Tuesday 11 January 2011

Take a long-term view on emerging markets. Investment is sometimes a case of getting one or two big decisions right.

Tom Stevenson
Take a long-term view on emerging markets
Investment is sometimes a case of getting one or two big decisions right.


Take a long-term view on emerging markets
The Nikkei and the FTSE 100 were left for dead by India's Sensex in the past two years 
Let's assume that on March 3 2009, as global markets hit bottom, you recognised amid all the fear and loathing that this was the time to buy. With markets all around the world on the skids, which would you have chosen?
The decision you took, as the chart shows, was an important one because the returns in the 21-month recovery since then have been anything but even. £1,000 invested in the Japanese stock market has turned into £1,250 over that period. Better than a poke in the eye but not great from the starting point of one of the worst-ever bear markets.
If you'd succumbed to home bias, you would have done better. The FTSE 100 index has risen by 69pc since March 2009. But both of these developed markets have been left for dead by India's Sensex, which has turned £1,000 into £2,380 in less than two years. It is little wonder that flows into emerging market funds took off last year or that the consensus for 2011 returns is so unanimous. Go East young man has been the clear message.
Until the past few weeks that is, when the mood music changed. They remain a minority, but the voices calling the top for emerging markets are gaining in confidence. The consensus is "complacent", some say; others suggest that investors are blowing a bubble that will end badly.
There is plenty of evidence that investors have fallen in love with the emerging markets story, with around half saying they expect to increase their exposure to stocks in the developing world and a quarter saying they want more emerging market bonds. The numbers of investors saying they want to reduce their exposure is vanishingly small.
The case for adopting a more cautious stance is reasonable. Valuations, which have traditionally put emerging markets at a discount to the developed world to reflect the greater risks involved, are now broadly comparable. Inflation, with the notable exception of the UK, is not an issue in the developed world but increasingly it is a headache in emerging markets. Meanwhile, concerns about corruption and poor infrastructure have not gone away – investors are just choosing to ignore the former and to see the latter as an opportunity.
Crucially, investors are being warned that GDP growth and investment performance have not historically gone hand in hand. The price you pay for growth is quite as important as the growth itself and if the good news is already priced in then a popular market can run very fast just to stand still.
I understand the scepticism in the short term and, as I have written in the past few weeks, I think developed markets such as the US, selected parts of Europe (such as Germany) and even Japan will have a relatively good year in 2011. But on a longer-term view, I'm not prepared to give up on the emerging market story.
Take India. Since economic liberalisation began under current prime minister Manmohan Singh in 1991, GDP has grown by an average of 6.3pc a year, almost twice the average for the global economy as a whole. Between now and 2015, according to the International Monetary Fund, growth will average 8.4pc, again twice as fast as the rest of the world.
India has enormous problems – illiteracy, widespread poverty, high infant mortality – but so many advantages too. Almost a third of the population is aged under 15 and just 5pc over 65. The government has pledged to all but double spending on physical infrastructure by the end of the current five-year plan to 2012.
More than $500bn will be invested, with maybe twice as much in the next five-year period. The Indian population is poised on the brink of an explosion of domestic consumption as its income per capita enters the sweet spot where people, for the first time in their lives, move beyond subsistence.
Yes, valuations matter, especially in the short term. But over the longer term, the steady compounding of a superior growth story is more important. When I bought my first property in London 20 years ago, close to the top of the market, all the same arguments would have applied. But the 10pc or so I may have paid over the odds at the time is totally inconsequential today. In 20 years' time, I don't expect to be quibbling about the PE ratio of the Indian market in 2011.
• Tom Stevenson is an investment director at Fidelity Investment Managers. The views expressed are his own.

Predicting the Unknowables!

'Beware the second half of the year'
The year bodes well for many asset classes, but in our opinion equities and commodities will fight for pole position.


We believe equities will produce good returns of around 8pc-10pc for the year, but these figures hide an expected return of 15pc-20pc in the first half, likely to be eroded by poorer markets in the second half.
The property market may be fairly neutral by comparison, likely to return 4pc-5pc, and gold may disappoint investors after a decade of good performance with a possibility of negative returns.
Bonds' 30-year "bull run" is nearing an end and the asset class is likely to produce negative returns for all but the most active managers.
Loose monetary and fiscal policies will continue to support the US economic recovery and provide impetus for robust growth along with strong emerging economies. As a result, we expect to see a stronger-than-consensus global recovery. But the momentum could peak in the first half of the year as the effects of the current loose monetary policies bring inflationary pressures to the fore and encourage rate hikes.
This would affect emerging markets more than the West as many policy-makers in the region have been slow in their response. In contrast to 2010, developed markets will outperform, or at least match, Asian and emerging markets.
Extreme investor optimism has resulted in many equity markets being technically overbought in the short term. Thus a correction is likely but this could present a buying or switching opportunity.
In such a scenario we believe allocations to commodities, resource, energy and technology stocks may be rewarding. Small and mid-cap stocks in the US and UK, and mid-caps in Germany, also represent good opportunities. For the more adventurous, frontier markets will be worth considering given that they have been left behind in this global rally. Most of the gains in 2011 are likely to come in the first half of the year. Timely exit strategies may be necessary to lock in profits.

Does your portfolio need rebalancing?

Does your portfolio need rebalancing?
If you can't remember the last time you reviewed your investments, now might be a good time to give your portfolio an overhaul

If you have locked your investments away in a drawer, there is a good chance that they are poorly matched and that your portfolio is unbalanced.
Should this be the case, you will need to act to ensure your investment goals are on track. No one can predict what will happen and the best way to avoid boom-and-bust cycles is to make objective decisions that ignore fashions.
Diversification and getting the balance right are vital. Fail to achieve that and it is easy either to buy the wrong kind of investment or to create a portfolio that is vulnerable to shocks.
"Rebalancing is one of the key factors in successful long-term investment performance, probably almost as important as asset allocation itself," said Adrian Shandley of Premier Wealth Management. "As an investor, you need to set your asset allocation at the outset to reflect your attitude to risk and your desired outcomes."
If you have not continually rebalanced, your original asset allocation will almost certainly have become distorted e_SEnD and you could find yourself taking either too much or too little risk.
"In the terrible bear markets of 2007 and 2008 a continually rebalanced portfolio would have produced positive returns by the middle of 2009, whereas a portfolio that was not rebalanced would still have been in deficit at the end of 2010," Mr Shandley added.
Sadly, too many investors realise they have poor asset allocation when it is too late, which is why prevention is definitely better than cure. Building a portfolio is a question of managing risk versus return.
Rob Burgeman, a director of investment management at Brewin Dolphin, the wealth manager, added: "The best defence against this is a well-diversified portfolio of assets that is suitable for the objectives that you are trying to achieve." Thus, the pension portfolio of a 40-year-old is likely to be very different from that of someone in their mid-sixties looking for income in retirement e_SEnD and rightly so.
Attitude to risk is also a key consideration. The sensible investor takes into account the amount of risk they are able to tolerate, both emotionally and psychologically and in terms of their individual needs. It is therefore vital to understand the different levels of risk inherent in various types of investment. Overly concentrating on a single asset class will increase the risk to a portfolio unnecessarily.
So what are the issues that investors should be considering this year? "On the one hand, interest rates at 350-year lows make holding large cash deposits unattractive. On the other, tax rises and cuts in government spending are likely to have a deflationary effect on the economy," Mr Burgeman said.
He continues to favour equities e_SEnD particularly the blue chips, which tend to have international exposure - and emerging markets. He is also warming to US shares, while he has been advocating a reduced exposure to government bonds.
"Europe, too, remains a concern as the contagion could spread further within the region. We remain underweight here. As far as Asia and other emerging markets are concerned, valuations are not expensive by historic standards and, while these regions are likely to pause for breath a little, we remain strategically overweight there."
Perhaps not surprisingly given the uncertain global outlook, many professional investors are taking a cautious stance - and that includes holding gold despite its terrific run. They are also wary of government bonds in light of quantitative easing and the prospect of inflation.
"We favour high-yield and strategic [bond] funds, such as Aegon High Yield and Cazenove Strategic Bond, over government and investment-grade bond funds," said Gary Potter of Thames River Capital, the fund manager.
Marcus Brookes, who manages fund portfolios at Cazenove, is investing in funds that have lagged the market over the past year, including Invesco Perpetual Income, J O Hambro UK Opportunities and Majedie Global Focus. He has trimmed his exposure to emerging markets, given their performance over the past three years.
"Gold is an asset that we have held for two years and, while it has had a strong run over the course of 2010, we still feel it warrants a place in the portfolios for the time being," Mr Brookes added.
Many financial advisers suggest that investors should think of their portfolios as football teams.
"I'd look to dump out gilt-type funds and not be tempted by the hype about absolute return funds, and fill the midfield with international stars like Angus Tulloch (First State Asia), Graham French (M & G Global Basics) and Robin Geffen (Neptune Global and Neptune Russia)," said Alan Steel of Alan Steel Asset Management. Mr Steel reckons that small-cap funds (Standard Life's is his favourite) and commodity funds such as J P M Natural Resources will also score for investors.
However, Mr Steel's bullish tone is set to change in a few months' time when he might change tactics and move to a more defensive strategy.
"If you build up a good lead by the summer I'd go more defensive with the big caps." Again, Neil Woodford of Invesco Perpetual will make his team sheet.

Typical UK house price to lose a quarter of its value

Typical house price to lose a quarter of its value
The typical value of a home in Britain will lose a quarter of its value by the end of this year, dropping to just £150,000, economists have warned.


Typical house price to lose a quarter of its value
Typical house price to lose a quarter of its value 
Halifax, Britain’s biggest mortgage lender, said average house prices dropped to £162,435 in November, down 1.3 per cent on the previous month and 1.6 per cent on the same period a year ago.
But economists forecast that values will drop even further this year to just £150,000 amid concerns about the economy.
It would mean a total drop of £50,000 in prices from the beginning of the credit crisis in August 2007, when they stood at £199,612.
Martin Ellis, housing economist at Halifax, said: “Uncertainty about the economy, weak earnings growth and higher taxes could put some downward pressure on demand.”
It comes amid growing speculation that the Bank of England will raise interest rates this year to combat higher inflation.
Howard Archer, an economist at Global Insight, said: “Any early interest rate hike in 2011 would be bad news for the housing market and likely to weigh down on prices - not just the rate rise itself but the impact on potential house buyers’ psychology resulting from the fact that they would be facing rising interest rates.
“Critical to the development of house prices over the coming months will be the amount of houses coming on to the market, mortgage availability, how well the economy and jobs hold up as the fiscal squeeze increasingly kicks in, and what happens with interest rates."
It comes as separate figures suggested that almost a third of home owners are on their lender’s standard variable rate – the rate they automatically slip onto when their initial deal comes to an end – and have no plans to change it.
In some cases, the rate will be cheaper than the cost of an alternative mortgage. In other cases, home owners will simply not be able to afford a deal elsewhere due to tight lending criteria.
The level has risen to 31 per cent, up from 26 per cent a year earlier, according to financial website unbiased.
Estate agents suggested the seasonal slowdown in the housing market was accentuated at the end of last year due to the bad weather.
Peter Rollings managing director of estate agent Marsh & Parsons, said: “The worst snowfall in a century reined in the number of buyers hitting the streets and viewing potential properties across many areas of the country.”
However, despite the drop in prices, separate research suggested the number of properties sold last year may have actually risen by 2.6 per cent.
Estimates suggest 630,000 properties were sold last year, up from 614,000 the previous year, according to property website Globrix.
Jennifer Warner, of Globrix, said: “The key driver for the market in 2011 will be mortgage lending activity. Mortgage availability is key to a healthy property market, particularly for first time buyers. The expected rate increase from the Bank of England, which now seems a question of when rather than if, will also shape the market this year, possibly leading to lower prices and greater affordability for first time buyers.”


http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/personalfinance/8250303/Typical-house-price-to-lose-a-quarter-of-its-value.html

The crisis is worsening for America's poor.

QE2 is sailing the US into stormy waters

Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
January 11, 2011
The crisis is worsening for America's poor.

THE US is drifting from a financial crisis to a more insidious social crisis. Self-congratulation by the US authorities that they have avoided a repeat of the 1930s is premature.

There is a telling detail in the US retail chain store data for December. Stephen Lewis from Monument Securities points out that luxury shops had an 8.1 per cent rise from a year ago, but discount shops catering to America's poorer half rose just 1.2 per cent. Tiffany's, Nordstrom, and Saks Fifth Avenue are booming. Sales of Cadillac cars have jumped 35 per cent, while Porsche's US sales are up 29 per cent. The luxury goods stock index is up by almost 50 per cent since October. Yet Best Buy, Target, and Walmart have languished.

Such is the blighted fruit of Federal Reserve policy. The Fed no longer even denies that the purpose of QE2 (its second round of quantitative easing) is to drive up Wall Street. Ben Bernanke's ''trickle-down'' strategy risks corroding America's solidarity before it does much to help America's poor.

The number of people on food stamps - worth about $US140 a month - has reached 43.2 million, a record high 14 per cent of the population. The US Conference of Mayors said visits to soup kitchens are up 24 per cent this year. About 643,000 people need shelter each night. Jobs data released on Friday was dire, again. The only reason headline unemployment fell from 9.7 per cent to 9.4 per cent was that so many dropped out of the system.

The ''labour participation rate'' for working-age men over 20 dropped to 73.6 per cent, the lowest since the data series began in 1948.

It is no surprise that America's armed dissident movement has resurfaced. Time magazine's ''Locked and Loaded: The Secret World of Extreme Militias'' describes an underground stint with the 300-strong Ohio Defence Force: citizens who spend weekends with M16 assault rifles and an M60 machinegun, training to defend their constitutional rights by guerrilla warfare.

Raghuram Rajan, the International Monetary Fund's former chief economist, says the subprime debt build-up was an attempt - ''whether carefully planned or the path of least resistance'' - to disguise stagnating incomes and to buy off the poor.

''Cynical as it might seem, easy credit has been used throughout history as a palliative by governments that are unable to address the deeper anxieties of the middle class directly,'' he said.

Extreme inequalities are toxic for societies but there is a body of scholarship suggesting they also cause depressions. They create a bias towards asset bubbles and over-investment, while holding down consumption, until the system becomes top-heavy and tips over, as happened in the 1930s.

Today, multinationals can exploit ''labour arbitrage'' by moving plant to low-wage countries, playing off workers in China and the West against each other. The profit share of corporations is at record highs in America and Europe.

Asia's mercantilist powers have flooded the world with excess capacity, holding down their currencies to lock in trade surpluses. The effect is to create a black hole in the global system.

So we limp on, with large numbers of people trapped on the wrong side of globalisation, and nobody doing much about it.

Would Franklin Roosevelt have tolerated such a state of affairs, or would he have ripped up and reshaped the global system until it answered the needs of his citizens?

TELEGRAPH

http://www.smh.com.au/business/qe2-is-sailing-the-us-into-stormy-waters-20110110-19l6b.html

Australia: Credit Suisse tips sharp GDP fall in 2011

Credit Suisse tips sharp GDP fall in 2011
January 10, 2011 - 3:54PM

Investors should sell resources stocks and position portfolios defensively in 2011 ahead of a likely sharp slowdown in Australia’s economic growth, according to Credit Suisse.

The global bank today voiced a position contrary to the Reserve Bank’s outlook and the market consensus, both of which expect strong growth in Australia’s gross domestic product (GDP) over the next two years.

Borrowers face high interest rates, banks are tightening lending criteria and the Australian dollar is overvalued relative to base metals prices, Credit Suisse’s analysts Adnan Kucukalic and Atul Lele told clients today.

This adds up to very tight monetary conditions, ‘‘historically consistent with a near hard-landing over the next year’’, they said in a note.

‘‘As a whole, monetary conditions are pointing to a sharp slowdown in GDP growth in 2011.’’

Most economists expect between two and four more interest rate hikes by the RBA this year, adding another 100 basis points to the current cash rate of 4.75 per cent in an effort to curb inflation pressures from China’s growth and the local mining investment boom.

Home borrowers expect the same, with Mortgage Choice reporting an increase in the take-up of fixed rate mortgages during December to buffer the hit to household budgets.

Fixed rate home loans now account for 15.22 per cent of all mortgages, up from 11.24 per cent in November when the RBA last raised the key interest rate, the national mortgage broker said.

Credit Suisse said the RBA should be cutting rates in 2011, especially if China continues to raise its interest rates to counter inflation. This would slow China’s growth, which would produce a headwind for local resources stocks.

Local investors should rotate out of resources stocks and take a defensive portfolio position, favouring interest rate-sensitive stocks such as retailers and banks, Credit Suisse said.

Although looking cheap when measured by conventional metrics, the Australian share market is expensive based on the long-term trend and should trade flat or lower in 2011, the analysts said.

The benchmark S&P/ASX 200 lost 2.6 per cent in 2010 to finish at 4745.2 points. It closed at 4712.3 points today.

AAP

http://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/business/credit-suisse-tips-sharp-gdp-fall-in-2011-20110110-19kw4.html

Monday 10 January 2011

Boustead in talks to buy army base land for RM8b project

Boustead in talks to buy army base land for RM8b project

By Sharen Kaur
Published: 2011/01/10


Boustead Holdings Bhd (2771) may build mixed commercial and residential properties worth more than RM8 billion on the 98ha Batu Cantonment army base at Jalan Ipoh, Kuala Lumpur.


The group's main shareholder Lembaga Tabung Angkatan Tentera (LTAT), which holds a 59 per cent stake, is in talks with the government to buy the land and is close to sealing the deal.

Boustead deputy chairman and group managing director Tan Sri Lodin Wok Kamaruddin is hopeful that it will be involved in the land development.

"Hopefully the deal could be secured soon. Everyone is working hard to make it happen. If LTAT can buy the land, we will do a feasibility study to decide on the most viable properties to build," he said.

"It is a good site for a mixed development. It would be the kind of project that one would want to pursue on this prime land," Lodin told Business Times.

He said Boustead may build medium to high-end houses, commercial and residential towers, shophouses, small office/home office and a mall.

The government is selling some of its prized land bank around Kuala Lumpur and the Klang Valley at current market value for redevelopment.

These include the Batu Cantonment land, 24ha at Jalan Cochrane, the 1,320ha Rubber Research Institute land in Sungai Buloh, and smaller parcels at Jalan Stonor, Brickfields, and Bukit Ledang, off Jalan Duta.

It is unclear how much the Batu Cantonment land is worth but according to Previn Singhe, founder and chief executive officer of Zerin Properties, the market value for unconverted land at Jalan Ipoh is now between RM40 and RM80 per sq ft.

Previn said the development will attract foreign investments as it is closely located near the KLCC.

"The shear size of the development offers a lot of promises. Prices of real estate along Jalan Ipoh have always been stable with good movement ... it's not as docile as how one thinks.

"This project will have a positive impact on Jalan Ipoh if done well and if the developer can tap on the commuter line nearby, and the proposed Kepong-Kajang line," Previn said.

The Batu Cantonment army base, which has been there for over 40 years, will be relocated.

In 2002, the Perak state government had earmarked a 680ha site in Batu Gajah for the relocation.




Read more: Boustead in talks to buy army base land for RM8b project http://www.btimes.com.my/Current_News/BTIMES/articles/LTAT5/Article/index_html#ixzz1Adr59Z63

Two directors convicted of market manipulation

Saturday January 8, 2011

Two directors convicted of market manipulation
By M. MAGESWARI
mages@thestar.com.my


KUALA LUMPUR: Former Impetus group executive directors Datuk Philip Wong Chee Kheong and Francis Bun Lit Chun were found guilty of stock market manipulation.

Sessions Court judge S.M. Komathy Suppiah ruled yesterday that the prosecution, led by DPP Ros Mawar Rozain, had proven the case against both accused beyond a reasonable doubt.

“I confirmed that the first accused (Wong) is the mastermind of market manipulation,” she said in her verdict.

Komathy held that both accused had created a misleading appearance of active trading of Suremax Group Bhd shares by buying and selling through nine CDS accounts.

In elaborating, Komathy said her ruling was based on a thorough examination of evidence tendered by 38 prosecution witnesses and the two accused who testified under oath.

She set Jan 12 for the hearing of mitigation and sentencing. If convicted, each accused can be fined a minimum of RM1mil and jailed up to 10 years under the Securities Industry Act 1983.

On Feb 12, 2007, Wong, 49, and Bun, 41, had claimed trial to having created a misleading appearance of active trading of Suremax shares.

They were said to have committed the offence by indirectly being concerned in transactions of sale and purchase of Suremax that do not involve any change in the beneficial ownership of the said shares.

The two were accused of committing the offence together with businessman Ivan Ng Chong Yeng at Bursa Malaysia Securities Bhd in Exchange Square, Bukit Kewangan, between Nov 24, 2004 and March 22, 2005.

On Feb 12, 2007, Ng, 45, who was then group chairman of Impetus Consolidated Sdn Bhd, was acquitted of stock market manipulation through 153 CDS accounts.

Sessions Court judge Akhtar Tahir acquitted Ng after the prosecution said they wanted to withdraw both charges against him.

http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2011/1/8/courts/7755242&sec=courts

Definitions

Worldscope Definitions
Brief definitions of the Worldscope items used to calculate the new datatypes are provided below.


Item Definition
Net Sales WC01001 Net Sales or Revenues represent gross sales and other operating revenue less discounts, returns and allowances.

Net Profit (Income) WC01651 Net Income – bottom line represents income after all operating and nonoperating income and expense, reserves, income taxes, minority interest and extraordinary items

Net Debt WC18199 Net Debt represents Total Debt minus Cash. Cash represents Cash & Due
from Banks for Banks, Cash for Insurance companies and Cash & Short Term Investments for all other industries.

Employees No WC07011 Employees represent the number of both full and part time employees of the
company.
It excludes:
Seasonal employees
Emergency employees

Total Assets WC02999
All Industries:
Total Assets represent the sum of total current assets, long term receivables, investment in unconsolidated subsidiaries, other investments, net property plant and equipment and other assets.
Banks:
Total Assets represent the sum of cash & due from banks, total investments, net loans, customer liability on acceptances (if included in total assets), investment in unconsolidated subsidiaries, real estate assets, net property, plant and equipment and other assets.
Insurance Companies:
Total Assets represent the sum of cash, total investments, premium balance receivables, investments in unconsolidated subsidiaries, net property, plant and equipment and other assets.
Other Financial Companies:
Total Assets represent the sum of cash & equivalents, receivables, securities inventory, custody securities, total investments, net loans, net property, plant and equipment, investments in unconsolidated subsidiaries and other assets.

Enterprise Value WC18100
All Industries:
Market Capitalization at fiscal year end date + Preferred Stock + Minority Interest + Total Debt minus Cash.
Cash represents Cash & Due from Banks for Banks, Cash for Insurance
Companies and Cash & Short Term Investments for all other industries.


Common/ Shareholders’ Equity WC03501 Common Equity represents common shareholders' investment in a company.

EBIT WC18191 Earnings before Interest and Taxes (EBIT) represent the earnings of a company before interest expense and income taxes. It is calculated by taking the pre-tax income and adding back interest expense on debt and subtracting interest capitalized.

EBITDA WC18198 Earnings before Interest, Taxes and Depreciation (EBITDA) represent the earnings of a company before interest expense, income taxes and depreciation. It is calculated by taking the pre-tax income and adding back interest expense on debt and depreciation, depletion and amortization and subtracting interest capitalized


CAPEX WC04601 Capital Expenditures represent the funds used to acquire fixed assets other than those associated with acquisitions.
It includes but is not restricted to:
Additions to property, plant and equipment
Investments in machinery and equipment.

Free Cash Flow (Funds from Ops)WC04860 Net Cash Flow – Operating Activities represent the net cash receipts and disbursements resulting from the operations of the company. It is the sum of Funds from Operations, Funds From/Used for Other Operating Activities and Extraordinary Items.

Interest Expense WC01251 INTEREST EXPENSE represents the service charge for the use of capital
before the reduction for interest capitalized. If interest expense is reported net of interest income, and interest income cannot be found the net figure is shown

http://thomsonreuters.com/content/financial/pdf/i_and_a/indices/datastream_global_equity_manual.pdf