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Weekend Reading 11-12 February 2017

Global Macro / Markets / Investing: The world’s biggest gamblers – The Economist Why Value Investors Need “Mental Toughness” – Value Idea World’s Biggest FX Trader Says Trump Currency Talk Is ‘Hogwash’ – Bloomberg Olive Oil Prices Are Going Through the Roof – Bloomberg Bond trading platform boom a challenge for regulators, says IOSCO – Trade News Carbon compromise? – The

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Macro Afternoon

by Chris Becker So as Trump spits the dummy, stocks boomed across Asia, mainly due to increase Chinese exports, but also the growing sense of a free for all on Wall Street. This is leading to a lot more risk taking as bonds are dumped left, right and centre and stocks are bid again after

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Specufestors are highly sensitive to rising mortgage rates

By Martin North, cross-posted from the Digital Finance Analytics Blog: Having looked at changes in investment loan supply, and the motivations of the rising number portfolio property investors, today we use updated data from our rolling household surveys to look at how property investors are positioned should mortgage rates rise. In fact, for many, rates

3

Big Iron firms again

Dalian is roughly flat today after overnight gains: Big Iron is modestly up too though FMG’s possible double top still lurks: Big Gas is rebounding after OPEC minister comments supported oil: Big Gold is off. Not sure it can get much further unless Donald does something more stupid: Big Debt continues its sneaky bull market.

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NZ Government is failing on housing supply

By Leith van Onselen In the lead-up to September’s General Election, pressure continues to build on the incumbent National Government of New Zealand around the issue of housing affordability. Yesterday, Interest.co.nz’s David Hargreaves penned a stinging critique of National’s promise to boost housing supply in Auckland, which has fallen way below demand: This is a

2

Goldman: Stay long USD

From Goldman: Markets are worrying over the “true” intentions of the new administration. Concern that President Trump is mercantilist and may talk down the Dollar has seen the Dollar fall notably below the 2-year rate differential, as markets have priced a protectionist risk premium. Our last FX Views argued that this decoupling is unlikely to

22

RBA sees futureboom!

From Bubble-o-Phil today: To this: This year’s growth has been shredded but worry not, the RBA always has a future boom at hand and despite a poor H1 this year, H2 is going to rocket to deliver an unchanged result of 3%. How? Overall, the forecasts for year-ended GDP growth are lower over the next

0

New home finance stays on high plateau

By Leith van Onselen Today’s housing finance data for December posted a 0.9% rise in the number of new home finance commitments (both construction and new), although commitments were down by 0.5% over the year: Looking at the state-by-state breakdown, which is presented below on a rolling annual basis since it is not seasonally adjusted,

5

IMF: Australian housing and debt risks remain

By Leith van Onselen The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has concluded its 2016 Article IV Consultation with Australia, issuing the following warning about Australia’s housing and debt risks: By some metrics, housing market conditions have cooled, in tandem with intensified prudential and regulatory steps, but risks related to house price and debt levels remain. In

21

The carnage in retail

As shrinkflation spreads the retailers tumble, via UBS: Discretionary retail news illustrates pressure in the sector The specialty apparel retail environment is showing signs of strain. In the past week, Rhodes and Beckett, Herringbone, David Lawrence and Marcs have entered Voluntary Administration. Together they represent 92 stores (excluding concessions). They join Payless shoes, Pumpkin Patch

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It’s time for a national debate on private health insurance

By Leith van Onselen Back in November, The Guardian published an interesting article arguing that Australia’s private health insurance system is broken and should be scrapped in its current form and replaced by a single health insurer: This drastic assessment has been prompted by numerous reports from government, consumer groups and peak health bodies over

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Government to axe $9 billion housing affordability scheme

By Leith van Onselen It’s official. After months of speculation, the Turnbull Government will axe the National Housing Affordability Agreement (NHAG) in the upcoming Budget. From The Australian: The $9 billion National Housing Affordability Agreement is set to be axed in the May budget following a report revealing that the states and territories had failed

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Macro Morning

By Chris Becker  The USD surged overnight bringing US and European stocks along for the ride as initial weekly jobless claims undershot significantly alongside some strong earnings. In Europe the script of good earnings and subsiding political risks (and no Tweets from the Twit-in-Chief – just another promise of tax cuts) was followed even as

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Introducing Tim Fuller, super guy and new MB blogger

Find below the first post by Tim Fuller, MB’s new super blogger and planning specialist at the MB Fund. Tim found MacroBusiness after a stint in the Pilbara and liked what he read. He has since jumped from constructing gas plants to constructing no nonsense financial advice for retail and sophisticated investors. Having spent a

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Loony Right unites as Insufferable Left falls silent

Finally an issue that can bring together the rabble that is Australia’s Right wing political economy. They all hate climate change and energy transformation. The Australian loves the lie: Malcolm Turnbull has blasted Labor’s renewable energy “horror show” by seizing on blackouts in South Australia to warn of out­ages across the country under the “insanity” of

1

Phil Lowe contradicts himself on company tax cuts

By Leith van Onselen Cognitive dissonance clearly runs riot inside RBA Governor, Phil Lowe’s, head. In his speech last night to global investors attending the A50 Australian Economic Forum in Sydney, Lowe told the audience that Australia has to lower corporate taxes to attract more foreign investment while simultaneously striving to balance the Budget: The

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What caused the SA blackout?

There is a lot of confusion and an unconscionable amount of politics swirling around the east coast power crisis today so I’ve tapped my sources to get some facts straight. Here’s what happened in SA: the heat wave rolling across the east is testing the grid in every state; NSW will be threatened today, coal

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Expect a massive first home buyer bribe in this year’s Budget

By Leith van Onselen Today, I want to explain why I expect the Turnbull Government to unleash some kind of first home buyer (FHB) stimulus in the guise of “housing affordability” in the upcoming May Federal Budget. 1. We have already received some hints: Last month, Michael Sukkar, whose responsibilities include housing affordability, refused to

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Mining does not give a $%@^ about Australia

I like mining. It’s a speculative game and takes a particular chutzpah to succeed. Sadly that same bravado translates into an absolute disaster at the policy level for the country in which it takes place. Witness yesterday. On one single day we had RIO announcing a handsome new profit complete with all sorts of capital