Monday, July 5, 2021

The future belongs to emerging markets – three EM stocks to buy now

For decades Mark Mobius and I have managed various emerging and frontier-markets funds, including Templeton Emerging Markets Investment Trust, the largest London-listed emerging-market trust. Just over three years ago we founded Mobius Capital Partners, aiming to offer a truly different investment approach to capture the most exciting opportunities in emerging and frontier markets. 

We decided on four key principles. We focus on one concentrated strategy only and limit the portfolio’s size; we invest in the highest-quality emerging businesses, with deep moats (sustainable competitive advantages that fend off rivals); we use non-traditional sources to underpin our conviction in our choices; and we act as partners and real investors through constructive engagement with our portfolio companies. 

We believe that active investing can deliver outsized returns, particularly in the rather inefficient small- and mid-cap sectors in emerging and frontier markets. Our formula has already delivered strong results, making the Mobius Investment Trust one of the best-performing strategies in its segment. 

The opportunities in emerging and frontier markets are changing rapidly. There is a new wave of innovation with new business models. With over 80% of the world’s population living in emerging markets and household incomes gradually rising, the needs of the future are very different from the needs of the past.

Africa’s top payment-app

One exciting example is Safaricom (Nairobi: SCOM) in East Africa, which has migrated from providing more traditional communication services to offering the largest mobile-payment application on the continent. It has just launched a “super-app” to enhance customers’ experience. 

In Asia in particular we are witnessing an economic “miracle” comparable to the post-war developments in Europe: a unique and versatile ecosystem increasingly dominating the world in innovative technologies. In sectors such as factory automation, sensor technology, autonomous driving, consumer electronics, the internet of things (IOT), artificial intelligence and alternative energy, Asia is taking a global lead. 

A healthcare supercycle

We are convinced that spending on services, especially healthcare and education, could turn into the supercycle of the next decade. Take Metropolis Healthcare (Mumbai: METROHL). It is a leading provider of medical and laboratory services in India. 

Metropolis offers pathology testing, imaging and nuclear medicine, clinical trials, and home-care services. It started as a single laboratory and today operates over 124 clinical laboratories with 2,400 collection centres across seven countries.

Another example is EC Healthcare (Hong Kong: 2138), which operates Hong Kong’s largest non-hospital medical network with over 60 centres in greater China. These are examples of the type of mid-cap company our strategy focuses on. They are often run by the founding entrepreneurs; they have a very dynamic culture and attract great talent; and they are highly innovative with sound balance sheets, excellent management teams and strong local brands. They are often overlooked by the market, but thorough research by our experts helps us identify these leaders of tomorrow.



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What lies behind the returns from ESG investing?

Last week, Eiji Hirano, former chair of the board of governors at Japan’s Government Pension Investment Fund (GPIF) – the world’s largest such fund – told Bloomberg that he sees signs of a “bubble” in ESG investing (that is, investing with environmental, social and governance issues in mind). The GPIF was an ESG pioneer in Japan, but now “needs to go back to its roots, and think about how to analyse if ESG is really profitable”. 

It’s not the only one. Investors once took it for granted that ethical investing (ESG’s predecessor) would deliver worse returns than the market as a whole. The mere fact that ESG investing means buying from a more limited universe of stocks implies that in the long run, you’ll lose out, because there will be times when the stocks you not allowed to buy outperform the ones you are.

Yet these days, ESG is often presented as a “factor” in and of itself – an investment strategy, similar to value or momentum investing, that will result in long-term outperformance due to some fundamental attribute of the stocks concerned. Robert Armstrong, in his Unhedged newsletter in the Financial Times, looks at two research papers, both by US professors Lubos Pastor, Robert Stambaugh and Lucian Taylor, which try to shed light on the matter. In theory, ESG aims to cut the “cost of capital” for “good” companies, and raise it for “bad” ones, incentivising “good” behaviours and cutting off funding to “bad” ones. 

You can argue over how effective this is (if you raise the cost of capital too much, then “bad” companies will simply go private). But even if it works, it means the ESG investor must underperform in the long run. Why? Because for a company to have a lower cost of capital, an investor must pay a higher share price or accept a lower bond yield than they otherwise would. Yet the same team found that shares with high ESG ratings beat their less ESG-friendly peers by 35% in total between 2012 and 2020. 

Why? Some argue it’s because so many ESG stocks also fit the criteria for the “quality” factor (whereby profitable stocks with strong balance sheets outperform) – the ESG label has nothing to do with it. But Pastor, Stambaugh and Taylor note that ESG outperformance is correlated with rising concerns about climate change. They argue that as a result, demand for ESG-badged products has surged faster than markets expected, driving the outperformance. In short, Hirano’s fears of a bubble look justified. In turn, as Armstrong notes, anyone investing in ESG now in the hope it will keep outperforming is betting that “the market still systematically underestimates consumers’ and investors’ taste for green products and assets – despite the fact that ESG products and funds have been very heavily promoted”. Not a bet I’d feel confident making.



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Here’s why investors were happy with Friday’s US employment data

Markets are in a quandary.

Investors want the recovery to be real. If the economy doesn't improve then corporate profits won't rise and valuations will be hard to justify.

It's worse still if the economy doesn't improve, but shortages of goods drive prices higher. That's stagflation and it's toxic to most assets.

Equally, however, they don't want central banks to raise interest rates. Higher rates would also make valuations hard to justify, partly because they drive up the cost of servicing debt, and partly because they decrease the value of future earnings.

So what they really want is evidence that the economy is getting stronger – but not so much stronger that the Federal Reserve will feel under pressure to raise interest rates.

And on Friday, that's just what they got...

There are really two forecasts for the jobs data: the economists' one and the market one

On Friday we learned that the US economy added 850,000 jobs in June. That was a good chunk more than the 720,000 expected. Figures for the previous two months, which had been a bit on the disappointing side, were also revised higher by about 15,000 jobs in all.

However, the unemployment rate rose to 5.9%, having been 5.7%. That could however be because people are leaving their current employment to look for other jobs, something we'll return to below.

One of the most important numbers is the participation rate. This shows the percentage of the population who are working or actively looking for work. Before the pandemic, it was running at 63.4%. It hit a low of 60.2% in April, at the height of the pandemic. But it's still only sitting at 61.7%. 

Meanwhile, average hourly earnings rose at a 3.6% annual rate from just 1.9% last month, although this figure is tricky to rely on because it doesn't account for the fact that it's probably being distorted by the sorts of jobs that are being added back.

Anyway, chances are that the headline number and all these other numbers will be revised in the near future, and possibly quite significantly, in one direction or other. And yet, it's the number we have to work with and more importantly, it's the number that markets care about.

The US is the world's biggest economy. It's driven primarily by consumption. That means – as I've said many times before – that the US consumer is one of the single-most potent economic forces on the planet.

What makes the US consumer happy? Having a job and getting paid to do that job. If US consumers have jobs they will spend their money. That's the way it works. And that's why investors all care about the state of the US jobs market.

One thing you have to understand when you look at the jobless data is that you really have two sets of predictions here.

One is the "consensus forecasts". That's what all the analysts and economists are thinking. That's where the 720,000 "expected" number mentioned above comes in. That's the official forecast.

But the other prediction is what the market is actually expecting and pricing in before the number comes out. And of course, this is a moving target. It'll usually be roughly centred on the predicted number, but it'll duck and dive around that number depending on other bits of data and just general sentiment.

It's not explicitly stated, but you can often guess from movements in the US dollar and other markets what investors are expecting overall, relative to official expectations.

In this case, the market was expecting a "surprisingly strong" report. In turn, that means it was betting on a result that beat expectations quite significantly. That's partly why we saw the US dollar have a strong run ahead of the report.

Instead what we got was a strong, but not wildly strong report. So you could argue that while the 850,000 number beat expectations, it actually came in a bit weaker than markets had been betting on.

As a result, the dollar weakened a bit as investors took profits. A weaker dollar is usually a sigh of relief for most other assets, and so it was the case on Friday.

People feel comfortable about leaving their jobs to find something better

Anyway, that's the minutiae – the bigger point to note is that overall, investors were comfortable with the report. It wasn't so strong that it might encourage the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates early. Employment still remains well below where the Fed wants it to be, and the central bank has previously emphasised that this, rather than inflation, is the priority right now (though its most recent meeting did seem to muddy the waters a bit here).

But it was strong enough that it kept the narrative of healthy, but-not-especially-inflationary growth alive too. In other words, it was a "Goldilocks" outcome. As Michael Hewson of CMC Markets put it, "means the Fed are set to remain on autopilot until Q4 whatever inflation does". And ultimately, that's what markets care about.

So what's next?

The US still has a long way to go in terms of getting people back into work. Employment remains 6.764m below its pre-pandemic levels, notes James Knightley of investment bank ING.

Yet there is also a lot of inflationary pressure in the economy. There might be plenty of "slack" left on the jobs side. But manufacturers haven't been this concerned about rising prices since 1979, according to the latest sector survey, also out last week. As John Authers pointed out in his Bloomberg newsletter, the reading "has been higher than it is now on only eight months out of the last 50 years."

This has all got a lot to do with supply chains being disrupted and the system generally still being congested after seizing up during the pandemic. As such, you can see why policymakers hope this will all indeed be "transitory". Prices might jump now but once the system has gone back to "normal", we can expect pricing pressure to relax and before long we'll be back to benign levels of price increases.

However, one thing that could put a spanner in those works is rising wages. Rising wages mean higher costs – and generally not one-off costs, unlike commodity prices – which companies, if they feel they can get away with it, will pass onto consumers. In an environment where we've felt cooped up for a while then companies probably can get away with raising prices, which is something we haven't seen for a long time.

And the reality is that, despite our economic woes, employees appear to be in a good position to negotiate higher wages right now. On the labour force side, one really interesting phenomenon is that the "quit rate" is extremely high. That means people are jacking in their jobs to get better-paid ones elsewhere.

As Knightley points out, "this is further bad news for US companies with the implication being that we expect to see companies not only have to pay more to recruit new staff, but also raise pay more broadly in order to retain staff."

In fact, ING reckons that "headline inflation will stay above 4% well into 2022", which means in turn that the Fed will probably have to raise interest rates then too.

The good news for investors right now is that this outcome is currently not on the market's radar. For now, bond markets and precious metals markets for that matter, are pricing in an agreement with the "transitory" argument.

One way or another, we'll start to get a clearer picture later in the year. But I'd stick with positioning your portfolio for stronger-than-anticipated inflation. It doesn't have to be 1970s-style to still be disruptive for a world that thinks interest rates should never rise again.

We'll have a lot more on this in forthcoming issues of MoneyWeek magazine. Get your first six issues free here.



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Investment Bank Outlook 05-07-2021

JP MorganEUR:Something in Friday’s labour market report for everyone, a strong headline number coupled with a move up in the unemployment rate and strong, but steady earnings. I guess none of those factors are enough to meaningfully change narratives at this point, not pointing to a hurried need to reduce stimulus nor to question whether the Fed’s slightly hawkish shift was a mistake.Overall, I sense that whilst the usd has moved over the course of the second half of June, people are only socially engaged in FX, the drift towards normalisation not fast enough to spur genuine surprise, and growth surprises plateauing somewhat but stabilising at levels that shouldn’t overly concern. So having cut most of our dollar longs in the moves last week, it leaves us comfortable with lower conviction levels for now, keeping a bias to be long usd’s against the low yielders in particular but looking for dips to buy rather than chasing higher, and with a preference for chf over the euro and jpy.GBP: Good figures from the US but they were very much expected (whispered to be better) and this left newly minted USD longs struggling as the DXY put in a key day reversal along with flipping back into neutral from overbought on the RSIs – a pair of signals that leaves me comfortable that we may see good opportunities to rebuild the USD longs we cut last week at better levels over the coming sessions. Sterling is trading mildly well this morning, maybe it is because it is coming home or maybe it has something to do with Boris announcing the final reopening step later today, we are out of most of our EURGBP but keep a short bias – we hope that better opportunities present themselves to get short ahead of the August MPR but EURGBP has been stuck around 86p now for a few months. Should be quiet today given Independence Day holiday; 1.3810/20 is interim support in cable with 1.3650/70 the big level below (0.8565/70, 0.8530/40 EURGBP) while 1.3875/80 is next resistance with 1.3925/35 above (0.8625/30, 0.8670 EURGBP), final PM Services later.JPY: Payrolls disappointed the elevated levels of excitement/anticipation on Friday, despite a beat in the data supporting the previously strong price action for the USD. It’s fair to say it’s a decent number for risk and equities, but given the peculiar correlation of higher equities, higher FI, higher USD last week, I also think it’s fair to say it’s not exactly clear what that means for FX. We’ve been trading from the long USD side of late but I have to concede that I can’t see the USD continuing to trade so firm across the board as it did last week if equities remain unflinched. I guess the most obvious USD to be long in this environment is USDJPY and it does feel like the market has a bit of FOMO above 111, having stopped out of long xJPY positions post Fed so I do think that is a USD pair that can continue to trade ok. 111.70 is the next resistance to watch ahead of the major 112.20 level, a break through the latter would start to look very bullish. Dips on the day to 111.00 then 110.50 should be well supported.

from Tickmill Expert Blog - Forex Traders Blog https://www.tickmill.com/blog/investment-bank-outlook-05-07-2021"
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Daily Market Outlook, July 5, 2021

Daily Market Outlook, July 5, 2021 Overnight Headlines SF Fed Daly – Appropriate to consider tapering later this year, we’re on our way to pre-crisis employment levels • Celebrating nation's birth, Biden urges Americans to help end COVID-19 pandemic • ECB's Knot says "inflation is not dead" in Europe – NRC interview • ECB's Schnabel says euro zone can escape low-inflation era, near inflation goal • Kuroda stresses BOJ's readiness to ease more to beat pandemic pain • Japan's digital yen plan to become clearer late 2022, says ruling party official • Japan's service sector activity contracts for 17th month as pick-up stalls; PMI 48.0, 46.5 prev • Suga's LDP falls short in Tokyo election as he presses on with Olympics amid pandemic • Growth in China's June services activity falls to 14-month low; Caixin PMI 50.3, 55.1 prev • After Didi, China launches cybersecurity probe into more U.S.-listed firms • Australia's labour market stays strong in face of COVID lockdowns; job ads rise 3% in June • AU May Retail Sales MM Final, 0.4%, 0.1% f'cast, 0.1% prev; June Services PMI Final, 56.8, 56.0 prev • AU May Building Approvals, -7.1%, -5.0% f'cast, -8.6% prev, -5.7% rvsd • Sydney Airport gets $16.7 bln buyout bid as investors take longer-term view on travel Looking Ahead – Economic Data (GMT) • 08:00 EZ June Services PMI 58.0 f'cast, 58.0 prev; Composite 59.2 f'cast, 59.2 prev • 08:30 GB June Services PMI 61.7 f'cast, 61.7 prev; Composite 61.7 f'cast, 61.7 prev • 08:30 EZ July Sentix Index, 30.0 f'cast, 28.1 prev Looking Ahead – Events, Auctions, Other Releases (GMT) • 09:00 ECB Christine Lagarde in Madrid panel discussion • 12:45 BOE Place speaks at Investment Association event • 13:00 Bundesbank Buch speaks at Bundesbank event • 16:00 ECB Enria speaks at IESE-EY banking meeting • 17:00 ECB De Guindos speaks at IESE-EY banking meeting Week Ahead-Services PMIs, China inflation lead global data It will be a very quiet week for U.S. data – in part due to Monday being a public holiday, while June services PMIs and China inflation dominate the global economic calendar. U.S. ISM non-manufacturing will be released this week along with final Markit PMIs, consumer credit and weekly jobless claims. European data includes final Markit services and composite PMIs, retail sales, German industrial orders and the ZEW investor sentiment survey. UK data includes services PMI, May GDP, manufacturing output and the trade balance. Japan's calendar features services PMI, household spending, current account and the trade balance. In China, the Caixin services PMI, FX reserves, CPI and PPI data are due. Australian data includes final retail sales and building approvals, but the focus will be on the RBA meeting. New Zealand has no top-tier data due, while Canada has the Ivey PMI and June jobs data. Week Ahead-Central banks in focus with RBA meeting, Fed minutes Tuesday's highly-anticipated Reserve Bank of Australia rate meeting takes the spotlight this week, followed by the release of the FOMC minutes on Wednesday, in the wake of better-than-expected U.S. non-farm payrolls data. RBA Governor Philip Lowe will hold a rare post-meeting press conference, stoking expectations for a tweak to the bond-buying programme which targets the three-year bond yield at 0.10%. The central bank may attempt to push back against a growing number of economists who predict it will start raising the cash rate well before the RBA's own forecast for 2024. The minutes of the June Federal Reserve meeting will be scrutinized for hints as to when quantitative easing might be tapered and for sentiment on U.S. economic strength and inflation. Wall Street is sensitive to any hints of a hawkish shift in the Fed's tone, so the minutes may cause some volatility in an otherwise quiet week in the U.S. with Independence Day on Monday.G10 FX Options Expiries for 10AM New York Cut(Hedging effect can often draw spot toward strikes pre expiry if nearby)EUR/USD 1.1840-50 (2.1BLN), 1.1900 (1.15BLN), 1.1920-30 (705M), 1.2000 (390M), 1.2050 (400M)USD/JPY 110.25-28 (540M), 110.50 (340M), 111.00 (854M), 111.45 (280M), 112.00 (409M)USD/CHF 0.9000 (360M), 0.9180 (200M)AUD/USD 0.7500-05 (720M), 0.7515 (300M)NZD/USD 0.7045 (376M)Technical & Trade ViewsEURUSD Bias: Bearish below 1.20 Bullish aboveTrades with soft tone in quiet Asian session • EUR/USD opened 1.1868 after moving higher following US jobs data • The USD firmed slightly in Asian and the EUR/USD dipped to 1.1852 • Heading into the afternoon its trading around 1.1855 • Resistance is at the 10-day MA at 1.1898 and break would lengthen correction • Support is at Friday's 1.1807 low with buying tipped at 1.1840/50 • EUR/USD still trending lower and selling rallies is the favoured strategyGBPUSD Bias: Bearish below 1.4080 Bullish above.Downtrend remains in play into lockdown easing plan • -0.1% in a 1.3815-1.3833 range – plenty of interest, once Asia fully opened • Bank of America tells UK staff to have vaccine before they return- Telegraph • Johnson to set out plan for final lockdown easing on Monday • Charts; despite Friday's bounce, 5, 10 & 21 DMAs, 21 day Bolli bands slide • Strong bearish trending setup targets 1.3669 double bottom in March, April • 1.3756, 61.8% 2021 rise proved resilient on the close – still major support • 10 DMA capped repeatedly, and is pivotal resistance, currently at 1.3867 • Close above 1.3867 would suggest choppy consolidation this weekUSDJPY Bias: Bullish above 108 targeting 112Back on 111 after dip to 110.96 Fri, 110.98 early • Asia sees USD/JPY up from 110.98 early to 111.19 before steadying on 111 • Profit-taking following US NFP/jobs report Friday over for now • Fed more hawkish going forward? SF Fed Daly • US yields remain soggy however, Treasury 10s @1.429% at Friday close • USD/JPY in 111.04-47 hourly Ichi cloud, tech support from @111.02 100-HMA • Daily chart shows USD/JPY likely still in uptrend from 107.48 on April 23 • Pull from massive 111.00 option expiries – today $854 mln, tom 1.75 bln • Nikkei -0.6% @28,611, E-minis -0.1% @4336 but AXJ bourses mostly upAUDUSD Bias: Bearish below .7790 bullish aboveRecovers from early dip in quiet Asian session • AUD/USD opened 0.7526 after completing a bullish outside day on Friday • USD struck a firm tone early and the AUD/USD dipped to 0.7509 at one stage • Buyers ahead of 0.7500 were noted and the AUD/USD drifted back to 0.7520/25 • There was no reaction to Aus data today as market awaits RBA decision • AUD/USD resistance is at the 10-day MA at 0.7539 and 200-day MA at 0.7570 • Buyers are tipped ahead of 0.7500 and 0.7475 with support at 0.7445 • US holiday today and RBA decision tomorrow should limit price action

from Tickmill Expert Blog - Forex Traders Blog https://www.tickmill.com/blog/daily-market-outlook-july-5-2021"
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Dollar Weakens as Payrolls Result Eases Rate Hike Concerns



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Market Update – July 5 – USD subdued, Bonds leap & Stocks hold gains

Market News Today The Dollar weakened, Bonds & Stocks rallied  following NFP (850k vs 700k but an uptick for Unemployment & patchy Earnings) and ahead of long weekend. Asian markets follow through overnight – but big miss for Chinese Services PMI’s virus developments and China’s bid to curb the influence of internet giants quells the rally. Yields; the biggest driver – 10yr lost -3.31%, 5yr -4.77% & 30yr -1.97%. USDIndex holds 92.30, USA 500 4352. (Tech stocks lead rally (GOOGL+2.30%) Overnight AUD building approvals weaker but Retail Sales better. EUR 1.1855, JPY down to 111.00 & Cable tests up to 1.3835. Gold still rotates at $1785, USOil  Holds over $74.00 at 74.35 as OPEC issues rumble on.

Week Ahead – FOMC Minutes, RBA Rate Decision, ECB Growth Forecasts & Special Strategy Meeting.  

European Open  – The September 10-year Bund future is fractionally higher, while in cash markets the 10-year Bund yield is unchanged at -0.24%. Other Eurozone bond markets are underperforming in early trade, while U.S. markets remain closed today for the observance of July 4 Independence Day. DAX and FTSE 100 futures are up 0.03% and 0.106% respectively, suggesting a cautious start to trading today.  US Stock FUTS in the red so far.

Today  OPEC developments continue as the UAE and Saudi disagree over quotas;  – EZ & UK PMIs (Final) ECB speak and US Independence Day.

Biggest Mover @ (06:30 GMT) Copper (+1.59%) Rallied from 4.222 lows on Friday  to test 4.350 (20-day MA) today. Faster MAs aligned higher, RSI 73.50 OB but still rising, MACD signal line and histogram rising remain significantly above 0 line. Stochs rising and also in OB zone.  H1 ATR 0.0150 Daily ATR 0.0950.

Click here to access our Economic Calendar

Stuart Cowell

Head Market Analyst

Disclaimer: This material is provided as a general marketing communication for information purposes only and does not constitute an independent investment research. Nothing in this communication contains, or should be considered as containing, an investment advice or an investment recommendation or a solicitation for the purpose of buying or selling of any financial instrument. All information provided is gathered from reputable sources and any information containing an indication of past performance is not a guarantee or reliable indicator of future performance. Users acknowledge that any investment in Leveraged Products is characterized by a certain degree of uncertainty and that any investment of this nature involves a high level of risk for which the users are solely responsible and liable. We assume no liability for any loss arising from any investment made based on the information provided in this communication. This communication must not be reproduced or further distributed without our prior written permission.



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Dollar Down, Takes Breather as U.S. Job Report Calms Interest Rate Hike Fears



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Dollar pauses as rate hike fears ebb, Fed minutes up next



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USDJPY facing bearish pressure, potential push down

USDJPY is facing bearish pressure as MACD is still holding below 0 line after price has reversed from swing high resistance. A break and close below Pivot, in line with 61.8% Fibonacci retracement and 100% Fibonacci extension, could see price swing towards 1st Support, which is a horizontal swing low support.

from Tickmill Expert Blog - Forex Traders Blog https://www.tickmill.com/blog/usdjpy-facing-bearish-pressure-potential-push-down"
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Sunday, July 4, 2021

John McAfee: the tech maverick who lost a $100m fortune

When John McAfee attempted to run for the White House in 2016, he invoked a mantra from Apple co-founder Steve Jobs in his campaign video. “Here’s to the crazy ones, the misfits, the rebels, the troublemakers, the round pegs in the square holes.”

McAfee, who committed suicide in a Spanish prison last week aged 75, “fitted each of these descriptions – and more”, says the Financial Times. The pioneer of antivirus software “built and lost a fortune”, later recasting himself as “a libertarian politician” and “a cryptocurrency hype man”. In 2017, he predicted that the price of bitcoin would reach $500,000 within three years. 

“Paranoid, even bonkers”

Still, it was McAfee’s repeated brushes with the law in exotic locations that latterly came to define him, says The Independent. In between relatively calm domestic periods in the US – where he formed a yoga retreat, and indulged in aerotrekking (flying unlicensed microlights at low altitude) – he spent years as an international fugitive, embracing a life of “drugs, guns and sex”.

In 2012, McAfee was sought for questioning in connection with the murder of his neighbour in Belize (a crime he always denied). In 2019, officials in the Dominican Republic linked him with a yacht carrying “high-calibre weapons, ammunition and military-style gear”. 

With McAfee, it was always hard to tell fact from fantasy. “I don’t want to be rude to the gentleman, but I believe he is extremely paranoid, even bonkers,” observed the prime minister of Belize. In August last year, McAfee told his social-media following that he had been detained in Norway mid-pandemic “for refusing to replace a lace thong with a more effective mask”, says The Times.

In October, he was arrested at Barcelona airport at the behest of the US; in time-honoured tradition, they got him for tax evasion. He killed himself last week just hours after Spanish courts approved his extradition.

McAfee once shocked a Wired magazine reporter by appearing to play Russian roulette during an interview. Violence, as he remarked, was always a lurking shadow. Born in 1945 on a US army base at Cinderford, Gloucestershire, he was a GI baby whose parents later moved to Salem, Virginia.

McAfee Sr, an alcoholic, regularly beat up his wife and son – eventually shooting himself when McAfee was 15. “Every day I wake with him,” McAfee told Wired. “Every relationship I have, he’s by my side…the negotiator of that mistrust.” After studying maths at Roanoke College, Salem, he took a series of jobs in the nascent tech industry.  

Crystallising fear

The turning point in McAfee’s life came in 1986 when he was working as a computer programmer for Lockheed, says The Times. It took the form of the world’s first known PC virus, Brain. Gripped by the threat, he formed McAfee Associates from his home, aiming to detect and eliminate malicious software. The resulting product was the world’s first “all-in-one” virus scanner.

McAfee made a fortune “from spreading fear”, says The Times, crystalising it when McAfee listed on Nasdaq in 1992. Two years later, he sold out completely. By 2008, he was reported to be worth around $100m, but lost nearly everything during the financial crisis. 

Drawn by his deep distrust of the state into the world of cryptocurrencies, he made a second fortune touting initial coin offerings – prompting a fraud investigation this year. He spent his final months conducting a “Free McAfee” campaign from his cell. But he was determined he wouldn’t end his days in a US jail. By taking his own life McAfee, as ever, had the final word. He died unconvicted of anything.



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Canadian dollar seen stronger but break of 1.20 to remain elusive: Reuters poll



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Dollar's near-term outlook bright, but to fade in a year: Reuters poll



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U.S. dollar net shorts fall to lowest in two months -CFTC, Reuters data



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Don’t count resources out

Commodities have performed poorly over the past year, but they tend to move in long and volatile cycles. from Moneyweek RSS Feed https://m...