Friday, September 27, 2024

This week's interesting finds

This week in charts

Asset class performance

10-year rolling annualized returns

Global policy rate cuts

Utilities

Rates and yield curve inversions

Gold

Car insurance

Mortgage amortization

Cargo Carriers Fear Port Strike Will Paralyze Half of US Trade

The world’s top container carrier is urging customers to move US cargo through East and Gulf Coast ports before the planned start on Tuesday of a dockworker strike that threatens to paralyze as much as half the nation’s seaborne trade volumes.

MSC Mediterranean Shipping Co. SA, in a customer alert Thursday, said talks between the longshoremen’s union and port employers “may not be resolved” by the Sept. 30 deadline, resulting in closures at terminals starting Oct. 1. That would delay the shipping of containers — both imports and exports — on trucks and railroads through ports from Boston to Houston.

Oxford Economics estimated that a strike would cost the US economy $4.5 billion to $7.5 billion a week — a hit to gross domestic product that would be reversed after it’s over and shipments resume. 

But the fallout of even a short strike would be costly for many retailers, manufacturers and other importers trying to ensure timely shipments and adequate inventories heading into the fourth quarter. 

Private equity just smashed another record

Last week FT Alphaville predicted that hot credit markets and investor desperation for some cash returns would cause the already record-breaking volume of “dividend recaps” to boom even harder.

But we didn’t know how quickly this would come true. On Monday the D’Ieteren Group in Belgium announced that its subsidiary Belron — a global car windscreen repair company jointly owned with a bunch of private equity firms — was borrowing €6.25bn in seven-year dollar and euro loans.

This is part of a broader €8.1bn borrowing spree that, combined with some of its own cash, will finance a €4.3bn special dividend to its owners. Trebles all round!

A morning note from PitchBook LCD informs us that this week’s loan represents the largest recapitalisation for dividend purposes on record, both for private-equity backed borrowers and overall. 

As a result, both S&P and Fitch downgraded the company this week, to BB- and BB respectively, with the latter noting that the dividend recap “effectively doubles the company’s existing debt, significantly affecting its leverage metrics”.


This week’s fun finds

Inspired by Prith’s South Asian moai, Chinda continued the global culinary adventure by heading to Thailand. Thai food is best enjoyed by eating many dishes so that you can experience the amazing balance of sweet, sour, bitter, salty and spicy. Thanks for sharing, Chinda!!

Postcards are the email of their day': How cat memes went viral 100 years ago

In the age of social media, we're living through a communications revolution. But this isn't the first one, nor is it the first time cats have been at the centre of social change.

It is a fundamental law of media history: as soon as a new communications technology emerges, people will use it to make pictures of cats. And those cat pictures show not only the special relationship between humans and their pets, but the changing ways that humans relate to one another.

Cat memes in their modern form date back to the 1990s, when email first allowed bored office workers and friends to message each other funny felines. The cats jumped from there to social media as the web developed, where viral videos like Keyboard Cat and memes such as Grumpy Cat bloomed across platforms. Demand for this content was so high that entire websites like ICanHasCheezburger sprung up to showcase the best e-cats, aggregating popular pet videos and cat memes.

But there was another trend long before any cat wanted to "has cheezburger", or any owner could even imagine taking a video of their pet with a handheld electronic rectangle: the Edwardian postcard. And, according to scholars of media history, understanding the cat postcards of the early 20th Century might help us to understand social media today.

Friday, September 20, 2024

This week's interesting finds

This week in charts

U.S. retail bankruptcies

Inflation 3% or higher

Historical Fed cutting cycles

Average fixed income prices

BBB bonds on downgrade watch

U.S. leveraged loans

Housing affordability

Rail delays

Nasdaq 100

Big Tech exposure

Cargo Floods Into US West Coast to Beat Tariffs

The ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach, which account for roughly a third of all US container imports, have seen a surge this summer just shy of an all-time high reached in May 2021.

Back then, a wave of inbound consumer goods caused supply bottlenecks on land and a queue of cargo ships waiting for a berth offshore was getting longer by the day.

This time around, cargo is moving more smoothly through the twin ports, as businesses bring goods in ahead of potential tariff increases and the threat of a dockworker strike hangs over alternate ports.

The Port of Los Angeles processed more than 960,000 20-foot container units in August, marking the trade gateway’s busiest non-pandemic month ever. 

Canada opens new critical minerals hub in push to end China’s dominance

North America’s latest rare earth processing centre opens in the city of Saskatoon this week, part of an effort to counter China’s global dominance in the supply of the critical minerals needed for the green technology, defence and aerospace industries.

The Saskatchewan Research Council, a 75-year-old government-funded scientific research and development institute, has built the commercial venture that will process rare earth minerals from Australia, Brazil and Vietnam until large-scale Canadian mines are operating.

The SRC Rare Earth Processing Facility marks a small but important step in western countries’ efforts to undermine China’s dominance in the critical minerals industry.

China controls about 60 per cent of the world’s rare earth mining production, but close to 90 per cent of processing and refining, according to the International Energy Agency. Rare earths are a set of 17 elements commonly found in the Earth’s crust but are hard to extract affordably in large quantities.

The Saskatchewan centre’s opening comes as a slump in rare earths prices over the past two years has knocked the business case for projects that can challenge China’s dominance over the minerals essential for electric cars and wind turbines.

Over the past four years, the US Pentagon has invested close to $1bn around the world in rare earths projects through the Defense Production Act — a cold war-era tool used to guarantee the supply of materials and technologies essential to the US’s economy and defence.

Washington has invested tens of millions of dollars in rare earths projects in its northern neighbour as part of these efforts to secure vital minerals.


This week’s fun finds

The EdgePoint soccer team played its season finale, marking the end of an amazing two-year run! Over the past two years, we had participation from various departments across the company: Investments, Sales, Operations and Investment Analytics - and from a diverse range of age groups, including interns just out of school and industry veterans with 30 years of experience. Trophies and medals remained elusive, but we took the win on team culture and chemistry! Stay tuned for updates on the EdgePoint basketball and volleyball team!

This Brazilian dog is a footvolley star. He teaches beachgoers how to play their own game

Rio de Janeiro’s main beaches bustle with commotion on sunny weekends. But activity ground to a near standstill on one stretch of sand. People held up their phones to record athletic feats they’d never before witnessed, or even imagined.

The game? Footvolley, a combination of soccer and beach volleyball. The athlete? A 3-year-old border collie named Floki.

Friday, September 13, 2024

This week's interesting finds

This week in charts


Equity drawdowns

Bull markets

Median index returns

MSCI All Country World Index performance

U.S. vs. Europe outperformance

Household spending

Restaurant spending

Home improvement

Disruptive technologies

Computer processing power

Companies issue record level of US debt to avoid market turbulence and election risk

Companies issued record volumes of US debt this week as they moved to head off possible volatility from closely watched economic data, a Federal Reserve meeting and a fast-approaching presidential election.

Twenty-nine US investment-grade bond deals hit the market on Tuesday alone following the Labor Day holiday, data from LSEG shows — the highest daily number on record.

Another burst of activity on Wednesday took issuance over those two days to just under $73bn, the largest figure in LSEG records going back 20 years. More blue-chip deals followed, taking total borrowing across 60 high-grade issuers to almost $82bn — marking the busiest week since May 2020.

Recent borrowing has spanned various sectors, with a $2.5bn deal from Ford Motor Credit, a flurry of bond sales by banks, a $750,000 deal from Target and a $4bn deal from Uber, which marked its first such transaction as an investment-grade company after being upgraded last month.

Investment-grade borrowers typically rush to tap lenders in early September. But senior debt bankers said the record-breaking issuance this week also reflected a desire to get ahead of any potential volatility sparked by economic data or the US election in early November.

Interest Payments Eating Up Canadians’ Incomes by Most Since 1992

The interest-only portion of households’ debt payments represented 9.59% of their disposable incomes in the second quarter, Statistics Canada reported Thursday.

That’s the highest level since 1992, and may capture the peak impact of what’s proved one of the fastest run-ups in interest burdens in a generation — in the first quarter of 2022, the interest-only portion of households’ debt payments represented just 5.86% of income, a record low in data going back to 1990.


This week’s fun finds

Prith, a member of the finance team, spiced things up in the Toronto office this week by hosting a South Asian Moai. No need to apologize for the short notice or “late” arrival, the food was delicious.

How Dave Matthews Band Tour Photographer Sanjay Suchak Meshes His Two Loves

A perfect moment is elusive: it’s hard to predict, hard to describe, but he’ll know it when he sees it. 

Here, Sanjay takes us inside the process behind how he works, including a photograph that changed his career; how creativity is an exercise that you can practice everywhere (even in the shower); and why he believes that borrowing like an artist is critical for mastering your craft, no matter what stage you’re at in your career. 

Friday, September 6, 2024

This week's interesting finds

This week in charts

Market capitalization

International valuation discount

S&P 500 valuations

Correlation

Volatility

ChatGPT launch

Historical recessions

Money-market funds

Global junk bonds

Household allocation to stocks

Past performance is a public enemy

In 13 of the past 18 years, not a single US stock that was a top-ten performer in one year also made the top ten in the next. In four of the other five years, only one managed the feat. In the other, a barely better three did.

Even staying in the top 100 is rare. An average of 15 companies per year managed to be in the top 100 for two consecutive years.

The odds of a repeat appearance in the top ten or top 100 two or three years down the line are similarly low.

It’s not even that they still do well but drop back from the glory stakes. In 14 of those 18 years, top-ten performers dropped to the bottom half of the performance rankings in the next year, on average. They were more likely to be among the worst-performing stocks than the better ones.

The typical drop in ranking has been savage.

Similar trends exist in other markets. In both Japan and the UK, in 11 out of 18 years, top-ten performers fell to the bottom half of the performance distribution in the next year. In Germany, it happened in all but four of the last 18 years.

It’s human nature to back winners. Hype is exciting! That’s why value investing is so psychologically hard to do in practice. It involves buying the losers, the unloved stocks.

More generally, the charts above show why investors should be cautious about chasing performance. Strong gains will tend to stretch valuations relative to fundamentals like earnings. Share prices start to bake in ever more optimistic expectations. At one point, Tesla traded on a valuation of over 200 times consensus forecasts for its next 12-months’ earnings (today it is on 77x). The erstwhile Magnificent-7 collectively are twice as expensive as the rest of the market, in terms of a multiple of next-12 months’ earnings.

Some companies may be able to deliver on these expectations (identifying which is the hard part). Many will not. And it can only take a small miss on earnings or a small change in the external environment – as happened this month – for an outsized share price reaction from the “hot stocks”.

The companies that win in the long run are often not the ones that are the best performers in any one year but the ones that can grow sustainably in the long run. Several years of good results and performance can easily compound over time to deliver better investment returns, in a less helter-skelter way, than if you are tempted to chase the best performers.

Momentum has been a popular investment strategy in recent years, but naively glory hunting is likely to result in high costs and mediocre returns. Don’t believe the hype.


This week’s fun finds

Common food dye found to make skin and muscle temporarily transparent

Researchers have peered into the brains and bodies of living animals after discovering that a common food dye can make skin, muscle and connective tissues temporarily transparent.

Applying the dye to the belly of a mouse made its liver, intestines and bladder clearly visible through the abdominal skin, while smearing it on the rodent’s scalp allowed scientists to see blood vessels in the animal’s brain.

The researchers describe the process as “reversible and repeatable”, with skin reverting to its natural colour once the dye is washed away. At the moment, transparency is limited to the depth the dye penetrates, but Hong said microneedle patches or injections could deliver the dye more deeply.