Monday, 16 March 2020

Stock Market Bubble Threat

Stock Market Bubble Threat

By Jomo Kwame Sundaram



KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia, Mar 11 2020 (IPS) -


The US is currently still in a stock market bubble which, if history is any guide, is likely to end, as argued by Thomas Palley. While President Trump would, of course, like to sustain it to strengthen his November re-election prospects, the Covid19 black swan is already showing signs of pricking the bubble

Meanwhile, US business investment has declined for many years. As shares of GDP, corporate profits or even market capitalization, such investment has been in decline for at least four decades. Clearly, ‘neo-liberal’ economic policies have failed to decades-long trend.


Financialization ‘unreal’

Julius Krein has underscored some dangerous financialization trends. Global stocks are now worth almost US$90 trillion, more than world output. Including equities, bank deposits, (government plus private) debt securities, etc., the total value of financial assets rose from US$118 trillion in 2004 to over US$200 trillion in 2010, more than double world output then.

Half of Americans own no stocks, while just ten per cent own over 80 per cent of equities, and the top one per cent has almost 40 per cent. With no increase in real investments, more funds in financial markets have served to worsen wealth inequality.

‘Capital returns’ in 1980, in the form of share buybacks and dividends, were about two per cent of US GDP, when real investment was close to 15 per cent. By 2016, real investment had fallen to around 12 per cent of output, while capital returns had risen to about 6 per cent.

Ironically, in an age of ostensible globalization, rising capital returns has become increasingly national in some economies, rather than involving cross-border capital flows, which fell from US$12.4 trillion in 2007 to US$4.3 trillion, i.e., by 65%.

The rise of finance, at the expense of the real economy, over the last four decades has slowed productive investments and economic growth, ending the post-war Keynesian Golden Age quarter century. Meanwhile, as profit rates declined, debt has increased.



Inflating stock market bubbles

Since the 1980s, as Palley has shown, ‘engineered’ US stock market bubbles have obscured lessons from preceding busts, explaining them away as Schumpeterian creative destruction. While each new bubble may retrieve some of the preceding loss, it never fully restores earlier economic gains.

Investors buy stock, expecting to sell at higher prices. Such purchases push up share prices, drawing new investors into the price appreciation spiral. The share price bubble continues to inflate until faith in ever rising prices ends, with the bubble imploding when enough buyers start selling.

Each new stock market bubble seduces share market punters to invest ever more, to gain even more, while obscuring public understanding of the economic malaise. And when prices fall, many shareowners hold on to their stocks, hoping for prices to recover, to make more, or at least, to cut losses.

Thus, stock market dynamics resemble Ponzi frauds, with earlier investors profiting from new investments. Handsome gains draw in more investments until even these are insufficient to meet rising expectations. Changes in market sentiments can slow the bubble’s growth, or cause reversals, even collapse.

Along the way, all investors feel richer, triggering wealth effects and market exuberance, typically irrational. When downturns occur, many are too embarrassed to admit to losses, especially if they have induced others, relatives and friends, to invest.

Thus, the dynamics of stock market speculative bubbles are akin to a collectively self-inflicted fraud as most retail investors lack the ‘inside’ information needed to make sound portfolio investment judgements.



Promoting stock market addiction

The US Federal Reserve’s apparent commitment to the stock market since Alan Greenspan was in the chair, and its growing, albeit varying influences on financial asset prices has been seen as giving the green light to speculation, enabling serial asset price bubbles over at least three decades.

Despite its balanced official mandate, unsurprisingly, US Fed leadership is widely believed to favour Wall Street, while mainstream economists view asset price inflation as the unavoidable price of overcoming recession, sustaining economic growth and the bubble’s wealth effect.

Unlike the Roosevelt era, when economic policy and war achieved full employment and improved labour conditions, decision-making in recent decades has been seen as better serving capital, with the bias justified by insisting that the interests of capital and labour are ‘joined at the hip’.

With 401K (a US employer sponsored retirement savings plan allowing employees to invest a portion of their salaries before taxes) and other investments in the stock market, widespread ‘middle class’ addiction to stock price inflation has also been economically and politically self-deluding.

But despite the sustained US stock market bubble after the 2008-2009 global financial crisis, the US ‘middle class’ continues to be economically squeezed, with relatively few having benefited significantly.

This stock market addiction is rooted in an illusion promoted by Wall Street, their enablers in the public authorities, and their cheerleaders among mainstream economists and the business media who identify the notion of shared prosperity with stock market indices.

But the history and dynamics of stock market bubbles imply that they simply cannot be the basis for shared prosperity, as suggested by all too many emerging markets’ governments. Sadly, wishful thinking to the contrary perpetuates the mass delusion promoted and perpetuated by those who stand to gain most.

Stock market bubbles serve to obscure the dangers of neoliberal financialization for the economy. Demystification of obfuscating narratives can not only improve public understanding of the problems, dangers and challenges involved, but also inform the reforms needed to address them.


http://www.ipsnews.net/2020/03/corrected-version-stock-market-bubble-threat/?utm_source=English+-+IPS+Weekly&utm_campaign=632464bdfe-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2020_03_15_04_37&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_eab01a56ae-632464bdfe-5479385&fbclid=IwAR3nWVA4e7I-IeHH88Vu2BjDk1zKs054pSBUVX108-1Ly9GukR0rBDEV79w


Tuesday, 10 March 2020

Top 50 Best Bursa Malaysia Dividend Stocks of the Year (2018)

Stock Name Total Dividend (cents)
NESTLE 280
PANAMY 248
DLADY 200
PEB 195
BAT 155
UTDPLT 140
CARLSBG 100
HEIM 94
PETGAS 72
PETDAG 70
PBBANK 69
LPI 68
AIRASIA 64
F&N 57.5
MAYBANK 57
BKAWAN 55
TENAGA 53.27
HLBANK 48
HLIND 47
AJI 46.5
KLK 45
AEONCR 41.13
HLFG 40
ORIENT 40
ALLIANZ 40
HAPSENG 35
UCHITEC 34
BURSA 33.6
PCHEM 32
MISC 30
PERSTIM 30
CHINTEK 30
MPI 29
PPB 28
AMWAY 27.5
LITRAK 25
CIMB 25
SAM 23.36
GENTING 21.5
SDRED 21.5
ATLAN 21
TIMECOM 20.56
RHBBANK 20.5
IOICORP 20.5
SCIENTX 20
MAGNI 20
HARISON 20
PETRONM 20
HAIO 20
MAXIS 20


3 Years Continuously Improvement in Dividend (2017,2018,2019)

3 Years Continuously Improvement in Dividend (2017,2018,2019)


Stock Name Dividend (2019) Dividend (2018) Dividend (2017)
AHP 5.75 5.63 5.2
AIRASIA 90 64 12
ALLIANZ 65 40 12
ALLIANZ-PA 78 48 14.4
ARREIT 6.2 6.08 5.49
AXREIT 9.26 8.74 8.26
BIMB 16 15.5 14
BOILERM 2 1.75 1.5
CARING 6 5 3
DIALOG 3.8 3.2 2.65
FPI 11 10 8
FRONTKN 2.5 1.5 0.5
HLBANK 50 48 45
HLFG 42 40 38
HLIND 50 47 45
JOHOTIN 6.4 5 4
KLCC 38 37 36.15
KOTRA 7.4 5 4
MAGNUM 16 15 11
MASTER 2 1.5 1
MBMR 13 12 3
METFSID 2.17 1.99 1.51
OPENSYS 1.5 1.25 1
PBBANK 73 69 61
PETGAS 82 72 66
PTRANS 1 0.95 0.7
RCECAP 9 7 3
SAM 29.05 23.36 17.23
SUNREIT 9.59 9.57 9.19
TIMECOM 29.03 20.56 17.2
TMCLIFE 0.2 0.18 0.17
ZHULIAN 12 10 7.5


Thursday, 5 March 2020

The Complete VALUE IMVESTING Guide That Works! by K C Chong (Published 2020)

I picked up this book in Popular Bookshop last week for RM 69.90 and has read many pages.

The author K C Chong has been an active participant in i3 investor forum,  and has shared his investing knowledge generously with the many readers in that forum for many years.

You can now refer to this fine book for the many knowledge, and more, that  K C Chong has shared.

Congratulations to K C Chong.





Topics:
Section 1: Before starting to invest
Section 2: The Stock Market
Section 3: Value Investing, the proven successful investing framework
Section 4: Stock Analysis
Section 5: Investing in good companies at reasonable or cheap price
Section 6: Some proven successful investing strategies
Section 7: Miscellaneous topics


Who is KC Chong?

KC Chong is a retired qualified engineer with more than 40 years of experience in stock investing. He is a dedicated value investor & has coached more than 1,000 students on fundamental value investing. He has a Master in Finance degree & writes frequently on investing & personal finance.



Comments by Cold Eye

Cold Eye "Currently there is a shortage of good reading materials on fundamental investing written by local investment gurus for investor especially stock market newbies. The series of articles written by Mr. KC Chong have certainly helped to fill the vacuum. I am confident that this book will bring a lot of benefits to those looking for guidance. I therefore strongly recommend this book to those who are keen to sharpen their acumen in share investments.



KLCI 30 Component Stocks (Market PE, DY, ROE)


Company Market Cap (b) PE DY ROE Price
10.32 19.22 2.25 5.76 6.22
11.152 7.18 5.41 8.47 3.7
37.112 27.18 2.35 8.42 4.05
44.653 9.79 5.56 8.11 4.5
18.843 31.04 1.14 15.31 3.34
32.5 22.68 4.35 230.38 4.18
16.33 11.7 6.91 7.19 2.75
18.88 9.46 4.41 5.61 4.87
23.527 20.23 3.7 15.83 9.45
21.068 51.32 1.32 16.63 6.23
33.903 12.74 3.2 9.64 15.64
18.177 9.44 2.65 9.63 15.84
49.134 89.03 0.54 2.47 5.6
26.397 40.31 1.9 7.04 4.2
23.48 43.99 2.3 5.15 21.72
42.074 27.7 3.72 21.58 5.38
95.889 11.7 6.68 10.05 8.53
33.077 23.19 4.45 4.11 7.41
33.065 49.14 1.99 101.04 141
69.878 12.68 4.06 12.64 18
45.28 16.08 3.18 9.41 5.66
21.935 26.44 3.85 13.87 22.08
32.372 16.73 5.01 14.61 16.36
19.625 41.68 1.03 13.25 4.86
25.834 22.41 1.54 5.38 18.16
22.897 9.22 3.59 9.63 5.71
13.603 14.57 5 6.42 2
33.321 378.12 0.35 0.66 4.84
71.882 15.87 4.21 7.81 12.64
14.682 39.46 1.31 14.38 5.73
KLCI (Total) 960.890 17.70 3.55% 8.83%
Company Earnings (m) Dividends (m) Equity (m) DPO
536.9 232.2 9321.9 0.43
1553.2 603.3 18337.7 0.39
1365.4 872.1 16216.3 0.64
4561.1 2482.7 56240.2 0.54
607.1 214.8 3965.1 0.35
1433.0 1413.8 622.0 0.99
1395.7 1128.4 19412.1 0.81
1995.8 832.6 35575.3 0.42
1163.0 870.5 7346.7 0.75
410.5 278.1 2468.6 0.68
2661.1 1084.9 27605.2 0.41
1925.5 481.7 19995.1 0.25
551.9 265.3 22343.4 0.48
654.8 501.5 9301.8 0.77
533.8 540.0 10364.2 1.01
1518.9 1565.2 7038.5 1.03
8195.6 6405.4 81548.7 0.78
1426.3 1471.9 34704.3 1.03
672.9 658.0 665.9 0.98
5510.9 2837.0 43598.8 0.51
2815.9 1439.9 29924.8 0.51
829.6 844.5 5981.4 1.02
1935.0 1621.8 13244.1 0.84
470.8 202.1 3553.6 0.43
1152.8 397.8 21427.3 0.35
2483.4 822.0 25788.2 0.33
933.6 680.2 14542.5 0.73
88.1 116.6 13351.9 1.32
4529.4 3026.2 57995.2 0.67
372.1 192.3 2587.4 0.52
KLCI (Total) 54284.3 34083.1 615068.3 0.63




Summary:

KLCI 1491.03    5.3.2020

1.  The total market capitalization of the KLCI 30component stocks is RM 960.89 billion.
2.  The PE of the KLCI 30 component stocks is 17.70, giving a Earnings Yield (E/P) of 5.65%.
3.  The DY of the KLCI 30 component stocks is 3.55%.
4.  The ROE of the KLCI 30 component stocks is 8.83%.
5.  The total earnings of the KLCI 30 component stocks is RM 54.28 billion.
6.  The total dividends distributed by the KLCI 30 component stocks is RM 34.08 billion
7.  The total equity of the KLCI 30 component stocks is RM 615.07 billion
8.  The DPO of the KLCI 30 component stocks is 0.63.
9.  The Price to Book Value ratio of the KLCI 30 component stocks is 1.56



Analysts see rubber glove stocks bouncing off

TheEdge Thu, Mar 05, 2020


KUALA LUMPUR: The Covid-19 epidemic has pushed investors into stocks of rubber glovemakers, which have seen an uptick in demand.

The Healthcare Index climbed 13.77 points or 1.03% to close at 1,344.72 yesterday, with the Big Four rubber glove players dominating the list of most active counters on Bursa Malaysia.

Among the most active stocks was Careplus Group Bhd, which saw 62.9 million shares change hands. The stock closed up 12.73% at 31 sen with a market capitalisation (cap) of RM165 million.

Shares in Adventa Bhd gained 10.77% to settle at 72 sen, bringing a market cap of RM110 million.

Supermax Corp Bhd rose 5.59% to end the day at RM1.70, while Hartalega Holdings Bhd and Kossan Rubber Industries Bhd were up 3.48% and 1.46% to close at RM6.24 and RM4.85 respectively. Top Glove Corp Bhd shares were unchanged at RM5.70.

Analysts said the stage is now set for a solid growth in the rubber gloves sector in 2020 following three quarters of anaemic quarterly earnings growth.

“From a low base due to the lacklustre demand of the past 12 months, the sector will benefit from restocking activities, ramping up demand as the current outbreak of Covid-19 enforces higher hygiene standards,” Kenanga Research analyst Raymond Choo Ping Khoon said in a sector report on Feb 7.

He noted that even before the Covid-19 crisis set in, the third quarter of 2019 (3Q19) results season had indicated a positive recovery in demand and hence, volume growth of industry leaders such as Top Glove and Hartalega. Both players recorded 6% and 14% sequential volume growth, respectively.

“From our ground checks, demand for nitrile gloves is picking up again with players’ new capacities swiftly taken up. We believe this uptick in demand is turning positive and should be reflected in players’ bottom line in subsequent quarters.

“For illustration purposes, going forward, assuming nitrile:latex [ratio] of 80:20 (currently 67:37) and based on estimated global demand of 308 billion pieces in 2020 (forecast for 2019 is 300 billion pieces and assuming an 8% growth rate in 2020), this implies nitrile growth rate of 30% or an additional 51 billion pieces from switching to nitrile gloves,” he added. Kenanga Research has an “overweight” rating on the sector.

Affin Hwang Investment Bank said earnings growth for rubber glovemakers declined slightly in the just-ended 4Q19 as some of the manufacturers were still feeling the negative impact from the labour shortage issue.

“However, most of them have started to deliver stronger quarter-on-quarter earnings growth due to stronger demand from the US, as buying patterns have started to normalise since the tariff hike in China gloves in 3Q19. We believe that as most manufacturers are already operating at high utilisation rates, the recent surge in demand due to Covid-19 would provide them more flexibility in setting selling prices,” it said in a strategy note on Tuesday.

On Jan 24, Malaysian Rubber Glove Manufacturers Association president Denis Low announced that its members are prepared to gear up to produce more gloves to meet the requirements if the Covid-19 outbreak becomes pandemic.

At press time, the number of confirmed cases of Covid-19 totalled 93,500, with at a death toll of at least 3,204 people worldwide.

Confirmed cases have also been ballooning in other parts of the world, including in advanced and developing economies such as South Korea, Italy and Iran. Malaysia reported 14 new cases yesterday, bringing its tally to 50.

According to Bloomberg data, most of the glove counters are still trading below analysts’ consensus target price (see table), except for Hartalega. At yesterday’s closing of RM6.24, the stock is trading above its average target price of RM6.15.

Those currently trading below the analysts’ consensus target prices are Comfort Gloves Bhd (21%), Kossan (15%), Supermax (14%) and Top Glove (5%).


https://www.klsescreener.com/v2/news/view/647178/analysts-see-rubber-glove-stocks-bouncing-off




ADVENTA    0.715
AFFIN           1.770
BURSA         5.480
CAREPLS     0.305
COMFORT   0.875
HARTA         6.220
KENANGA   0.440
KOSSAN      4.940
SUPERMX   1.720
TOPGLOV    5.720

Investing: When to bet the farm

Big payoffs often require big risks. 

  • Bet wrong, and you could lose everything. 
  • Do you have what it takes? 
  • And how do you assess whether a dicey investment is worth it?

You want a big return? 
  • How big a risk do you want to take to get it? 
  • Gauging the risks associated with really promising investments, and 
  • handling those risks appropriately, can change your life.

"It's never safe to take a risk, by definition." 
  • Yet successful investors take major risks all the time. 
  • They succeed because they do their research, can afford to lose the money they invest in high-risk schemes and are able to make up any losses they incur with other investments, which frequently involve complementary or counterbalancing risks.
  • Whether considering an investment in a stock, a privately held startup or a hedge fund -- all high-risk propositions -- investors should start by digging through the details of the business case to figure out how the return on investment is likely to be generated. 
  • How big a payoff might the investment produce? 
  • And how likely is success?
  • Successful investors look hard at the downside as well. 
  • What would the price of failure be? 
  • And how likely is that?

Just jump in and take a risk
  • And what about all the outcomes in between?
  • Successful investors tend to have a broad view, taking the downside into account with the upside. 
  • They plan on an outcome somewhere in the middle of the range of possibilities. That is their "expected return."
  • "An expected return is an average. It's the probability of all of the outcomes."

Risk assessment gets pretty sophisticated at risk-oriented hedge funds.

  • These funds combine and counterbalance risks to put together exotic investment strategies that increase an investor's upside while controlling the downside -- all for a price. 
  • But the basics are just common sense.

Our own personalities add complexity to high-risk situations.

  • There are risks associated with overly emotional reactions.
  • "What you don't want to happen is for people to get emotional with the market."
  • The more emotional we get, the more likely it is we will make a mistake.
  • A company's business prospects can be measured and evaluated statistically, but there is no easy measure for mood swings. 
  • Before making any moves, people contemplating high-risk investments should come to grips with their emotional makeup and know how they are likely to react.

Three ways to analyze a company

  • (Quantitative, Qualitative and Technical Analysis)
  • Where risk is high, the investor needs to analyze his or her life situation.



Is financial risk really risky?

  • "There are times in your life when it's appropriate to take different levels of risk."
  • Age is a big factor. Age changes us in a lot of ways. We gain emotional maturity. At the same time, the nature of our financial obligations changes, and the time horizon for risk gets tighter.
  • "Let's say you're young, in your mid-20s,"  "If you take a big risk and something goes wrong, you have time to recover." 
  • On the other hand, the middle-aged homeowner probably needs a bigger safety net, especially if there are kids who need braces or there are college costs to consider.
  • Even a high-risk investment can be a very positive part of a portfolio when it's appropriate to a person's situation and is well-managed."In investing and in life, you have to look at everything on a risk-and-reward basis.  Volatility is not the end of the world."

Risk lesson from owning the business

  • He left the investment firm to start his own firm. 
  • He knew most new businesses fail, but he had a lot of confidence in his own investment skills. If the business went under, he reasoned, he could always get a job with another firm.
  • "Careers are actually the easiest place to take risks, as long as you don't burn your bridges." Younger investors, particularly, should be ready to gamble with their careers. 
  • But in the same breath he cautions as professional investors often do: Risk only as much as you can afford to lose, he says.

How to win in a bear market



The secret is simply to invest when others are selling. To do this requires resisting our instinct (built into our genes over thousands of years) to follow the herd.

Regular savers also win in a bear market because they continue to buy shares or units when prices have fallen. Provided they keep doing this they will benefit when the next bull market comes along.

Patience and perseverance is the key, since the recovery could take several years, but rest assured, a bull market will follow a bear market as sure as night follows day.

Investing in a hedge fund that ""goes short"" is also a way to make money in falling markets. In this case the fund manager does not invest directly in stocks but actually borrows and sells them.
  • He then repurchases and returns them at a later date. If he has judged correctly and the repurchase price is lower than what he paid then the difference, less expenses, is pure profit.
  • Such a fund can be a useful component in a portfolio to soften the impact of a falling market, but much depends on the skill of the manager. It is not something you should try at home!