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Thursday, March 16

Things from my Newsblur; 2023 Part 1

It’s been too long since OM posted anything of note, so lets get the ball rolling with the first Things from my Newsblur for 2023.

When he was young OM was a big fan of Hot Wheels cars, today it’s OM’s kids who enjoy them.  This article helps explain Hot Wheels’ history and longevity and how its kept prices so affordable over the years.   (Fernando Alfonso III, NPR)
 
This article is a good reminder to seek our balance in what you read and where you get your news from.  On the heels of more financial strife, the anniversary of the war in Ukraine, et al – here’s some of the good things that happened in 2022.  (Future Crunch)
In a similar vein, here are some of the stunning nature photographs from last year.  My favorite was the bat-snatcher, what’s yours?
(NPR)

Just a classy article written after LeBron James became the all-time NBA leading scorer.
(Kareen Abdul-Jabbar)
The demise of Silicon Valley Bank (‘SVB’) is a financial story, but at their core bank runs are stories about trust.  Silicon Valley and venture capital more than anywhere else is an industry founded on trust.  While there have been signs of this weakening over the last decade, SVB’s failure is poignant as it suggests just how much it has weakened (and how herdlike VC’s are!).  More broadly it is also reflective of the journey that society has embarked on since the Great Financial Crisis with trust in institutions declining across the board.
(Ben Thompson, Stratechery)
Regular readers know OM has a lot of commodity-related exposure in his portfolio principally through uranium and tin position.  While OM’s not yet ready to declare that a commodity super-cycle is here, it is increasingly clear that supply is constrained and demand is continuing to increase.  If a structural commodity bull market (or supercycle) is really here, this is a vital read for investors as it will help remind folks (or educate those who haven’t yet seen a commodity bull market) just how volatile commodity bull markets are.  They are NOT anything like the tech/software markets we’ve seen in recent years.  (Arjun Murti, Super-Spiked)


Wednesday, January 25

2022: Fourth Quarter Update

Portfolio Update
- After the array of changes to the portfolio during the third quarter (see update), OM made no changes in the fourth quarter.
- As noted in the update, at year-end OM moved the Greece & Shipping positions from Dislocations to Thematic.  The Shipping positions were OM’s largest contributor during 2022 – adding over 1,200 basis points to performance - and are pricing in a vastly more attractive future than they were 12 months ago.  Given the changes on both demand and supply side, the positions remain attractive going forwards but no longer offer excess opportunity.  
- OM moved the position in Brazil from Thematic to Dislocation at year end, after President Lula returned to power.  It’s a situation – along with Turkey (no position, yet!) – that OM has spent a lot of 2022 researching so expect an update soon.

Performance and Review
OM’s portfolio posted a healthy gain of +6.4% during the fourth quarter, though this lagged the rising equity markets (S&P 500: +7.6% and MSCI World: +7.5%).  Despite the rally during the fourth quarter, OM’s portfolio ended the year down -2.7%, though there was some small consolation as this was ahead of equity markets (S&P 500: -18.1% and MSCI World: -16.3%).

Fourth Quarter Attribution
 

Our Man’s portfolio largely rose with the market during the fourth quarter.   The Shipping/Tanker positions (+190bps) contributed strongly and were positive in each of the four quarters during 2022 despite the falling market.  In addition to the impacts of the IMO 2020 regulatory changes, they were and remain beneficiaries of the energy market complexity caused by the Ukraine/Russia crisis.  To repeat a simple example, pre-conflict a small Aframax tanker would fill-up with crude oil in Russia make the short run to Europe (Rotterdam) where it would be refined into oil products.  Due to the conflict this has become something akin to a couple of Aframaxes fill up in Russia, head out to sea to a ship-to-ship transfer to a larger VLCC, which then travels all the way to India or China, while other crude tankers service Europe with oil from the US or Middle East.  Furthermore, after the oil has been blended with non-Russian oil and refined in India and China the resulting oil products (gasoline, jet fuel, etc.) are likely heading back to the West on product tankers.  While this is a massive simplification it’s a good demonstration of how inefficient the reality of today’s oil supply chains are compared to preconflict!   Tankers travel a lot of extra miles and with fixed supply, unsurprisingly price is the variable that has changed benefiting these companies.

OM’s commodity exposure was also beneficial with both Tin (+248bps) and Commodities (+59bps) contributing.   The month-to-month moves in Tin and the related stocks can be volatile and impacted by recessionary fears but the medium-term story remains simple.  It is one of a currently balanced market where a commodity that has no substitutes is seeing increased inelastic demand coupled with declining supply.  There are only three western listed ways to participate, and OM is invested in all, with an outsized position in Alphamin Resources.  Alphamin, as part of its Bisie tin project, owns both the premier global tin asset (the Mbapma North deposit), as well as the best development asset (Mbapma South deposit, which is ~1km from Mbapma North reducing the development risk).  The caveat is that the Bisie tin project is in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

OM also benefited from the Idiosyncratic positions (+143bps, equally split between TPL and JOE), Greek exposure (+70bps) and the market’s view that medium term yields would be higher (Shorts, +41bps).

Despite the market rising, there were negative contributions from Uranium (-63bps) and Blockchain (-105bps).  The latter was impacted by the bankruptcy of (and potential/likely fraud at) FTX, which saw all cryptocurrencies fall.  While OM intended to exit the Ethereum (ETHE) position during Q4, the panic saw the Grayscale Ethereum Trust fall to a ~60% discount to the value of its Ethereum holdings.  Digital Currency Group (“DCG”, owner of Grayscale, the Trust’s sponsor) was caught up in the maelstrom around FTX’s bankruptcy and there are fears that like FTX it may have commingled assets leading to questions around the veracity of the Trust’s NAV.  OM is more sanguine than the market, in part as the assets are custodied at Coinbase, a US-listed entity (unlike Bahamas based FTX, or somewhere in the world based Binance).  Coinbase has released a statement confirming the assets are held separately, have/continue to be audited, cannot be lent out as well as the amount held.  While fraud remains possible it would require systemic corruption amongst US-based and listed bodies including DCG, Coinbase, third-party auditors and regulatory bodies.   Given this probability, OM felt it would be imprudent to sell ETHE at a 60% discount to its value (an equivalent to ~$500 for Ethereum).

Portfolio (as at 1/1/23 - all delta and leverage adjusted, as appropriate)
Dislocations: 23.8%
21.7% - Uranium (URNM, CCJ, NXE, PALAF, DNN, BNNLF, URG and SMR)
2.0% - Brazil (EWZ)

Thematic: 45.7%
13.5% - Shipping/Tankers (STNG, INSW, EURN, TNK and DHT)
9.6% - Tin (AFMJF, MLXEF and SBWFF)
6.4% - India (IBN, INDA and SMIN)
5.1% - Biotech: 4th Industrial Revolution (IBB & XLB)
3.9% - Greece (GREK & ALBKY)
2.6% - Blockchain/Crypto (ETHE and OSTK)
2.5% - Software: 4th Industrial Revolution (JD & WCLD)
2.1% - Commodities/Mining (FLMMF)

Idiosyncratic: 6.6%
6.6% - Equities (TPL & JOE)

Shorts/Hedges: 6.7%
6.7% - Higher Medium-Term Rates (PFIX)

Cash: 17.3%

Disclaimer:  Nothing above represents investment advice or a recommendation in any way, shape or form so please don’t even think of trying to take it that way.  For added clarity, while Our Man is invested in all of the securities mentioned that’s a terrible reason for anyone else to do so.  Our Man also holds a few other securities (of negligible value).  You should not buy any of these securities because Our Man has mentioned them, but should do your own work and decide what’s best for you given your own circumstances/risk tolerance/etc.  


Sunday, October 30

2022: Third Quarter Update

 Portfolio Update
- Our Man made an array of changes to the portfolio, which are all described in the September 2022 portfolio update.

Performance and Review
OM’s portfolio posted a healthy gain of +8.6% during the third quarter, despite equity markets falling back (S&P 500: -4.9% and MSCI World: -4.4%).  Despite the strong third quarter, OM’s portfolio remains down -8.6%, though this is ahead of equity markets (S&P 500: -23.9% and MSCI World: -22.1%).

Third Quarter Attribution


OM’s outperformance during the third quarter was driven by the two core positions in the dislocation part of the portfolio.   The positions in Shipping/Tankers (+593bps) were up significantly during the quarter, as it became clear that the supply chains for oil and especially oil products had become significantly more complex because of the Russia-Ukraine conflict.   The large position in Uranium (+363bps) recouped much of Q2’s losses, with stocks responding to the increasing Uranium price and the continued signs of nuclear power’s mainstream acceptance.  Finally, there was a meaningful contribution from OM’s play on higher medium-term interest rates (PFIX, +105bps) as markets adjusted to the high and sticky inflation numbers.

OM’s losses largely came in the portfolio’s other commodity-related investments; Tin (-167bps), Commodities/Mining (-24bps) and Carbon Credits (-55bps).  The positions were hurt by the expectations of a slowing global economy.  Tin was particularly negatively impacted by the slowdown in Semiconductor space, which is a major source of demand that turned sequentially negative during Q2 with many fearing the largest slowdown since 2000.  For once, OM was appropriately sized and able to add to the position in Alphamin Resources (AFMJF) as long-term the world will use more semiconductors (Internet of Things, Electric Vehicles, greater automation, etc.) and Alphamin remains the best/lowest cost Tin mine and the best development resource globally, while also having limited debt and being cash flow generative.  

The rest of the portfolio was broadly a wash though it was helped by a timely exit from the Funds (+66bps) positions.  The rest of the performance included Biotech (+14bps), Software (-37bps), Idiosyncratic (-36bps), Blockchain/Crypto (+9bps), Brazil (+1bps), Greece (-31bps), India (+49bps), and Vietnam (+8bps).  

Portfolio (as at 09/30/22 - all delta and leverage adjusted, as appropriate)
Dislocations: 39.9%
23.8% - Uranium (URNM, CCJ, NXE, PALAF, DNN, BNNLF, URG and SMR)
12.6% - Shipping/Tankers (STNG, INSW, EURN, TNK and DHT)
3.4% - Greece (GREK & ALBKY)

Thematic: 29.8%
7.8% - Tin (AFMJF, MLXEF and SBWFF)
6.7% - India (IBN, INDA and SMIN)
5.0% - Biotech: 4th Industrial Revolution (IBB & XLB)
3.8% - Blockchain/Crypto (ETHE and OSTK)
2.6% - Software: 4th Industrial Revolution (JD & WCLD)
2.3% - Brazil (EWZ)
1.9% - Commodities/Mining (FLMMF)

Technical: 0.0%

Idiosyncratic: 5.6%
5.6% - Equities (TPL & JOE)

Shorts/Hedges: 6.7%
6.7% - Higher Medium-Term Rates (PFIX)

Cash: 18.0%

Disclaimer:  Nothing above represents a recommendation in any way, shape or form so please don’t even think of trying to take it that way.  For added clarity, while Our Man is invested in all of the securities mentioned that’s a terrible reason for anyone else to do so.  Our Man also holds some cash and a few other securities (of negligible value).  You should not buy any of these securities because Our Man has mentioned them, but should do your own work and decide what’s best for you given your own circumstances/risk tolerance/etc. 

Wednesday, September 21

Portfolio Update – September 2022

A small note on the current environment and market; economic conditions are uncertain and are being impacted by a cross-current of conflicting short and longer-term trends.  These include the consequences of the COVID-19 lockdowns and the subsequent multi-speed re-openings, the varying amounts of fiscal and monetary support provided during COVID, a decade+ of loose monetary policy, and rising inflation caused in part due to supply constraints and as a result underinvestment in commodities that have been exacerbated by the Ukraine/Russia conflict.  As a result, there has been contradictory signals across countries and within different parts of the economy and markets, meaning there are a broad range of outcomes for both growth and inflation and there is data to support almost any view.

Market wise this has led to increased uncertainty and higher rates, which have been bad for stocks and credit.  It has also seen a tendency for the market to extrapolate limited datasets to smooth the uncertainty but then have sharp reversals when contradictory data comes out.  This is further compounded by the uncertainty over the Fed’s preference function due to the absence of inflation over a prolonged period.  What matters most to the Fed between inflation, financial sector stability, economic growth/unemployment, currency strength/stability, etc. and by how much?   

OM’s market view can be summed up as 🤷 with reasonable cases able to be made for almost any stance.  However, Our Man made several changes to the portfolio in early September.  These largely reflected some structural things that OM has been pondering a while with the most notable being profit-taking in Shipping/Tankers and the elimination of the Funds bucket of the portfolio.

For a broader round-up, and thoughts on the various buckets, please see below:

Uranium: 25.4% NAV
Marginal change, through the reduction in the Paladin Energy (PALAF) position
Since its inception, the uranium position has primarily been about the supply deficit and how higher prices would be needed to encourage greater supply.  While there have been signs of changes in the perception of nuclear generation and potentially increased demand (i.e. new power plants) over the last couple of years, the conflict in the Ukraine and resulting energy issues have acted as a catalyst and brought things to the fore.   So far in 2022, we have seen the UK lay out a strategy to build 8 nuclear power plants, Japan signal a return to nuclear power, the US further support its nuclear plants including the Inflation Reduction Act and California trying to u-turn on closing the Diablo Canyon nuclear plant, not to mention a spate of plans for small-modular reactors in Europe.  This unexpected increase in future demand merely underscores the supply deficit and potential upside for uranium.


Shipping/Tankers: 12.6% NAV
Major change through sale of ~40% of the position across all names
The decision to trim the position was relatively easy as OM the Shipping/Tankers position is up 100%+ in 2022.   Tankers have been a significant beneficiaries of the energy market turmoil caused by the Ukraine/Russia crisis.  As simple example, pre-conflict a small Aframax tankers would fill-up in Russia make the short run to Europe (Rotterdam) and then head back to refill.   Due to the conflict this has become something akin to a couple of Aframaxes fill up in Russia, head out to sea to a ship-to-ship transfer to a larger VLCC, which then travels all the way to India or China (and back again), while other tankers service Europe with oil from the US or Middle East.  While this is a massive simplification it’s a good demonstration of how inefficient today’s reality is compared to pre-conflict!   Tankers are traveling a lot of extra miles and with fixed supply, unsurprisingly price is the variable that has changed.

So why keep the position (and in larger size vs. end-2021).  The tanker fleet is getting old and the order book is the lowest since 1996 so supply will be constrained for a long time.  Furthermore, while Tankers will be hurt if/when there’s a resolution in Ukraine and/or a recession, we’re also unlikely to revert to the pre-crisis trade routes.  This is especially the case when we look at where the oil is being exported (US oil production/exports near all time highs), where the refineries are and where the end consumers are.  

Given the above, OM leans to the view that the dislocation phase of the tanker trade is over, and the tanker market super cycle is finally beginning.  To reflect this, OM will move Tankers from dislocation to thematic at year-end.  The operating and financial leverage (and shady management) in the businesses means it won’t be smooth sailing and the position sizing reflects that and the thematic nature.   


Tin: 8.3% NAV
Minor change through increasing the position in Alphamin Resources (AFMJF)
The tin price has been very volatile over the last year; the current $21K price is down over 50% from its 2022 peak yet also near historical pre-COVID highs.  However, there’s been little change to the long-term outlook and the same demand-supply dynamics remain (https://ourmaninnyc.blogspot.com/2021/05/the-adventures-of-tintin.html).  OM took the opportunity to add to the Alphamin position; it is a largely debt free company that’s profitable at these prices as the lowest cost major producer, and it also has the largest untapped tin deposit adjacent to its existing mine.

 
International: India (6.7% NAV), Greece (3.5% NAV) and Brazil (2.2% NAV)
Minor change, exiting Vietnam but adding to Brazil
The position in Vietnam was exited – while Vietnam will benefit from supply chains being diversified from China, it’s more likely that many of these supply chains will be brought back to Americas than prior to COVID/Ukraine.

OM added to the position in Brazil – it’s a commodity rich country, with a cheap market, where interest rates (at 13.75%, from 2020 lows of 2.00%) are nearer the end of their cycle and with a pivotal election later this year.  It’s something OM continues to spend more time on, and if it’s going to be sized up meaningfully then OM will write in greater depth.   OM is additionally looking at Turkey, as a potential investment idea.

 
Equities/Funds: 5.6% NAV
Major change: exited all of the Funds’ positions (GVAL, CWS, ARTTX, and CAPD) and added marginally to JOE.
The biggest change to the portfolio was OM exited the Funds’ positions.  This is something that OM has been toying with for much of the last year – the positions were introduced a while ago to provide some consistent equity exposure as OM was chronically underinvested.  Today, OM has vastly more ideas, greater conviction in them, and a better understanding of his own investment style.  As such, there’s somewhat less need for the Funds positions and their capital will be allocated elsewhere.


Software/Tech (2.8% NAV) and Biotech (5.0% NAV)
No changes, though both Software and Biotech are approaching levels that are beginning to get attractive.


Carbon Credits: 0.0% NAV
OM exited the position in Global Carbon Credits (KRBN)
While OM is intrigued by the Carbon Credits space, in part because it would take a material event to push Europe and California away from believing their carbon cap-and-trade systems were part of a green solution.  Unfortunately, the Ukraine conflict and its impact on energy and electricity prices in Europe is such a material event.  With Europe representing 50-60% of KRBN and a debate beginning to emerge (https://www.euractiv.com/section/emissions-trading-scheme/news/eus-von-der-leyen-rebuffs-polish-call-to-suspend-carbon-market/) over pausing Europe’s cap-and-trade system, OM decided to exit the position.  However, you should expect to see it back in the portfolio in the future though it may be expressed differently (e.g. KCCA, which just reflects California’s Carbon Allowance system and is trading much more attractively).


Blockchain: 4.1% NAV
Marginal Change; exited Bitcoin (GBTC) but added to position in Overstock (OSTK)
OM was long overdue in exiting the Bitcoin investment, which turned a great profit into a healthy one.  The capital was largely reallocated to the position in Overstock (OSTK).  The broad outline of the case for OSTK is largely unchanged since OM’s original write-up.  The developments include the Founder/CEO departing and Overstock moving its blockchain assets into a vehicle that’s managed by a professional VC.   The most prominent of these blockchain investments – tZERO Group – is a blockchain based exchange that is regulated by the SEC and FINRA.  It received a strategic investment from Intercontinental Exchange (ICE, who run the New York Stock Exchange) earlier this year, which saw David Goone (a long-time ICE executive) become tZERO’s CEO.


Commodities: 1.5% NAV
No changes.  
OM is tentatively interested in increasing the size of this bucket, especially if recession fears increase and prices become more attractive.  After a decade of underinvestment there are supply/demand imbalances across many commodities, which are a core component of electric vehicles and the buildout of renewable energy.  However, OM is cognizant of the strong correlation of this bucket with a number of others in the portfolio (e.g. Uranium!), especially when markets are stressed or recession fears increase.


Shorts/Hedges: 5.7% NAV
Marginal change; added to OM’s position in PFIX
OM expects that future interest rates over the next 5-7 years will be higher than historical ones over the last 5-7 years.  For simplicity, PFIX invests ~50% of its capital into a US Treasury Bond (5-year) and uses the balance to purchase put options at 4.25% on the 20-year rate, expiring in May 2028.  In essence, with the value of the Treasury Bond providing a floor for PFIX should OM be wrong, the option provides substantial upside should medium term rates move beyond 4.25%.


Cash: 16.8% NAV
As a result of the portfolio changes, especially the liquidation of the Funds and reduction in Shipping/Tankers, OM is holding substantially more cash.  This cash level reflects OM’s view of the uncertainty in the economy and markets but expect OM to slowly start to invest it as either this fades or prices become more attractive.


Disclaimer:  Nothing above represents a recommendation in any way, shape or form so please don’t even think of trying to take it that way.  For added clarity, while Our Man is invested in all of the securities mentioned that’s a terrible reason for anyone else to do so.  Our Man also holds some cash and a few other securities (of negligible value).  You should not buy any of these securities because Our Man has mentioned them, but should do your own work and decide what’s best for you given your own circumstances/risk tolerance/etc. 

Saturday, September 10

Things from my Newsblur; 2022 Part 2

Hopefully, you’ve all had a fine summer – here are some interesting articles that piqued OM’s interest over the break!
 
With Christmas on the horizon, OM like many other parents is turning his thought to what to buy the kids (Mrs. OM has so far vetoed coal, laundry bags, and Clorox wipes!).   What better time to read about Al Kahn – whose made and lost (and made again) fortunes – and is behind toys such as Pokemon, Yu-Gi-Oh! And Cabbage Patch kids!
(Scott Eden, Inc.)


Parenting is hard, and surprisingly the books on it contain little science or even insight from wise moms!   Eric Barker looks at the lessons from Michealeen Doucleff’s book (“Hunt, Gather, Parent: What Ancient Cultures Can Teach Us About the Lost Art of Raising Happy, Helpful Little Humans.”) drawn from her time spent with the Maya in Mexico, the Inuit in the Arctic, and Hadzabe near the Serengeti.   OM found the suggestions interesting and is trying to implement some of them into our daily lives!
(Eric Barker, Barking Up the Wrong Tree)

For those football fans amongst us, the shenanigans at Barcelona over the last 12-18 months have been quite something to behold!   The Generalist has a great look at the business-side of Barcelona, and how it all went wrong including their spectacular profligacy and how they’re trying to fix those problems.
(Mario Gabriele, The Generalist)


The inability to define, let alone effectively research or treat long Covid continues to be a glaring weakness in the medical response.  Unfortunately, post-pandemic/epidemic and post-viral ailments are consistently under-researched with few historical lessons learned.
(Zeynep Tufekci, The Insight)


Now that it’s had its first institutional blow-up, I guess we can count crypto as a real asset class.  In a tale as old as finance Jen Wieczner goes inside the collapse of Three Arrows, run by Su Zhu and Kyle Davies.  The two-Ivy League-educated and Wall Street-trained investors blew up their multi-billion-dollar firm and took down a large part of the crypto industry with them.   Unsurprisingly it involves hubris, non-existent risk management and a lot of leverage.
(Jen Wieczner, both NY Mag)


Monday, July 25

2022: Second Quarter Update

Portfolio Update
- Uranium:  OM made a small tweak to his Uranium exposure, slightly reducing the broader exposure to Uranium Miners (URNM) and replacing it with NuScale Power Corp (SMR).  Nuscale is a leading designer of small modular nuclear reactors.

Performance and Review
After an exceptional five+ months to start 2022, OM’s portfolio came rudely back to earth during the final three weeks of June.  OM’s portfolio fell by -19.4% during the quarter, but three-quarters of that loss came in the final three weeks of June.   This resulted in the portfolio under performing both the S&P 500 Total Return (-16.1%) and MSCI World (-14.4%) for the quarter.  The strong start to the year, means that OM’s portfolio (-15.8%) is still ahead of those equity indices year-to-date - S&P 500 TR (-20.0%) and MSCI World (-18.5%)

Second Quarter Attribution
 

Before we look at the myriad of ways OM managed to lose money in Q2, let’s briefly touch on what bucked the trend.  Unsurprisingly, the ‘short/hedge’ position in PFIX (+35 bps) – a play on higher medium term interest rates - was profitable as the Fed finally began raising rates and investors began to consider whether inflation was cyclical or structural.  The more that inflation proves to be structural, the more likely we see higher medium-term rates.   Elsewhere, OM profited from two Energy-adjacent positions - Shipping/Tankers (+274 bps) and the holding in TPL.   Shipping/Tankers were a beneficiary of the Ukrainian crisis and the subsequent impact of the transport of crude oil and petroleum products.   At the simplest level, Russian crude is going to India/China rather than Europe and Middle Eastern crude is going to Europe – inefficient trade routes resulting in greater ton-miles and demand for tankers.  Finally, OM’s exposure to Carbon Credits (+12bps) gained despite all the issues around high energy and electricity prices.  OMs exposure is primarily to the EU and California carbon credit markets where Green/ESG policies are a shibboleth, and the least likely to be abandoned even in times of stress.

The losses were broadly driven by some combination of three things:
i.    Stocks were down.
ii.    That was a choice; short-term pain for (expected) long-term gain.
iii.    That was foolish.

Unsurprisingly, with global markets heavily falling most of Our Man’s stocks headed in the same direction; Tech/4th Industrial Revolution (-59bps), Biotech (-64bps), Funds (-156bps) and the position in JOE (together with TPL, forming Idiosyncratic -107bps).  Within this group, the longer duration names (Tech/Biotech) and housing-related (JOE) fell more heavily reflecting the weakness of these sectors of the market, while some of the Funds held up slightly better.

The two other large risks that OM has chosen to take are commodity risk and short US dollar risk.  The two are of course related, with commodity positions containing an implicit short-dollar relative position.  With the US dollar continuing to strengthen during the quarter it was a headwind for OM’s non-US exposure; Brazil (-10bps), Vietnam (-76bps), India (-72bps), Greece (-59bps) and the Cambria Global Value ETF (GVAL, within Funds) all lagged.  The first half of the year largely saw commodities rise, despite the dollar increasing.  That changed abruptly in early June after the market moved from focusing on inflation to fearing recession, and its potential negative impact on commodity demand.  The result was a sharp pullback across the commodity complex, and an even larger one in commodity related equities.  OM’s positions in Uranium (-837bps), Tin (-311bps) and Commodities/Mining (-17bps) were hurt by this move.  While both Uranium and Tin pulled back the long-term fundamentals of both continue to look good and the volatility comes with the space.  With OM’s limited ability to trade the portfolio, position sizing is key - these large quarterly losses were within OM’s risk tolerance for the positions.  

The case for nuclear continues to develop as the challenges of energy transition from fossil fuels, and the far longer timeline it will require, become clearer to even politicians.  The West is thinking about building new reactors (led by the UK), postponing closures (California) and restarting (Japan) existing ones, as well as considering the security of its uranium supply (e.g. US establishing Strategic Uranium Reserve).  These have had an impact on pricing higher up the nuclear fuel chain (SWU prices) as well as long-term contracting prices which are up 50% from last year.

OM believes the case for Tin is even cleaner, with the small changes since OM's last major update all further enhancing the case.  As the rest of the market begins to run out of supply, Alphamin Resources (AFMJF) has progressed in 2022 from not only being the lowest cost producer to also being the one with the largest & most attractive undeveloped resource.  The company suffered in Q2 after considering its strategic options but not finding a deal to its liking, coupled with a substantial fall in the price of tin.   OM was delighted (and took the opportunity to add some in Q3) – the company is debt free and profitable at today’s tin prices, meaning it can fund its development internally.  It is by some distance the premier asset in the most strategic metal.  If the West has learned anything from the Russia/Ukraine crisis then the large Western mining companies should be potential acquirers, though probability suggest that it will eventually be bought by the Chinese.   Hopefully, that day is still a year or two away allowing more of the value to accrete to existing shareholders rather than the eventual acquirer.

Finally, OM managed to throw away a bunch of performance; the crypto positions in GBTC and ETHE cost the majority of the Blockchain’s (-495bps) loss.  Why throw away?  Well, when OM talked about the position last he made clear the aim was to reduce the size and eventually exit during 2021.  Sadly, having a plan is great but failing to execute is not – had he heeded his own advice and exited at the end of 2021, the portfolio would have saved ~500bps.  There’s no great excuse (but lots of poor ones) for why he did not – hence that was (at best) foolish!   The size of the drops in GBTC/ETHE were so large and dramatic that OM is being judicious about when to exit them, especially given their small size.  However, unlike previously – the position will definitely be sold by 2022-end if not well well before.  While the crypto positions would still be healthily profitable (500bps+) even if the existing GBTC/ETHE holdings went to zero, this is not a private equity portfolio; the sting of 2022’s profit foolishly thrown away, far outweighs the 25%+ IRR even in that worst case scenario.

Portfolio (as at 06/30/22 - all delta and leverage adjusted, as appropriate)
Dislocations: 43.6%
23.5% - Uranium (URNM, CCJ, NXE, PALAF, DNN, BNNLF, URG and SMR)
16.0% - Shipping/Tankers (STNG, INSW, EURN, TNK and DHT)
4.0% - Greece (GREK & ALBKY)

Thematic: 34.9%
7.3% - Tin (AFMJF, MLXEF and SBWFF)
6.8% - India (IBN, INDA and SMIN)
5.3% - Biotech: 4th Industrial Revolution (IBB & XLB)
4.1% - Blockchain/Crypto (GBTC, ETHE, and OSTK)
3.2% - Tech: 4th Industrial Revolution (JD & WCLD)
3.1% - Vietnam (VNM)
2.7% - Carbon Credits (KRBN)
1.9% - Commodities/Mining (FLMMF)
0.4% - Brazil (EWZ)

Technical: 0.0%

Idiosyncratic: 16.3%
11.1% - Funds (ARTTX, CWS, GVAL, and CAPE)
5.2% - Equities (TPL & JOE)

Shorts/Hedges: 3.7%
3.7% - Higher Medium-Term Rates (PFIX)

Cash: 1.5%

Disclaimer:  Nothing above represents a recommendation in any way, shape or form so please don’t even think of trying to take it that way.  For added clarity, while Our Man is invested in all of the securities mentioned that’s a terrible reason for anyone else to do so.  Our Man also holds some cash and a few other securities (of negligible value).  You should not buy any of these securities because Our Man has mentioned them, but should do your own work and decide what’s best for you given your own circumstances/risk tolerance/etc.  


Friday, July 1

Things from my Newsblur; 2022 Part 1

OM has been very delinquent in updating the blog during a busy first half of 2022 - hopefully, this is the start of a little more frequent posting as we head into the second half of the year!  To ease us back into the flow here are some light reads and videos from the last 12mos that you might find interesting - especially if you have kids!


Here’s How to Understand What a “95% Accurate” Test Is Actually Telling You
Pretend you’re a doctor; You’re using a new test for Disease X, which afflicts 1 out of every 1,000 adults. The new test has perfect “sensitivity,” i.e. it detects every single true positive case of Disease X. It also has a false positive rate of 5%. Your last patient doesn’t have obvious symptoms, but you just got their positive test result. What is the chance that they actually have Disease X?”

If you answered ~2%, you’re shockingly good at mental math or you stopped, thought about it and used a pen/paper.  If you didn’t answer 2% (and especially if you answered 95%) then please read the article.  (David Epstein, Range Widely)


Why should we go to Mars?
With everything stressful, sad and concerning going on in the world, here’s something rather more hopeful.  NASA’s Perseverance landed on Mars in 2021.  Why does that matter?   Let Dr. Robert Zurbin of the Mars Society spend 5 minutes telling you why - it’s the real science, the challenge, and the future!  
(Dr. Robert Zurbin, YouTube) 


How to Outrun a Dinosaur
If you have kids of a certain age, this is the kind of stuff that’s helpful to know; Velociraptrors are vastly overrated by Jurassic World, juvenile T-Rex’s are not!
(Cody Cassidy, Wired)


How to Kick a$$ at your first job…any maybe second
OM was recently asked to give some advice to a couple of college-aged interns by a friend; Jackie DiMonte does it far better.
(Jackie DiMonte, Day by Jay)


10 easy ways you can tell for yourself that the Earth is not flat
It’s nearly the midterm election season in the US – politicians will say stupid things (including being utterly oblivious to what a “95% Accurate” test means).  Here’s one way even a child can disprove the stupidest thing you’ll probably hear.
(Moriel Schottlender, Popular Science)


How a Portuguese Fishing Village Tamed a 100ft wave
OM has never surfed, but one of the joys of last summer was watching “100 Foot Wave” with his kids and the various random discussions that followed each episode.  For those who don’t have HBO/HBO Max, this article tells the tale of Nazare in Portugal, and its local council and surfer Robert McNamara who have made it the epicenter of big wave surfing!
(Elly Earls)


Rock Skip Robot – The Perfect Science of Rock Skipping
If you’ve ever wanted to impress someone with your rock skipping abilities, then Mark Rober has some tips for you.  If you’ve ever wanted your kids to watch something interesting/useful then OM highly recommends Mark Rober’s YouTube channel.
(Mark Rober, YouTube)


Who’s Afraid of Elemental Power
OM believes that nuclear will be the bridge between fossil fuels and renewables, and that the transition will take longer than people expect.  It’s part of the reason he has a BIG Uranium position!  Well, here’s some of the arguments for nuclear and a rebrand to make it less…scary.
(Harry Stevens, Washington Post)