Apologies for the lateness of this report, we are still getting reporting systems ironed out with our portfolio provider – you will be hearing from us much earlier for the next monthly report. While some of the key trends that we are positioning the portfolio for moved against us last month (bonds and the Australian
Primary Section
Latest posts
Weekend Reading 30 September to 1 October 2017
Global Macro / Markets / Investing: ProShares files for bitcoin ETF, and one to bet against it – CNBC Bitcoin Is the Market’s Favorite Buzzword – Bloomberg Deficits Do Matter, But Not the Way You Think – Roosevelt Institute OTC Derivatives Markets Thriving Thanks To Financial Regulation – Value Walk Investors Seemingly Learned Nothing From
A Big Australia and the problem of #FakeInvestment: A note for Andrew Leigh
Cross-posted from The Glass Pyramid: Macrobusiness reported the latest ABS release on demographics: “…….The ABS released its Australian demographic statistics for the March quarter of 2017, which revealed that Australia’s overall population growth rate has accelerated led by unprecedented growth in Victoria, which has once again obliterated records. According to the ABS, Australia’s population rose
Aussie internet data usage skyrockets
By Leith van Onselen The ABS today released its half-yearly Internet Activity report, which reported near exponential growth in data usage despite only moderate (2.1%) annual growth in internet subscribers: The total volume of data downloaded in the three months ended 30 June 2017 was 3.0 million Terabytes (or 3.0 Exabytes). This is a 15.8%
Aussie households are spending more to live and learn
By Leith van Onselen Earlier this month, the ABS released its Household Expenditure Survey for 2015-16, which revealed that Australian households are spending more on basics: Today, the ABS released further analysis of its Household Expenditure Survey and has revealed that spending on education, household services and childcare is taking-up more of household’s budgets: “In
Housing credit growth softened in August
By Leith van Onselen The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) has released its private sector credit aggregates data for the month of August 2017: A chart showing the long-run breakdown in the components is provided below: Personal credit growth (-0.2% MoM; -0.3% QoQ; -1.1% YoY) is still in the gutter, whereas business credit growth (0.5%
UBS: Sydney at risk of housing bubble
By Leith van Onselen UBS has released its Global Real Estate Bubble Index, which places Sydney among a small group of global cities at risk of a housing bubble: In Munich, Toronto, Amsterdam, Sydney and Hong Kong, prices rose more than 10% in the last year alone. Annual price-increase rates of 10% correspond to a
WA to receive bigger GST slice
By Leith van Onselen The Commonwealth Grants Commission has backed new plans to deliver a greater slice of GST revenue back to Western Australia via an increase in iron ore royalties. From The West Australian: In an interim decision welcomed by Treasurer Ben Wyatt as a “first good step”, the commission conceded that the way
Mortgage stress up despite falling rates
From Roy Morgan Research: New research from Roy Morgan shows that mortgage stress has increased to 17.3% of borrowers in July, an increase of 0.3% points over the last 12 months, despite a decline in loan rates. Home loan rates were based on the standard variable rate from the RBA which in the three months
Unlike his colleagues, Gotti talks sense on company tax cuts
By Leith van Onselen The Australian’s Editorial has delivered the following drivel today following the Trump Administration’s pledge to cut the corporate tax rate from 35% to 20%: [Trumps] package will make Australia even less attractive as a destination for such investment, which is bad news for business and jobs on this side of the
Auckland’s housing shortage worsens
By Leith van Onselen The New Zealand National Government’s single-minded focus on solving Auckland’s housing crisis by boosting supply continues to fail. Today, Statistics New Zealand released figures showing that despite a big lift in Auckland dwelling consents in August, new supply continues to fall well short of immigration-driven demand. There were 1,184 dwelling consents
Income recession hitting the middle-class
By Leith van Onselen The income recession afflicting Australia has been well documented on this site. Evidence comes from a variety of sources, all showing that typical Australian household incomes have fallen over recent years when adjusted for inflation. Consider the below charts illustrating the situation. First, the national accounts measure of compensation per employee,
Can mass immigration save the housing bubble?
Australia is in the midst of another of its grand macroeconomic experiments. We pretend to be conservative economic managers but in reality we are like mad scientists concocting economic potions in bubbling test tubes. The alchemy is always directed at one thing only, keeping house prices high, but it throws everything from sulfuric acid to
More record highs for stocks
DXY pulled back last night: AUD stabilised versus EMs: But fell against EMs: Gold held: Brent was whacked: Base metals rallied: But not big miners: EM stocks held: High yield is stable: US yields pulled back: European spreads contracted: And US stocks hit more record highs: It’s a pretty normal pullback following Trump tax excitement. There’s
CoreLogic weekly Australian house price update
By Leith van Onselen In the week ended 28 September 2017, the CoreLogic 5-city daily dwelling price index, which covers the five major capital city markets, rose by 0.04%: Values rose in three capitals but fell in two: So far in September, home values have risen by 0.24%, driven by Melbourne: So far in 2017,
RBNZ LVR restrictions reins-in the speculators
By Leith van Onselen Data released by the Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) revealed that property investor lending has continued to cool after the RBNZ implemented new loan-to-value ratio (LVR) restrictions targeting investors, which officially came into effect on 1 October 2016, although banks began informally applying the rules since they were first announced
Do-nothing Malcolm cowardice embeds the gas cartel
Via the ABC: In the end bloodshed was avoided. The Federal Government put its large calibre export control weapon back in the holster. The gas producers agreed to hand over sufficient supplies to cover a 54-petajoule shortfall regulators identified in the eastern state gas market next year and there were huge sighs of relief all
Greens campaign to rub out all dual citizen dodgers
Something to like about The Greens today: Larissa Waters and Scott Ludlam, the Greens senators who resigned after becoming aware of their citizenship conflicts have argued “ignorance or wilful blindness” should not be used as an excuse to save parliamentarians in potential breach of the constitution. In a marked departure from the arguments of Barnaby Joyce, Fiona
Coalition, BCA steps up company tax cut lobbying
By Leith van Onselen As expected, the Turnbull Government and the Business Council of Australia (BCA) have used the Trump Administration’s pledge to cut the corporate tax rate from 35% to 20% to redouble their lobbying efforts to cut Australia’s corporate tax rate. Here’s Treasurer Scott Morrison: Mr Morrison said the Labor Party would leave
Daily iron ore price update (hanging on)
Tianjin benchmark fell 10 cents to $62.60. Paper eased lower. Steel too. Coking coal futures fell. Coke was hardest hit. Texture from Reuters: “Iron ore fundamentals are not good,” said Zhao Xiaobo of Sinosteel Futures in Beijing. “Imports will rise in the fourth quarter and the environmental restrictions on steel mills are reducing iron ore
Links 29 September 2017
Global Macro / Markets / Investing: Education Isn’t the Key to a Good Income – The Atlantic Drowning in grain – How Big Ag sowed seeds of a profit-slashing glut – reuters The Disconnect Between Unemployment and Wages – IMF Teen births have plummeted 51 percent over the past decade – VOX Bitcoin ‘More Than
Netflix’s rise is free-to-air TV’s loss
Netflix continues to grow in popularity in Australia, with 7.6 million Australians now watching the online streaming service, according to a new Roy Morgan Research survey. By comparison, Australians continue to switch-off from free-to-air television: The growth of Netflix use over the past 18 months far exceeds its Australian Free-to-Air competitors. An estimated 7,558,000 Australians
ECB blows air into Bitcoin bubble
Via Coindesk: Mario Draghi, president of the European Central Bank (ECB), has indicated that his institution does not have the authority to regulate cryptocurrencies. Making his statements to the European Parliament’s Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs, Draghi said that “it would actually not be in our powers to prohibit and regulate” bitcoin and other digital currencies. The comments came in
IMF: Wages growth is caput
Via the IMF: Over the past three years, labor markets in many advanced economies have shown increasing signs of healing from the Great Recession of 2008-09. Yet, despite falling unemployment rates, wage growth has been subdued–raising a vexing question: Why isn’t a higher demand for workers driving up pay? Our research in the October 2017 World Economic
Why renewables will soon be cheaper than coal
Cross-posted from The Conversation: In a recent Conversation FactCheck I examined the question: “Is coal still cheaper than renewables as an energy source?” In that article, we assessed how things stand today. Now let’s look to the future. In Australia, 87% of our electricity generation comes from fossil fuels. That’s one of the highest levels
