Well, that was fun! After a serene 2017 and a
rampant January, Mr. Market handed out a harsh dose of reality during February
with the S&P 500 Total Return falling 10%+ intra-month before
recovering. In the midst of this, OM did very little during the month;
adding to the Greece position and beginning a new one in Vietnam. Let’s
touch a little on both decisions, before looking more broadly at how the
volatility is impacting OM’s view going forwards.
Greece
While the market was hitting its lows, Greece successfully issued a 7-year bond in an oversubscribed
offering. This alone reflects the change in investor perceptions, and is
further highlighted by the 3.5% yield on the bonds (or a mere 75bps above
similar US Treasuries)! There remain hurdles to clear, most notably
agreeing suitable debt relief and a post-bailout monitoring arrangement, but OM
saw the successful bond issuance as another sign that things are on the right
track.
Vietnam
The argument for Vietnam is a simple one; it looks like
China/Thailand 15-25 years ago and is treading down the same path.
- After the property bubble, there was a long and drawn
out restructuring in the bank sector that started in 2011. It took till
2015 before real estate transaction volumes really started to recover.
Now, with the real estate sector stabilized, the strength of the rest of the
economy is becoming more apparent; growth is good, inflation is under control (2.5-5%), rates
are low, and the government is using foreign inflows (see below) to build
reserves.
- Vietnam has one of the lowest labor costs in Asia, with
a young and educated demographic profile. This comes at a time when
labor costs in China (and Thailand) are rising due to an aging population.
- Vietnam is already a consumer-centric economy (65% of GDP) meaning the combination of good demographics
(an influx of young workers) and job opportunities (see next point) sets up a
virtuous cycle of opportunity.
- Vietnam is seeing substantial Foreign Direct Investments
(“FDI”) from global multinationals. This began with Samsung’s $13bn
investment in 2014 (and follow-up commitment of $7bn more by 2017) and has
continued apace with 2017 setting a new record. The Vietnamese government
is continuing with reforms to further encourage foreign
multinationals to set-up and invest.
- In the medium-to-long term, if Vietnam is to
follow in China’s footsteps and become the next up-and-coming Asian
manufacturing powerhouse, further industrialization and urbanization lies
ahead.
- The Vietnamese government has targeted a 70% market cap
to GDP ratio (currently ~46.5%), which seems achievable given that similar countries
include Singapore (200%+), Thailand (~90%), Philippines (~80%), and Malaysia
(~120%). The government is facilitating this through easing foreign
ownership restrictions, privatizations and equitizations. From OM’s
Argentina discussions, you will remember these are all key criteria in moving
from being a “Frontier” market to an “Emerging Market” and the wall of $ that
brings. For those that enjoy history’s rhymes, Vietnam’s government
floated the company’s largest beer company (SABECO) in late 2016, and just sold a majority stake to ThaiBev. The historians
amongst you will note that back in 1993, Tsgintao Brewery was the first Chinese
state-owned company to list in Hong Kong creating the H-share market that has
blossomed today.
This week brought further confirmation of the interest in
Vietnam, with Warburg buying a stake in Techombank and Amazon poised to enter the country, which both help
indicate the strength of the long-term opportunity.
Overall
So what did February change in OM’s outlook? In the
immediate-to-short term, not a lot - new highs are likely coming and the speed
of their arrival (the quicker the better) will provide more clues as to how far
the market might run in the medium-term. However, it is equally clear
that the probability of 2019 being spectacular (think 3,500 on the S&P 500)
was significantly diminished by the depth of February’s slump.
As such, while OM is certainly not forecasting any end of
the bull market it’s certainly wise to start preparing for it. This is
something OM is pondering and will be the focus of an upcoming post, but to
whet your appetite here are the three positions that are likely most at risk of
seeing their position sizes reduced:
- Brazil: OM’s Brazil positions are very indicative
of where the market finds itself, somewhere between rolling over and surging to
impressive new highs. Technically, it’s one of the clearest/most
interesting charts out there – based on OM’s analysis, either we see 89-90K on
the iBovespa relatively soon and are on the pathway to impressive new highs, or
there’s likely a much more substantial pull-back. Fundamentally, OM
continues to like Brazil but with an election coming up later in 2018 it’s
unlikely to remain vastly outsized unless we see that push to impressive new
highs.
- IBB: Biotech has done fantastically over the past
few years, but of all the things OM owns it looks the closest to
exhaustion. Given how far it has come a pull-back could be substantial,
and OM worries that should that occur the receding tide will reveal more Theranos’
swimming naked! The decline won’t be as dramatic as Tech’s 99/00,
but OM is using that as his broad heuristic and will be happy to wait until he
hears other investors proclaim how they don’t invest in biotech/binary
situations before diving back in.
- Uranium: Fundamentally, and conceptually, OM loves the
Uranium thesis – it’s probably his favorite in the book. However, as the
chart below shows the price action sucks – sharp bounces when the production
cuts were announced but no follow through.
Unless things turnaround, and soon, expect the position to be vastly
reduced.
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