Showing posts with label WORLD MARKET. Show all posts
Showing posts with label WORLD MARKET. Show all posts

What is Brexit and what would happen if Britain left the EU?

What is 'Brexit'?

It's the issue of whether Britain should exit the European Union or not —
a question that will be decided in a historic referendum on June 23.

What is happening?

A referendum to decide whether Britain should leave or remain in the European Union. Prime Minister David Cameron promised to hold one if he won the 2015 general election, in response to growing calls from his own Conservative MPs and the UK Independence Party (UKIP), who argued that Britain had not had a say since 1975, when it voted to stay in the EU in a referendum. For a start, those wanting Britain to leave the EU see it as an opportunity to reassert British national sovereignty and in a sense liberate Britain from the bottlenecks of EU both politically and financially.

What is the European Union?

The European Union - often known as the EU - is an economic and political partnership involving 28 European countries . It began after World War Two to foster economic co-operation, with the idea that countries which trade together are more likely to avoid going to war with each other. It has since grown to become a "single market" allowing goods and people to move around, basically as if the member states were one country. It has its own currency, the euro, which is used by 19 of the member countries, its own parliament and it now sets rules in a wide range of areas - including on the environment, transport, consumer rights and even things like mobile phone charges.

Why do they want the UK to leave?

They believe Britain is being held back by the EU, which they say imposes too many rules on business and charges billions of pounds a year in membership fees for little in return. They also want Britain to take back full control of its borders and reduce the number of people coming here to live and/or work. One of the main principles of EU membership is "free movement", which means you don't need to get a visa to go and live in another EU country. They also object to the idea of "ever closer union" and what they see as moves towards the creation of a "United States of Europe".

Advantages of Brexit

Economically, Britain would immediately save $12 billion a year in EU budget payments. Freed from famously cumbersome EU regulations, Brexit supporters say, Britain would attract greater investment and become a more dynamic economic hub — particularly if it still had full access to the EU's tariff-free single market. But that's a big if, and would rely on Britain renegotiating a new trade deal with the EU's remaining 27 member states — many of whom, post-Brexit, would want to make a bitter example of the U.K., to discourage other members from fleeing.

Under the EU's labor rules, any citizen of a member state has the right to live and work in another member state — a rule that has allowed some 942,000 Eastern Europeans to move to the U.K. as the EU has expanded its borders. Brexiters say these migrants have overwhelmed the housing system and abused Britain's generous in-work benefits. At least 34,000 of them are getting child benefits for children who do not even live in the U.K. and sending that money — totaling about $42 million a year — back to their home countries. Leaving the EU would allow Britain more control over how many migrants are allowed to enter. That's become a big selling point after the influx of 1 million refugees into EU countries.

Risks of a Brexit

The uncertainty it would create could destabilize the markets and cause the pound to plummet. 
Some extreme predictions are that a Brexit will blow a £100 billion hole in Britain's economy, 
and Britain will lose 3 million jobs!

What is the probability of Brexit?
According to Economist as on today, 44% People Vote for Leaving Europe, 
42% for Remaining in Europe and 10 remain Undecided.
 

Performance vs Outcome

1.      Coca-Cola is fighting 12 consecutive years of soda consumption decline. Its stock is at an all-time high.

2.      Tesla is changing the world, and orders for its new car are off the charts. Its stock is at 18 months low.

3.      Cigarette consumption has dropped 44% since 1981. Altria stock is up 71,000% since 1981.

4.      WalMart net income has tripled since 2000. Its stock has lost 1.5% since 2000.

5.      Apple has earned almost a quarter trillion dollars of profit since 2012. Its stock has barely budged.

6.      Amazon's profits round to zero since 2012. Its stock has tripled.

7.      2009 was one of the worst years for the economy in a century. The market rose 27%.

8.      2015 was a good year for the economy. The market rose 1%.

9.      Brazil's economy is a disaster. Its stock market is flat over the last two years.

10.  US is enjoying the longest streak of low unemployment claims in 4 decades. S&P 500 is flat over the last two yrs

And so on.

I'm fascinated with the problem of why really smart people have such a hard time predicting the future. It's mostly because the future is more random than we think. But it's also because future performance (like earnings and economic growth) doesn't tell you half of what you need to know to predict future outcomes. Outcomes are determined by performance within the context of expectations, with importance heavily weighted toward the latter. And if predicting future performance is hard, calibrating them against expectations is close to sorcery.

Even if you accurately forecast future performance, predicting the outcome from that performance requires answering two questions:

Are current expectations reasonable? What will future expectations be?

The first is possible to answer, but pretty hard. We can look at sentiment and valuations to gauge, based on past trends, whether the current mood seems reasonable. But disagreeing with popular sentiment is easier said than done. Few things feel better than fitting in, and having a viewpoint that goes against everyone around you is a mental battle not one person in a ten can maintain for long. Rather than identifying extremes in current sentiment, it's easier to justify the market's mood no matter what it is. Billionaire investor Howard Marks once wrote:


The problem is that extraordinary performance comes only from correct non consensual forecasts, but non consensual forecasts are hard to make, hard to make correctly, and hard to act on.


The second – predicting future expectations – is even harder. To know where stock prices will be in five years, I have to know what mood people will be in five years from now. Which is as ambitious as it sounds. Ask yourself what kind of mood you yourself will be in April 2021, and you'll shake your head in laughter. Ask what kind of mood seven billion strangers will be in April 2021 – that mood, of course, will determine stock prices in five years -- and it's hard to keep a straight face. This is where the disconnect between performance and outcomes occurs:

Accurately predicting five years of economic growth might not do much for the stock market if, five years from now, people are worried about the future five years from then.


As Ben Graham said, "In the short run, the market is a voting machine. But in the long run, it is a weighing machine." Even if future markets are gloomier than they are now, rising profits and compounding business assets can leave investors with a positive return. This "weighing" is why true long-term investing isn't gambling. Real value is created, even if we know exactly when it will flow to shareholders' pockets.


But the more precise we try to forecast, the more we rely on predicting emotions and expectations. In a world where analysts focus most of their time analyzing performance – what earnings will do, or what the economy will do – and it's no wonder we struggle to predict outcomes.

HSBC: A Look at History Shows World Markets Are Close to the Bottom

Since 1988, the MSCI All Country World total return index has suffered a drop of more than
10 percent on 16 occasions, averaging a 20 percent decline over a span of 18 weeks.,

By comparison, this retreat has lasted for 14 weeks, during which time the index has given back 19 percent. Though timing the market is a tricky task indeed, Laidler points out that investors who manage to buy the trough can look forward to an average 12-month return of more than 20 percent:
Other factors such as elevated valuations and low earnings growth amplified the
pressure on global equities, effectively adding "fuel to the fire."

The S&P 500 has tumbled by at least 2 percent for three consecutive sessions as of Monday,
only the third time this has occurred in more than 50 years.

Do Not Panic. Its all going to settle down ^_^





All red over the heatmap. Top loosers from Nifty 50 pack are VEDANTA, GAIL, TATA STEEL, CAIRN crashed more than 13%. And Nearly 31 stocks out of 50 crashed more than 5%.


Sector Heatmap
All sector ends in red. Top loosers are from Airlines, Gems & Jewellery,
Hospitality, Tyres, Real Estate, Paper & Shipping sectors

Problem of GREECE explained in a simpler way ^_^

The problem of Greece explained.. MARY is the proprietor of a bar in Dublin. She realises that virtually all of her customers are unemployed alcoholics and, as such, can no longer afford to patronise her bar – she will go broke. To solve this problem, she comes up with a new marketing plan that allows her customers to drink now, but pay later. She keeps track of the drinks consumed on a ledger (thereby granting the customers loans). Word gets around about Mary's 'drink now, pay later' marketing strategy and, as a result, increasing numbers of customers flood into Mary's bar. Soon she has the largest sales volume for any bar in Dublin — all is starting to look rosy. By providing her customers freedom from immediate payment demands Mary gets no resistance when, at regular intervals, she substantially increases her prices for wine and beer, the most consumed beverages. Consequently, Mary's gross sales volume increases massively. A young and dynamic vice-president at the local bank recognises that these customer debts constitute valuable future assets and increases Mary's borrowing limit.


He sees no reason for any undue concern, since he has the debts of the unemployed alcoholics as collateral. At the bank's corporate headquarters, expert traders figure a way to make huge commissions, and transform these customer loans into Drinkbonds and Alkibonds. These securities are then bundled and traded on international security markets. The new investors don't really understand that the securities being sold to them as 'AAA' secured bonds are really the debts of unemployed alcoholics. They have had a 'rating house' certify they are of good quality. Nevertheless, the bond prices continuously climb, and the securities soon become the hottest-selling items for some of the nation's leading brokerage houses. One day, even though the bond prices are still climbing, a risk manager at the original local bank decides that the time has come to demand payment on the debts incurred by the drinkers at Mary's bar. He so informs Mary. Mary then demands payment from her alcoholic patrons, but, being unemployed alcoholics, they cannot pay back their drinking debts. Since Mary cannot fulfil her loan obligations she is forced into bankruptcy. So she now is broke.


The bar closes and the 11 employees lose their jobs. Overnight, Drinkbonds and Alkibonds drop in price by 90%. The collapsed bond asset value destroys the bank's liquidity and prevents it from issuing new loans, thus freezing credit and economic activity in the community. The suppliers of Mary's bar had granted her generous payment extensions and had invested their firms' pension funds in the various Bond securities. They find they are now faced with having to write-off her bad debt and with losing over 90% of the presumed value of the bonds. Her wine supplier also claims bankruptcy, closing the doors on a family business that had endured for three generations. Her beer supplier is taken over by a competitor, who immediately closes the local plant and lays off 150 workers. Fortunately though, the bank, the brokerage houses and their respective executives are saved and bailed out by a multi-billion euro, no strings attached cash infusion from their cronies in government. The funds required for this bailout are obtained by new taxes levied on employed, middle-class, non-drinkers who have never been in Mary's bar. Now, do you understand economics in 2015?

NIFTY & SENSEX

 Monthly Nifty with Andrews pitchfork tool, Lower line support at 6900-7000 areas

USDINR

  1. 1947 - $1 = Re. 1
  2. 1952 - $1 = Rs. 5
  3. 1970 - $1 = Rs. 7.57
  4. 1975 - $1 = Rs. 8.40
  5. 1980 - $1 = Rs. 7.89
  6. 1985 - $1 = Rs. 12.36
  7. 1990 - $1 = Rs. 17.5
  8. 1995 - $1 = Rs. 32.42
  9. 2000 - $1 = Rs. 45
  10. 2006 - $1 = Rs. 48.3
  11. 2007 - $1 = Rs. 38.4
  12. 2008 - $1 = Rs. 42.5 (JUNE)
  13. 2008 - $1 = Rs. 48.8 (OCTOBER)
  14. 2009 - $1 = Rs. 46.3
  15. 2011 - $1 = Rs. 44 (APRIL)
  16. 2011 - $1 = Rs. 50 (NOVEMBER)
  17. 2011 - $1 = Rs. 53.7 (DECEMBER)
  18. 2012 - $1 = Rs. 56.25 (MAY)
  19. 2013 - $1 = Rs 60 (JUNE)
    2014 - $1 = Rs 64 (DEC)

Effect on GDP Growth in 2015-16 of oil at $40 v/s $84

                                                                                                                source : stocksiq.in

Performance in Nutshell – Infographic 2013

                                                                                                                                         [source :finviz]

Key Facts from the infographic

1)Nikkei is the top performer amount various asset classes gained 54.9 and corn among the worst performer and lost 39.1 among the asset classes
2)Most of the world stock market indices(Nikkei, Russel2000, Nasdaq100,S&P500) are the Top Index performers
3)Natural Gas is the top performing commodity with 29.4% YTD returns
4)Both Gold and Silver lost in double digit percentage terms. This year is the first year since 1997 that gold will finish with a double-digit drop. lost 28.2% and 34.1 respectively.
5)Among the forex pairs EURUSD is the top performer with 4.3% and USDJPY lost nearly 17.7% and the worst forex pair performer among the most traded currency pairs.
6)10 year bond and 30 year Bond are the losers for the year 2013 with negative returns of 7.3 and 12.9% returns respectively



GLOBAL



UNDERSTANDING THE US DEBT CEILING ISSUE

What is the topic all about ?

•US government is having a high fiscal deficit, which means its earnings (through taxes) are less than the expenses (spending).
•So, in order to fill the gap between the two, US government have been borrowing since last few decades, as their spending is higher than income.
•So, how much can US government borrow ?
•They can maximum borrow up to the limit fixed by the US Congress government- which is the combination of two parties- Republicans and Democrats
•The first borrowing limit was enacted in 1917.
•Since 1962, Congress has raised the borrowing limit 77 times. It now stands at 16.7 Trillion $
•This means that if US borrows now, maximum it can borrow is 16.7 trillion dollars.

What’s the problem then ?
The 16.7 trillion dollars of US DEBT limit which was decided by government got hit on May 19, 2013.
This means now no more US government can borrow money from markets and use it to fuel deficit.
So from May 2013 till now, US government is trying to run through the deficit by doing whatever it can but time has come that now US will have to increase the debt limit to borrow or else it will default on its interest obligations or would have to cut on its spending
So money needs to be borrowed more by issuing US Treasury bills in market and raise more funds, but as we said now the limit is over and US government is not allowed to raise any more funds through Treasury bills.
Why US Debt limit cannot be increased more ?
•Now it’s a good question that US government have been increasing its debt limit time and again, and was able to show everyone that it is managing things well, and not going to default, so why not US increase the limits again?
•Problems are politically connected so lets understand what it is all about:
•US Congress has 2 parties which votes for all important decisions –

A) REPUBLICANS
and B) DEMOCRATS

•Barack Obama who leads America is from Democrats, and Democrats are known to be very liberal in policies and this we can see by lavish spending by US government and which have lead to consecutive increase in debt limits.
•On the other hand Republicans are more conservatives and want to focus on reducing spending and increasing taxes, so that America can reduce its deficit.
So in 2011, Republicans were not supporting the increase in US debt ceiling limits as this was making US deficit vulnerable, but Democrats managed to sort the issue with Republicans by telling them that they will reduce spending and increase taxes later on, and for this Democrats asked to increase debt limit more by 2.4 trillion dollars
This 2.4 trillion dollars in Aug 2011, made sure at least US will not have any problems till coming 2 years, and we saw S&P downgrading US Treasury just after this increase in 2.4 trillion dollar limit, because of chances of defaults going ahead.
So, the limit got over in Feb 2013, when the US debt limit got finished at 16.4 trillion dollars, however three months extension was provided during which the debt rose to 16.7 trillion dollars.
Hence this became the new limit in a deal that Congress finalized in May 2013.
Since May 2013, debt limits have not been increased because of Republicans not agreeing to increase in debt limit and they want Democrats to cut spending and increase taxes.
Why Democrats are not willing to cut spending and increase taxes is that election year is coming, and VOTES are important.

What's the Current Status ???

Since the Debt limit is not increased after May 2013 and even Democrats are not willing to increase taxes and cut spending, the government is having a SHUTDOWN
In a letter written by Treasury secretary of US, he said that if the debt ceiling is not raised by 17th October, US government will not be able to pay for US Treasury interest to bond holders, government contractors and social security recipients.
It is said that after 17th October 2013, US government would not be able to finance its debt and it would be able to do it with remaining cash in hand – approx 30 billion dollars and some tax inflows.
But, this can only suffice up to few days and between 22 October and 31st October, this would also finish.
What next ?
Markets went up last week thinking as 17th October is coming near,  US would do something to increase the debt limits, as US cannot default (Assumption)
However, if the US Congress is not able to increase the debt limits, then in coming months, it would face lot of problems in paying the interest on US Treasury it have issued to raise funds, and also to US citizens who are supposed to be given benefits of pensions, and federal government employees salaries, medical pensions etc.
Default would occur if US do not pays its treasury holders interest. (China, Japan and other foreign countries together are holding 34% of total US Treasury debt)
Therefore US will try and pay the Treasury holders first and later on pay the US citizens on their benefits.
But how can this happen ?

This can be done in 2 ways, either not pay US citizens and only pay Interest on US Treasuries by remaining money US government has, to avoid Default on payments to outsiders
Or

Increase the debt limits and pay everyone their dues
But, the first way of only paying US Treasury holders and not others is not possible.
Why? Because all the payments are through electronic computer system, and there is no option where US can feed in to machine that pay only few and don’t pay others. So anyhow US will have to make sure money is there in the Computer system, or else defaults is sure.
So this means, DEBT Ceiling limit most probably would be increased as US don’t have any other option, and this would lead to Equity markets moving up sentimentally.
If the US defaults on Treasury bonds interest, we can assume a global financial market crises, as US itself will have to bear higher borrowing costs, as if US don't pay interest on bonds, it would lead to selling in bonds, and resulting in higher borrowing costs for corporate.

Conclusion:



What happens when you borrow money ? You have to pay interest ? What if you don’t have money to pay interest ? You borrow more and pay Interest ! What if now no one allows you to borrow more ?  YOU DEFAULT…….!

So, we expect US Debt ceiling to increase in coming weeks, or else how will US pay for its interest ? This should bring cheer to equity markets !

That was all about US debt ceiling crises, and why US government is SHUTDOWN from past month or so.

DOW ZONES MONTHLY CHART

Typically, federal services that continue despite a shutdown include the National Weather Service and its parent agencies, medical services at federal facilities, the postal service, armed forces, air traffic management, and corrections (the penal system). A government shutdown is similar to a lockout in the private sector.