|
Weekly Update - 2 October 2009 |
Getting the Bonfire Lit
I think I can hear the sound of something disappearing down the
plug hole. It may just
be the money supply. After a flush of excessive emergency stimulation
packages, the
world looks to see what effect have they had. To change my metaphors,
if I may, gallons
of lighter fuel has been poured onto the very damp bonfire and the
“burning” question
has been - has it been enough not just to catch alight and burn the
fuel, but to create
enough heat to set the heart of the bonfire glowing again for the
longer term. For those
who specialise in autumn bonfires, chucking paraffin over it is
usually rather ineffective.
Good slow burning bonfires are created from a concentrated heat which
is nurtured
over time to burn more slowly and consistently. The question for the
global economy
will be - have we started the slow burning bonfire, or just seen a
flash of fuel burn over
the surface and just leaving a thin blue plume of smoke from a still
damp pile of rotting
leaves?
Looking at the data following the fuel laden stimulus packages to
date, these figures do
not seem to inspire much confidence. For example, after all the
stimulus packages
China exports are down 23%, Japan’s down 36% along with their
industrial production
down 23%, and Germany’s down 17%, France down 13% and the US down 11%.
I
wonder what would have happened without any stimulants at all?
Thus if the money supply is disappearing, are we not in danger of
losing the lifeblood of
the credit and capitalist system? If so then where does that leave us?
Well probably
further deflation. If I may quote Axel Weber the Bundesbank chief “we
are threatened
by stress from our domestic credit industry through the rise in the
insolvency of firms
and households” and for Germany I think we could also read a similar
picture in the US
and UK.
***
Last week there was much excitement over the record set for the
FTSE 100 with its best
quarterly rise in history! By the way, history started in 1984 for
the FTSE before which
we had the much simpler FT30. A rise of almost 21% over that period
has been
remarkable and we have to go back to 1987 to find the next best
quarter when between
January and March of that year the where Index rose by 19% - at the
risk of being a
“Jeremiah” this was followed by the sharp “crash” or correction of
October 1987. We
must all remember that markets do not go up just in a straight line.
However, one of the factors and features of this recovery has not
just been the supreme
stimulus packages from the authorities, but also the better than
expected corporate
results which surprised the markets and further encouraged the bullish
enthusiasm.
More recently the rebirth of some M&A activity has heartened investors
but a Goldman
Sachs economist suggested that nervousness about the forthcoming
earnings season
might be adding to market wariness when saying “third quarter
consensus earnings per
share estimates in the US have been drifting down for the past two
months” and more
precisely “while 49% of S&P companies reported positive earnings
surprises in the
second quarter, only 25% beat on the revenue side” - which in English
means that the
rest was achieved by cost cutting which although helpful for a time,
is not a recipe for a
sustained future of growth.
***
More focus back on the insurance sector is likely to continue.
After the
Resolution/Friends Provident deal, the market is looking at other
likely candidates. Legal
& General have been regularly put in the frame, with Standard Life
also being
mentioned in despatches. The key will be to find the acquisitors and
here we should be
watching the National Australia Bank (owners of Clydesdale and
Yorkshire Banks) along
with their fellow antipodeans AMP and QBE. One name that keeps on
being mentioned
and keeps on denying any interest is the Italian leviathan Generali
who have currently
only a tiny UK presence. All of this gutter mutter will keep the
sector bubbling and no
doubt none of this will have gone unnoticed by the silent watchers
from those other
Insurance giants lurking on the sidelines.
***
And finally... another incongruous legal decision from the US legal
system. A
Mr Terrence Dickson, of Bristol, Pennsylvania, was leaving a house he
had just broken
into and burgled, by way of the garage. Unfortunately for Mr Dickson,
the automatic garage door opener malfunctioned and he could not get
the garage door to open.
Worse, he couldn't re-enter the house because the door connecting
the garage to the
house locked itself when Dickson pulled it shut. As a result he was
forced to sit for eight
days and to survive on a case of Pepsi and a large bag of dry dog
food. As a consequence he sued the home owner's insurance company
claiming undue mental anguish.
Amazingly, the jury said the insurance company must pay Dickson
$500,000 for his
“anguish”. Memo to self - don’t leave anything in the garage that’s
consumable except
some WD40, Warfarin and Antifreeze. That should sort out his anguish.
Have a good week.
Justin A Urquart Stewart
Director
Seven Investment Management Limited
For
previous editions of our Weekly Update, please click here
This article represents a personal and
light-hearted
view from Director, Justin Urquhart Stewart of Seven Investment
Management Limited, and is based on current financial news and events
around the world. Its content should not be used for investment
purposes and you should contact an independent financial adviser
before making any investment or financial decision. Seven Investment
Management Limited is authorised and regulated by the Financial
Services Authority. Member of the London Stock Exchange. Head office:
23 Austin Friars, London EC2N 2QP. Telephone 020 7760 8777. Registered
in England and Wales number 4092911. Registered office: 3 More London
Riverside, London SE1 2AQ.
|