Wednesday, April 30, 2014

Canada: the bond market's darling

Canada has issued a $1.5bn 50-year bond at a yield of 2.96%. Canada is the only industrialized country ranked AAA by all three agencies.

The yield is lower than the US 30-year. Canada is funding long. The US is doing the opposite: 26% of US government debt matures in less than 12 months, 88% in less than 5 years. Is the US profile too risky?

Will there be a negative quarter in China's GDP this year?

Q1 2014 was the worst quarter for Chinese steelmakers since the Asia Crisis.  The industry lost ¥2.3bn, inventories rose 43.5% q/q, and domestic prices dropped 11.3% y/y.

Tuesday, April 15, 2014

Wise words from an American artist

James Abbott McNeill Whistler (From “Alive to the fingertips” in TLS April 4, 2014)

·         At West Point military academy – to which he was sent, following in his father’s footsteps – he veered from one scrape to the next until finally failing a vital set of exams through “deficiency in chemistry”.  In later life he like to claim, “if Silicon had been a gas I should have been a major-general.”
·         Among his dicta was the assertion that “two and two continue to make four, in spite of the whine of the amateur for three, or the cry of the critic for five.”

·         Whistler was very self-promotional:  Degas, who admired Whistler’s work, said, “Really Whistler you behave as though you have no talent.”

Tuesday, April 8, 2014

The Crash of 1929, as seen by Paul Cabot in 1930


From the State Street Research and Management 1930 Annual Report. (as quoted in Michael Yogg's Passion for Reality):

"All common stock investors lost, irrespective of the care with which their investments were made or supervised. No amount of research work could have prevented such losses unless it was decided that no equities should be used.

"One has only to review the utterances of leading economists, research organizations, and businessmen during the past eighteen months to discover how small is the amount of real knowledge and understanding concerning problems of major economic importance. In spite of all the research work that has been done on such prolems, it appears that common sense will remain the intelligent investor's most reliable and useful asset." (p. 55)


And yet, common sense is all too uncommon.

Monday, April 7, 2014

Mary Barra's Haiku

Andrew Capon has proposed a haiku for Mary Barra:

Ignition broken
On a side road to nowhere
The future darkens

Can Mary Barra match this?

The FT printed a poem by Li Shufu, chairman of Geely and Volvo, today:

Winter goes, spring arrives.  We quietly bury ourselves in work.
Don't argue, don't make noise.  Support Chinese brands.
Winds from Europe and America, waves from Japan and Korea.
       Why revere foreign things?
Chinese cars fly even higher. Fight bravely for a decade to make great changes.

(translated by Tom Mitchell)