Friday, December 24, 2010

My 2011 investment outlook. With stock picks or not?

Merry Christmas to everyone who is reading this post! I am starting my year end note a little earlier this year because I have no idea how long it is going to take to finish this note. Especially when I intend to pick some ideas and give some view on the market direction, this means it will take a lot more thinking a whole lot of my time.

Looking back at this year, I have already posted 59 posts which is more than 1 per week, however I really doubt I will be able to post this many in the coming year because my work is just going to get more challenging and my time with my beloved stocks will dwindle to almost nothingness. Ok I admit it is a little dramatic, but the fact of the matter is, it is really very difficult to keep things going for the blog going forward. Lets hope for the best and really I do wish to see more of you silent readers to become followers for the blog because it would be a justification for me to continue writing this.

So Tuan Sing really moved 3 days after my post, now people are really going to think I am a contra trade stock picker. I really had no idea that Business Times was going to publish an article 2 days after I did. If I did, I would have mortgaged my house and bought into the stock! My goodness, I did not make a single dime on the stock because I was still trying to determine how I should rebalance my personal portfolio to include Tuan Sing but now it is just flown away from me....sigh.....Maybe in the future, I will only post after accumulating enough of the stock....but that would be unethical. The dilemmas in life....balancing between ethics and money.

This year has not been as fruitful as I hoped it would be. To be honest, it has been a turbulent year for my personal portfolio and I have been struggling to beat my benchmark of 10% real return on my money. Figured that if it is possible to deliver such returns, I should be retired by 45 years old. Do not misunderstand that I have tons of money to start with, but all I am targeting is to have as simple a life as possible and that does not take much money in the first place. So that is why I have set such low expectations.

Moving into this year's final post. Where should we start? How about risks? It is always important to look at the downside before looking at the upside. So lets start off with the risks that I see in the market.

Inflation

Yes yes, I know the central bankers like Trichet and Bernanke are all talking about how they feel inflation will remain tepid in Europe and US. They are probably right and it will stay low for another 12 to 18 months but there is a problem here...we DO NOT LIVE IN EUROPE AND THE US. We are going to face inflation of above 4% going into the next year and you know what? That is just the FAKE figures that our governments are going to report to us. Imagine what will the true rate of inflation be? Inflation will be key going into the next year as we have had a great year for emerging markets and wage pressures and material costs are going to be main drivers for the inflation problem in emerging markets. The competitive devaluation of currencies makes it a conducive environment for inflation to breed. It is not wise for investors to rest on their laurels next year on their reliance on fixed income.

I personally know that there are some very established investment strategists that are still recommending investors to buy into emerging market bonds but I believe they are underestimating the inflationary pressures these countries face in 2011 and that will really hurt their bond prices. Lets be honest here, which of you do not think inflation is something which we do not pay enough attention to. That is all due to the "money illusion" which governments create in our perceptions, but that is a theory which will be left for another post cos I do not intend to spend my whole Christmas weekend writing this post.

The theme will be based around the fight against inflation and balancing it against worries over the robustness of the economic recovery. If central banks continue to look at economic recovery as fragile, inflation will catch up on them without them realising it. Emerging markets have to realise that they will have to move their model away from export model to a consumption one. If is going to be difficult because if consumption picks up, inflation will too, if currencies are managed artificially lower to help exports, inflation moves up too. Thus it is really a "catch 22" situation for them. The biggest problem for most people are their inability to look beyond the short term and into the long term. Some times short term pain may really lead to long term gain. However governments are giving too short tenors for each election cycle and they tend to use stop gap measures to "stop start" their economy according according to election cycles and that distorts the economic growth path for most countries. China will be the only exception for this because their governments stay in place till they are too old. Hahaha. Just kidding.

So when evaluating investments, investors will have to take note of inflationary risks and make sure that the underlying investments they choose to take will have potential to return more than the inflation rate. I would target a return in excess of 8 percent to be safe.

Europe will continue to be a worry zone because we are very quickly running out of peripheral countries to distract us from the possibility of Spain or Italy to default on their debt. Remember, even if these countries do not default, the press will make it out to be. So I would just say, expect volatility in these markets. Will a sovereign default materialize? Maybe. Will it hurt us? In the short term yes, but in the longer term no. So expect Europe to continue to contribute to the volatility but take it as buying opportunities.

It is my belief that it is practically impossible for all parts of the world to do well altogether. If Europe suffers, we will benefit in one way or another. Do you know why food and energy prices have been low over the past 30 years? That is because there are large parts of the world suffering from starvation and lack of materials and power. Now that these parts are emerging from the darkness of poverty, some places have to lower their standard of living just to make up for this increase in demand. ZERO SUM GAME, understand? Harsh? I know, but face it, its the truth and it hurts because this is not UTOPIA.

The US will probably continue to do well because of the loose monetary policies in place and throw in QE2 and the extension of tax breaks (QE3), it all makes for a very conducive investment environment. Who will lead the S&P 500 forward to higher levels? Financials of course! They have not performed well this year and only picked up over the past 3 weeks because strategists out there are realising the fact that financials are the lagging sector throw the Pharmaceutical sector, we have the dogs of S&P 500 in 2010. What could screw things up for the US? I would say higher mortgage rates which we have been seeing for the past 5 weeks where treasuries have taken a beating leading to higher longer term yields and higher mortgage rates. The yield curve is steepening and that would mean that mortgages are going get higher. We could see a pop in mortgage take ups over the next few months as house owners may be afraid of higher rates in the future and rush to get their refinancing done, but after all that is done and dusted, what happens next? Could we see a double dip for housing? That is my fear for 2011. As I have said many times, Bernanke is probably the man made for this job. You want cheap money, he will give it to you. So he will think of some way to save the housing market. You can bank on that happening.

What do I like for 2011? I love real assets, be it properties and commodities. I am really bullish on them. Totally expecting the Singapore government to continue to introduce more property price cooling measures in 2011. In fact, it should come sooner than later so do expect to see it. But if you hold a long term view, I continue to like Singapore properties. I love commodities, especially soft commodities and energy. No gold? All my friends will know that I have been calling for gold since it was 600 bucks so I really do not want to keep calling for it. Is it a good hedge for inflation? I really think it is overrated. The best hedge for inflation will be where the inflation is coming from and they will be in housing, food and energy. For precious metals, I would promote platinum because it is the laggard behind silver and gold. This is totally unjustified because the demand and supply situation for platinum is still very bullish for the metal. Sell silver and move into platinum. I hope a close friend of mine whom I told to buy silver 5 years ago will listen to me again. You know who you are. One commodity I really like for next year will be Uranium. Very bullish on it because North Korea has placed an order to buy tons of it for their nuclear enrichment programme. Hahaha. Just kidding. I believe nuclear energy will see more take up over the next few years and uranium will be red hot.



Stocks Stock and more ...... (STOCKS)

It is no secret that there is nothing I love more than stocks as an investment. So I am going to end off with a few stock picks that I feel will do well for everyone's portfolio....

Nah...I guess I will leave it for my next post because I really am getting a little tired of typing. So will it be next week or will it be next year when I put the list out? Keep guessing.

Have a great Christmas! Stay blessed!

Best,

SVI

Saturday, December 18, 2010

Tuan Sing, uncovering the undervalued prime property developer plus others. $0.25

This will probably the penultimate post from me for the year as next couple of weekends will be rather busy due to Christmas and New Year celebrations scheduled. It is my favorite time of the year because this is the time to look forward to the new beginning for another year and my investment track record starts on a clean slate once again. December is always a great month to reflect back on the year and strategize for the next year. This year has not been fantastic especially for equity investors because they had to go through two volatile periods in May and September wiping out most gains and only giving them back if the investor was able to withstand the temptation to cut losses.

Before I go into the topic for today, I would like to apologise for not posting last weekend because if I did, some of you would have made good money on the stock I was going to write about. For those who benefited from the call, you are welcome. But anyone of you who smses me asking for contra or trading ideas, I will be charging 20% performance fee should you make money. I do not appreciate being asked such questions because I really dislike giving advice on short term trades, I do not like to have the pressure of giving a stock pick that will perform over 5 days. So let me state this clearly once and for all, NO MORE CONTRA advice! It is ok if you want me to give you ideas on stocks to buy and hold, because that is what investing is all about!

The stock I was intending to write about was STX OSV which has already gone up significantly from the price I was intending to call for. This is probably the IPO I liked most out of all the recent IPOs. I do believe it will continue to do well over the long term so do keep this on your watch lists and look for an attractive entry price. Goldman released a good report placing a target price of $1.54 on it. It is not surprising for Goldman to write good things for this stock because they are after all they are the IPO manager. Expect more positive reports to be released and more investors will jump on the bandwagon because there will be more credibility from a more neutral party.

This week, I am going to be doing a write up on a stock which my mum and dad would know about but younger investors would not even bother about it. This is a favor I am doing for someone who asked me to look into this stock. After looking through it, I was definitely impressed by the value in this company that is why I have decided to share it with all of you. Remember, this is definitely not the kind of stock that will move over the next few weeks or even months but this is one that has tons of value and will eventually deliver.

Tuan Sing Holdings Limited was established in 1969 and listed on the Singapore Stock Exchange in 1973. Over the years, the Company has expanded into multi-core businesses and broadened its presence in the region. Headquartered in Singapore, Tuan Sing now has over 70 subsidiaries, associated and jointly-controlled companies with a total workforce of more than 4,200 employees operating in various countries in the region.

Tuan Sing is involved in industrial manufacturing (tyres, packaging etc), hotel operations, property development, retail and electronics manufacturing. Now you know how diversified this company is. Currently, the company seems focused on taking on more property development projects, through their acquisition of Serene House and the land plot in Seletar. Earnings over the past year has been driven by property development while revenue has improved due to industrial segment.

Property Development

The company has been involved with property development for the longest time in Singapore and they have plenty of experience with that in China too. All their previous developments have been in prime areas in Shanghai. Their historical selection of land plots for development have been impressive and I do expect them to continue this great track record of land selection going forward.

Industrial Manufacturing

The Tyre and Auto Products unit has exclusive distributorship/rights for tyres from renowned manufacturers, namely GT Radial and Bias Tyres from Indonesia; GT Radial, Primewell and Runway Tyres from GiTi Group in China.

As the exclusive distributor for these established brands of tyre for selected countries in ASEAN, the unit distributes a wide range of tyres including passenger car radial tyres, truck and bus bias and radial tyres, as well as off-the road and industrial tyres. To complement its tyre business, the unit also markets Millennium wheels from Indonesia, GT wheels of Seyen Heavy Industryies in China, GT Lube, GT Batt and Yokohama brand batteries in ASEAN and China.

Hypak, a 98%-owned subsidiary, manufactures unlaminated and laminated polypropylene woven bags for products such as fertiliser, sugar, chemical, flour and feed meal.

Hotel operations (Hyatt Melbourne and Hyatt Regency Perth)


Hyatt Melbourne is a pre-eminent five star hotel in Melbourne

Within walking distance to the city's premier theatre, sporting venues, parks and convention centres

Won many international awards including recognition as Best Business Hotel in Melbourne 2000 by Asiamoney and Euromoney

547 guest rooms including 49 suites

Regency Club with 56 guest rooms for VIP accommodation

Hyatt Regency Perth includes five star Hyatt Regency Hotel, 23,000 square metres of office, retail and professional office tenancies, and a basement carpark

367 guest rooms including 32 suites

Regency Club with 68 guest rooms for VIP accommodation

Retail

The Group’s retail business comprises its 60% interest in the Pan-West group of companies, held through the Group’s wholly-owned subsidiary TS Planet Sports Pte Ltd.

Pan-West distributes and markets golf and golf-related lifestyle products in Singapore, Malaysia, and Indonesia. It also provides golf-related services such as custom fitting, professional coaching and after sales service. As a retailer, Pan-West operates 35 on-course and off-course outlets and concessionaires throughout the region.

Pan-West is the distributor of some of the top golfing brands in the world, amongst them, Callaway, Honma, Odyssey, Cleveland, Yamaha, Tour Edge, Cutter & Buck and Katana.

Electronics Manufacturing

Tuan Sing owns a 43.33% interest in an associated company, publicly listed Gul Technologies Singapore Ltd, a printed circuit board manufacturer with operations in Singapore and China.

GulTech is a manufacturer of double-sided, multi-layered and high-density printed circuit boards (PCBs). The company was listed on SESDAQ in March 1997 and was transferred to the main board of SGX in July 2000. GulTech has manufacturing plants in Suzhou and Wuxi, China.

Now you get the idea. When a company has this many businesses, it is hard for analysts to cover, hard for investors to appreciate and hard for the management to manage efficiently. I strongly believe this is a key reason why the stock price is still languishing at these levels.

The company used to be bogged down by high gearing in the past but after restructuring and divestment of Katong Mall, they have brought themselves to a net cash position and more corporate restructuring seems to be on the cards from the company's latest result announcement.With the current price at $0.25, the company is trading at less than 10 times p/e with a NAV of $0.45. With their recent moves in replenishing their land bank in Singapore and China, expect analysts to start paying attention to Tuan Sing, putting this company onto the radar screens of investors.

For me, I really think Tuan Sing will continue to be underrated as long as it continues having such diversified businesses. However, I do think the company is going to restructure itself to focus more on its core business (property development and their tyre business) and probably hive off or spin off most of its other businesses. If they should do this, I really believe investors will open up their eyes and see the company in a different light. A target price of $0.36 is not unreasonable which translates to 20% to its NAV. So I would call this a strong buy for all value investors.

In my next post, I hope to cover my views on the market for next year. Pray hard I will be sober enough to write.

Have a great week ahead.

Best,

SVI

Friday, December 3, 2010

Bank of Ireland had a great run, now for Citi to show more strength.

Tis the season to be jolly. I believe that may be the case going into December this year. I certainly hope I will be in a good healthy state going into this Christmas season to fully take part in the festivities. Fingers crossed, work will also slow down. It has really been a tough first week of the last month of the year and the light at the end of the tunnel in terms of work is totally non existent.

Last week, my schedule was so tight that I had no time to really put in a meaningful post. The market reactions to the various headlines was just frustrating to me because so many people were acting like idiots selling on the pointless news flow published by their equals. I keep telling investors to stop reading too much into the over sensationalised headlines but no one would listen. Just like what the great Warren Buffett always says, " the daily gyrations of the market is just noise." It does not take a genius to do well in the market, it takes someone who is calm and unemotional. Basically what that means is that a comatose person should do better than an emotional genius in investing. Ok I am being a little extreme but no one can really disagree with me on this point right?

The market started December with a bang, a strong rebound for most markets except China. Top analysts and strategists are still looking really silly by being so bullish on China over the past 12 months with it still logging in -12% returns this year on the Shanghai Composite.

Last week, I mentioned about the bank of Ireland being irrationally cheap and it has already risen 30% this week. For those brave souls out there, good for you. Investing takes a sound mind and a good gut to be successful. I would have liked to write about a particular stock today but my health is really failing me these days. The soul is willing but the flesh is weak.

Today lets talk about how well some of my picks have done this year. We had another buyout offer for one of my calls, Reyoung at $0.53. What price did I call it at? How about Bright World Precision hitting a 52 week high last week? They did not move overnight but they sure did well if you held it for 12 months. Another illustration on how bottom up stock picking actually delivers over the longer term. Be patient. I know of a close friend of mine who kept complaining that Reyoung had no movement and totally under performing the market. Well look who has outperformed the market over the past 12 months?

So is this current 1 week old rally for real? Is Santa Claus going to deliver a nice rally this December? I think we could end the year on a strong note. We have good ol' Benny Bernanke going on "60 minutes" talking about how the US recovery is going to take another 5 years to get back on track and how he feels inflation can be controlled when the time comes to control it. 100% sure about it? My goodness, talk about being confident. What does this all mean? He is just going to make it easier to borrow money than for you to bring yourself to deposit it. So its all green light for more asset inflation. What does he believe in? He believes in the wealth effect of asset inflation translating to higher consumer spending and leading to more jobs created. So which asset class has the broadest reach across the economy? Stocks of course. Wa la...we have the answer to bringing the US economy back from the dead? Push up stock prices so to make people feel richer and we will see economic activity come back to life. But is this really a long term fix or just a short term

It looks like Bush era tax cuts will be extended to over the next two years, this is another plus point for the economy and should provide another positive boost for the markets. I am impressed on how the Eurozone is looking for more austerity measures while the US is trying their best to get more spending. This gives economists a very good basis for comparison between the 2 developed super powers. Only time will tell which approach will work. My gut tells me, Trichet is still going to come out looking like a genius, but who am I to say?

For those people who like the Bank of Ireland pick, I am not calling for a strong buy on Citigroup because I feel $5 is not too far from now. Why? Cos the Fed has finished selling their last tranche at $4.35 and now there will be no worries over a possible share overhang. Citi is still trading below its book value and at a very reasonable price to earnings of 18 times. So I am calling for it as my key call and lets see how it works out.

I took 5 days to finish this post because time is really becoming a rare commodity for me. The current price of Bank of Ireland is 60% higher from time I called for it last weekend. This shows you how crazy markets can be. The overshooting theory will never go out of fashion with irrationality being a deep rooted flaw of humans.

Sorry for the lack of constructive things to say over the past two weeks, but balancing work, life and study is no easy feat. I have a couple of stock ideas to write about but I just do not have time to do so. Well tough....

Have a great remaining week ahead!

Best,

SVI