George Soros believes the Eurozone is
careening towards a financial meltdown and another Great Depression, unless
co-ordinated intervention happens fast. Soros is calling for a pan-European treasury with powers
to tax and therefore borrow. In effect, he is recommending the ECB issue Eurobonds
to raise capital to shore up the European financial system.
The model portfolio returned +0.7% last
week. Equities gained +0.0%, bonds rallied +0.9% and gold in euro terms added
+2.5%. There is no change to the 60% equities / 20% bonds / 20% gold split.
In August, the model portfolio returned
-1.2% compared to -5.7% for the average managed fund. Equities declined
-7.4%, bonds rallied +3.9% and gold in euro terms added +12.4%.
YTD
through end-August, the model portfolio has returned -0.9% compared to -7.3%
for the average managed fund. Equities returned -10.2%, bonds rallied
+4.0% and gold in euro terms gained +19.6%.
DJIA
|
10,992
|
Dollar
Index
|
$77.20
|
|
334.25
|
DJTA
|
4,369
|
CAD/EUR
|
1.3610
|
Gold
|
$1,856
|
DJUA
|
420
|
USD/EUR
|
1.3655
|
Silver
|
$41.20
|
NDX
|
2,468
|
JPY/EUR
|
106.00
|
Copper
|
$4.00
|
S&P
500
|
1,154
|
JPY/USD
|
77.60
|
Oil
WTI
|
$87.40
|
ISEQ
|
2,444
|
USD/
|
1.5885
|
Natural
Gas
|
$3.92
|
FTSE
|
5,215
|
10
Yr. Tsy.
|
130.90
|
Soybeans
|
$14.35
|
Nikkei
|
8,738
|
30
Yr. Tsy.
|
141.30
|
Corn
|
$7.38
|
Equities:
Pythagorean
theorem: 24 words
Lord's
prayer: 66 words
Archimedes'
Principle: 67 words
Ten
Commandments: 179 words
US
Declaration of Independence :
1,300 words
US
Constitution with all 27 Amendments: 7,818 words
EU
regulations on the sale of cabbage: 26,911 words
This
is the result when you put a group of politicians in a room and ask them to
come to an agreement on a particular issue. They fight and bicker and try to
look after their own self interests instead of a common cause. Every man for himself. We see the
same thing happening today as the pan-European banking and sovereign debt
crises reach boiling point.
It is virtually impossible to implement a
co-ordinated effort to resolve the current crises when everyone is looking out
for themselves. We may get to a United States of Europe some day, but it is a
long way off. In the meantime, the Eurozone banking system is imploding. Irish
banks have already hit the wall. The French and Italian banks could soon
follow. Here are a few charts of the key players – Societe Generale, BNP Paribas and Unicredito – which are under
enormous strain. Exposure to Greek sovereign debt is the noose around their
collective necks.

Soc. Gen., with an equity market capitalisation of just $12 billion, is
holding $1.13 trillion in assets, so this fine institution is 94 times
leveraged. BNP Paribas holds $2 trillion
in assets, 65 times its market cap. It's the same story in Italy , where
Unicredito and Intesa are 77 times and 50 times leveraged respectively. If
Eugene Sheehy or Brian Goggin can speak French or Italian, they should head to Paris or Milan , touting their conservative banking
track records. Another unbelievable fact, these banks are holding their Greek
sovereign debt at book value, when market values are 60% less. These banks are certainly not going to be
able to trade their way out of this mess. In France 's case, total banking assets
amount to $8 trillion while French GDP
is a mere $2 trillion.
George Soros put forward a possible solution
to the Eurozone crisis this week that included a Eurozone exit for Greece , Portugal and
maybe Ireland .
He discussed transforming the current European Financial Stability Facility
(EFSF) into a pan-European treasury with the power to tax and therefore borrow.
This would mean issuing Eurobonds and would require German approval. Issuing
eurobonds (a.k.a. 'money printing') is the most viable short-term solution and
the one that I think will be followed. It is the only way the Eurozone project
can hold together. The other option is austerity, but this is a
debt-deleveraging crisis and you can't cut your way to long-term-growth.
Soros concluded: "leaving the euro
would make it easier for them (Greece ,
Portugal
and Ireland )
to regain competitiveness; but if they are willing to make the necessary
sacrifices, they could also stay in. In both cases, the EFSF would protect bank
deposits and the IMF would help to recapitalise the banking system. That would help these countries to escape from the trap in which they
currently find themselves. It would be against the best interests of the
European Union to allow these countries to collapse and drag down the global
banking system with them.
It is not for me to spell out the
details of the new treaty; that has to be decided by the member countries. But
the discussions ought to start right away because even under extreme pressure
they will take a long time to conclude. Once the principle of setting up a
European Treasury is agreed upon, the European Council could authorize the ECB
to step into the breach, indemnifying the ECB in advance against risks to its
solvency. That is the only way to forestall a possible financial meltdown and
another Great Depression."
From a technical perspective, we broke
long-term support last month but have recently regained the upper hand, barely.
Since markets are oversold to such an extreme – there are fewer stocks above
their 50DMA's now than at the March 2009 bottom – I want to give this market a
little more time before moving to a defensive position. Like I said, markets
should be close to turning around here and crash-type events are low
probability outcomes.
Bonds:
The current term structure of interest
rates for the German, US and UK
government bond markets are summarised in the following table.
Current
Yields
|
German Bunds
|
|
|
|
|
3-Month
|
0.46%
|
|
0.00%
|
|
0.52%
|
2-Year
|
0.61%
|
|
0.19%
|
|
0.56%
|
5-Year
|
1.09%
|
|
0.93%
|
|
1.32%
|
10-Year
|
1.92%
|
|
2.04%
|
|
2.51%
|
30-Year
|
2.83%
|
|
3.31%
|
|
3.69%
|
Fair value yield estimates for 5, 10 and 30 year
government bonds for the German, US and UK fixed income markets are as follows:
Fair
Value Yields
|
French Bonds
|
|
|
|
|
5-Year
|
4.30%
|
|
4.40%
|
|
5.30%
|
10-Year
|
4.40%
|
|
4.50%
|
|
5.30%
|
30-Year
|
4.40%
|
|
4.50%
|
|
5.30%
|
Commodities:
Gold closed on Friday at $1,856/oz,
-1.4% for the week in USD. The USD rallied +3.9% versus the EUR over the week,
so gold in euros gained +2.5%. Year-to-date, gold is up +28.0% in euro terms.
Model Portfolio:
The model portfolio returned +0.7% last
week. Equities gained +0.0%, bonds rallied +0.9% and gold in euro terms added
+2.5%. There is no change to the 60% equities / 20% bonds / 20% gold split.
In August, the model portfolio returned
-1.2% compared to -5.7% for the average managed fund. Equities declined
-7.4%, bonds rallied +3.9% and gold in euro terms added +12.4%.
YTD
through end-August, the model portfolio has returned -0.9% compared to -7.3%
for the average managed fund. Equities returned -10.2%, bonds rallied
+4.0% and gold in euro terms gained +19.6%.
Top Ten Investment Ideas for 2011:
|
Top 10 For 2011
|
|
Comment
|
1
|
Long Gold
|
$1,337
|
Conservative
inflation hedge
|
2
|
Long CEF.A
|
$18.95
|
ETF backed by
50% gold, 50% silver
|
3
|
Long
|
$55.00
|
Miner leveraged
to rising gold prices
|
4
|
Long EGD
|
$4.20
|
Mining services
company that sells equipment to the sector without taking the exploration
risk.
|
5
|
Long GDXJ
|
$34.60
|
Junior miners
ETF – when gold hits bubble territory, GDXJ will best capture the mania that
follows.
|
6
|
Short 30 Yr
Treas.
|
$121.45*
|
28 year bond
bull market over, with US 10-year yields troughing at 2.4%.
|
7
|
Long
|
$27.75
|
The cash machine
of the technology sector; single-digit P/E with double-digit EPS growth.
|
8
|
Long CAD/ Short
JPY
|
JPY 82.00
|
JPY must decline
so
|
9
|
Long Sugar
|
$0.34/lb
|
Commodity play
with strong supply/demand imbalance
|
10
|
Long Soybeans
|
$14.05/ bushel
|
Commodity play
with strong supply/demand imbalance
|
* Incorrect price listed in week 4 update
and amended above.
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