like this.'
"His speech was made as a survey of 44 leading economists by the NABE showed
many were worried about the effects of unemployment and the budget deficit
on the US economy.
"Four in every five said that the worst recession since the 1930s was over.
But while they expected the stock market and corporate profits to rise next
year, they saw unemployment hitting double digits and did not expect all the
jobs that have been lost to return until 2012.
"Wage growth will be only 1% this year and 2.2% next year: the slowest two-year
period on record. That leaves the outlook for consumer spending, which typically
accounts for two-thirds of gross domestic product, fairly bleak. Next year
it will grow at an anaemic 1.6%, the economists predict, while car sales will
not bounce much from this year's 40-year low.
"'From a technical standpoint [the recession] is probably over, but that doesn't
mean in any way shape or form that it's over from the point of view of an awful
lot of people,' said Dr Tony Cherin, finance professor at San Diego State University.
"But they upgraded their expectations for real gross domestic product growth,
forecasting it to rise at a pace of 2.9% in the second half of this year and
3% next year. They think the housing market will recover enough in 2010 to
contribute to overall growth for the first time in five years.
"Business investment will also pick up next year, they reckon, while corporate
profits will rise 11% and the S&P 500 will add 7.5%."
MoneyNews: Soros - bankrupt banks hamper recovery
"Economic recovery in the United States will be sluggish thanks to 'bankrupt'
financial institutions and debt-laden consumers, says billionaire investor
George Soros.
"US financial institutions in the Americas have written down or lost $1.1
trillion in the last two years, while savings rates have risen to the highest
levels in 24 years as wary consumers tighten their purse strings, according
to Bloomberg.
"'The United States has a long way to go,' Soros said at an International
Monetary Fund and World Bank meeting in Istanbul, Turkey.
"Soros urged leaders to stick with plans to beef up regulation, which could
become difficult once recovery moves ahead.
"'It will be very difficult to accomplish,' Soros says."
"'The crash of 2008 now seems like a bad dream and people like to treat it
like a bad dream and forget about it and get back to business as usual.'
"Economic indicators suggest recovery is taking place and the recession is
thawing or even ending.
"'I see the risk of a stock market correction, especially when the markets
now realize that the recovery is not rapid and V-shaped, but more like U-shaped,'
says Nouriel Roubini, a New York University economic professor who is said
to have accurately predicted the extent of the current financial crisis.
"'That might be in the fourth quarter or the first quarter of next year,'
says Roubini, according to Marketwatch."
Source: Forrest Jones, MoneyNews,
October 12, 2009.
Bespoke: Long-term downtrend in confidence continues
"It's increasingly becoming a glass half empty mood in the US. This month's
index of Consumer Confidence by IBD/TIPP showed that sentiment declined 7.2%
from 52.5 to 48.7. For this index, readings above 50 indicate net optimism
and readings below indicate pessimism. While the index is still near its recent
highs, from a longer-term perspective, the five-year downtrend is somewhat
concerning. As shown in the chart below, the index peaked above 60 in 2004,
then made a lower high back in late 2006, and now is showing signs of another
lower high in 2009. Is it a faulty index, or to borrow a line from former President
Carter, are American consumers stuck in a crisis of confidence?"
Clusterstock: The government debt explosion
"The growth of government debt has 'decoupled' from the rest of the economy.
"While households, businesses and the financial sector reduce leverage, public
sector debt growth has simply exploded. As you can see from the chart, every
non-governmental sector of the economy is now in debt reduction mode while
governmental debt is growing a breakneck speeds."
Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust): Q3 consumer spending expected jump likely,
but muted growth in Q4
"Retail sales in September fell 1.5% after a 2.2% gain in August. These headline
numbers reflect the swings in auto sales brought about by the lift from the
temporary 'Cash for Clunkers' program. Excluding autos, retail sales increased
0.5% in September following a 1.0% increase in August.
"Furthermore, the sharp increase in gasoline prices in August translated into
corresponding gains of gasoline purchases in the retail sales report. Excluding
autos and gasoline, retail sales increased 0.4% in September after a 0.6% advance
in August.
"The main message is that retail sales in September have been impressive with
purchases of furniture (+0.9%), apparel (+0.5%) and general merchandise (+0.5%)
posting significant increases which will add up to a strong increase in consumer
spending in the third quarter (+3.0%) compared with a 0.9% drop in the second
quarter. The absence of the 'Cash for Clunkers' program implies that consumer
spending will be positive but show only muted growth in the fourth quarter."
Clusterstock: The retail sales second derivative is on fire
"Dissecting today's [Wednesday] advance retail sales data shows that trends
improved for everything, except auto-related sales due to cash for clunkers.
This is strong.
"The data beat expectations, with overall retail sales down 1.5% vs. an expected
negative 2.1%. While 1.5% is the largest drop since December of last year,
it was due to the end of cash for clunkers.
"The chart below takes September's year over year (YoY) sales change (Sep
09 vs. Sep 08) and subtracts August's year over year sales change (Aug 09 vs.
Aug 08). It thus shows the change in change. Yes, this matters: American retail
trends have to become less negative before they go positive.
"And that's exactly what is happening. While sales continued to fall for many
categories, the rate of decline slowed down substantially, improving by the
amount in green shown below for each."
Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust): The quandary between initial claims and
total continuing claims
"Initial jobless claims fell 10,000 to 514,000 during the week ended October
10. This reading is the lowest since March 2009 when initial jobless claims
peaked at 674,000. This is good news, firms are not hiring but the pace of
firing has slowed. Continuing claims, which lag initial claims by one week,
declined 75,000 to 5.992 million and the insured unemployment rate moved down
one notch to 4.5%. Continuing claims have held above the 6-million mark for
six straight months.
"However, total claims including continuing claims and claims under the Extended
Benefits Program and Emergency Unemployment Compensation Program have advanced
to nearly 10 million. The good news here is that total continuing claims appear
to have peaked; they have held between 9.86 million and 9.89 million for the
four weeks ended September 26, with the latest weekly reading at the lower
end of this range. We will be tracking these numbers closely for signs of improvement
in the labor market."
Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust): Widespread strength in factory report
"Industrial production increased 0.7% in September, following an upwardly revised
1.2% gain in the prior month. The industrial production index hit the cycle
low in June and has since risen every month.
"In the third quarter, industrial production rose at an annual rate of 5.2%,
the first increase since the first quarter of 2008. Production at the nation's
mines (0.7%) advanced while that of utilities (-0.7%) fell in September.
"Factory activity, which excludes mining and utilities and makes up roughly
85% of industrial production, moved up 0.9% after revised gains of 1.2% in
each of the prior two months. In the third quarter, factory production advanced
at an annual rate of 8.9%, the largest gain since the fourth quarter of 1987!
"The operating rate of the factory sector has increased to 67.5% in September
from a record low of 65.1% in June 2009. The overall tone of the industrial
production report is positive and confirms that an economic recovery is underway."
Bespoke: Philly Fed positive three months in a row
"If you needed more evidence that the recession that began in December 2007
has ended, this morning's [Thursday] Philly Fed report should provide it. While
the actual number came in below forecasts (11.5 vs 12.0), it was still positive
for the third straight month. The last time this indicator was positive for
three straight months was from September through November 2007, which was the
last three months leading up to the start of the recession."
Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust): Restocking - one of the conduits of economic
growth in the months ahead
"Business inventories dropped 1.5% in August, marking the twelfth consecutive
monthly drop. In the meanwhile, business sales have risen for three straight
months, inclusive of a 1.0% increase in August.
"As a result of the drop in inventories and gain in sales, the inventories-sales
ratio plummeted to 1.33 in August from 1.36 in July and it is a sharp reduction
from the cycle high of 1.46 in January 2009. Starting from the end of the third
quarter of 2008 businesses have been liquidating stocks in response to the
weakness in demand conditions. As the economy recovers, inventories will add
to real GDP growth, some of which is already apparent, particularly in the
auto sector."
Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust): Inflation expectations non-threatening
"The Fed is in the most favorable spot in the near term with regard to inflation
because the excess capacity in the economy allows the Fed to maintain a focus
on economic growth and leave inflation on the back burner, for now. Moreover,
inflation expectations are also non-threatening at the present time. Inflation
will emerge as a major concern after there is self-sustaining economic growth."
Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust): Inflation remains a non-issue, for now
"The Consumer Price Index (CPI) increased 0.2% in September after a 0.4% increase
in the prior month. In the third quarter, the CPI has increased 3.6% after
a 1.3% gain in the second quarter. On a year-to-year basis, the CPI fell 1.3%
in September. The food price index dropped 0.1% during September vs. a 0.1%
increase in August. The energy price index moved up 0.6% in September compared
with a 4.6% jump in the previous month.
"The core CPI, which excludes food and energy, increased 0.2% in September
after two consecutive monthly gains of 0.1%. The core CPI has risen 1.5% from
a year ago in September, following a cycle low gain of 1.44% in August."
The Wall Street Journal: Investors hedging inflation risks
"Economists continue to debate the path of inflation but investors are looking
to hedge the risks of rising prices by buying inflation linked bonds."
With
25 years' experience in investment research and portfolio management, Dr Prieur
du Plessis is one of the most experienced and well-known investment professionals
in South Africa. More than 1 000 of his articles on investment-related topics
have been published in various regular newspaper, journal and Internet columns.
He also published a book, Financial Basics: Investment, in 2002.
He holds the following degrees: BSc (Quantity Surveying)
(Cape Town), HonsB (B & A) (cum laude) (Stellenbosch), MBA (cum laude)
(Stellenbosch); and DBA (Doctor of Financial Management) (Stellenbosch).
Prieur is chairman of the Plexus group
of companies, which he founded in 1995. Previously he was general manager:
portfolio management at Sanlam, responsible for the management of investment
portfolios with total assets in excess of $5 billion.
Plexus is a pioneer
in the mutual fund industry and has achieved a number of firsts under Prieur's
leadership. These include the authoritative Plexus Survey, a quarterly analysis
of the consistency of the performance of unit trust management companies, the
Plexus Offshore Survey, the Plexus Unit Trust Indices, and the PlexCrown Fund
Ratings.
Plexus is the South
African partner of John Mauldin, American
author of the most widely distributed investment newsletter in the world, and
also has an exclusive licensing agreement with California-based Research
Affiliates for managing and distributing its enhanced Fundamental Index™ methodology
in the Pan-African area.
In 2001 Prieur received the Santam/AHI Business Leader
of the Year award for corporate leadership, business acumen and entrepreneurial
flair. He was also profiled in the book South Africa's Leading Managers (2006).
Plexus received the AHI/Old Mutual Enterprise of the Year award in 1997 and
was also included in the book South Africa's Most Promising Companies (2005).
Prieur is 52 years old and lives with his wife, TV producer
and presenter Isabel Verwey, and two children in Welgemoed, Cape Town. His
recreational activities include long-distance running, motor cycling and reading.
He belongs to the Cape Town Club, Johannesburg Country Club, Gordon's Bay Yacht
Club and Swiss Social & Sports Club.
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