May 18, 2012

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Investment Update On Asia Ex Japan Equities

ASEAN Markets Investment

ASEAN Markets Investment

As we head into the second quarter of 2012, we continue to target companies which we believe are well positioned to benefit from rising domestic demand and infrastructure development across the region. [Read more...]

Why the shares are neglected

Why Chinese Shares are Neglected

Why Chinese Shares are Neglected


International investors generally have very low holdings of Chinese stocks.

One reason is that the huge domestic market is largely closed to foreign investors, and completely closed to individual investors. The only avenues open to us are shares of Chinese companies listed outside the country (mainly in Hong Kong), depositary receipts of such firms listed overseas, or foreign multinationals whose profits are geared to business with China. [Read more...]

Bad Guys Check-list

CHECK-LIST FOR THE BAD GUYS

China Investment

China Investment

If you are worried about investing in Chinese companies because of the risks of corporate crime, here are things to look out for, according to Violet Ho, Greater China MD of global risk consulting company Kroll:

  • The first warning sign would be familiar to investors around the world: If it is too good to be true, then it probably is. Look for margins well above industry norms, rapid asset acquisitions after listing, related-party transactions.
  • Most common fraud is using shell companies to process deals (often set up by key persons’ family members or friends). The shell company is injected into the supply chain and used to create bogus revenues. This is very easy to fake, especially with services, as only people in the management team can say if they actually received services.
  • While all sectors may contain companies which commit fraud, those where the supply chain has multiple entry points, particularly where the upstream is farmers or plantations, are most prone. A large supplier base transacting without formal contracts or receipts means you cannot cross-check with reported financials and thus risk increases. This is also true for companies where revenue comes from sales of things you cannot see (virtual businesses).
  • Don’t trust all-clears by auditors. If the fraud is perpetrated through collusion of multiple parties, both inside and outside the organization, it will be very hard for the auditor to detect.
  • Compare statutory government filings with public disclosures. It is common practice for Chinese companies to under-report revenue to the local government by booking expenses in special ways to avoid taxes. This indicates they are corrupt on some level. And there’s the risk they get found out.

Finally, I cherish this insight by FT commentator John Plender on accounting practice in Chinese business. He says family entrepreneurs tend to keep four sets of books:

  • One for shareholders (lousy profits);
  • One for the tax man (just over break-even);
  • One for the bank providing credit (great profits);
  • One for themselves (reality).

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Thirdly, what matters to most investors is capital growth. Historic share prices are a matter of public record, so cannot be manipulated. If corruption has been a problem, it means capital growth would have been higher without it. But I would not complain about the average five-year share price increase for those same Hong Kong-listed firms — 164 per cent.

Moving beyond the negatives, which are far less than they are often said to be, what should we now expect?

  • Official policy is likely to continue moving cautiously towards easing.

This is a politically difficult time because of the periodic mass changeover in important government positions throughout the country. Retiring officials still in power won’t want to make the mistake of easing up too soon on squeezing property speculation and damping down inflation. On the other hand, they wouldn’t want to see too much of a slowdown, which would cost them serious loss of reputation.

So… steady as she goes, with the outgoing leadership probably declaring “victory” in the second or third quarters, ahead of the October changeover.

  • If there is an economic setback, China “has plenty of ammunition in its monetary policy arsenal… to deploy,” says former chairman of Morgan Stanley Asia Stephen Roach.
  • With valuations now very attractive — an average forecast earnings-per-share ratio of not much above nine times – and a reduced downside risk to earnings growth, Deutsche Bank says it has “a very positive outlook for China’s equity markets.”

Of course, there is historic evidence that strong investment returns don’t correlate with strong economic growth. But rules based on history have a way of collapsing the moment they become well-known and investors base their decisions on them.

In this difficult new world of exploding public debt, what Roach describes as “untested and dubious” central bank policies, and mature economies struggling with poor growth and growing political disaffection, it surely makes sense to choose an economy growing at 8 per cent a year above those struggling to achieve 2 per cent? With retail sales, even in a slowdown, growing at 14 per cent a year? And to invest in companies whose earnings have been growing strongly, while most of those listed in the West haven’t done better than recover lost ground?

CopyRight – OnTarget 2012 by Martin Spring

Metals or Paper for Long-Term Asset Value

Gold Investment

Gold Investment

Gold has made idiots of the Swiss, French, Dutch, Portuguese and British central bankers, who sold off 2,671 tons of their holdings at low prices between 2000 and 2009. And of mainstream fund managers who have shunned the asset for decades, misquoting economist John Maynard Keynes as dismissing it as “a barbarous relic” (he was writing in 1924 about the gold standard, not about gold itself). [Read more...]

Green Fuels, Unpopular

Green Fuels: Costly, Unpopular

Green Fuels: Costly, Unpopular

Green Fuels: Costly, Unpopular

Some interesting points from an American investment banker specializing in the energy sector, Allen Brooks… [Read more...]

How to invest for deflation, then inflation

How to invest for deflation, then inflation

How to invest for deflation, then inflation

This article continues on from – Debt Crisis Explosion: Still a Long Way Off

Although Mauldin’s book is most informative, even entertaining, it ends up being unsatisfying in two ways. [Read more...]

Good Year for Investors

Good Year for Investors

Good Year for Investors

It Should Be a Good Year for Investors

It is important to have a game plan that shapes our investment tactics – to move forward beyond the short-term volatility of the markets, reduce the risk of emotion-driven wrong decisions, and make it easier to ignore the turbulence. [Read more...]

Investing in Equities for Income

Investing in Equities for Income

Investing in Equities for Income

The fear pervading investment markets has heightened interest in high-yield stocks. There is much historical evidence that the shares of companies that pay good, stable dividends carry less risk and even deliver better long-term total returns than those focused on capital growth. [Read more...]

Why Its Time Again to Buy into Asia

Crisis provides Opportunities

Crisis provides Opportunities

Crises offer the best opportunities for investors, although we need nerves of steel to seize those opportunities.

You might have expected all the bad news from Japan and the Mideast to clobber Asian stock markets. But they have done nothing of the sort.

After a moderate correction, the markets as a whole remain in an uptrend. The bourse you would expect to be hit the hardest, Japan, plunged immediately after the tsunami, but has already recovered half the ground lost and is now well above levels seen last year. [Read more...]

The Key to Good Returns is Good Dividends

The Key to Good Returns is Good Dividends

 

Good Returns is Good Dividends

Good Returns is Good Dividends

Historically, income from dividends and growth in those payments have accounted for almost all the long-term return to investors.

In the US, over the period from 1871 to 2009, dividends accounted for nearly 90 per cent of the return to investors.

In various European countries, since 1970 dividend payments and dividend growth have accounted for between 80 and 100 per cent of investors’ returns.

“In periods when stock prices are falling, dividends provide a positive offset to the negative returns from continuing to hold on to shares,” says Allen Brooks, MD of energy investment bankers PPHB.

“Dividends, and especially dividend increases, represent positive statements by managers about the health and outlook for their companies.”

They are also one measure of the soundness of a company. Reported earnings can be manipulated using favourable accounting assumptions. Dividends cannot – they are cash paid out.

Of course, dividends aren’t everything. They may be financed out of extra borrowing (as BP is now doing) in anticipation of profits recovery, but that is something that makes me very uncomfortable.

And dividends may be reduced or not paid at all, so there is more cash available to management to finance expansion. Nothing wrong with that, in a growth business – providing you’re satisfied that money you would otherwise be able to invest yourself is being better invested by the managers.

CopyRight – OnTarget March 2011 by Martin Spring