Timber !
July 27, 2020 Leave a comment

Trying to hear what's not being said
July 22, 2020 Leave a comment
Let’s debunk the theory behind Gold rising as a store of value and an outright beneficiary of “money printing”.
Over the past 5 weeks, (since June 15th, which was an interim low across many commodity prices) Gold has only risen 8%.
Over the same period, Silver has surged 30%, Platinum & Copper advanced 16% and Brent Crude has climbed 15.7%.
You just don’t find the same zealots and blinded fanaticism in the other assets, unlike Gold.
Heck, the price of Coffee and Wheat rose the same amount as Gold.
July 22, 2020
by Rob Zdravevski
rob@karriasset.com.au
July 22, 2020 Leave a comment
I saw this headline the The Australian newspaper today….
“Hundreds of thousands of Australians could abandon the office in the wake of COVID-19, in a potential boon to small businesses and regional towns…
Rather than such news stories being a passing fad, COVID-19 is a real opportunity to encourage regional living.
It would allow government to re-distribute monies towards “the regions” and ease the pressures which metropolitan living places on transportation along with other infrastructure and services.
In my industry alone (finance), COVID-19 has already forced many stockbrokers to work from home.
This was never a possibility in the past.
Why ?
Because we were required to work within centralised offices in order to monitor us from a compliance basis.
Over the past few months, I haven’t heard this proximity pre-requisite being a concern amongst industry friends.
Why not let it continue ?
And similarly for other industries (whether or not employees need to be overseen), COVID-19 should give them the opportunity to move to less congested and perhaps safer communities.
If employees needn’t work in a close-knit team, remote work indeed should be a boon for regional towns and an option for the employee.
July 20, 2020 Leave a comment
Today, the ASX 200 closed at 6002.
I am watching if the index will trade lower to “fill” the following “gap-ups”,
5918, 5803, 5604, 5394, 5055 & 4701.
Those are declines of 1.4%, 3.3%, 6.6%, 10.1%, 15.8% & 21.7% respectively.
I’m betting on it trading closer to the 5,055 level.
20 July, 2020
by Rob Zdravevski
rob@karriasset.com.au
July 19, 2020 Leave a comment
Some months ago, I wrote about a M&A theme of where the “big become bigger”. I also continued to say that “quality will buy quality”.
In Chevron’s case of buying Nobel Energy, I’m not quite sure if they are buying quality, although as the FT article link summarises, at least Chevron didn’t rack up huge debt trying to buy Anadarko last year, while the winning bidder, Occidental, now struggles with that liability.
The other part of my M&A theme musings was also a prediction that forthcoming acquisitions won’t be necessarily require paying a premium and that “take-unders” may be more common that a “take-over”.
Chevron was close in this regard. It is buying Noble’s stock for $10.38 per share, which is only a 7.5% premium to its previous days closing price but quite a discount to its $35 price it was trading at 2 years ago.
July 15, 2020 Leave a comment
by Rob Zdravevski
July 15, 2020
Hello everyone,
Many think that the stockmarket is overpriced or even expensive !
Today, the forecast consensus Price to Earnings (P/E) ratio for the S&P 500 is 22.
The average P/E for the S&P 500 over the past 140 years has been approximately 15.
Yet I think that equities may be the only game in town.
I’d like to introduce you to the Earnings Yield.
https://www.investopedia.com/articles/investing/120513/comparing-pe-eps-and-earnings-yield.asp
The Earnings Yield is the reciprocal of the P/E Ratio
And so, the Earnings Yield of the S&P 500 Index is 4.5%.
In comparison, the yield for the 10 Year Treasury Bond or the “risk free rate” is currently 0.63%.
This means the S&P 500 is offering a return of 7 times more than the return for doing “nothing”.
Such a multiple hasn’t been seen since World War 2.
I’m trying to highlight a fertile habitat for investing.
For some recent context, in September 2011 (once the market cratered and then stabilised following the 2008-2009 Financial Crisis), the forecast P/E for the S&P 500 was 10.5 and so its Earnings Yield was 9.5%.
Comparatively, the 10 year bond was yielding 1.9%
At that historic nadir in stock prices, the market was offering a return of 5 times above the risk free rate.
Then the S&P 500 more than doubled in the next 7 years.
And more recently, in December 2018 (somewhat before a further 31% spurt in the S&P 500 Index over the next 14 months), the Earnings Yield of 6% (because the P/E was 16.8) was only twice that of the 3.1% 10 year Treasury Bond Yield.
Incidentally, that 3.1% 10 Year Bond Yield was the highest interest rate seen since June 2011.
The current “spread” which I mention in the opening paragraph coincides with my blog post about the real bull market may yet to be seen.
https://robzdravevski.com/2020/05/20/bull-markets-you-aint-seen-nothing-yet/
p.s. the forecast for the S&P 500 in 2022 is lower than 22, which mean a higher Earnings Yield.
rob@karriasset.com.au
July 10, 2020 Leave a comment
Although I’d like to note that the stocks I was selling as listed in the original post have all declined between 10% and 20%.
I am not advocating a trading mentality but rather, when you have conviction in your opinion, there are times when you need to protect your capital.
July 10, 20202
by Rob Zdravevski
rob@karriasset.com.au
July 9, 2020 2 Comments
Throughout the business cycle it seems inevitable that assets change hands between a “natural” to the “unnatural” owner and revert again to the “natural” owner.
What do I mean by this?
When doctors and lawyers buy vineyards, sure and soon enough they end up selling them back to the seasoned wine operator.
Sometimes people are romanced by starting, owning or buying a business which they have no business being involved in.
This can also include people who shouldn’t be in the stockmarket or own multiple residential dwellings in order to become high-flying landlords or starting a restaurant.
I’d love to hear some of your examples.
A recent conversation which started up while drinking beer with friends was relating to the housing grant stimulus being offered and a coming “boom” in new home starts.
One of the pre-requisites to receiving or qualifying for the grant, was that a slab (concrete foundations) needed to be laid by the end of December 2020.
So, my buddies start talking about getting into the concreting business.
I interrupted and asked “what the hell do you blokes know about concreting?”
Their reply was along the lines of, “what’s to know?” and “its easy”.
I needed to chime in and remind them that the guys which you see in the business today, actually belong there.
They are the “natural” owners of those businesses.
They’ve been talking concreting with their “old man” over the dinner table for years.
They know the costings, pricing and margins better than any of us.
I’m not raining on anyone’s entrepreneurial parade but it seems obvious that certain businesses should be run and owned by those with a pedigree in that industry.
Pedigree trumps competence, finances and passion.
If your friend ever decides to invest in Alpaca Farming or a Forestry Schemes, start a Nail Salon or an online bikini company…….and they have no business being there, perhaps you should say something.
7 July 2020
by Rob Zdravevski
rob@karriasset.com.au
July 6, 2020 Leave a comment
In another edition of market illusions…..
It’s the time of year when Australians measure investment performance as our financial tax year (ending June 30th) has come and gone.
Some market watchers may think V-shaped rallies, overwhelming tech bullishness coupled with tsunami’s of fiscal stimulus should’ve equated to above average returns on equity markets.
Not necessarily the case…..
Between July 1, 2019 and June 30, 2020,
the S&P 500 recorded a 5.4% return,
while in AUD, it was 3.7%.
and deceptively, the ASX 200 posted a decline of 10.9%
Another topic for another day is why we draw the line on each quarter, calendar or fiscal year. Though I guess, we need to start somewhere in order to measure things.
July 6, 2020
by Rob Zdravevski
rob@karriasset.com.au
Yes…..Lumber. (see chart below)
All have doubled over the past 4 months.
Where to next….
Oil’s bullish trend is still intact,
Silver is overbought, at extremes and warrants caution if you are long (susceptible to a pullback to $18),
and Lumber is a Sell. With its 3 standard deviation above its ‘weekly’ mean and an outside reversal week, it’s time to cash in the (wood) chips.
by Rob Zdravevski
July 27, 2020
rob@karriasset.com.au