Wednesday 6 February 2019

The Great Walls of Mexico and China & Other Updates


The Great Walls of Mexico and China

US government shutdown

The US Government shutdown resulted from the non-passage of the bill to fund the building of the wall along the Mexican border to fulfil pre-election promise by president Trump. While the demand for the funds for building the wall was US$ 5.7 billion, the estimated cost of the US shutdown has been $11 billion so far.

Readers interested in further details may read the article through the link given below: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2018%E2%80%9319_United_States_federal_government_shutdown

According to some official estimates, a government shutdown shaves off 0.1% from the GDP every two weeks.

Tariff war between USA and China

The trade tariffs imposed by the US on China have invited a similar counter action from the Chinese authorities. The impact of tariffs on an exporting country can theoretically be neutralised by devaluation of the currency of the exporting country, however, imposing tariffs on the imports of goods from the US by China is a more effective retaliatory counter measure.

A slowdown in China is evident, as seen from the released Chinese trade data. Whether this slowdown has resulted from the slower exports to the US due to imposition of tariffs or a slowdown in the US consumption is something that cannot be conclusively inferred, despite whatever may get reported by the media.

US Fed interest rates

In the recently concluded Federal Reserve policy meet, the chairperson Jerome Powell announced Fed’s patience in hiking interest rates, considering the general slowdown in USA. The interest rates remain untouched in the 2.25% to 2.50% range.

ECB Monetary Policy

In the meeting of the European Central Bankers held on January 24, 2019, president Draghi announced no hike of interest rates until mid-2020, thereby inviting concerns about the growth of the Eurozone. He however skilfully set to rest the concerns by justifying the policy decision by citing events such as trade war between USA and China, Brexit and certain pockets of Eurozone experiencing slowdown rather than being influenced by any other major internal economic event of significant consequence.

Union Budget 2019-20

On the home turf, pre-budget debates amongst the economic pundits and media personnel predominantly revolved around two key concerns, viz., budget deficit exceeding the target of 3.3% as well as failure to stick to disinvestment targets of the PSUs.

However, post budget, the budget was unanimously hailed by global pundits and Indian industry veterans as growth and consumption oriented with inclusion of farm, animal husbandry, rural and real estate sectors as well as the burgeoning middle class and entry level salaried workforce to be the anticipated engines and drivers of growth in the future.

RBI’s upcoming monetary announcement on February 7

Considering stable interest rate policies of Fed and ECB, it is unlikely that RBI will tamper with the interest rates, despite benign food and fuel inflation.

Other Updates

World Indices
Despite intermediate upswings, the global stock indices as mentioned in my previous post dated October 18, 2018, continue to remain in primary downtrend.

The world stock indices (US and Indian) have an extremely low probability of a bounce back above the previously attained levels.

Crude Oil (WTI) and USDINR

After touching sub $50 per barrel levels, WTI crude oil may rise and find resistance at two levels, viz., $59-60 and subsequently in the $69-70 zone in the near term (3-4 months) and may subsequently drift sideways to downwards from there. Consequently, USDINR is likely to retest the levels of Rs.74.00-74.50/USD within next few months and the INR will get stronger subsequently.

Apple and Amazon

Apple and Amazon are two legendry stocks to have touched the USD 1 trillion mark, for a very brief duration and intra-day, respectively and which then subsequently fell flat.

A rock solid stock/ institution like Apple, renowned for its marquee flagship product iPhone (a dream product of the masses), which saw some of the most respectable companies, their divisions or a few of their products in global leadership positions, go belly up, almost a decade back (since its launch in 2007), itself got challenged by a clutch of small Chinese rivals on accounts of pricing, features and aesthetics, proving the versatility and superiority of open source (android) over iOS, leading to a drop in the number of shipments of Apple products across the world and a consequent drop in its share price, eroding almost 30% of its shareholders' wealth from the peak achieved.

Apple’s recent public statement, “There is life beyond iPhone,” needs to be proven by the company in the near term.

Given below is the three monthly candlestick chart of Apple indicating the dent that the stock has received in its market price.


Amazon and Bitcoin

Given below are three candlestick charts:
1.    The first two charts show comparison between Amazon’s quarterly candlestick chart and Bitcoin’s weekly candlestick chart.
2.    The third chart is the weekly candlestick chart of Bitcoin, till date, post-crash.




While it will not be prudent to infer any conclusions because there is no sure shot pattern as to how a stock may behave, such a comparison as above can perhaps give some reference as to how momentum stocks and some speculative charts behave (Bitcoin has no underlying assets).

A recent quarter page news in a local business newspaper gives reference of non-triggering of anti-trust provisions against Amazon based on accumulated losses and because of a dominant complex structure which leads to co-opting of rivals rather than driving them away.

This serves as food for thought for the Indian authorities as well so as to consider redefining a dominant enterprise not just on the basis of share of profits or market share in the industry but by introduction of newer criteria, a few of which amongst many could possibly be, the size of assets, enterprise value, ability to raise Super Uber capital or a few others which can stifle competition under the garb of long term view/ investment, value/ beneficial for customers etc.

The next wave of fall in the US indices may be led by Apple and Amazon duo, which have a very high weightage in the index – Nasdaq 100.

Best wishes for the New Year, albeit a bit delayed.

For more charts the author can be contacted at: riskadvisory@outlook.com.


DISCLAIMER:

These extracts from my trading worksheets/books are for the purpose of education only. Any advice contained therein is provided for the general information of readers and does not have regard to any particular person's investment objectives, financial situation or needs and must not be construed as an advice to buy, hold and sell or otherwise deal/ trade in commodities, currencies, indices, securities or other forms of investments. Accordingly, no reader should act on the basis of any information contained therein without consulting a suitably qualified financial advisor in the first place.