Not Doom and Gloom – But Just Cautious…

You wouldn’t know it on the basis of the strong US market action January 26, but it wasn’t all quiet in overnight trading. Local markets in China (FXI) took another hit, with Shanghai and Shenzhen exchanges experiencing declines to the magnitude of 6%-7%+ on the session. Though some optimistically dismiss the local China markets as irrelevant, the implications on weakened Chinese banks, other Asian nations via trade, and interconnected financial institutions from Standard Charted to HSBC (HSBC) and even Citigroup (C) are material, in our view, and we’re paying close attention. Some may even say that China stocks represent less than 15% of household financial assets in the country — certainly not enough to cause a global calamity… Or is … Read more

Moody’s Puts Oil & Gas and Mining Sectors on Review

By Kris Rosemann On January 22, Moody’s placed 120 oil and gas companies (XLE) from across the globe on review for a credit rating downgrade. The list ranges from massive global producers such as Royal Dutch Shell (RDS.A, RDS.B) and Total (TOT) to nearly 70 US exploration and production and services (“E&P”) companies. It also includes 55 mining companies (XLB) that have been punished by the recent rout in commodity prices. Alcoa (AA), Rio Tinto (RIO) and Vale (VALE) are a few notables that made the list for a potential downgrade. The news is not completely unexpected, however, and may likely be a response to several executive teams pointing to legacy (outdated) counterparty/customer ratings as reasons to not be concerned … Read more

Seeking to De-risk the Newsletter Portfolios

There’s never a good reason to panic in investing, but the 276-point slide in the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DIA) January 4, the worst start to a year since the credit crisis in 2008, reminded us why we hold more than a 30% cash position in both newsletter portfolios at the moment: with a US stock market still near all-time highs, we like having ample capital available to scoop up bargains as stocks inevitably give back some of their gains. The question for us is not whether the broader US stock market will decline from here but whether such a decline will be 10%, 20% or more. After all, the S&P 500 (SPY) has essentially tripled from the March 2009 … Read more

Creditor Risk Aversion Rises Considerably in Energy, Metals & Mining Sectors

Not all is well with commodity producers. Moody’s (MCO) has been very quick to point out that “the latest plunge by base metals prices and the renewed slide (in) crude oil prices are more ominous for corporate credit than was the earlier plummet by crude oil prices amid relatively steady industrial metals prices.” The credit rating agency’s industrial metals price index has dropped more than 10% in the past 20 days ending July 9, reaching levels not seen since the depths of the Financial Crisis in 2009. Moody’s industrial metals price index has fallen an incredible 25% since the same time stamp last year, something we’ve been witnessing anecdotally. The International Energy Agency recently warned that the bottom in crude oil … Read more