Saturday, January 29, 2022

Russia and Ukraine: what does Putin want?

What’s the Ukraine conflict about?

In the long run, it’s about Russia’s traditional fear of encirclement and perceived need for a “sphere of influence” as a buffer and Vladimir Putin’s stated belief that Ukraine is “not even a real country”. It is also, some analysts think, about Moscow’s fear of a good example in the form of a modernising, democratic Ukraine.

Putin’s Russia has been waging hybrid war on Ukraine since 2014, when it annexed Crimea (which has a large proportion of Russian speakers and is home to Russia’s Black Sea fleet at Sevastopol) and backed armed pro-Russian separatists in the east of Ukraine. That followed the ousting, in a popular uprising, of a pro-Russian president. Moscow has ramped up the pressure since Volodymyr Zelensky’s government moved  to counter Russian influence. Moscow has also calculated that now is a good time to up the ante.

Why is it a good time?

No one yet knows whether Putin’s amassing 125,000 troops on the border is the precursor to a large-scale invasion aimed at regime change in Kiev, a more limited military campaign in the east and south-east, or simply leverage aimed at extracting concessions from Nato.

But it’s happening now due to Nato’s relative weakness and Russia’s relative economic strength and energy leverage, says Ambrose Evans-Pritchard in The Daily Telegraph. “European Nato disarmed through the austerity years and is now near rock bottom, while Russia has been rearming for a decade.” Europe’s politics are in flux, with a lack of unity over how to respond. The US is deemed to be a “pushover” that signalled its own post-Trump weakness with a chaotic retreat from Afghanistan.

What does Moscow want?

It says it wants “legal guarantees” of Russia’s security, in the form of draft treaties with the US and Nato that would dramatically scale back Nato’s reach and in effect create a recognised Russian sphere of influence in eastern Europe. Nato would rule out further expansion, stop any military co-operation with Ukraine or other states in the ex-Soviet space, and withdraw troops and weapons from ex-Soviet states. 

Of course, Moscow knows that none of this would be acceptable to Nato, hence the view that its demands are performative and unserious – and that the likelihood of military action is genuinely high. Moscow’s strategy, says Fiona Hill in The New York Times, is to further weaken Ukraine’s sovereignty, and also to weaken Nato, divide Germany (very dependent on Russian gas) from the UK and US, and destabilise the Baltics.

Ultimately, its aim is to push the US out of Europe altogether – and complete what it sees as the unfinished business of the Cold War. That’s a big gamble since it may well have the effect of unifying and strengthening Nato, and encouraging the likes of Sweden and Finland to finally join. 

Can Russia afford it?

Some of the gloss has come off Russia’s economy since 2014, says Adam Tooze on his Substack blog. Yet it remains a “strategic petrostate” which has built up significant foreign reserves and economic power. Russia accounts for about 40% of Europe’s gas imports, and is “too big a part of global energy markets to permit Iran-style sanctions”.

Currently, the state’s budget is set to balance at an oil price of only $44. “That enables the accumulation of considerable reserves”, says Tooze – and since 2014 these have risen from less than $400bn to more than $600bn (among the largest in the world, after China, Japan and Switzerland). “This is what gives Putin his freedom of strategic manoeuvre. Crucially, foreign-exchange reserves give the regime the capacity to withstand sanctions on the rest of the economy” and slow a run on the rouble.

Could Russia turn off the gas?

Yes, it could – and might, depending on what sanctions the West tried to impose. But it would end up hurting Russia more than the West, says The Economist. Russia’s deep foreign-exchange reserves mean it could withstand a brief energy shock, and a total shutdown is not as unthinkable as it once was. That would be unpleasant for Europe, but it would mean economic pain (in the form of spiralling prices as markets scramble to access alternative sources) rather than an actual inability to heat homes.

However, “a bigger price would be paid by Russia over the longer term”, as European markets (and indeed China) adjusted to “such a display of aggressive unreliability”. Seriously tough financial sanctions (such as cutting Russia off from the Swift international payments system, or export bans) currently look unlikely, says Hamish McRae in The Independent. But in the long run Russia’s position is weaker than it seems now. The global transition away from fossils will diminish its economic clout, as will its already falling population.

What about the short run?

Even in the short term it has a lot to lose, says Lex in the Financial Times. Yes, Russia has bolstered its reserves, and has a strong trade balance. But “jittery markets represent a greater threat to Russia” than its neighbour’s desire to get closer to the West – and an invasion of Ukraine would inevitably incur sanctions that would make things worse.

As an emerging economy, Russia is “already exposed to disinvestment triggered by US rate rises”. Inflation is surging and the Bank of Russia has doubled its key lending rate in the last year to 8.5%. The rouble has lost a tenth against the dollar in the past three months, and the stockmarket is down 31% in the same period in dollar terms.

Is this a buying opportunity for hardy contrarians? After all, at about ten times estimated earnings, the market valuation is nearing the lows of 2015, and the dividend yield has hit 7%. The answer is no: “if a conflict cut off Russian oil and gas flows, the risk-off switch would become a rout”. Even very brave investors should “stay clear when nationalism rather than national prosperity propels events”.



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Friday, January 28, 2022

End of Week Wrap Ahead of US Open!

US personal income increased 0.3% and spending declined -0.6% in December after respective gains of 0.5% (was 0.4%) and 0.4% (was 0.6%) in November. The Dollar ticked lower following the data, which saw the ECI a bit lower than consensus, while personal income missed the mark, and consumption was a little more negative than expected. Prices, meanwhile, were in line with forecasts. EURUSD headed to 1.1153 from 1.1135, while USDJPY slipped to 115.45 from near 115.60. Equity futures remain mixed and very choppy, while yields are off their highs.

Click here to access our Economic Calendar

Andria Pichidi

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 written permission.



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The Rand is relatively resilient to market shocks

USDZAR,H4

South Africa’s Central Bank (SARB) raised its benchmark interest rate for the second time on Thursday and warned that further gradual increases in borrowing costs are likely. The SARB raised the interest rate 25 bps from 3.75% to 4%, in line with the consensus, and warned that further hikes in the benchmark may be needed to keep inflation in check, over the coming years. “However, economic and financial conditions are expected to remain more volatile in the future,” SARB Governor Lesetja Kganyago said in a statement.

In December, headline inflation increased further to 5.9%, above market expectations of 5.7% and moving closer to the top of the 3-6% SARB target range. The headline CPI forecast has been revised slightly higher to 4.9% in 2022 (vs. 4.3% in November) but lowered to 4.5% in 2023 (vs. 4.6%). Meanwhile, GDP growth projections remain unchanged at 1.7% for 2022 and 1.8% for 2023.

The South African Rand stood out for its resilience in the face of a resurgent US Dollar during most of the early session, however in the US session the Rand lost ground against the Greenback.

USDZAR,H4

The currency’s intraday bias looks neutral below the resistance at 15.5680. A move above this level will target the resistance levels 15.7355 and 16.0739. As long as the resistance at 15.5680 holds the movement will likely consolidate in the early session. RSI and MACD are still validating yesterday’s volatility, RSI is above the 50 level, MACD and OSMA are also above the midline. This slightly confirms the movement which tends to move to the upside. As long as the support at 15.0499 holds on the downside, the pair will still move in the direction of the ascending channel. A move below the support at 15.0499 will annul the bullish scenario.

Click here to access our Economic Calendar

Ady Phangestu

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 written permission.



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FOMO Friday: NZDUSD Breaks Through Lows

Kiwi Comes Under PressureAnother week comes to a close in financial markets, and we’re also rounding out the first month of the year. I hope it’s been a great start to the year for you all. In terms of market action this week, there’s been plenty going on, however, it seems that the move catching the most attention is the rally in USD and, in the FX space, the pair which has seen the biggest shift is NZDUSD. So, let’s take a look at what caused this move and, as always, if you caught it? Well done! If not? There’s always next week.What Caused The Move?USD Rally Back OnThere have bene a couple factors which contributed to the roughly 2.5% drop in NZDUSD this week. The first has been the uptick in USD which has weighed particularly hard on higher-beta currencies such as NZD. The January FOMC this week saw the Fed greenlighting a rate-hike in March. The Fed was decisively hawkish in its language, satisfying the market’s hawkish expectations and reigniting the USD rally which had been on pause over late December/early January. With the greenback riding high, equities and commodities prices have come of sharply weakening capital flows for NZD. Looking ahead, this theme looks likely to remain in place while US data supports.NZ Lockdown ReturnsThe other factor weighing on NZDUSD is news, which came over the weekend, of a fresh nationwide lockdown in New Zealand, in response to a small outbreak of omicron. The news of the return of the strictest measures, including a closing of the borders, has been met with dismay and has turned sentiment sharply sour towards NZD given the expected economic hit of yet another lockdown there. While other country’s central banks are pressing ahead with tightening schedules and monetary policy normalisation, expectations of RBNZ tightening have been pushed further out in light of this latest development.Technical ViewsNZDUSDThe rejection at a retest of the .6863 level has seen the market reversing sharply with price breaking down out of the bear flag structure and below the bigger bear channel low. Price is now fast approaching the .6512 level. With both MACD and RSI firmly bearish here, the focus is on a continuation lower while price holds below the .6703 level.

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Asian economies must adjust to Covid-19

We’re in the third year of the pandemic and travel in Asia is still “heavily restricted”, says Chad de Guzman in Time. Most Asian countries have done an excellent job fighting the pandemic: South Korea has recorded 12 deaths per 100,000 people, compared to 259 per 100,000 in America. But the arrival of Omicron has triggered a return to 2020-style measures.

Japan has banned most foreigners from visiting. Hong Kong “which once boasted one of the world’s ten busiest airports… banned all flights from eight countries including the US and the UK” earlier this month. Yet as cases of Omicron spike across the region, “experts question whether continuing to stay closed to tourists, students and business travellers” is still “an effective strategy”.

Southeast Asia in recovery

Tight restrictions and slow vaccine rollouts have weighed on stocks. The MSCI Asia Pacific index underperformed European and American shares in 2021, finishing the year down 2.5%. Southeast Asian markets have been particularly dull. The regional MSCI Asean benchmark has been flat over the last three years, even as the wider emerging markets index delivered gains of 11% a year. Vietnam’s VNI, which soared 35% last year, has been the only bright spot as other markets lagged global averages.

Delta wreaked havoc last summer, says Trinh Nguyen of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Lockdowns disrupted Malaysian semiconductor production and Vietnamese textile manufacturing. GDP in the latter country tumbled 6% year-on-year in the third quarter.

However, better times may be coming. Vaccination rates in most countries in the region (with the exception of Indonesia and the Philippines) are now comparable to those in the UK. Southeast Asia is also a potential winner from worsening US-China relations. Companies are diversifying their supply chains, which is bringing more inward investment. Trans-Pacific “jockeying for power” has “allowed Vietnam to escape the United States’ currency-manipulator list”.

Commodities, not tourism

“The nexus of Asia-Pacific economic growth is shifting to Southeast Asia amid maturing recoveries in northeast Asia,” says RBC Capital Markets. “The retreating pandemic and higher commodity prices have catalysed a brightening growth outlook for Malaysia and Indonesia”. The latter is a significant coal and oil exporter.

The outlook for tourism is less encouraging, says The Economist. The sector “accounted for over 12% of the region’s GDP before the pandemic”. In 2019, Chinese tourists “made up 12 million of Thailand’s 39 million international arrivals”, but Beijing’s zero-Covid policies mean few Chinese visitors are travelling overseas anymore. “In Cambodia the temples of Angkor Wat are eerily empty.”



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No easy answers to Europe’s gas crisis

“The European energy crisis is not over yet,” said Goldman Sachs in a research note this week. The bank’s analysts think that gas prices could remain twice as high as normal until 2025. British wholesale gas prices, which are heavily influenced by Europe, are currently about four times higher than they were a year ago, at 218p a therm. An escalation in Ukraine could see prices top their highs of last December. 

It might not come to that, says Bloomberg. Germany, which is highly dependent on Russian gas, has long argued that Moscow is a reliable supplier: it “kept sending gas to Europe all through the Cold War” and during the 2014 Crimean annexation. Russia is thought to be unlikely to want to damage that reputation. It is also economically dependent on the revenue from energy sales. Still, if the US throws Russia off the Swift payments system then energy transactions could become impossible. Nord Stream 2, a new energy pipeline to Germany that bypasses Ukraine, could be hit by new sanctions. Finally, a war could damage key Ukrainian pipelines that deliver gas to the West.

Liquefied natural gas (LNG) cargoes have been diverted from Asia to Europe in response to soaring prices, but LNG is no silver bullet, says Deutsche Welle. EU gas storage facilities are just 47% full, compared with a more normal level of 60% at this time of year, according to a report by Commerzbank. If Russian supplies are disrupted, “LNG would not be able to fully compensate”. There is “a lack of free short-term capacity among exporters such as the US and Qatar”. If things get very tight then governments may be forced to “ramp up coal power stations… environmentalists will not like that… but that really is the only possibility in the short term”.



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Tech stock sell-off may be a good signal

“There is an old saying that ‘markets ride the escalator up and take the elevator down’,” says Russ Mould of AJ Bell. Last year’s stockmarket gains were steady and serene, with “just 40 daily moves of more than 1% in the FTSE 100 from open to close, compared with 116 the year before”. But with central bankers about to remove monetary stimulus – investors’ “happy pills” – volatility has made a comeback.

Big tech disappoints  

America’s S&P 500 and Nasdaq indices both suffered their worst weeks since March 2020 last week, says Ben Levisohn in Barron’s. The tech-heavy Nasdaq is down 15% since its November peak. The trouble started after pandemic winners Peloton and Netflix both issued disappointing trading updates, sending their shares down by 14% and 24% respectively. That has fed a broader sense that the big-tech boom is running out of steam. As Chris Senyek of Wolfe Research notes, the “combination of Fed tightening and some big earnings misses” was what ultimately popped the dotcom bubble in 2000.  

The volatility continued into this week. The FTSE 100, which has largely avoided the sell-off, fell by 2.6% on Monday. The pan-European Stoxx 600 lost 3.8% for its worst day since June 2020 as tensions over Ukraine heightened the sense of gloom. The same day on Wall Street, the S&P 500 crashed 4% in the morning only to then rally and close the day with a small gain. Such extreme trading reversals are exceedingly rare. The CBOE Volatility index, dubbed the “fear gauge”, has jumped to its highest level in more than a year.

The Nasdaq has retreated to the same levels it was at in June last year, says Bill Blain in the Evening Standard. That could be “the curtain-raiser to a more chaotic market collapse”. The sell-off in Peloton and Netflix is justified – “both are in highly competitive sectors” and will lose out from the end of the pandemic. The sign that something bigger is afoot is that even the likes of Apple and Microsoft, some of the “most profitable firms in the history of capitalism”, are tumbling. “The bubble pops when a collapse in weak stocks spreads as a contagion to strong stocks”.  

Pandemic endgame

“Momentum is building against companies with exciting promises to reshape the world,” says Graeme Wearden in The Guardian. Tech stocks are heading for a “crunch fortnight” as its biggest names report their latest earnings. “They must prove they can thrive in a post-lockdown world where the cost-of-living squeeze is leaving people with less money for tech products and services.”

Big tech’s giant market rally has rested on two assumptions, says the Financial Times. “One was that lockdowns would permanently change how we live our lives,” the second was that interest rates would stay ultra-low “for the foreseeable future”. Both are now being brought into question. What’s bad for tech investors might be good for society: instead of betting on more bouts of lockdown misery, markets are ready to move on from the pandemic. “Those of us who prefer a busy social calendar to social distancing should be pleased.”



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Dollar Edges Higher as U.S. Rate Outlook Offers Continued Support



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Investment Bank Outlook 28-01-2022

CIBCFX FlowsCurrencies were locked in narrow ranges, the only pair that had better trading range was the $CAD. The pair was sold into the North America closing minutes, believed to be linked to ETFs. WTI Crude March futures began the session weak, contracts dipped briefly below $87.00 and bounced back to $87.28, this helped accelerate $CAD move towards 1.2713. There was also a talk that leveraged accounts sold the USD. Total of $750mio option strikes around 1.2695 and 1.2700. Nothing in terms of economic data release today.NZD¥ faced resistance above 76.00, this limited NZD$ recovery. The cross took out 75.75 but only went as much 75.65. As said, leveraged names will probably look to sell above 76.00. NZD$ rose to 0.65855, light offers seen above 0.6590. I see limited downside option strikes, suspect market is not well positioned.Rest of the currencies had little or no action, talk of $YEN offers close to 115.50, could be linked to a USD call which expires today for $1.77bn. Downside strike 115.00 also due today for $1.35bn. Japanese retail day traders as I said yesterday have now positioned short $YEN. They will continue to do so up to 116.00.CitiEuropean OpenAfter the NY session saw equities pare gains into the close and OIS markets pricing in almost 30bps of Fed rate hikes by March, the Asian markets were quiet on the Friday prior to the Chinese Golden Week. DXY was slightly lower, while the UST curve mildly bear-flattened. The g10 complex was mixed against the dollar with no notable moves. We note that early in the Asian session, there were negative geopolitical headlines from unconfirmed reports on Bloomberg concerning Biden’s comments on Russia and Ukraine. We note, however, that there were subsequent comments claiming that these reports were not true. Nevertheless, we remain alert for any geopolitical developments as headline risk remains live.Looking ahead, the US will look forward to Employment cost index and the PCE core deflator at 13:30 GMT, as well as the final prints for the University of Michigan inflation expectations at 15:00 GMT. While we don’t usually look to final prints, we note that there is upside risk to this reading on the back of rising energy prices. Meanwhile, SEK sees some second-tier data n the form of unemployment figures for December at 07:00 GMT, while EUR will see French GDP and Eurozone economist sentiment data at 10:00 GMT. HKD will see GDP at 08:30 GMT, BRL an inflation print at 11:00 GMT and COP a rate decision at 18:00 GMT, where our economists expect a 75bps hike to 3.75%.

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Share tips of the week – 28 January

Three to buy

Hargreaves Services

The Mail on Sunday

This former coal-mining company owned 17,000 acres of land a decade ago. It retains 11,000 now, which it’s cleaning up to convert into space for homes and businesses. It currently has several ongoing developments and a strong pipeline. Its trading, recycling and industrial-services arms are also performing well, and are expected to grow over the next five to ten years. The company has pencilled in a dividend of 20p for 2022, putting the stock on a yield of 5% at the current price. 400p

Marks & Spencer

Shares 

High-street retailer Marks & Spencer has further to go. The company “continues to demonstrate strong progress in transforming the business”. It had a stronger third quarter than analysts had predicted – sales for the 12 weeks to 1 January climbed to £3.27bn, up 18.5% from the previous year, and were 8.6% higher than in the same period in 2019. This was mostly driven by its clothing and home sections: sales for both were up over 50% on a two-year basis, “which suggests that the firm has finally got its web offering right”. Food sales were “also outstanding”: M&S grew the most rapidly of any store-based food retailer during the quarter and had its highest ever Christmas till roll. 221p.

Mr. Cooper Group 

Barron’s

This US mortgage firm is unusual because it profits from rising rates. About half its revenue comes from servicing loans – a higher percentage than any competitor. It also owns Xome, an auction platform for foreclosed properties, whose business is picking up after the expiry of a moratorium on foreclosures. It hopes to sell Xome, which could be worth between $750m and $1bn – roughly 20%-30% of its total market cap of $3.2bn. $41.34

Two to sell

Rentokil

The Daily Telegraph

Pest-control expert Rentokil is buying US rival Terminix for $6.7bn (£5bn) – just over half of its own market value of £9.5bn. Its shares “have taken quite a battering since” as investors question the deal. 

If Rentokil is overpaying “at least it will be doing so largely in its own shares rather than in cash”, which should cushion any impact on its balance sheet. What’s more, the share price had risen strongly in the last few months, “so if Rentokil is overvaluing Terminix it is at least paying for it in an overvalued currency”.

But “this does not… make everything fine”. Those who get the new shares – Terminix’s current shareholders – could decide they want to sell, which might well lead to a “torrid time for Rentokil’s share price”. Steer clear. 512.6p.

Currys

The Sunday Times 

Currys – previously known as Dixons Carphone – has 829 shops and 35,000 employees “selling everything from washing machines to laptops”. Sales growth over Christmas slowed due to supply-chain issues and inflationary concerns and the company has cut its profit guidance for the year. 

Part of the sales decline was due to Currys “having had a good 2020” as people invested in home entertainment. But it remains to be seen whether spending habits will be maintained now that restrictions are ending. 

The group shut down over 500 shops in 2020, but has yet to acknowledge the need to reduce its bricks-and-mortar presence further. Shares have fallen 16% so far this year, but “if a further restructuring is on the cards, there could be more pain to come”. 99.2p.

...and the rest

The Daily Telegraph

Unilever’s £50bn offer for GlaxoSmithKline’s consumer health unit was rejected, so it will either have to “raise its bid or walk away”. There is a danger of overpaying, bidding wars and “battles for regulatory clearance”. But the deal seems unlikely to go ahead, so hold on (3,517p). Doric Nimrod Air Three suffered in the pandemic as investors shunned its aircraft-leasing business model. But it has declared an unchanged quarterly dividend of 2.0625p and has an “extraordinary” yield of 21.7%. Hold (38p).

Investors’ Chronicle 

“Parking excess stuff in safe storage is now a permanent feature of modern life” due to the decreasing size of modern houses. That’s great for Safestore. Hold (1,320p). Best of the Best, which runs online competitions, saw a surge in activity throughout the pandemic. The shares have sold off due to weaker guidance, but revenues are still at twice the level they were reaching before it went fully digital shortly before the pandemic. Hold (450p)

Shares 

Shares in video-game developer Frontier Developments fell following a downgrade to forecasts for 2022 and 2023, but the issue seems to be “management’s overly ambitious guidance rather than fundamental development of the business”. The potential is still there. Buy (1,330p). 

Motley Fool 

Vistry Group’s low share price “belies the possibility of strong and sustained profits growth”. The housebuilder’s cheapness reflects concerns that demand for new-build properties will fall, but low mortgage rates and government support should prevent that. Buy (1,080p)



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Energy stocks will only get better in 2022 – here are three to buy

Oil prices have risen over the last few months. Global demand is rebounding strongly, following the worst of the pandemic, and is expected to reach new highs later in 2022. The Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (Opec) cartel has been adding supply back into the market in a cautious fashion – its aim being to keep global oil reserves under control while achieving a price that satisfies the fiscal needs of its members. 

Elsewhere in the world, a lack of investment in new oil supply is beginning to show up, with no major oil developments starting up this year. Natural gas has become front page news, with a perfect storm of supply and demand events driving European and Asian prices to record levels. 

Rising oil and gas prices have created a positive backdrop for energy equities. The sector performed strongly in 2021, but valuations remain subdued relative to our long-term oil price and earnings expectations. In particular, we are seeing the emergence of much stronger free cash flow yields in the sector, a result of higher revenues and better spending discipline by the companies in question.

Our Guinness Global Energy fund invests worldwide in companies across the oil and gas sector. This includes the large integrated oil and gas majors, smaller and mid-sized oil producers, refiners, and pipeline and energy services companies.

BP: catching up with the market

In common with other oil and gas super-majors around the world, BP (LSE: BP) has lagged broader equity markets for several years. In addition to navigating a period of depressed commodity prices, the company has been dealing with the aftermath of the Gulf of Mexico oil spill in 2010. Today, BP has reshaped itself and now has one of the industry’s strongest pipelines of new oil and gas projects, has improved the profitability of its existing production assets, and is showing some leadership in its de-carbonisation strategy. The company’s dividend yield is currently just over 4%, but this has room to rise, since its free cashflow yield is expected to be over 10% this year.

Pioneer Natural Resources: higher oil prices, higher dividends

Pioneer Natural Resources (NYSE: PXD) is a US-based oil and gas producer, with a focus on shale oil production in the Permian Basin in Texas. We believe that the company owns one of the highest quality asset bases in the shale oil industry, with a deep inventory of undeveloped acreage. Pioneer is also demonstrating growing shareholder friendliness, shifting its ambitions away from production growth and towards higher shareholder returns. In particular, we like Pioneer’s recent adoption of a variable dividend structure, which returns excess profits to shareholders in sync with the oil price cycle.  

Equinor: Nordic powerhouse

Equinor (Oslo: EQNR), previously known as Statoil, is Norway’s state-controlled energy major. The company has grown its oil production well over the past couple of years, thanks to the successful development of its Johan Sverdrup oil field. In addition, Equinor is responsible for supplying a high proportion of Europe’s natural gas imports, so it’s enjoying the benefit of higher prices. We expect Equinor to increase production this year, to help alleviate the worst of the gas price spike, but we still expect gas prices to settle at a level that supports strong earnings growth for the company in 2022. 



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The amazing Spider-Man comic-book sale

Spider-Man is amazing. But he’s not as amazing as the record-high $3.4m that a page of original art from a comic book starring the web-slinging hero fetched at auction earlier this month. To understand why, we have to turn back a page. On page 24 of Marvel Super-Heroes Secret Wars #8 from 1984, a critical moment in the Spider-Man story starts to unfold. Here, Spider-Man is looking to replace his tattered disguise following a fight. At the suggestion of the Incredible Hulk, Spider-Man plugs himself into a sort of mind-reading mechanical haberdashery. But what comes out is an alarming black “glob” that attaches itself to Spider-Man’s arm. That page sold for $288,000 at Dallas-based Heritage Auctions. 

Record breakers

Moments later, the $657,250 record price for a page of original comic book art – set in 2014 by a page from The Incredible Hulk, No. 180 (1974) that introduced the character Wolverine – was broken by the next page in the Spider-Man comic, says Sarah Cascone on ArtNet News. Here, the black glob spreads out to cover all of Spider-Man’s body. Marvel fans will know that this new iconic black costume is, in fact, a symbiotic alien life form that later inhabits new host Eddie Brock to become the arch-baddie, Venom. “Well, I’ll be an eight-ball’s uncle!” says Spidey.

The artwork, drawn by Mike Zeck, sold for ten times its opening bid of $330,000. Maybe that’s not surprising seeing that Spider-Man is the hero of the most expensive comic book ever sold. Last September, a Spider-Man comic from 1962 fetched $3.6m, also with Heritage Auctions. That was enough to beat Action Comics #1 (1938), famous for making Superman’s debut, into second place – one copy of which had sold privately for $3.3m last April. Not that Superman had too much to feel sorry about at Heritage’s sale this month. Another copy of Action Comics No.1, nicknamed the “Rocket Copy” because its cover displays a red stamp mark in the shape of a rocket put there by its original, 13-year-old (and, until now, only) owner, sold for $3.2m. Its condition was given as a CGC Fine 6.0 (10 being “Gem Mint”), which gives an indication of the strength of the market. The copy sold last April was an 8.5. Over the four days, the 1,333 lots on sale at the Heritage Auction, every one of which found a buyer, raised a combined $23.8m. 

A treasure saved

Other lots included a copy of Detective Comics, No.27, from 1939, in which we meet Batman for the first time – it sold for $1.1m. It had been kept between two hardcover books, and almost thrown out before tumbling from its hiding place. And an unrestored copy of Marvel Comics, No. 1, also from 1939 and the first to feature the Human Torch, fetched $360,000. The sales “prove what we’ve long been saying”, says Heritage Auctions’ Joe Mannarino. “Comic-book art is as beloved and valuable as anything put on canvas.”

The surprising fortunes in Pokémon

Pokemon cards

© Alamy

While you’re rummaging in the attic for your old comics (see above), keep an eye out for vintage Pokémon cards from the late 1990s and early noughties. Nostalgia and rarity have combined to drive a steady market in the cards, based on the popular Japanese cartoon series. Money.co.uk has trawled eBay to find the most expensive cards listed on the online auction platform. It found a mint-condition Japanese “Old Back Pokémon Trophy Card No.2 Neo Spring Battle” from 2001, featuring the character Pikachu, on sale for almost £1.3m. Whether it finds a buyer at that price is, of course, another matter. For comparison, the second highest-priced card on eBay is a gem-mint-condition “Trophy Kangaskhan Parent & Child Tournament 1998” card, featuring Kangaskhan, at £350,000 – still a lot of money for a playing card. 

Fakes are a problem, so look for cards that have been graded for their condition, says Salman Haqqi of Money.co.uk. They are given a serial number, typically by firms PSA and CGC, that can be checked against a database. Cards with holograms tend to be worth more, and look out for the symbols at the bottom of the cards, which indicate how rare they are.   

Auction house Bonhams also launched its inaugural “The World of Anime” sale this week, running until 2 February. Pokémon’s Pikachu is represented among the 150 rare production celluloids and drawings from Japanese cartoons. The artwork by Satoshi Tajiri has been valued at up to $3,500. But it is a celluloid featuring the eponymous character Kiki of Kiki’s Delivery Service (1989), with her companion Jiji, from the studio of pioneering filmmaker Hayao Miyazaki, that leads the auction. It is expected to sell for between $15,000 and $25,000.

Auctions

Trainers

© Sotheby's

Going…

Sotheby’s is partnering with French fashion house Louis Vuitton to auction 200 special-edition pairs of Louis Vuitton and Nike “Air Force 1” trainers (pictured), designed by Virgil Abloh, Louis Vuitton’s late artistic director for men’s wear, who died last year. The shoes, made from calf leather and embellished with Louis Vuitton’s Monogram and Damier patterns, had originally been created for the fashion house’s spring-summer 2022 men’s collection. Each pair will also be sold with a Louis Vuitton pilot case. Bidding for the trainers, ranging in sizes five to 18, begins at $2,000 and runs until 8 February. Proceeds from the sale will go to Abloh’s fashion scholarship fund for black students in the US.

Gone…

Earlier this month, toy maker Mattel teamed up with Paris fashion label Balmain to sell via online auction three unique sets of bright pink digital outfits for the Barbie and Ken virtual avatars. Each of the three non-fungible tokens (NFTs) comprising the Balmain x Barbie collection also came as a doll-sized physical version. “Barbie avatar makes a huge statement in a short voluminous dress with maxi bow detail in a pink silk satin,” reads the description for the most expensive outfit, which sold for $17,651. A striped sweater dress and pink maxi pillow bag ensemble fetched $10,310; the Ken outfit featuring a pink double-breasted blazer went for $6,951.



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Wine of the week: a superstar Beaujolais with depth and elegance

2020 Régnié, Vallières, Jean-Marc Burgaud, Beaujolais, France

About £18, quercuswines.co.uk, golbornefinewinedeli.com, glugwines.co.uk, Nysa Wines, 020-7924 5727

There are two things that I love about this week’s tip. Firstly, a select handful of independent merchants have spotted this truly awesome wine, and they are to be applauded. Secondly, the wine itself is utterly thrilling, and it does a neat job of explaining the virtues of the 2020 vintage in Burgundy and Beaujolais in red-wine form.

January is Burgundy month, and I have already written copious notes on my website about the finest wines, which you should already be securing for your cellar. But as very few of the reds have found their way into bottle yet, and purchases are made as En Primeur “futures”, I thought I would find the most expressive example available in the UK right now and implore you to drink it. This very wine will explain the vintage in a couple of truly delicious gulps.

While many think of the 2020 Burgundy vintage as a high-quality white-wine year, the very best reds are dark coloured, ripe, and refreshing. The best reflect their vineyards precisely with crisp acidity and supple tannins. Jean-Marc Burgaud is considered one of Beaujolais’ superstar winemakers. While his Morgons are long-lived and his expressive Villages wine, Les Vignes de Lantignié, is always a beauty, it is this Régnié that combines the fruit clarity of the Beaujolais and the profound depth and elegance of his top Cru wines. Give a few bottles a road test, and if you like what you see there are many more recommendations to track down in my online notes.

Matthew Jukes is a winner of the International Wine & Spirit Competition’s Communicator of the Year (MatthewJukes.com)



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The best Mercedes SL in decades

“Few things in the automotive industry are as anticipated as the arrival of an all-new Mercedes-Benz SL model,” says Michael Harley in Forbes. The new SL, developed with AMG, Mercedes’ renowned performance wing, is no exception. It is the culmination of luxury, masterful engineering and technological innovation in “one beautifully sculpted package”. Not that pedestrians will have long to admire it, says Hannah Elliott on Bloomberg. It may have the good looks to rival any modern Porsche or Chevrolet, but with a 4.0 litre V8 engine under the bonnet, passers-by won’t be able to keep their eye on it for long.

Mercedes has injected a surprising amount of power into the AMG SL. It comes in two flavours – the SL55 and the slightly racier 63, with a top speed of 195mph. And whereas the original SL from the late 1950s was lucky to maintain an 80mph cruising speed on the highway, “you’ll have to actively rein this one in”. Inside, it has all the “latest technologies, comfort settings, fragrances, and textiles that make it feel special without forcing them upon you”. The whole package clocks in at a hefty 1,895kg, every ounce of which glues itself to the road, says Georg Kacher in Car magazine. As the AMG SL tears from 0-60mph in 3.6 seconds, “the adaptive sports exhaust plays Godzilla vs Kong at every blip of the throttle”. It produces an impressive 590lbs of torque on the tarmac, more than enough to deliver a bite-sized adrenaline rush. And let’s not forget that it’s a convertible, blow-drying your hair on command. 

No doubt, this is a heavy car, says Greg Kable in Autocar. And yet, despite packing in every luxury you could want, “it operates with the fluidity of movement and responsiveness to inputs of something much lighter and more Spartan”. The big increase in body stiffness, lower centre of gravity and networked suspension with four-wheel steering results in “sweetly struck handling and great athleticism”. Mercedes has yet to say how much it will cost, but expect to pay around £120,000. For your money, you will get the best SL in decades.

Price: £120,000 (estimated). Engine: V8, 3,982cc, twin- turbocharged. Torque: 590lb ft. Top speed: 195mph. 0-60mph: 3.6 seconds



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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...