It’s
been a while since OM gave a portfolio update, but after much promising, here
it finally is…
International/Country
– 34.6%
The
International/Country book is made up of 2 main exposures; Europe and
Argentina.
-
Europe (~19%): About 3/4 of Our Man’s European exposure is split between Spain
and Italy, with the balance in Greece. This
reflects the long-term cheapness of Spain and Italy (on a CAPE-basis) coupled
with the stronger technicals and higher probability that these countries are
through the worst of their problems.
Greece appears exceptionally cheap, though this may prove superficial
given the scale of the economic depression that the country has been through
since the Financial Crisis.
-
Argentina (~12.5% spread across 5 names):
The
catalyst for the Argentinean positions is the upcoming Presidential election in
Q4, and the positive news is that both of the primary candidates appear to
understand the need for change, to improve the economy and to settle with the
bond holdouts (giving Argentina access to global bond markets). The big questions surround the timing and
the ability of the candidates to execute.
The
worries about Scioli center on whether he is too close to the existing regime,
something that his VP choice (an ally of the President) only fueled. However, he has the broad support of the
Peronists and thus is likely to be able to push changes through, though this will be in
a more gradual manner as he builds consensus. As such, there remains the risk
of an economic issue/crisis before change is implemented and can have an
effect.
Macri
is the bolder ‘change’ choice, as he is likely to attempt to try to do things
much more quickly. The questions
surrounding him are whether, after the initial honeymoon period, he’ll be able
to push things through (given his status as an outsider) or will he be
bogged down fighting the opposition.
-
GVAL: Is a very long-term holding; given this OM wanted to wait a full cycle
before making any decisions on it, thus if was sized very small. So far the performance has been disappointing,
though the performance was (and still is) expected to be characterized by
periods of large under/over performance.
Technical book –
34.1%
As
mentioned when it was implemented, the Technical book has a longer-term bias
and changes are not expected to be made to it on a regular basis. Thus unsurprisingly this year has shown no
changes, especially with the market being in a ‘dead zone’ between 2040 and 2135 for
the the last few months. It’s broadly
OM’s expectation that this is a long consolidation that’s likely to break the
upper limit and start a strong move lasting into 2016. So far that hasn’t happened, but despite some
internal weakness in the market (advances/declines, and ever decreasing
breadth, coupled with the reaction to companies missing/making numbers), it
would likely take a move comfortably sub-2000 for the Technical book’s sell
signals to be triggered. (Editor’s
Note: And this is why you don’t leave a
semi-written blog post waiting to be finished for a month or two.
The market closed on Friday at 1971, right around the level where the Technical
book’s initial sell signals are triggered)
Equity Book – 22.5%
At this point there are 4 names in the book:
-
RDY and TTM are both Indian stocks though there is no great theme to these
investments. There has also been no
great change to either story; the generics business continues to grow strongly
(RDY) and Land Rover/Jaguar have started to roll out new models and the
rationalization of the manufacturing underway (TTM).
-
VIPS and JD are both Chinese Internet retail/consumer plays. China’s development has come at an
interesting time, coinciding with the technological jumps that come with the Internet,
meaning that that the country’s retail model could be very different to those
of the already developed world as it moves more directly/aggressively to the
internet (and mobile) rather than brick-and-mortar stores. This wouldn’t be the first time we’ve seen a
developing country skipping a step as it modernizes; most obviously with India moving straight to mobile telephony rather than putting fixed telephone lines down across the country.
As
with (seemingly) all Chinese companies, there is speculation as to whether
these companies are ‘real’ and though OM has never been to China, he has
sources who’ve met both companies, seen their sites, etc and is thus confident
that both companies exist and have real businesses.
VIPS is comfortably the larger of the two positions, owing to the fact
that (despite being an ‘Internet’ company) it’s profitable & generates cash
– while some are disappointed by its recent growth, OM sees not competing
aggressively for bad business to increase revenues (at the expense of margins,
profits, etc) as a sign of good long-term management.
- Currencies
(21.9%) & China Thesis (11%)
Our
Man has stated a number of times on this blog that he’s a dollar bull. It’s his highest conviction belief that we’re in a
dollar bull market, a true secular bull market in the dollar, which is
something we’ve not seen for decades. While
it’s not ignored OM doesn’t really think it’s fully realized that the Federal
Reserve hasn’t raised rates in over a decade, and the US Dollar hasn’t been in
a true secular bull market for almost 20 years.
While the dollar’s recent rally has been noted by the markets, it barely
compares to historical secular bull markets such as the 90% rally in the 1980s
and the 50% rise in the 1990s! Furthermore,
with a more globalized world now, the impact of the rising dollar is likely to
be larger than people expect – instead of Poles with loans in Swiss Frances, it’s
going to be global corporates that have borrowed in US Dollars (especially in
those countries, *ahem* China, where a pegged currency has led to the rapidly
crumbling illusion of no currency risk).
As for China, the slowdown has clearly impacted commodity prices (a
number of which are at, or threatening, their 2008/2009 lows) and it’s spilled
over into the currencies of the commodity countries. The China book’s Short Australian Dollar
position has been great and OM expects it to be volatile but very profitable for
a while.
- Precious Metals –
9.3%
While
OM’s medium-term thesis here - that Precious Metals are going to have a strong
bounce (the kind that would have the would-be gold bugs believing again) - may prove to be correct he took the position too early, much too
early. OM would have been better off
waiting for that final leg down, rather than getting into the positions.
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