Tuesday, April 5, 2022

Buy Bank of Georgia: a cheap play on a robust economy

Investing in any bank’s shares may seem a contrarian proposition at the moment. Investing in a bank in a country that has been invaded by Russia might then seem on the hazardous side of contrarian.

Yet the Russian invasion of Georgia happened in 2008 and that means further military conflict is unlikely. Therein lies the opportunity.

Vladimir Putin’s invasion in 2008 in support of South Ossetia (a Russia-friendly breakaway province) was a brief and one-sided escapade. Sadly it may even have encouraged the Russian tyrant to think that an invasion of Ukraine would be similar.

A solid economy

Following the invasion, Georgia is now less reliant on Russia both as an export market (14% of exports) and as a source of remittance flows from Georgians working abroad who send money back home (now 12%, down from half ten years ago). The rich volcanic Georgian soil means that the country is less exposed to rising wheat prices or a shortage in fertiliser than many. Georgia is also less vulnerable to higher energy costs than in the past, after a decade of investment in hydro power dams. 

These made up 70% of energy production last year. In short, the difficult recent history since the fall of the Soviet Union has been a catalyst for the country to become more resilient.

The economy has been strong, with real GDP growth of 5% per year for the three years preceding the pandemic. Growth is forecast to be 3% in 2022, assuming the conflict in Ukraine is resolved in a few months’ time, according to Galt & Taggart (G&T), Bank of Georgia’s brokerage business (named after the characters in Ayn Rand’s Atlas Shrugged).

Even in the worst-case scenario of a prolonged conflict in Ukraine and sanctions applied to Russia’s oil and gas exports, G&T predict a 1% contraction in the economy.

This may be too pessimistic, since Georgia is a relatively stable destination in the region. I’ve heard stories of flights to Tbilisi from Moscow and St. Petersburg being booked out as skilled Russians flee Putin’s regime.

Managing the risks well

London-listed Bank of Georgia (LSE: BGEO) is one of two leading local banks. It’s cheap and in fine shape (see below), although obviously not risk-free. Around 60% of the bank’s balance sheet (both loans and deposits) is in US dollars or other foreign currencies. This would be an issue if the currency devalues steeply: borrowers who earn in local currency could struggle to service their dollar debts.

Some of this risk is reduced by the 1.3 million Georgians who earn overseas in foreign currencies and send money home. In 2021, remittances were up by 25% year-on-year, and by 36%from 2019.

The central bank, which has been increasing its $4bn in foreign-currency reserves, is aware of the devaluation risk and requires banks to have higher capital weightings for foreign-currency loans. It has also set the maximum term of a foreign-currency mortgage to ten years, as a further incentive to encourage borrowing in lari, the local currency. Thus lower interest costs on foreign-currency mortgages are offset by higher principal repayments.

Sulkhan Gvalia, finance director of the Bank of Georgia, who used to be head of risk management, has just bought £200,000-worth of shares at around £12. I met him when I listed the bank on the London Stock Exchange a decade ago, and he struck me as a shrewd character with a common-sense approach to risk management that larger, supposedly more sophisticated, banks in the US and Europe could have benefited from.

While the share price fell steeply during the financial crisis and Russian invasion, the bank didn’t need a large rescue rights issue or rely on a government bailout. I own the shares and think that there is plenty of upside to compensate for the perceived risks.



from Moneyweek RSS Feed https://moneyweek.com/investments/stocks-and-shares/bank-stocks/604646/buy-bank-of-georgia
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AU200AUD, H4 Potential For Upside

Type: Bullish BounceKey Levels:Resistance: 7684.36 Pivot: 7521.33 Support: 7458.58Preferred Case:Prices are on bullish momentum. We see the potential for bounce from our Pivot at 7521.33 in line with 100% Fibonacci projection towards our 1st resistance at 7684.36 which is an area of Fibonacci confluences.Alternative Scenario:Alternatively, prices may dip towards our 1st support at 7458.58 which is a graphical swing low.

from Tickmill Expert Blog - Forex Traders Blog https://www.tickmill.com/blog/au200aud-h4-potential-for-upside"
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AUDCHF, H4 | Potential Bullish Rise

Type: Bearish ReversalKey Levels:Resistance: 0.65047Pivot: 0.64634Support: 0.6412Preferred Case:Despite the recent breakout of the triangle to the upside, we have a short term bearish bias that price will drop and retest at out 1st support of 0.6412 in line with the 50% Fibonacci retracement and the ascending trendline from our pivot of 0.64634 in line with the 61.8% Fibonacci retracement and swing high resistance. Our bearish bias is further supported by how price is moving below our Ichimoku cloud.Alternative Scenario:Alternatively, price may break our pivot structure and continue to our 1st resistance at 0.65047 in line with the swing high resistance.

from Tickmill Expert Blog - Forex Traders Blog https://www.tickmill.com/blog/audchf-h4-or-potential-bullish-rise5"
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Monday, April 4, 2022

Gold Futures (GC!), H1 Potential for Bounce!

Type: Bullish BounceKey Levels:Resistance: 1959.0Pivot: 1921.0Support: 1910.2Preferred Case:Prices have recently broken out of our descending trendline. We see the potential for further bullish continuation from our Pivot at 1921.0 in line graphical overlap and area of Fibonacci confluences towards our 1st resistance at 1959.0 in line with 61.8% Fibonacci Projection . Our bullish bias is further supported by RSI being at levels where bounces previously occurred.Alternative Scenario:If prices were to reverse, they can potentially reach our 1st support at 1910.2 in line with 61.8% Fibonacci projection .Fundamentals:With continuation of Russo-Ukraine invasions and inflation, we might expect a slight bullish turn towards the precious metal.

from Tickmill Expert Blog - Forex Traders Blog https://www.tickmill.com/blog/gold-futures-gc-h1-potential-for-bounce4"
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Wheat Futures (ZW1!), H1 Bullish Bounce

Type: Bullish BounceKey Levels:Resistance: 1033'0Pivot: 985'2Support: 959'0Preferred Case:Prices have approached our Pivot at 985'2 in line with 78.6% Fibonacci Projection. We see the potential for a bounce from our Pivot at 985'2 towards our 1st resistance at 1033'0 in line with 50% Fibonacci retracement and 61.8% Fibonacci Projection. RSI is at levels where dips previously occurred.Alternative Scenario:Price might continue to drop towards the 1st support level of 959'0 in line with 127.2% Fibonacci extension.Fundamentals:No Major News

from Tickmill Expert Blog - Forex Traders Blog https://www.tickmill.com/blog/wheat-futures-zw1-h1-bullish-bounce"
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Nasdaq Futures (NQ1!), H1 Potential for Bearish Dip!

Type: Bearish DipKey Levels:Resistance: 14950Pivot: 14870Support: 14727Preferred Case:We see the potential bearish dip from our Pivot at 14870 in line 23.6% and 61.8% Fibonacci retracement towards our 1st support at 14727 in line with the horizontal swing low support and 61.8% Fibonacci projection. Our bearish bias is further supported by how price is moving below our Ichimoku cloud.Alternative Scenario:Price might move towards the 1st resistance level of 14950 in line with 38.2% Fibonacci retracement and swing high resistance.Fundamentals:Economic risks from inflation and tightening monetary policy causes bearish sentiments around indices.

from Tickmill Expert Blog - Forex Traders Blog https://www.tickmill.com/blog/nasdaq-futures-nq1-h1-potential-for-bearish-dip"
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Soybeans Future (ZS1!), H1 Bullish Rise

Type: Bullish RiseKey Levels:Resistance: 1623'2Pivot: 1580'0Support: 1546'4Preferred Case:With price expected to bounce off the stochastics indicator, we have a bullish bias that price will rise to our 1st resistance at 1623'2 in line with the 38.2% Fibonacci retracement and pullback resistance from our pivot of 1580'0 in line with the 161.8% Fibonacci extension and swing low support.Alternative Scenario:Alternatively, if price breaks our pivot structure, it may head for 1st support at 1546'4 in line with the swing low support.Fundamentals:No major news.

from Tickmill Expert Blog - Forex Traders Blog https://www.tickmill.com/blog/soybeans-future-zs1-h1-bullish-rise"
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Dax Futures (FDAX1!), H1 Potential For A Rise!

Type: Bullish RiseKey Levels:Resistance: 14707Pivot: 14355Support: 14202Preferred Case:With price expected to bounce off the RSI support, we have a bullish bias that price will rise to our resistance at 14707 in line with the 61.8% Fibonacci retracement and swing high resistance from our pivot at 14355 in line with the 78.6% Fibonacci retracement and swing low support.Alternative Scenario:Alternatively, price may break pivot structure and head for 1st support at 14202 in line with the swing low support.Fundamentals:With the concerns over the war in Ukraine, European stocks are expected to trade lower.

from Tickmill Expert Blog - Forex Traders Blog https://www.tickmill.com/blog/dax-futures-fdax1-h1-potential-for-a-rise"
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Corn Futures (ZC1!), H1 Potential for Bearish Dip!

Type: Bearish DipKey Levels:Resistance: 754'6Pivot: 747'0Support: 733'0Preferred Case:We see the potential bearish dip from our Pivot at 747'0 in line 38.2% Fibonacci retracement towards our 1st support at 733'0 in line with the horizontal swing low support. Our bearish bias is further supported by how price is expected to reverse off the Ichimoku cloud resistance.Alternative Scenario:Price might move towards the 1st resistance level of 754'6 in line with 61.8% Fibonacci retracement .Fundamentals:No major news.

from Tickmill Expert Blog - Forex Traders Blog https://www.tickmill.com/blog/corn-futures-zc1-h1-potential-for-bearish-dip4"
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The FTSE 100 is doing moderately well – can this continue?

The first quarter of 2022 is over.

It's a natural point at which to take stock of what's happened in markets.

It's also a completely arbitrary point, of course. Just because markets have been doing something over the past three months doesn't mean they'll keep doing it.

Yet, arbitrary or not, taking a snapshot of markets can give us an idea of what the overall narrative is at any given time.

And it's very clear from the first quarter of this year that the big stories in investment are now dramatically different to the ones that drove the post-2009 bull market...

The FTSE 100 is doing well – what's gone wrong with the world?

One of the most obvious changes in the investment environment is that the UK's headline stock market index isn't clutching tightly to the wooden spoon for once. That's quite the shift.

During the first quarter of 2022, the FTSE 100, which comprises the 100(-ish) biggest (in terms of market capitalisation) companies listed on the London Stock Exchange, gained 1.8%, notes George Steer in the FT.

You may not be cracking open the champagne on that sort of gain (certainly not with inflation sitting at its present levels). And if you'd been more adventurous, investing in Brazil say, you'd be up a whopping 34.3%, says Morningstar.

But it's rather a lot better than if you'd invested in most other major developed global stock markets – or British ones for that matter. 

The FTSE 250, which comprises the next 250(-ish) companies, lost 10.6%, while the biggest companies on Aim – London's junior market - lost an even more brutal 16%.

As for international comparisons, eurozone stocks (as measured via the Stoxx 600 index) fell by 6.5%, while the S&P 500 dropped 4.9%.

There's a pretty straightforward story to tell here. The FTSE 100 has done reasonably well for two main reasons. One is that it has been the least popular developed market in the world for a long time now, so it was starting from a low base. That shunning was partly due to Brexit. 

Two - which has nothing to do with Brexit – is that it is full of the sorts of stocks that everyone has hated for the duration of the post-2008 bull market. The FTSE 100 has banks (at the heart of the last bubble); miners and oil companies (hated because they're the opposite of both ESG and "digital" assets); and a distinct lack of hot tech stocks.

Oh and it's a dividend-heavy index in a world that had decided that regular payouts to investors showed that a company had run out of imagination. 

So in a world where investors have decided that "value" investing is a dirty word, it's little surprise that the FTSE 100 index was hated.     

Clearly that's changing now. Even before Russia invaded Ukraine, commodity and energy prices were surging. Inflation finally stopped being described as "transitory" in December last year as the Federal Reserve "retired" the word.

Meanwhile, on the other side of the equation, anything speculative (in other words, any asset where profits are a distant prospect) has struggled. "Growth" has lost its popularity. "Virtual" has become less appealing. "Expensive" is no longer a synonym for "high-quality". 

This helps to explain why the US in particular – previously the world's leading stock market by far – has started to struggle. It's far more "growth-y" and "tech-y" than the FTSE 100.

The trend is clear. The rationale is pretty clear too. The big question now is: is it likely to continue?

How to invest for a continuing shift to value from growth

On the "big picture" level, a lot of this boils down to what you think will happen to interest rates, inflation and the economy over the coming year.

If you think that inflation will drop back down and that the world's central banks are going to be clear to cut interest rates, but that we'll scrape by avoiding a recession, then we could probably flip back to the good old days of growth trumping everything and everything being hunky-dory in a slightly glum manner.

If you think that inflation will persist, that central banks are caught between a rock and a very hard place, and that we might end up with the economy being dragged down by soaring living costs even as staff agitate for higher pay to compensate and countries scramble to secure scarce supplies of key resources – well, we can probably expect more of the same.

I'll admit I find scenario number two or some variation thereof the most likely option here. I would prefer a more cheerful outcome (and if wages start rising in a persistent manner, that would make me more optimistic about the economy, if not about earnings prospects).

But overall, it's hard to see how we go back to the previous "secular stagnation" scenario which sounded very gloomy but in practice, entrenched the dominance of the top performers and wasn't much of a problem as far as Wall Street was concerned.

How do you play this? We've looked at lots of ways to play lots of different commodities, from copper to silver and platinum. You could also invest in value-oriented investment trusts or those which are aimed at protecting you from inflation.

The other option is to look at a simple FTSE 100 tracker fund. It won't give you pure exposure to all of the things that will do best out of any shift from growth to value, but it is a cheap option for investing in the overall shift.

On that note, for more on the debate over passive investing and its impact on markets, you really should listen to this week's MoneyWeek podcast, in which Merryn chats to Robin Wigglesworth, FT journalist and author of Trillions, an in-depth history of index investing and its impacts. Have a listen here.



from Moneyweek RSS Feed https://moneyweek.com/investments/stockmarkets/uk-stockmarkets/604664/fsfs
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GBPAUD H4, Potential For Bounce!

Type: Bullish BounceKey Levels:Resistance: 1.77547 Pivot: 1.74474Support: 1.7337Preferred Case:Prices are at a Pivot. We see the potential for a bounce from our Pivot at 1.74474 in line which is an area of Fibonacci confluences towards our 1st resistance at 1.77547 in line with 50% Fibonacci retracement. RSI is portraying bullish momentum.Alternative Scenario:Alternatively, prices may dip towards our 1st support at 1.7337 in line with 127.2% Fibonacci extension.

from Tickmill Expert Blog - Forex Traders Blog https://www.tickmill.com/blog/gbpaud-h4-potential-for-bounce"
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GBPUSD H4 | Potential For Bounce!

Type: Bullish BounceKey Levels:Resistance: 1.33004Pivot: 1.31219Support: 1.3058Preferred Case:Prices are on bullish momentum and abiding by our ascending trendline support. We see the potential for a bounce from our Pivot at 1.31219 in line with 50% Fibonacci retracement towards our 1st resistance at 1.33004 in line with 78.6% Fibonacci projection. RSI are at levels where bounces previously occurred.Alternative Scenario:Alternatively, prices may dip towards our 1st support at 1.3058.

from Tickmill Expert Blog - Forex Traders Blog https://www.tickmill.com/blog/gbpusd-h4-or-potential-for-bounce4"
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What went wrong for Barclays with its £450m structured notes loss?

Investors in Barclays got a nasty shock this week when the bank revealed that a US paperwork blunder will cost it around £450m. Put simply, Barclays messed up the administration requirements around the issuance in the US of financial products called structured notes and exchange-traded notes (ETNs). 

So what went wrong? Any financial securities sold to the public in the US have to be registered with the US financial regulator, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). As Bloomberg’s Matt Levine explains, this is usually done via a blanket “shelf registration statement”, which contains a “very large arbitrary number for how many securities you might sell”. In 2019, Barclays registered to sell just under $20.1bn of securities in a statement. The trouble is that apparently it forgot to keep track of how much of this $20.1bn capacity it had used, and ended up issuing a combined $36bn securities or so – around about $15bn in the last year – instead of $20bn, before realising its error.

A minor mystery solved

The error does appear to explain why Barclays stopped issuing new shares in two of its most popular ETNs – one tracking the Vix volatility index (VXX) and the other tracking crude oil prices (OIL) – a couple of weeks ago. This was at the height of market volatility around Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. The decision resulted in dramatic price moves for both the VXX and OIL products. The inability to issue new shares meant the ETNs could no longer track their underlying indices. Instead they become more like an investment trust – where the price is driven by supply and demand for the shares, and so can trade at an entirely different price to the value of the underlying assets – which, needless to say, is not the point of an ETN.

The £450m cost is due to the fact that, because the securities were issued in error, holders have “a right of rescission”. In other words, Barclays has to buy them back at the original sale price. Of course, anyone who made a loss on their structured notes, or perhaps on these two ETNs, will almost certainly exercise this right and get their money back at Barclays’ expense. As you’d expect, the bank is conducting a review into what went wrong.

We suspect that few MoneyWeek readers trade ETNs, and we’ve also railed against structured products often enough to dissuade you from them too. And in this rare case, investors may well have benefited from the error rather than lost out. But it’s another very good demonstration of why you shouldn’t invest in anything that you don’t understand thoroughly. If even a banks’ back office can’t get it right, what hope do you have?



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Three Asian growth stocks to invest in the world's fastest growing markets

Pictet’s Asia ex-Japan strategy is a long-only, high conviction and fundamentally driven portfolio. We focus on cash-generative businesses and invest in both structural compounders and cyclical-inflection opportunities. Asian equities are attractive due to the strong earning potential of companies and appealing valuations, especially relative to developed markets. A focus on stock selection has been the driver of outperformance and the holding period for each stock is typically three to five years.

Asia remains the fastest-growing region in the world. It is among the most advanced in terms of e-commerce and fintech. The companies below showcase three of the most interesting picks across a variety of sectors.

A key player in renewables

Innovation across the region is on show in the renewable energy sector. Sungrow (Shenzhen: 300274) is a key player in the renewable energy manufacturing chain. It supplies inverters to solar module makers, as well as energy storage solutions (ESS) to solar farm operators. The company is looking to expand its inverter market share from both global and domestic leaders, such as Huawei.

Sungrow has benefited from strong tailwinds from global solar farm growth and the accompanying need to capture and store solar energy via its ESS business, as well as from China’s long-term policies of increasing green energy.

We believe current energy prices are likely to accelerate the renewables roll-out. What seem to be high near-term multiples (a forward price/earnings (p/e) ratio of 30 times estimated 2023 earnings) belie the value in the name due to its long-term, structural growth.

A safe play on China’s real-estate rebound

Midea (Shenzhen: 000333) is a white-goods manufacturer whose main product is air conditioners. We believe the company has been unfairly punished due to its exposure to the Chinese real-estate market and, more recently, to rising input costs. However, in our view Midea has managed past surges in input costs (copper) well and will now look to mitigate adverse effects on margins through efficiency gains, price increases and product mix.

We also believe that in order for China to reach its growth targets, it will have to address the real-estate market’s issues tactically and adjust policies so that buyers come back into the market. With Midea’s strong cash flow and net cash position, this should be a safe way to gain exposure to a Chinese property market rebound. At 10.6 times forecast 2023 earnings and a 4.3% dividend yield, it provides both the safety of value and the upside of growth in an otherwise difficult market.

Asia’s best insurer

We view AIA (Hong Kong: 1299) as Asia’s best insurer. A policy of financial liberalisation means there is a strong long-term structural tailwind to growth in the Chinese insurance market. Although the stock has been affected by Covid-19, with the added difficulty of its agents being less able to meet clients in person, we are now seeing the beginning of loosening restrictions in Hong Kong.

Given AIA’s strong presence across Asia, we consider the stock a good way to play an opening up of travel in mainland China and Hong Kong. In addition, valuations should be considered reasonable at 1.7 times 2021 book and 13.5 times earnings.



from Moneyweek RSS Feed https://moneyweek.com/investments/stocks-and-shares/growth-stocks/604647/three-asian-growth-stocks-to-invest-in-the
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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...