torsdag den 31. juli 2014

A bank making sense and looking after its clients? Surely? A MUST SEE

Dear All,

A bank making sense and looking after customers? Surely not

This is a must see: Toronto Dominion bank has made this add which is not only clever, but sets new standards for bank service and class!
Must say its the most convincing ad I have ever seen! - maybe I should buy some of that stock?

http://tinyurl.com/puq2d37

An ABSOLUTELY MUST SEE!

Have you seen this page on TradingFloor.com, Saxo Bank's social trading portal? Take a look:
https://www.tradingfloor.com/?cmpid=TF_mgm

Best regards,

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mandag den 21. juli 2014

Steen's Chronicle: War & Markets

Steen's Chronicle: War & Markets

https://www.tradingfloor.com/posts/steens-chronicle-war-markets-1125555

 

Steen Jakobsen

 

Chief Economist & CIO / Saxo Bank

Denmark

 

·         Prepare for less growth, less certainty and more geopolitical risk

·         Crude oil price is simplest proxy for geopolitical risk

·         Wars reflect a world where growth is low and energy expensive

 

By Steen Jakobsen

"There are causes worth dying for, but none worth killing for" – Albert Camus

The world is increasingly becoming engaged in civil wars and general turmoil where Camus' words could and should play a central but never will. This article is one of the hardest to write as war is never about right or wrong. They are per definition always wrong and extremely personal and emotional. The fact is, however, that we need to put "the risk of wars" into our macro outlook as they are increasing not only in intensity but also in the numbers of casualties.

I will not condone anyone or any party involved in the present conflicts – I learned my hard lesson advocating the removal of Saddam Hussein, only to learn that his successors are just as bad. Therefore, Camus' words will remain my mantra.

The simplest way to "measure" geopolitical risk is to look at the price of energy. Energy is everything for a macro economist as it's a tax on the economy when high, and a discount when low. High energy consumption levels makes it a critical part of any projection but despite this, energy assumptions are often exogenous (given!).

Think about this: Everything you did this morning involved energy consumption: Waking up to your smart phone (charging overnight), putting on the coffee, pouring the cold milk from the fridge, taking a shower, driving the car to work and walking into your air-conditioned office. Likewise, the rest of your day will be one big consumption of energy. The world's energy resources are primarily extracted from "volatile" or underdeveloped regions, creating a real risk of disruption of supply. Herein lies a clear and quantifiable risk.

The way I measure this geopolitical risk is through measuring the spread between the 5th contract of WTI crude oil and the first contract. Of course, there are other factor at work, but in the absence of a better alternative, I use this.

 Source: Bloomberg, Saxo Bank

As can be seen, since July 15 the "war premium" or more neutral "disruption premium" have increased by USD 2 and the world's consumers are now paying two dollars more per barrel of WTI crude. Overall there are many factors influencing the crude market but the price of energy remains the one component we need to know is stable and preferably falling.

The overall impact from war is negative despite the glorified analysis of how World War II stopped the recession – think of the 1970s – probably a better and more relevant analogy to today's trouble in Gaza, Iraq, Russia/Ukraine, Libya, and Syria. Many will argue it's different this time, back then we were too dependent on the Middle East!  Sure, but prices were only between 10 and 25 US dollars a barrel back then!

 

Now we have lived with an oil rise in excess of  USD 100 more or less since 2007! Crude is now four times higher in price than during the "inflationist" 1970s – the era in which we ended  the Bretton Woods system of monetary management and where central banks started targeting inflation instead. 

No, the signal from the energy market about the demand of energy and the risk of getting enough of it is clear: Prepare for less growth, less certainty and more geopolitical risk. The market, however, maintains a steady hand: Israel will be contained inside a couple of weeks, Russia vs. Ukraine will find a solution. The non-acceptance of tail-risk (Black Swans) is clear for everyone to see. The market is "perfect" in its information, zero interest rates will save us and we have all been fooled into believing that the real world no longer matters.

Unemployment, social inequality, wars, innocents being killed, and TV images of people fighting to live another day are not relevant………except for the fact that for world growth to keep increasing we need to continue to see growth in Africa, the Middle East and Eastern Europe.

We need to accept that the world is now truly global – we smiled while globalisation reduced prices and made our companies more profit, now the escalation of wars reflect a world where growth is low, energy is expensive and increasingly hard to get and that we have gone full circle with macro and interventionist policies.

The escalation of turmoil in the world is yet to play a role for the market, but be warned: everything economic has a delayed reaction of nine to twelve month – whenever there is an action there will be a reaction. If the present state of alertness continues through the summer you can bet on higher energy prices having a serious impact on not only world growth but also on markets. But don't ever forget that the real losers are the individual families losing loves ones. No, Camus got it right. There is nothing worth killing for, plenty to fight for.

Steen Jakobsen is chief economist and CIO at Saxo Bank

-- Edited by Clare MacCarthy

 

 

Med venlig hilsen  |  Best regards
Steen Jakobsen  |  Chief Investment Officer

 

Saxo Bank A/S  |  Philip Heymans Allé 15  |  DK-2900 Hellerup
Phone: +45 39 77 40 00  |  Direct: +45 39 77 62 23  |  Mobile: +45 51 54 50 00

 

Research: http://www.tradingfloor.com/traders/steen-jakobsen

Please visit our website at www.saxobank.com

 

This email may contain confidential and/or privileged information.
If you are not the intended recipient (or have received this email
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tirsdag den 15. juli 2014

Macro Digest: Germany may have won the World Cup, but its economy is cooling fast

https://www.tradingfloor.com/posts/germany-may-have-won-the-world-cup-but-its-economy-is-cooling-fast-1076281

 

Germany may have won the World Cup, but its economy is cooling fast

Steen Jakobsen

Chief Economist & CIO / Saxo Bank

Denmark

·          

·         Triple whammy from Asian rebalancing, US economy and bad energy policy

·         Economic deceleration is too quick for comfort

·         Unlike its footballers, Germany became complacent

 

By Steen Jakobsen

 

We need to congratulate Germany on its World Cup win. It was a victory for organisation and science, but unfortunately the Germany economy is slowing fast — and too fast for comfort when we look at Eurozone GDP.

 

I have long argued this slowdown was coming based on Asia rebalancing (reducing imports of capital goods and turning more domestically-based); Bad energy policy (being dependent on Putin and his Russian gas rather than German nuclear energy — not exactly perfect substitution); A new minimum wage and a coalition government that has either reversed or halted a lot of the progress that had been made in the labour market.

 

Unlike its football team, Germany became complacent and the switch to a reliance on green energy is now at risk as growth collapses.

 

A few charts to illustrate my old argument ...

 

 

 

ZEW expectations

 

 

 

Industrial Production

 

 

 

Strategy:

 

This confirms that we are destined for new lows in yields in core Europe, something I have constantly said since Q4-2013. The world is barely producing growth with zero interest rates — how can ANYONE believe rates will go higher? Beats me!

 

Therefore: Long IEF, Bund futures and 10-year US Treasury notes.

 

 

 

Congrats with the World Cup boys, but your economy? Oh dear.

Photo: Wikimedia Commons/Agência Brasil

 

— Edited by Clare MacCarthy

 

Steen Jakobsen is chief economist and CIO at Saxo Ban

 

 

Med venlig hilsen  |  Best regards
Steen Jakobsen  |  Chief Investment Officer

 

Saxo Bank A/S  |  Philip Heymans Allé 15  |  DK-2900 Hellerup
Phone: +45 39 77 40 00  |  Direct: +45 39 77 62 23  |  Mobile: +45 51 54 50 00

 

Research: http://www.tradingfloor.com/traders/steen-jakobsen

Please visit our website at www.saxobank.com

 

This email may contain confidential and/or privileged information.
If you are not the intended recipient (or have received this email
by mistake), please notify the sender immediately and destroy this
email. Any unauthorised copying, disclosure or distribution of the
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torsdag den 10. juli 2014

CORRECTION... IMPORTANT .........RE: Marque Portugese bank close to Chapt. 11... sending banks in europe down

CORRECTION – should read… close to Chap. 11 at GROUP level….see structure below…

 

http://www.jornaldenegocios.pt/empresas/detalhe/infografia_quase_todo_o_universo_do_grupo_espirito_santo_a_venda.html

 

 

 

Med venlig hilsen  |  Best regards
Steen Jakobsen  |  Chief Investment Officer

 

Saxo Bank A/S  |  Philip Heymans Allé 15  |  DK-2900 Hellerup
Phone: +45 39 77 40 00  |  Direct: +45 39 77 62 23  |  Mobile: +45 51 54 50 00

 

Research: http://www.tradingfloor.com/traders/steen-jakobsen

Please visit our website at www.saxobank.com

 

From: Steen Jakobsen (SJN)
Sent: Thursday, July 10, 2014 11:27 AM
Subject: Marque Portugese bank close to Chapt. 11... sending banks in europe down

 

To: Steen Jakobsen (SJN)
Subject: Marque Portugese bank close to Chapt. 11... sending banks in europe down

 

http://www.jornaldenegocios.pt/mercados/bolsa/detalhe/bes_volta_a_afundar_mais_de_11_enquanto_a_esfg_suspende_negociacao.html

 

 

the BES shares back to sink more than 11%, a trend that was accentuated after ESFG have decided to suspend trading in its shares due "because of the physical difficulties" being found "in its largest shareholder," the Holy Spirit international. BES has accumulated a fall of 27.5% in four days.

 

BES shares are down 11.38% to 54.5 cents, increasing to 27.5% fall in the last four days, which corresponds to an excess of EUR 1.1 billion loss in market capitalization . Since the beginning of the year, the securities the bank still led by Ricardo Salgado are sliding 42%. So far, more than 32.2 million shares of stock, compared with 28.2 million of securities that were traded daily on average in the last six months were traded.

 

The fall of BES was accentuated after the Espírito Santo Financial Group (ESFG) have decided to suspend trading of its shares and obligations "due to significant difficulties in its largest shareholder, the Holy Spirit International, and the exposure of the company ESFG ". Before proceeding with the suspension, the actions of ESFG came to lose more than 16% to 1.09 euros, which represents the lowest level ever.

 

The group's shares continue to be penalized by known financial problems in recent weeks. On Wednesday, Moody's cut the "rating" ESFG to eight levels below "junk. Assigned rating of Caa2 now is a few levels of" default ". Moody's sees "a worsening of the credit risk for ESFG profile as a result of increased exposure ESFG its indirect shareholders." The "fears about the credit quality of ESFG are amplified by the lack of transparency surrounding not only the financial situation of the Espírito Santo Group, but also the extent of intra-group including direct and indirect exposure ESFG the Holy Spirit International ". The Business progresses, the issue of Thursday, several customers of Banque Privée Espírito Santo, which have applications in the GES debt arrears, complained to the CMVM, which forwarded them to the Swiss supervisor.

 

 

This email may contain confidential and/or privileged information.
If you are not the intended recipient (or have received this email
by mistake), please notify the sender immediately and destroy this
email. Any unauthorised copying, disclosure or distribution of the
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Marque Portugese bank close to Chapt. 11... sending banks in europe down

To: Steen Jakobsen (SJN)
Subject: Marque Portugese bank close to Chapt. 11... sending banks in europe down

 

http://www.jornaldenegocios.pt/mercados/bolsa/detalhe/bes_volta_a_afundar_mais_de_11_enquanto_a_esfg_suspende_negociacao.html

 

 

the BES shares back to sink more than 11%, a trend that was accentuated after ESFG have decided to suspend trading in its shares due "because of the physical difficulties" being found "in its largest shareholder," the Holy Spirit international. BES has accumulated a fall of 27.5% in four days.

 

BES shares are down 11.38% to 54.5 cents, increasing to 27.5% fall in the last four days, which corresponds to an excess of EUR 1.1 billion loss in market capitalization . Since the beginning of the year, the securities the bank still led by Ricardo Salgado are sliding 42%. So far, more than 32.2 million shares of stock, compared with 28.2 million of securities that were traded daily on average in the last six months were traded.

 

The fall of BES was accentuated after the Espírito Santo Financial Group (ESFG) have decided to suspend trading of its shares and obligations "due to significant difficulties in its largest shareholder, the Holy Spirit International, and the exposure of the company ESFG ". Before proceeding with the suspension, the actions of ESFG came to lose more than 16% to 1.09 euros, which represents the lowest level ever.

 

The group's shares continue to be penalized by known financial problems in recent weeks. On Wednesday, Moody's cut the "rating" ESFG to eight levels below "junk. Assigned rating of Caa2 now is a few levels of" default ". Moody's sees "a worsening of the credit risk for ESFG profile as a result of increased exposure ESFG its indirect shareholders." The "fears about the credit quality of ESFG are amplified by the lack of transparency surrounding not only the financial situation of the Espírito Santo Group, but also the extent of intra-group including direct and indirect exposure ESFG the Holy Spirit International ". The Business progresses, the issue of Thursday, several customers of Banque Privée Espírito Santo, which have applications in the GES debt arrears, complained to the CMVM, which forwarded them to the Swiss supervisor.

 

 

This email may contain confidential and/or privileged information.
If you are not the intended recipient (or have received this email
by mistake), please notify the sender immediately and destroy this
email. Any unauthorised copying, disclosure or distribution of the
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Macro Digest - An editorial on geopoltical risk - does it matter? (done for Middle East based news agency)

Geopolitical risk and investing – the rules?

 

Geopolitical risk has always been a "discount" on market valuations, how much so varies with the tension around the world and of course more often than not particulary what goes on in the Middle East. The quick answer really is that geopolitical risk does and should not matter… long term.

 

Fundamentals will always prevail long-term. A company which is innovative, productive, cost conscious, and with a positive cash flow will always attract capital and investors whatever country and region its placed in and despite its political risk. I like to say it's the victory of the individual story over the momentum driven. It's the strength of the micro- vs. the macro story. I go to about 35 countries in an average year. Everywhere, and I mean everywhere, I meet smart, cool and incredible successful companies and people – this includes Argentina, China, Brazil, Indonesia, Israel, Palenstine, France, and even Denmark J. Everywhere there is investors and business people trying to succeed, opening door to their business every morning trying to make a dollar.

 

This is exactly why we should never concede to political troubles, risk premia's or wars when investing. Countries, economies, and societies are individuals. Strong individuals who succeed despite the odds. Today modern society is more of a "nursing state" than a productive state. It's more macro than micro, but that's also why global growth remains low. Simply put from a market perspective we have more to fear from the "planned economy" approach than from geopolitical risk. Not that geopolitical risk is not important, but it's always present and more often than not it's in regions which have a relatively small impact on the investable stocks and money markets. The US and Europe still dominate world markets with more than 60% weight in global index'.

 

Geopolitical risk premiums and certainly those associated with Middle East is most easily read through the WTI crude market. Presently the risk premium in Crude is 10-15 US dollar. This varies over time but at a low of course trades at zero and at high around 25-50 US dollar.

 

The Israeli stock market with its investor grade and inclusion into MSCI with a weight of 0.4% is natural part of most global investors portfolio's. The tiny 0.4% of course could make many investors skip the allocation, but here the uniqueness of the Israeli stock market comes triumph: Israel has the highest PhD per capita and the highest research and development ratio in companies and a society which everything being equal is homogenous and industrial. The educational system is strong and favorable to innovation and technology. If anything I would predict that Israel would take a larger role in most fund managers stock selection going forward due to this. Society and economics is willing to go a long distance to get access to this kind of set up and technology.

 

In other words: Israel's and Middle East weakness is the geopolitical risk, but it's nothing new and relatively constant. The upside is the micro structure – the Israeli focus on technology, education and innovation.

 

Overall to asses local geopolitical risk into investment risk-  the straight forward approach is to find the stock markets total allocation in the MSCI. In the case of Israel the weight is 0.4% - hardly something global market will notice. Canada is 3.8% - Again a crisis in Canada would be negative but less so than in the US  - US have weight of 48.8%! The MSCI AWI global index covers 85% of all investable stocks or basically the "global markets".  The 2014 H1 full report can be seen here including performance, weight and also biggest holdings. I am sure knowing that APPLE, Exxon, Microsoft, Johnson & Johnson and GE is the biggest holding will not come as major surprise!

 

Source: MSCI.com

 

 

The conclusion is this: geopolitical risk is hard to quantify, it's does not really matter long-term, but short term is creates mispricing which in itself offers opportunities. Investing is about extracting illiquidity from the market and geopolitical events often offers a big discount of entry as long as the fundamental story remains valid. From macro perspective I will maintain that we have bigger risk from this giant monetary experiment which the central banks and policy makers have initiated, as they believe in macro – the ability to smooth over business cycle, I, on the other hand believe in people, ideas and micro.

 

Safe travels,

 

Steen Jakobsen

 

Med venlig hilsen  |  Best regards
Steen Jakobsen  |  Chief Investment Officer

 

Saxo Bank A/S  |  Philip Heymans Allé 15  |  DK-2900 Hellerup
Phone: +45 39 77 40 00  |  Direct: +45 39 77 62 23  |  Mobile: +45 51 54 50 00

 

Research: http://www.tradingfloor.com/traders/steen-jakobsen

Please visit our website at www.saxobank.com

 

This email may contain confidential and/or privileged information.
If you are not the intended recipient (or have received this email
by mistake), please notify the sender immediately and destroy this
email. Any unauthorised copying, disclosure or distribution of the
material in this email is strictly prohibited.

Email transmission security and error-free status cannot be guaranteed
as information could be intercepted, corrupted, destroyed, delayed,
incomplete, or contain viruses. The sender therefore does not accept
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onsdag den 9. juli 2014

Steen' Chronicle : From here to eternity in the age of low interest rates

Dear All,

Seems Outlook been playing me tricks - this is my latest Chronicle including strategy outlook.

https://www.tradingfloor.com/posts/from-here-to-eternity-in-the-age-of-low-interest-rates-999217


Safe travels

Steen
This email may contain confidential and/or privileged information.
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