Newsletter

What Is History Telling Us About This Market?

Good Morning,

Stocks concluded a third straight week of gains Friday, climbing to new record highs a day after President Donald Trump promised to release a “phenomenal” tax plan in the near future. The man went so far as to say in a meeting with airline executives Thursday that “lowering overall tax burden on American business is big league” pleasing investors with his renewed focus on the business environment.
 

Economic data also continued to paint a mostly positive picture of the U.S. economy, after Thursday’s unexpectedly low number of Americans filing for jobless claims and as corporations added to one of the best sets of earnings since the financial crisis.
 

In addition, enthusiasm for the equity market is surging in 2017, according to a BNP Paribas SA measure of investor sentiment called the Love-Panic indicator. The index, which takes into account options positioning, equity fund flows and sentiment surveys, reached the highest since April 2014 on Monday, the last reading….
 

On the local front Canada’s economy added 48,000 jobs in January while economists were expecting job losses. Growth has exceeded expectations for 2 straight months reinforcing the message that the job market may have turned the corner. The problem is that pay gains were slowest since 2003. Furthermore, this week Fitch Ratings warned that potential U.S. protectionism puts countries like Canada at the highest risk of damage to their credit fundamentals.
 

Our Take
 

As we said last week this is a policy driven market. Investors were fretting that Trump had put tax reform on the backburner and now it appears to again be a priority. This is welcome news for markets. Last week Trump got bogged down with a series of bizarre tweets and other immigration noise and this week he appears to be back on track. Expect further volatility as he vacillates between sensible economic priorities and the sensationalist triviality.
 

As for sentiment appearing to reach levels not seen since 2014, it is important to take the temperature of the market. Was the market telling us to walk away in 2014? Were we at a top in 2014? Despite the myriad of pitfalls which could beset the market, perhaps we are just getting going. Things are always uncertain and uncomfortable when you are living in it and so obvious and sure when you are looking back. Lloyd Blankfein this week stated that:
 

“The change in the market today is from a cycle where we were of very low economic activity, consequently very low interest rates, and a very, very high level of—maybe call it pessimism about where we go. And it feels like we’re changing to one in which it’s going to get growthier. More growth out there, more opportunity and one in which we are getting a bit more optimistic.”
 

Nevertheless, other big names like George Soros, Seth Klarman and Stan Druckenmiller remain more bearish as they believe investors seem to have been lulled into a false sense of security.


Update on our Best Ideas for 2017
 

Peter Mantas
 
Huntington Ingalls Industries (NYSE: HII): +8.77% YTD
Cemex SAB de CV (NYSE: CX): +12.58% YTD
S&P 500: 3.45% YTD
 
Matthew Castel
 
Aaron Inc. (NASDAQ: AAON): +3.93% YTD
Syntel (NASDAQ: SYNT): +12.35% YTD
S&P 500: 3.45% YTD


Musings
 

I read an interesting book this week: Amusing Ourselves to Death: Public Discourse in the Age of Show Business by Neil Postman. This book written in the 80s, covered the media’s effect on us suggesting that there were two key dystopian novels written by British cultural critics: Brave New World by Aldous Huxley and Nineteen Eighty Four by George Orwell – and that Americans mistakenly feared the latter. In the Orwellian future the state overtly censors what we see, hear and experience. Individuality is emaciated while movement and freedom are overtly restricted. In the Huxley version citizens are sedated by technology, conspicuous consumption and self-righteous instant gratification.
 

Postman believed that it was Huxley’s vision we should be worried about. He wrote:
 

“What Orwell feared were those who would ban books. What Huxley feared was that there would be no reason to ban a book, for there would be no one who wanted to read one. Orwell feared those who would deprive us of information. Huxley feared those who would give us so much that we would be reduced to passivity and egoism. Orwell feared that the truth would be concealed from us. Huxley feared the truth would be drowned in a sea of irrelevance. Orwell feared we would become a captive culture. Huxley feared we would become a trivial culture.”
     
      
Our information environment has become our entertainment environment. Facts have become blurred with opinion and public debate has degenerated into superfluous sound bites. The average person now spends roughly 74 hours in front of a screen in a given week and checks their phone over 150 times a day.
 

The concerning part is that unlike the Orwellian world in which control is overt, it is more difficult to resist in a world in which we are lead to believe we occupy the center of….


Thought of the Week

 

"That men do not learn very much from the lessons of history is the most important of all lessons that history has to teach.” –Aldous Huxley



Stories and Ideas of Interest

 

  • Snapchat destroys value and thus its IPO is pre-mature. We keep getting questions about the impending Snap IPO and based on our reading of the S-1 IPO filing it is too early for such a move. Tim Connors puts together a compelling account as to why Snap has not proven that they have a great business (not a single dollar of gross margin). Going public now as a business that loses more money the more users they get isn’t fair to the founders, those who would buy the IPO (not the 1% but the retirement savings of American workers) and those founders who have created value-generating ventures. Perhaps Snap should take notice of Twitter’s dismal earnings report this week (Twitter has been losing around $100 million a quarter for the past three years, and its user growth has been essentially flat) in order to see what may be in store if glaring business-model questions are not addressed. Quartz digs in and asks whether Snap will be the next Facebook, a humble startup turned massive, revenue-generating cash cow? Or will it be the next Twitter, a company that can’t seem to grow or make money? Not a company we would invest in but important to watch as a barometer for the "growth at all costs" model.


     

  • Seth Klarman speaks in a private letter to his investors. This famed value investor who has lost money in only 3 of the last 34 years weighed in on Trump suggesting that investors have become hypnotized by all the talk of pro-growth policies, without considering the full ramifications. He worries, for example, that Mr. Trump’s stimulus efforts “could prove quite inflationary, which would likely shock investors.” He also finds that “The big picture for investors is this: Trump is high volatility, and investors generally abhor volatility and shun uncertainty,” he wrote. “Not only is Trump shockingly unpredictable, he’s apparently deliberately so; he says it’s part of his plan.” He also had an interesting perspective on the many hedge funds that have underperformed over the last 5 years: “With any asset class, when substantial new money flows in, the returns go down.” He also sounded the alarm on ETFs suggesting that “stocks outside the indices may be cast adrift, no longer attached to the valuation grid but increasingly off of it.” “This should give long-term value investors a distinct advantage,” he wrote. “The inherent irony of the efficient market theory is that the more people believe in it and correspondingly shun active management, the more inefficient the market is likely to become.”

 

  • The United States is coming to resemble two countries, one rural and one urban. What happens when they go to war? Although I’m not a fan of dividing groups of people, I found this description of America in The Atlantic to be quite interesting. Perhaps dividing people between red states and blue states is no longer that helpful when one is attempting to understand the fault lines of American politics. Perhaps instead the gulf between urban and nonurban voters is wider than it ever has been. David Graham writes: “An important lesson of last year’s presidential election is that American political norms are much weaker than they had appeared, allowing a scandal-plagued, unpopular candidate to triumph—in part because voters outside of cities objected to the pace of cultural change. Another lesson is that the United States is coming to resemble two separate countries, one rural and one urban. Only one of them, at present, appears entitled to self-determination.”

 

  • The term “fake news” is officially meaningless. Once upon a time the term was used to refer to completely fabricated stories about politicians. Today the term has been hijacked to mean any news someone doesn’t like.

 

  • Donald Trump might be more popular than you think. Once again there is evidence suggesting
    that traditional polls are not accurately measuring support for the president and his policies. Support appears to increase when the poll is conducted using more anonymous methodologies…Could there be a difference between what one believes and what one will say publicly. Could their be a “social desirability bias”?

 

  • Could coding be the next blue-collar job? Provocative piece in Wired suggesting that for decades, pop culture has overpromoted the “lone genius” coder. “We’ve cooed over the billionaire programmers of The Social Network and the Anonymized, emo, leather-clad hackers of Mr. Robot. But the real heroes are people who go to work every day and turn out good stuff—whether it’s cars, coal, or code.”

 

  • Sex doesn’t sell any more, activism does. And don’t the big brands know it. From Starbucks supporting refugees to Kenco taking on gangs, big businesses are falling over themselves to do good – and to let us know about it. Great piece in the Guardian outlining how political business has become. There is no room for humility when a brand does a good deed and sadly brands are allowing people to pat themselves on the back without them personally having to sacrifice anything.

 

All the best for a productive week,


Logos LP

Can Stories Destroy An Economy?

Good Morning,
 

U.S. equities rallied on Friday, with financials rising around 2 percent, following a stronger-than-expected employment report.

 

The Dow Jones industrial average jumped around 180 points — posting its best trading day of the year — signalling that the Trump rally may still be intact. 

 

The U.S. economy added 227,000 jobs in January, while the unemployment rate ticked higher to 4.8 percent, the Bureau of Labor Statistics said Friday. Economists polled by Reuters expected payrolls to grow by 175,000 with the unemployment rate holding steady.

 

Another factor improving investor sentiment was the move on Friday by Trump to sign executive orders aimed at watering down financial regulations in the U.S. This move lifted the Financial Select Sector SPDR Fund (XLF) by 2 percent.


 

Our Take

 

Remember when people used to talk about the Federal Reserve? No longer. What we are looking at is a structural shift in the market from a Fed-driven market to a policy driven market. 


Musings
 

Do humans for the most part act rationally, or are they for the most part driven by emotion? To what extent can our decisions and judgements be tainted by emotion? Can stories and rumours throw an entire economy off course? 

 

I read a fascinating piece this week by Mark Buchanan a physicist and science writer which took up a theme I alluded to in a previous letter that rhetoric can become reality. Sentiment can cause outcomes. 

 

In his piece, Buchanan fleshes out this concept by demonstrating how narratives can spread economic uncertainty, discouraging consumer spending and business investment. 

 

In a recent speech Yale University Economist Robert Shiller made arguments about the Great Depression and the 2008 financial crisis. 

 

In the 2000s people passed around stories about getting rich flipping homes and this contributed to a belief that home prices would always rise. The real estate industry as well as the financial industry played into this but the key is that most appeared to buy into this narrative. Dissenting voices were few and far between. (Sound like the familiar narrative you hear in Toronto with home prices jumping 22%?)

 

Schiller has written extensively on these topics yet his new work has coined the term “narrative economics” - the idea that stories more more like infectious agents, with some being much more contagious than others, and that an epidemiological approach might help to better understand their movement. This is becoming more of a reality as we are able to perform more complete analyses of news feeds and social media. 

 

If moods, feelings and emotions drive decision making to what extent to they drive markets and economies? 

 

As Buchanan states: 

 

“It is perhaps appropriate that the power of stories is gaining greater recognition during the age of Donald Trump, who rose to the presidency thanks in large part to an utter disregard for objective reality. As Shiller acknowledges, Trump is a “master of narrative." Let's hope this one doesn’t prove to be disastrous.” 

 

Pay attention to the prevailing mood. Take the temperature of the stories and narratives that dominate the hearts and minds of those that surround you. You may find that causality can be turned on its head…



Thought of the Week


 

"Words are but symbols for the relations of things to one another and to us; nowhere do they touch upon the absolute truth.” -Friedrich Nietzsche




Stories and Ideas of Interest

 

  • Since the election, your personal filter bubble has been a big topic of conversation. To solve this bias problem, Wired magazine suggests using tech to re-engineer your media diet. You can try an app called Discors or the Chrome browser extension EscapeYourBubble to help you better understand and accept others. Barry Ritholtz suggests that these are good places to start but that they miss the mark as bias is but one cognitive error we make. He offers a few additional steps here

     

  • The multinational company is in trouble. Mr Trump is unusual in his aggressively protectionist tone. But in many ways he is behind the times. Multinational companies, the agents behind global integration, were already in retreat well before the populist revolts of 2016. Their financial performance has slipped so that they are no longer outstripping local firms. Many seem to have exhausted their ability to cut costs and taxes and to out-think their local competitors. Mr Trump’s broadsides are aimed at companies that are surprisingly vulnerable and, in many cases, are already heading home. The impact on global commerce will be profound.

     

  • Inside the mind of a Snapchat streaker. Bloomberg dives into the life of an avid user demonstrating that the photo sharing app is dangerously addicting by design. This is a depressing account but a must for those who are not users. Timing is right given that this week Snapchat filed for an IPO stating in its filing that: "We have incurred operating losses in the past, expect to incur operating losses in the future, and may never achieve or maintain profitability.” Will the app’s addictiveness be enough to convince investors to overlook the company’s net loss: $514.64 million in 2016, wider than $372.89 million in 2015? 

     

  • People wouldn’t care if three quarters of brands disappeared: Survey showed. Havas Group's "Meaningful Brands" report shows that people wouldn't care if 74 percent of brands they use vanished. They also say that 60 percent of the content produced by companies is poor, irrelevant or failing to deliver. This is a clear sign that over communication is diluting brand value and thus making it more difficult for brands to grow. The fight for consumer attention has perhaps never been more difficult. 

    What is a meaningful brand? Delport defined a meaningful brand as one which functionally works, offers value for money and makes someone's life easier, as well as considering the impact it has on a community. 

 

All the best for a productive week,

Are We Living In a "Post-Intelligence" World?

Good Morning,

U.S. equities closed mixed on Friday after the initial fourth-quarter GDP read fell short of estimates, but managed to record weekly gains of around 1 percent.
 

Economic growth in the U.S. slowed more than expected (slowest since 2011) in the fourth quarter as a plunge in shipments of soybeans weighed on exports, but steady consumer spending and rising business investment suggested the economy would continue to expand.
 

Gross domestic product increased at a 1.9 percent annual rate, the Commerce Department said on Friday in its first estimate of fourth-quarter GDP. That was a sharp deceleration from the 3.5 percent growth pace logged in the third quarter.

 

Our Take

 

The GDP confirms what we already knew. The U.S. economy is stuck in this growth range with the year ending on a mediocre note, but policy is already changing with Trump's actions strongly indicating that he is moving to deliver on many of the biggest and most revolutionary pledges of his campaign,

Lets have a look at what Trump did during his first (whirlwind) week in office: 


1) Affordable Care Act rollback

One of Trump's first acts as president was to sign an executive order aimed at rolling back Obamacare. The order directs agencies to "waive, defer, grant exemptions from or delay implementation of any provision or requirement" of Obamacare that imposes a burden "to the maximum extent permitted by law," and to offer the states as much flexibility as possible in implementing healthcare programs.


2) Immigration

Trump made the biggest splash of his first week in office on Wednesday, when he signed two executive orders codifying two of his major campaign pledges: To build a wall at the southern border and to cut federal funding to "sanctuary" cities, which don't enforce federal immigration laws on undocumented immigrants.

On Friday he also put a four-month hold on allowing refugees into the United States and temporarily barred travelers from Syria and six other Muslim-majority countries, saying the moves would help protect Americans from terrorist attacks.


3) Supreme Court

Trump announced — via tweet — on Wednesday that he would reveal his pick for Supreme Court Justice during his second week in office, on Thursday.


4) Reducing regulations

The Trump Administration has issued two memoranda dealing with regulations so far, taking steps to fulfill the longtime Republican Party pledge to rollback burdensome regulations on small businesses and manufacturing.

Shortly after Trump was sworn in, White House Chief of Staff Reince Priebus issued a memorandum instructing all executive departments and agencies to freeze new or pending regulations. This is a largely standard move for a White House transition to a new party, and is meant to give the incoming administration time to review any new regulations — or halt the implementation of some policies enacted by the previous administration.


5) Expediting infrastructure projects

In a similar vein, Trump issued an order Tuesday declaring the administration's intent to "streamline and expedite … environmental reviews and approvals for all infrastructure projects," particularly those deemed as "high priority" for the country — like updating the nation's electric grid or critical bridges and highways.


6) Abortion

On Monday, Trump's third full day in office, he signed an executive order reinstating the "Mexico City Policy," first implemented under Republican President Ronald Reagan in 1984. It bars taxpayer dollars from being used to fund non-governmental organizations "providing counseling or referrals for abortion or advocating for access to abortion services in their country."

The move won plaudits from anti-abortion rights groups, but was largely unsurprising — while every Democratic president since Reagan has reversed the measure, every Republican president has reinstated it.


7) Voting Rights

During a meeting with Congressional leadership Monday night, Trump again repeated his debunked claim that 3 to 5 million votes were cast illegally, robbing him of an election win. After repeated questions from the media, he on Wednesday announced plans to do something about it.


8) Withdrawing from TPP

Trump made good on one of his major campaign promises Monday when he signed an order withdrawing the U.S. from the Trans-Pacific Partnership Trade Agreement negotiations. It directs the U.S. Trade Representative to instead "begin pursuing, wherever possible, bilateral trade negotiations to promote American industry, protect American workers, and raise American wages."

The order is largely symbolic, as the trade agreement hadn't been signed by the U.S. and was unlikely to be approved by Congress as it faced opposition from members of both parties. But it formalizes U.S. withdrawal from the agreement, essentially erasing it.


9) Federal hiring freeze

On Monday, Trump signed a memorandum telling agencies they can't fill vacant positions or create any new ones — excepting military personnel and critical public safety positions — and directing the Office of Management and Budget to formulate a plan to "reduce the size of the Federal Government's workforce through attrition."


10) Energy production

On Tuesday, Trump signed orders clearing roadblocks for two controversial oil pipelines: The Dakota Access pipeline, which would carry oil from North Dakota, through South Dakota and Iowa to be shipped out of Illinois, and the Keystone XL pipeline, which would bring oil from Canada to Nebraska.


What does it mean? 


Without getting into the merits/demerits of his social/cultural policies Trump may be moving too fast. Interesting article this week in Bloomberg by Margaret Carlson suggesting that the whirling dervish occupying the Oval Office knows the body politic is not designed to absorb so many actions taken so fast with so little thought.


She writes that: "Not Capitol Hill, not the press, not the new president’s critics or friends. And not, it would seem, President Enrique Pena Nieto of Mexico, who cancelled a much ballyhooed one-on-one with Trump that was supposed to be the opportunity to work out a payment plan for the wall along the border. That’s what happens when you can’t wait until you have a secretary of state. If there’s one message coming out of the Republican retreat in Philadelphia where Trump spoke Thursday afternoon, it’s slow down, you’re moving too fast." 


What concerns me most from an economic point of view is the proposed border wall and the idea to use a 20% tax on all Mexican imports to fund it. This measure would likely inflict economic damage on both sides of the border. 


About 40 percent of the content of Mexican exports to its northern neighbor actually originate in the U.S., according to a 2010 National Bureau of Economic Research working paper.
 

And roughly 5 million American jobs depend on trade with Mexico, according to Christopher Wilson of the Mexico Institute at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars. 
 

Furthermore, prices in the USA for consumer goods would surely rise further pinching the pockets of the "forgotten man and woman" who shop at Wal-Mart....


Musings


This week my social media/news feeds have been exploding with anger over the above list of changes/ There is no doubt that these are contentious issues with arguments for and against on either side but what is most concerning to me is the unwillingness of many to consider opposing viewpoints. 


We appear to have lost our ability to listen, consider and reason with those who hold opposing viewpoints. This is problematic as one of the hallmarks of a liberal democracy is debate. Where do we head as a society if no one is willing to sit down, face the facts and make an effort to consider (from the other's point of view) an idea that one does not espouse? 


Are we living in an age of contempt in which we deligitimize facts and opinions? Forget a "post truth" world. We may have moved to a "post-intelligence" world.... 



Thought of the Week
 

 

"The test of a first rate intelligence is the ability to hold two opposed ideas in the mind at the same time, and still retain the ability to function. F. Scott Fitzgerald, "The Crack-Up", Esquire Magazine (February 1936).




Stories and Ideas of Interest

 

  • The stock market doesn’t really care who’s US president. The commander-in-chief has very little to do with the economy’s performance. Great piece from Ben Carlson who looks at historic data on stock market performance. 

     

  • Stock market participation is still quite low. The Dow hit 20,000 and half of America missed out. Back in April 2016, Gallup conducted its latest annual poll showing that just 52% of American adults owned stocks, via either individual issues, mutual funds, or self-directed 401(k) plans. This matched the lowest ownership level in Gallup’s 19-year tracking of this measure.

     

  • Warren Buffett says the US will do fine under Trump because we've got the 'secret sauce. "America works," the chairman and CEO of Berkshire Hathaway said. "I've said this before. It'll work wonderfully under Hillary Clinton, and I think it'll work fine under Donald Trump."

     

  • The super rich are preparing for the end of the world. Some think the end is near. “You just need so many things to actually ride out the apocalypse,” says former Facebook product manager Antonio García Martínez. 

 

  • Why the elites will always rule. Not exactly a politically correct title but this piece is a must read for anyone trying to make sense of our world and the power structures that have proliferated. History is the story of one elite replacing the other whether fox or lion. This is a very compelling account that transcends left and right, Republican and Democrat.

 

All the best for a productive week,


Logos LP

Could Trump Be Powerful Enough?

Good Morning,
 

U.S. equities closed higher in volatile session on Friday after Donald Trump took a protectionist tone in his first speech as president.

 

"We must protect our borders from the ravages of other countries making our products, stealing our companies, and destroying our jobs," Trump said after being sworn in. "Protection will lead to great prosperity and strength. I will fight for you with every breath in my body and I will never ever let you down.”

 

Our Take

 

It was a very populist speech. But what were you expecting? No Trump isn’t normal but that’s sort of the point as he spoke to the Heartland appealing directly to those who voted for him. It was vintage Trump and quite frankly it was what many in the United States needed to hear. Perhaps if businesses and consumers truly believe that Trump will “make America great again” the rhetoric will become reality as wallets open and corporate war chests are put to work. 

 

Sentiment is powerful and often precedes outcome. The way you carry yourself will often determine how you are treated. The things you say in the long run can have a way of creating the future.


The great leader respects himself and inspires the same sentiment in others. By acting regally, by tempting others to become confident in their powers, in their country and in themselves they make themselves and their subjects seem destined to wear a crown. 

 

Could Trump be powerful enough to catalyze rhetoric into reality?



Thought of the Week

 

"Be royal in your own fashion: act like a king to be treated like one.” - Robert Greene



Stories and Ideas of Interest

 

  • U.S. investor optimism is highest since crisis as Trump era dawns. It's been a month since the post-election rally in U.S. stocks stalled, but to hear high net worth investors tell it, there's only blue sky ahead as Donald Trump takes office….

     

  • That awkward moment when the world’s richest people have the same amount of money as half the world. Eight billionaires from around the globe are as rich as the 3.6 billion people who make up the poorest half of the world's population.   
         
     

  • Lifelong learning is becoming an economic imperative. Interesting piece from the Economist suggesting that technological change demands stronger and more continuous connections between education and employment. The faint outlines of such a system are now emerging. We are moving towards in which schools are places that you may return to several times over a lifetime in order to train for several different careers. 

     

  • Trump’s nationalization via Twitter. Here’s a question: When is a company considered privately owned? There’s ownership, and there’s control. If a company’s shareholders and executives don’t have control over the day-to-day operations of their organization -- if the government calls them up and tells them what to do -- is it really private?

     

  • AI pioneer wants to build the Renaissance machine of the future. Juergen Schmidhuber taught a computer to park a car. He’s also showing that same machine how to trade stocks and detect flaws in steel production. Unrelated as these tasks may appear, Schmidhuber thinks a seemingly random training regimen is key to creating artificial intelligence that can solve any problem.

 

  • Can Snapchat’s culture of secrecy survive an IPO? Last September, Snapchat employees read a report about a leaked commercial touting a new product—a pair of glasses for shooting videos. They felt emboldened to ask their bosses: Are these Spectacles glasses really from us? It seemed plausible. Paparazzi had photographed Chief Executive Officer Evan Spiegel wearing similar frames months earlier. Interesting piece chronicling the rise of a company in which employees are last to know. 

 

  • Mathematical model reveals the patterns of how innovations arise. The MIT technology review suggests that the work could lead to a new approach to the study of what is possible, and how it follows from what already exists. 

 

  • Move over coders- physicists will soon rule Silicon Valley. Interesting piece from Wired suggesting that structurally and technologically, the things that just about every internet company needs to do are more and more suited to the skill set of a physicist. Stay interdisciplinary. 

 

All the best for a productive week,


Logos LP

The Pundits Are Dead Wrong...

Good Morning,
 

Stocks closed mostly higher on Friday, boosted by strong quarterly earnings from U.S. banks, while investors mulled over several pieces of economic data. Short-term momentum continues to weaken as the major indices move sideways.

 

JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America and PNC Financial all reported better-than-expected profits, but only JPMorgan exceeded revenue estimates. All in all these earnings were solid but nothing particularly notable. 

 

In political news Donald Trump will enter the White House next week as one of the most unpopular presidents in recent American history. And he will be pushing an agenda that most Americans don't seem to support.

 

The latest numbers for Trump, beset this week by fresh reports of Russian efforts to boost his candidacy, are stark. A new poll from Gallup shows that just 44 percent of Americans approve of his presidential transition efforts while 51 percent disapprove. By contrast, 83 percent approved of President Barack Obama's transition in 2008. Even George W. Bush, who like Trump lost the popular vote, enjoyed a 61 percent approval rating of his transition as he prepared to enter the White House.

 

Trump himself has also seen his approval ratings slide again after a brief uptick following his surprise Electoral College win. A Quinnipiac poll out this week showed that just 37 percent of Americans approve of the way Trump is handling his job as president-elect to 51 percent who disapprove. The numbers are the reverse of Obama, who had a 55 percent approval rating in the poll.

 

But….polls also predicted that Trump would lose the election….(Great memo published this week by Howard Marks on expert opinion)

 

While on the topic of Trump, another fun fact: New York has currently spent $32 974 356 protecting Trump. Based on Bloomberg estimates the City spends about $450 000 per day on his security. Freedom isn’t free…


Our Take


Wednesday’s press conference featuring Trump was awful. In answering questions, he raised more than he answered. His plans to insulate the presidency from his business interests is a joke (handing power to his sons) and he again refused to release his tax returns. 

 

He also mocked those worrying about his conflicts of interest, saying that under his read of U.S. law, a president cannot be accused of such a thing, no matter what he does.

 

He also claimed that he had both the ability and the legal right to simultaneously run the Trump Organization and the executive branch of the U.S. government, but was choosing to step away from the former as a sort of favour to American voters.

 

Yet if that wasn’t bad enough he refused to take a question from a CNN reporter because “your organization is terrible” and “you are fake news.” He also took time out of his busy “presidential” schedule to denigrate Meryl Streep and Hilary Clinton. Yes Meryl denigrated him and his voter base but a president should rise above such insults. He should attempt to set an example. 

 

Our worry is that the market continues to price in the best version of Donald Trump. A version it may never see…

 

Our second worry is more for our home country Canada. If Trump does in fact make good on many of his promises we now risk falling even further behind America with its pro-business president and free enterprise Congress. Pierre Poilievre for the Financial Post takes an interesting look at how a potential Border Adjusted Tax (BAT) and other republican tax plans could wreak havoc on Canadian exports. Not pretty as higher mortgage rates are starting to squeeze Canadians…

Musings


I read a nice article this week by Ben Carlson which explained how certain “pundits” in the financial world are able to continuously sell books and newsletter subscriptions despite the fact that their predictions have continuously turned out to be dead wrong. 

 

The article really hit home as I have a certain acquaintance that every year, sometimes as often as every quarter, informs me of a new impending stock market crash. 

 

This has been going on for years now: currency crisis, debt crisis, trade crisis, war, famine, viral outbreak, collapse of the monetary system and variations of “the whole system is a sham”. I can’t keep track. 

 

Yet even after a disastrous string of predictions the subscriptions keep increasing and the talking heads keep talking. 

 

Why? 

Because There Is No Easy Way To Get Rich Overnight” simply doesn’t sell. It’s like playing the lottery: losing every year, every month or even every week doesn’t stop people from playing. 

 

The rush you get when you play, when you get that chance to be right, to be the “outlier” is simply too sweet for most to pass up.

 

These “pundits” are aware of this fact and use it to their advantage in order to make money. Yet unfortunately, this is a terrible strategy for investors to use in order to generate returns. But, I suppose it remains a compelling strategy to generate entertainment…
 

Logos LP In The Media

 

One of our GP’s top picks for 2017: Syntel (NASDAQ: SYNT) was featured on the MoneyShow. 


Thought of the Week

 

"Life is hard, and a lot of people come home tired from work. If they’re gonna spend half an hour reading, they want some entertainment and sense of achievement. So that’s what I give them. That’s all I’m trying to do. Is that really so wrong?” -James Patterson 



Stories and Ideas of Interest

 

  • We are beginning to fight back against technology. French workers now have the “right to disconnect,” or more appropriately, a new law instructs companies to ask workers on how they can—if at all—be contacted outside of the office or during non-work hours. Would you want that right for yourself?

     

  • Silicon Valley needs startup Drano. An entire library could be filled with books about how the bright minds in Silicon Valley find and fund the next Google or Facebook. 

    But there are four basic steps to startup investing:

    1)Persuade people to give you lots of money.
    2) Use that money to buy shares in young companies.
    3) Cash out those shares in an IPO or acquisition. 
    4) Return to the people from step one (if all goes as planned) a much larger pile of money than what they gave you. Keep some for yourself. 

    But the basic mechanics are sputtering. Steps 3 and 4 are broken as money and thus returns are not flowing out… 

         

  • Instagram’s shameless Snapchat knockoff is doing marvellously well. On Jan 11 Instagram announced that Instagram Stories, a feature it launched in August 2016 that was a blatant copy of Snapchat, has accumulated 150 million daily active users. That’s exactly how many users Snapchat had as of June 2016. That in turn means it’s taken Instagram Stories about four months to get the same number of users it took Snapchat over four years to attract. This may put pressure on its proposed IPO as Snap has yet to make a profit. A problem Facebook certainly does not have…

     

  • Did the global elite’s devotion to borderless capitalism sow the seeds of a populist backlash? Kenneth Rogoff can pinpoint the moment he started to grow concerned Donald Trump would be the next U.S. president: It was when Rogoff’s fellow attendees at the World Economic Forum’s annual meeting last January said it could never happen. “A joke I’ve told 1,000 people in the months since leaving Davos is that the conventional wisdom of Davos is always wrong,” says the Harvard professor and former chief economist of the International Monetary Fund. “No matter how improbable, the event most likely to happen is the opposite of whatever the Davos consensus is.” Could this year’s Davosbe any different?    
          
     

  • Feel your cost of living is getting to high? Feel like seeing your dollars go farther? It may boil down to where you choose to live. CNBC puts together an interesting list of American cities in which you can live really well on $60,000. 

     

  • Could goal setting be holding you back? We are all told from a young age that setting goals is the way to achieve the things we want. Yet perhaps when it comes to actually getting things done and making progress, focusing on systems is more useful. What is a goal and what is a system? If you’re a coach, you’re goal is to win a championship. Your system is what your team does to practice every day. Interesting piece suggesting that committing to the process is what makes the difference.
     

All the best for a productive week,


Logos LP