Friday, January 10, 2020

This week's interesting finds

January 11, 2020

Our Q4 commentaries are available now
This quarter, portfolio manager Andrew Pastor explains his investing journey (and what he learned to forget along the way), while portfolio manager Frank Mullen discusses finding positives in a negative-yield environment. 

Canadian energy makes the world a better place (en) (fr) 
A short video that reinforces the benefits that the Canadian energy industry, directly and indirectly, brings to all Canadians.

Canada has an abundance of natural resources that can fuel our nation yet we are importing resources daily from countries that take advantage of us, and that do not share the social values or legal standards that we demand from ourselves. 

Canada should be a world leader in supplying the most responsibly sourced energy not only to ourselves but to other parts of the world as well.

Streaming and cloud services are soaking up huge amounts of energy
A researcher at Huawei Technologies Sweden expects the world's data centers alone will devour up to 651 terawatt-hours of electricity. That is equivalent to the energy produced from Canada’s entire energy sector. This researcher also suggests that global data centre energy demands will double over the next decade and will represent 11% of global energy consumption by 2030.

What's driving the increased demand for data? Streaming video is currently the biggest culprit, with platforms like Netflix and Amazon Prime Video eating up 61% of all internet traffic.

The million-dollar age grid
This grid shows at what age you can become a millionaire, based on your yearly savings and when you start saving. This grid assumes you start with $0 and your savings are invested at 7% annually.

If you start saving $24,000 every year starting at age 30, you will have one million dollars by the time you are 50, or if you start saving $10,000 a year, by the time you are 60.

 Efficiently concentrated through ETFs
One of the primary drivers of the boom in ETFs over the last decade is that they provide efficient diversification.  While that’s the theory, the reality is that a number of the biggest sector ETF’s aren’t that diversified at all.

Investing in “the market” or a specific sector is increasingly becoming a concentrated bet on a few large names.
Would you believe that the two largest holdings in two sector ETFs account for more than 40% of the entire ETF?  That’s right, in the Energy sector, the top two holdings (Exxon and Chevron) account for just under 43% of the entire ETF, while Alphabet and Facebook account for 41.8% of the Communications Services sector.  In the Tech sector, Apple and Microsoft account for just under 40% of the ETF.

Friday, January 3, 2020

This week's interesting finds


January 4, 2020

New decade, Same rules apply.
When kicking off a new year it’s a good idea to remind yourself of some important investing lessons. As we enter a new decade, here are some of our favourites from this list.

- Be humble or the markets will eventually find a way to humble you. Having more confidence is a good thing in many areas of life. Markets are not one of them. More confident investors tend to trade more and take on undue risk, leading to worse performance.
- Being good at suffering is a superpower. When you think about the great investors in history, suffering probably isn’t the first word that comes to mind. But having a high threshold for pain is just about the most important trait you can have in this business. 
- The longer your holding period, the higher your odds of success.
- The best strategy is the one you can stick with long enough to reap the benefits of compounding.
- Price targets are pointless. Forecasts are foolish. Cycles and trends exist. That does not mean they are easy to predict or navigate. 
- Learn to control your emotions or your emotions will control you. Don’t be afraid to say “I don’t know.” Stay within your “circle of competence.” Thinking you know something and acting on that opinion can be far more harmful than admitting you just don’t know.

The disappearing edge
The rise in computing power and new regulations for full instant transparency have made it increasingly hard to gain an edge over the competition. In Charlie Ellis’s Winning the Loser’s Game, he lists another possible way to gain an edge. You try to remain steadier than the competition. You can never get too hot or too cold, even when those around you are acting irrationally.

Cyclicals comprise less than 30% of the S&P 500 Index. 

8 out of 11 sectors underperformed the S&P 500 over the last three years.

The number of billion-dollar IPOs surged this decade, but their performance lags. 
This was the decade when companies behind some of the world’s most-used apps went public at record valuations. In 2019 alone, there were 13 U.S. unicorns valued at $1 billion or more. Far more than in any prior year.

From 2010 to 2014, nine unicorns reported an annual profit. From 2015 to 2019 only four unicorns have reported an annual profit at least once, including Uber and Zoom Video in 2019. Uber’s profit was due to a gain on the sale of investments.

The last decade was tough for the average green stock.
Global clean energy shares underperformed the S&P 500 Index by 70% in the past, despite an estimated $2.4 trillion invested in projects involving the two fast-growing renewable power technologies – wind and solar.

The WilderHill New Energy Global Innovation Index, or NEX, which tracks the performance of more than 100 companies around the world specializing in renewables and related areas, such as energy efficiency and electric vehicles, was trading at 215.60 on Friday, December 20, 2019 – some 13% down compared to its level on the last day of 2009.

Friday, December 20, 2019

This week's interesting finds

December 21, 2019

Season's greetings from the EdgePoint team! 
Wishing you all the joys of the season and happiness throughout the coming year.


Same ETF’s, different name
The below table illustrates the impact of index ETFs on valuations of three slow-growth/no-growth companies. The three companies comprise a significant portion of many ETFs marketed under a range of ETF categories.  The companies in charge of structuring the ETFs simultaneously defined the three companies as value, growth, high-dividend, and low-volatility stocks. It is inconceivable that anyone of these stocks can be included in all four categories, suggesting that there is a fundamental flaw underlying these ETF methodologies.

Stats from the bond desk
BB bonds yielded just 3.51% on Monday, the lowest on record and just 164 basis points more than U.S. Treasuries. To put those figures further in perspective the safe AA index yielded 3.58% just over 13 months ago. Source: Bloomberg LP. 

From Almost Daily Grant - Wednesday, December 18, 2019
Newly issued leveraged loans have come to market with an average debt load of 5.5 times EBITDA this year, compared to just under 5 times in 2007. But after accounting for issuer-friendly adjustments such as add-backs (i.e. applying for credit today from hypothetical future cost savings), debt from new issues rises to near 7 times EBITDA, up from just over 5 times in 2007.

What does a junk bond even mean anymore?
The difference between BBB-rated and BB-rated U.S. corporate bond spreads has collapsed as investors chase yield in the highest-rated junk bonds. The differential between the best junk and worst investment-grade debt hit 38 basis points on Monday, the lowest since Bloomberg records began in 1994.

The global search for yield continues to draw investors to the U.S. corporate bond market, particularly the safest slice of high-yield, which has outperformed lower-rated bonds this year.

The millennial urban lifestyle is about to get more expensive
If you wake up on a Casper mattress, work out with a Peloton before breakfast, Uber to your desk at a WeWork, order DoorDash for lunch, take a Lyft home, and get dinner through Postmates, you’ve interacted with seven companies that will collectively lose nearly $14 billion this year. If you use Lime scooters to bop around the city, download Wag to walk your dog, and sign up for Blue Apron to make a meal, that’s three more brands that have never recorded a dime in earnings and have seen their valuations fall by more than 50%.

The idea that companies like these don’t make a profit might come as a shock to the many people who spend a fair amount of their take-home pay each month on ride-hailing, shared office space, or meal delivery. 

There is a simple explanation for why they’re not making money. The answer, for finance people, has to do with something called “unit economics.” Normal people should think of it like this: Am I getting ripped off by these companies, or am I ripping them off? In many cases, the answer is the latter.

Friday, December 13, 2019

This week's interesting finds

December 14, 2019

Conflicting ESG methodologies
Competition in the ESG ratings market is heating up. At least a dozen major third-party companies do such ratings. These different providers vary in their methodology and this is creating confusion for investors and making it harder to compare ESG data and ratings. 

ESG analysis, by its very definition, is subjective different providers will inevitably have different ways of classifying whether they think social concerns are more important or whether they are driven by carbon footprint. ESG data and ratings providers aren’t regulated, unlike counterparts focused purely on financial information. Nevertheless, efforts are being made to bring more transparency and standardization to the industry.

Tough for household formation
At age 35, baby boomers had seven times the wealth that millennials will have at the same age.

Alberta men facing a 20% unemployment rate
Alberta's unemployment rate among young men has nearly doubled over the past seven months, in an unprecedented spike that has pushed their joblessness rate to a level not since the early 1980s. In April, roughly one in 10 young men in Alberta was unemployed. By November, it had surged to one in five.

Only 10% of the volume is in fundamental single stock trading.

Friday, December 6, 2019

This week's interesting finds


The inconvenient truth about responsible investing
An analysis of  122 active responsible investing funds listed found that 45% still had exposure to at least one stock that is primarily engaged in the production, processing or direct transport of fossil fuels. That number is likely conservative because more than 50 of the funds on the list, which includes ETFs, mutual funds, pooled funds, GICs, segregated funds and private funds, only disclosed their top holdings, which made up as little as 7% of a portfolio. An additional 18 do not disclose any information about their funds at all.

Real estate transaction revenues is growing much faster than in other industries. RERL represented $252.28 billion in Q3 2019, up $2.30 billion or 0.92% from the quarter before. This works out to $6.62 billion or 2.70% higher than the same quarter last year. Quarterly growth is 4x higher than all industries, and annual growth is over 80% higher. As you can probably guess here, it’s a really big percent of total growth. Like, an unreal amount of the growth.
Government, Corporate and Household Debt now at 3x Global Economic Output
A decade of easy money has left the world with a record $250 trillion of government, corporate and household debt. That’s almost three times global economic output and equates to about $32,500 for every man, woman and child on earth. 
How Amazon Wove Itself Into the Life of an American City
A look at Baltimore shows how Amazon may now reach into Americans’ daily existence in more ways than any corporation in history.

To the city’s southeast stand two mammoth Amazon warehouses, built with heavy government subsidies, operating on the sites of shuttered General Motors and Bethlehem Steel plants.

Friday, November 29, 2019

This week's interesting finds

November 30, 2019

Our holiday gift guide — the list that keeps on giving
It’s the most wonderful time of the year and we’ve got you covered with EdgePoint’s sixth annual holiday gift list! Avoid getting a lump of coal with some gift suggestions from EdgePointers. 

Replacing coal with gas will open a new ‘window of opportunity’ for Canada’s LNG sector
It’s been a struggle to get the LNG sector off the ground in this country.

Despite this, Canada has several factors in its favour including our massive natural gas reserves in British Columbia and Alberta, and our closer proximity to growing Asian markets than U.S. Gulf Coast plants.

A study last year by the Canadian Energy Research Institute found that western Canadian LNG has an overall cost advantage to the land product in Asia, compared to building new export facilities in the U.S.

According to the IEA’s new World Energy Outlook report, coal-to-gas switching can offer “quick wins” for reducing global emissions. Natural gas generates half of the carbon dioxide emissions, on average, than burning coal for electricity, the study said.
“There is a window of opportunity. And the window of opportunity is also, for instance, (in) the coal-to-gas switching,” van der Hoeven, who headed the Paris-based IEA earlier this decade, told reporters.

“If you really want to phase out all of the coal that’s still in the world in power production, well that’s a huge window of opportunity where gas can play an increasing role, next to the renewables.”

Graham & Doddsville: Fall 2019 investment newsletter
“Many people refer to competitive advantage as a moat, based on Warren Buffett's letters. I think something else is just as important, yet hasn't gotten as much air time: functional advantage, which is the very nature of the business. The person who started me on this is Thomas Caldwell.

At some point, he was investing in stock exchanges. He made the point that these are really good businesses by the very function of what they do. A stock exchange naturally tends to have a network effect, not require a lot of capital, and grow with the market. For all these reasons, a stock exchange is a pretty good business.”

How investment analysts became data miners
Nowadays, analysts sift through non-traditional information such as satellite imagery and credit card data or use artificial intelligence techniques such as machine learning and natural language processing to glean fresh insights from traditional sources such as economic data and earnings-call transcripts. 

Teen birth rates just hit an all-time low
The teen birth rate, for girls between the ages of 15 and 19, fell 7 percent, from 18.8 births per 1,000 women in 2017 to 17.4 births per 1,000 in 2018.
Inside Edge Humor

Friday, November 22, 2019

This week's interesting finds

November 23, 2019

Billionaires circle distressed assets: oil and gas patch
Thanks to the shale revolution, the U.S. has become the world’s biggest oil producer. The investors behind that growth, however, have little to show for it. After years of churning through cash with paltry shareholder returns, independent oil and gas drillers are down more than 40% since 2014. Lenders are becoming more discerning after easy money enabled much of the original boom.

But certain billionaire investors see value in assets belonging to an industry that’s in distressed-sale mode could signal that the bottom is here -- or, at least, close.

Known and unknown of shares prices
In the investing community, known knowns are priced in. Unknown unknowns aren’t. They can’t be.  Unknown knowns are when people ignore information in front of their faces.  This is confirmation bias.  That leaves known unknowns; and man, do investors not like known unknowns.  Investors don’t like ambiguity.

We all know that losses feel a lot worse than gains feel good and that fuels and affects our decision making.  We think this is not just relevant for losses that we have already sustained, but for future losses that we think are likely.

When we know that there will be bad news coming, we brace for the impact.  But when we don’t know precisely how bad things will be, we do more than brace.  We panic.  We scatter.  We run for the hills.

It may actually be that the expectation of bad news weighs more heavily on our psyche than the actual bad news when it arrives; even if the extent of the bad news confirms our worst fears.


China imposes gaming curfew for minors
Gamers under 18 will be banned from playing online between 22:00 and 08:00. They will also be restricted to 90 minutes of gaming on weekdays and three hours on weekends and holidays.

China is the second-largest gaming market in the world, with US global revenue surpassing China for the first time this year due to China's increased regulations on the industry.

The state of the smartphone
A dozen years since launch, the smartphone is now at an inflection point. Adoption rates are nearing their natural peak, with close to nine in ten adults owning one. While ownership rates may be approaching a ceiling, the smartphone economy is just getting started. The smartphone industry remains brimming with potential.
 Almost every person asked uses their smartphone daily.

Here are Bill Gates' favorite TED talks:

The danger of science denial, by Michael Specter
How do we heal medicine, by Atul Gawande
Could this laser zap malaria? by Nathan Myhrvold
The power of introverts, by Susan Cain
Robots that fly…and cooperate, by Vijay Kumar

EdgePoint Children's Chrismas Party!