Australia’s RBA remains stubbornly behind

This article failed to mention that Australian’s are the 2nd most indebted citizens (% of household debt to GDP) in the world.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2021-11-24/traders-betting-rba-will-soon-follow-rbnz-may-have-to-wait?sref=qLOW1ygh

As a result, raising interest rates will add to mortgage repayment stress.

Furthermore, the meeting minutes of the Korean and Kiwi centeal banks cited soaring residential real estate prices along with rising prices (inflation) as reasons to hike rates.

The Aussies only talk of the latter.

Rates eventually dohbking would hurt the indebted Australian home owner terribly. The rising net interest margin will make the banks a fortune but only to a point where defaults don’t ramp up.

Banks like taking deposits and lending money. They don’t want to become landlords.

See how the RBA is in a combination of being the curve or between a rock and a hard place?

November 25, 2021
by Rob Zdravevski
rob@karriasset.com.au

Ooops ! JP Morgan…

Dimon’s backpedaling is not a surprise.
China’s silence and lack of rebuke makes for good viewing.

It’s another case of knowing and watching how the world works.

One could paraphrase it as ‘knowing which side your bread is buttered’.

“Earlier this year, the bank one approval from Chinese regulators to fully own its Chinese securities venture…….”

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2021-11-24/jpmorgan-started-damage-control-as-soon-as-dimon-made-china-joke?sref=qLOW1ygh

November 25, 2021
by Rob Zdravevski
rob@karriasset.com.au

Where’s The Beef?

I think Cattle prices have reached an interim high.

CME prices are currently US$1.38 per pound.

Whether you’re a farmer, producer, investor, processor or speculator, I would either lock in forward prices or take the money and run (all the way until the cows come home…..)

The fat part of the trade has been had. The chart below shows the Cattle price rising 64% over the past 18 months.

My medium-term downside price target is $1.10.

That could also mean selling your shares in the world’s largest meatpacker, JBS. Its price chart showing its stellar performance is also attached.

Does this make shares in plant based, meat substitute company, Beyond Meat (BYND) attractive?

November 25, 2021
by Rob Zdravevski
rob@karriasset.com.au

#cattle #beef

Currency Trade Ideas

This week and today, we are also seeing an extreme in the U.S. Dollar (DXY) Index and as a result certain currencies are exhibiting notable weakness, which I think translate into an attractive buying opportunity.

My three strategic currency ideas are;

Sell USD and Buy EUR (current price is 1.1210)
– Once the Euro’s have been bought, I’m waiting for some specific stocks prices. Some on my list include SAP and ArcelorMittal.

Sell USD and Buy JPY (current price is 115.40)
– there are some Japanese equities on my buying list.

Sell USD and Buy SEK (currently 9.1130)
– Swedish equities have already rallied and benefitted from a weaker currency. The likes of Sandvik, Atlas Copco, Swedbank and Assa Abloy. The laggard is airline, SAS. This strategy is more applicable for those need to Buy Krona for corporate and business purposes.

The GBP (versus the USD) isn’t quite there. 1.3260 could be the place to buy Sterling.

November 25, 2021
by Rob Zdravevski
rob@karriasset.com.au

Kneading the dough

Lock in your Wheat price.

Yesterdays outside bearish reversal aides my Short Call on Wheat.

Currently trading at $8.50 on CBOT,

Looking for an initial downside target into the $7.81-$7.67 range.

$7.75 to be specific.

The medium term target surrounds the $7.12 area.

November 25, 2021

by Rob Zdravevski

rob@karriasset.com.au

#wheat

Whoa…back it up

Dimon’s backpedaling is not a surprise.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2021-11-24/jpmorgan-started-damage-control-as-soon-as-dimon-made-china-joke


China’s silence and lack of rebuke makes for good viewing.

It’s another case of knowing and watching how the world works.

One could paraphrase it as ‘knowing which side of your bread is buttered’.

“Earlier this year, the bank one approval from Chinese regulators to fully own its Chinese securities venture…….”

November 25, 2021
by Rob Zdravevski
rob@karriasset.com.au

Ya gotta know when to walk away

This price chart is an example where you should take profits or ‘manage’ your position.

The stock was a nice performer for our client portfolios in the last part of 2021. In the first quarter of 2022, I trimmed the holding (I thought it was quite prudent to adjust my weighting once the stock doubled) and eventually exited completely.

I thought the stock was fully valued and amongst other considerations I wasn’t a buyer at those new improved levels.

But there was a problem…..

Some investors were a little irritated that I was ‘becoming a ‘trader’ rather than a longer term investor. As I was suggesting we take profits within a 12 month window, this meant some investors faced a taxable ‘short-term’ gain.

When cash is earning you less than 1% and a stock doubles in a very short period of time (perhaps capitalising 3 years of earnings growth within a 7 month period of stock performance)……..you take the profit.

Otherwise, the ‘market’ has its own profound way of solving your tax problem.

Behold………the stock has halved.

Buyers from a year ago, no longer have a tax problem.

I feel a Kenny Rogers song coming on.

November 24, 2021

by Rob Zdravevski

rob@karriasset.com.au

Don’t fight OPEC?

We say ‘Don’t fight the Fed’,
Perhaps Biden shouldn’t fight OPEC?
What a terrible politically motivated decision especially when the SPR is normally kept for emergency supply disruptions such as in case of a hurricane etc.

And he asks or even persuades other nations to join him in their own ‘release’.

Such ad-hoc ‘band-aids’ seldom solve and this releases will be soon forgotten.

Alas, the oil price rose 3% today.
Maybe short covering played a part as speculators bet on a larger dumping.

Biden just added supply this hurting his own U.S. drillers. With this type of decision, drillers are hardly about to make capex decisions to drill more.

This story also mentions how the replenishing costs may be detrimental to refiners.

Lo and behold, pending OPEC’s response in the coming months, the reflexivity of this scenario means oil prices make their way lower due to inflationary pressures crimping GDP growth.

Furthermore, Biden becoming worse at international diplomacy. His relationship with Saudi Arabia is dreadful (interesting Saudi and China) are close allies.

His relationship with Russia is awful. (And Russian troops gather around Biden’s mates in the Ukraine)

And China and Russia definantly cooperate.

To understand Oil, it’s worthy to watch how the world works.

November 24, 2021

by Rob Zdravevski

rob@karriasset.com.au

Macro Extremes (week ending November 19, 2021)

The following assets (on a weekly timeframe) registered an Overbought reading or traded more than 2.5 standard deviations above its rolling mean.

Extremes “above” the Mean (at least 2.5 standard deviations)

Gold in AUD and USD

Rice

Overbought (RSI > 70)

Australian 5 year government bond yields

New Zealand 10 year government bond yields

U.S. 2 year government bond yields

the JKM “Japan/Korea (LNG) Marker”

LNG

Coffee

Tin

Urea 

France’s CAC-40 equity index

The S&P 500 & Nasdaq 100

And Amsterdam’s AEX equity index



The Overbought Quinella – Both Overbought and Traded at > 2.5 standard deviations above the weekly mean)

U.S. Dollar (DXY) Index

Philadelphia Semiconductor (SOX) Index

Assets (securities) which touched the other side of the extreme, being Oversold (where the RSI is < 30) or were at least 2.5 standard deviations below its mean are;

Extremes “below” the Mean (at least 2.5 standard deviations)

GBP/USD – suggesting a weaker British Pound 



Oversold (RSI < 30)

Iron Ore



The Oversold Quinella – Both Overbought and Traded at > 2.5 standard deviations above the weekly mean.

EUR/USD – suggesting a weaker Euro



Notes & Ideas:



An even milder week was seen in the world of commodities, currencies, commodities and debt. Volatility is subdued and we are experiencing something we may call consolidation or digestion. In some cases, there is some migration towards and test the other side of the mean.

In other news, Wheat is nearing an overbought level, the Baltic Dry Index has halved in the past 4 weeks, Turkish Banks have climbed 40% in 5 weeks (since my October 14th note) and Crude Oil has fallen 11% in 3 weeks. That peak of $85 coincided with Wall Street analysts calling for an $110 oil price. 

It pays to observe the herd, ignore the media squawk and ponder the contrarian view.

Extraordinary moves were seen in Lumber, Gas, Crude and Heating Oil, while divergence was noticed amongst declines in the U.S. transports, bankings, mid cap and small equity indices.

The larger advancers over the past week comprised of Cocoa 2.3%, the US dollar (DXY) Index 1%, JKM 8.5%, Coffee 5.2%, Lumber 28.9%, LNG 14.4%, Natural Gas 5.7%, Dutch TTF Gas 15.1%, Rice 3.2%, Rotterdam Coal 4.5%, Urea 3%, Nasdaq 100 2.3%, Philadelphia Semiconductor Index (SOX) 3.1% and Istanbul’s BIST equity index rose 5.1%. 

The group of decliners included Baltic Dry Index (9.1%), WTI Crude (6%), Gasoil (5.9%), Heating Oil (4.6%), Lean Hogs (2.8%), Orange Juice (2%), Platinum (4.9%), Gasoloine (4.3%), Silver (2.2%), Brent Crude (4.3%), China Coal (2.6%), Bitcoin (10.3%), AUDGBP (1.6%), AUDJPY (1.2%), AUDUSD (1.4%), EURGBP (1.6%), TRYUSD (12.3%), KBW Banking Index (2.7%), Dow Jones Industrial Average (1.4%), IBEX (3.6%), Bovespa (3.1%), Sensex (1.9%), Russell 2000 (2.8%), Nasdaq Transports (2.1%), FTSE 100 (1.7%) and the S&P Midcap 400 fell (1.1%).



November 21, 2021

by Rob Zdravevski

rob@karriasset.com.au  

Apple can do anything it wants to

What’s really cool is that Apple is trying to build a car and no one questions their competency. Apple can enter the world of health, money payments, computer chips, make telephones, computers and a watch. Google could too (education, virtual reality etc.) Amazon does a bunch of things beyond selling books online.

Ford will only, ever make cars. Boeing is in the business of aircraft manufacturing. Pfizer will continue to develop drugs.

Tesla’s challenge is (beyond having a better credit rating and selling more cars to justify its valuation) can it do something else’s beyond cars ?

p.s. making a charger that recharges the car battery doesn’t count. Apple also makes chargers for its laptops.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2021-11-18/apple-accelerates-work-on-car-aims-for-fully-autonomous-vehicle?sref=qLOW1ygh