Register For Our Mailing List

Register to receive our free weekly newsletter including editorials.

Home / 431

Welcome to Firstlinks Edition 431 with weekend update

  •   28 October 2021
  • 5
  •      
  •   

The Weekend Edition includes a market update plus Morningstar adds free links to two of its most popular articles from the week.

Weekend market update

From AAP Netdesk:  The benchmark S&P/ASX200 index closed lower by 107 points, or 1.4%, to 7324 on Friday. The Reserve Bank is tipped to bring forward rate rises after opting not to defend soaring bond yields which decimated shares. Investors on Friday sold bonds and pushed the Australian three-year bond yield to 0.75%. Investors are increasingly sure the RBA will hike rates earlier than its forecast of 'not before 2024' as inflation mounts.

Monetary policy will also be in the spotlight in the US next week. Inflation has been higher in the US than Australia and the US is tipped to have higher rates sooner. The US and Chinese economies slowed in the past quarter, according to GDP data, as both were affected by supply shortages.

Westpac shares fell more than 2% on Friday, as did the Commonwealth Bank and NAB. All share categories fell while property stocks fared worst. In mining, BHP declined 1.2%, Fortescue fell 0.6% while Rio Tinto slumped by 2.7%.

From Shane Oliver, AMP Capital: Share markets were mixed over the past week. US shares rose 1.3% helped by solid earnings results, Eurozone shares rose 0.9% and Japanese shares rose 0.3% but Chinese shares fell 1%. The Australian share market fell 1.2% on the back of interest rate fears. Bond yields fell in the US but rose in Europe and Australia with the 10-year yield above 2% for the first time since March 2019. On Friday is the US, both the S&P500 and NASDAQ were up marginally by the close.

We now expect the first rate hike in a year’s time and the RBA to soften its rates guidance and weaken or abandon the 0.1% yield target, most likely on Tuesday. The RBA won’t rush into a rate hike because it wants to see that “inflation is sustainably within the target range” and for this to occur it will want to see more evidence that the inflation pick up is moving beyond transitory distortions due to the pandemic, that the economic recovery is sustained, full employment is reached and wages growth is around 3% or more.

However, money market expectations for the RBA to start hiking by mid next year and for around four rate hikes out to the end of next year taking the cash rate to 1 to 1.25% look way over the top. 

***

Headline writers reaching for superlatives to describe the rise in Australian house prices in the last 12 months (up 19.3% on the CoreLogic 5 Capital City Aggregate) make regular references to 'the fastest increase in 33 years'. So what happened in 1988? In only one quarter, June 1988, residential property prices rose 9.6%, but that's where the similarities end.

Between September and November 1987, the ASX All Ordinaries price index fell 50%, prompting a big asset switch to the security of property, both commercial and residential. Kicking it along, the cash rate fell 1.5% between September 1987 and June 1988.

Cash rates down, money flowing into property ... sounds like 2021, right? Wrong. The cash rate fell from 15% to 13.5%. Such rates would bury current day borrowers financing at 2% with debt to income ratios of 2021. And the current flows to property are not a switch from equities, which are themselves experiencing major inflows. The 2021 property boom is more funded by the ready availability of debt.

According to the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA), 22% of new mortgages in the June 2021 quarter went to borrowers with debt-to-income (DTI) ratios above six. Some banks allow up to nine times. Since 1988, the ratio of house prices to household debt has risen from 2.5 to over 5.5.

Here's a major difference between 1988 and 2021. Back then, while paying a mortgage at 13.5% was tough, inflation was also high and wages kept pace with rising prices. Over the years, the debt was inflated away, such that most people had paid off their mortgage when they entered retirement.

Now, inflation is low and the debt retains its current value for longer into the future. If someone takes a loan for say nine times their income, while they can service the interest repayments due to low rates, they make little inroads into the principal. Inflation no longer fixes the debt burden, and far more people will enter retirement with large mortgages.

It has long-term consequences, neatly summarised by MacroBusiness economist, Leith van Olselen. He says it's as if banks have adopted a subscription model for mortgage lending. It's similar to Microsoft switching to an annual subscription fee rather than selling their software upfront. The banks now collect annual interest payments but many borrowers never pay off the debt. It works fine as long as interest rates do not rise too much, especially when house prices are rising, except it leaves the owner with a mortgage to service in retirement when work ceases.

Often, superannuation is used to pay the debt, or Australia may move to intergenerational mortgages, as they have in Japan, where they offer 100-year mortgages. A house becomes 'ancestral' and is passed on with the loan over multi-generations.

And what happened after the house price boom of 1988? Falls through 1989 to 1991 with many quarters of prices down around 1.5%. In November 1990, Paul Keating called out 'the recession we had to have'. 

Susan Thorp tackles this issue by looking at the failures of policies to adequately link home ownership with retirement income. The family home is the largest asset for most retirees but it's least likely to be used for retirement income. Susan rates the current system a poor 'D'.

Continuing the home focus, we have extracted charts and predictions from the work of Alan Oster and his economics team at NAB to give a state of play at this critical point. Price rises are slowing and eventually rates will rise, even if only slightly, but there are reasons for market resilience.

We have documented previously how RBA Governor, Philip Lowe, and the market are differing on rate and inflation expectations, with further evidence in last week's CPI release. Even before further rate rises on Friday, the Bloomberg AusBond Composite index is expected to deliver its first negative annual return for 20 years in 2021. It presents obvious challenges for defensive portfolio allocations, so watch those 60/40 funds.

 

Investors in the Bank of America Global Fund Manager Survey report their most underweight exposure to bonds since the research began in 2001. Professional investors have voted with their money and this is putting further upward pressure on long-term rates.

The White Paper this week from Sage Capital looks at inflationary consequences for portfolios, and how to invest with this threat not seen for many years, transitory or not.

Still on housing, Michelle Morgan and Norman Derham take the view that the balance sheets of banks and the vast majority of borrowers are far more robust than those worrying about 'financial instability' claim. It's a challenge to the popular view gaining momentum.

Back on bonds, even if there is a modest rise in rates, the returns will not satisfy investors needing income to live on. With a Government Inquiry reporting this week on how to open the corporate bond market to more investors, beyond the current 'sophisticated' definition, Matthew Macreadie checks some unlisted opportunities at different points of the risk spectrum.

Andrew Mitchell then gives some excellent examples of four mental biases that undermine our investment success, and ways to cope with potential mistakes and turn them into opportunities. It's all in the mind.

In the short term, there are many factors that drive stockmarkets, but Damien McIntyre looks through the recent expansions in Price/Earnings ratios which have driven popular growth stocks to high prices to show where returns really come from over the long term. Cash flow is king.

Emerging markets are increasingly on investor radars, and Valeria Vine reports on 10 trends that will guide the destiny of these newer market opportunities.

Two bonus articles from Morningstar for the weekend as selected by Editorial Manager Emma Rapaport. Iron ore has plummeted thanks to a slowdown in Chinese steel production, taking Fortescue Metals with it. Could green hydrogen be the mining giant's future, she asks? And John Rekenthaler explores the bull case for Bitcoin

This week's Comment of the Week from Billy was in response to the article on how financial advice is changing, where many people described that the role of advisers has moved well beyond picking investments.

"I once received a financial plan that (amongst other things) had four pages which showed that in certain times "growth managers" performed better than "value managers" and at other times the opposite was the case. They presented a nice graph to prove their point, and recommended a "blend" of managers, some growth and some value. Dah! I could produce an almost identical graph that showed that at some times a manager who's name commenced with the letters between A and L produced better returns than managers that commenced with the letters M to Z and at other times the opposite. Four pages wasted, which took time to produce and time for me to read, but didn't add value. The average return of the "value" and "growth" managers? Same as the index, but with higher costs. All for "compliance" reasons. Adding cost, but not value."

Last week, the Government announced some changes to superannuation rules effective from 1 July 2022.

  1. Removal of the $450 per month income threshold under which employees do not have to be paid the superannuation guarantee by their employer.
  2. Eligibility age to make downsizer contributions into superannuation will reduce from 65 to 60 years of age.
  3. The maximum amount of voluntary contributions that people are able to release under the First Home Super Saver Scheme (FHSSS) will increase from $30,000 to $50,000.

Finally, I will be taking a two-week break and for the first time in nine years, turning on my OOO and trying to switch off completely. Leisa will be assisted by Guest Editor, Harry Chemay, best known as the co-founder of Clover and his years at Mercer. Harry recently gave this talk on housing (un)affordability if you want to put a face to the name.

Graham Hand, Managing Editor

 

Latest updates

PDF version of Firstlinks Newsletter

IAM Capital Markets' Weekly Market Insight

ASX Listed Bond and Hybrid rate sheet from NAB/nabtrade

Indicative Listed Investment Company (LIC) NTA Report from Bell Potter

LIC Monthly Report from Morningstar

Plus updates and announcements on the Sponsor Noticeboard on our website

 

banner

Most viewed in recent weeks

2024/25 super thresholds – key changes and implications

The ATO has released all the superannuation rates and thresholds that will apply from 1 July 2024. Here's what’s changing and what’s not, and some key considerations and opportunities in the lead up to 30 June and beyond.

Five months on from cancer diagnosis

Life has radically shifted with my brain cancer, and I don’t know if it will ever be the same again. After decades of writing and a dozen years with Firstlinks, I still want to contribute, but exactly how and when I do that is unclear.

Is Australia ready for its population growth over the next decade?

Australia will have 3.7 million more people in a decade's time, though the growth won't be evenly distributed. Over 85s will see the fastest growth, while the number of younger people will barely rise. 

Welcome to Firstlinks Edition 552 with weekend update

Being rich is having a high-paying job and accumulating fancy houses and cars, while being wealthy is owning assets that provide passive income, as well as freedom and flexibility. Knowing the difference can reframe your life.

  • 21 March 2024

Why LICs may be close to bottoming

Investor disgust, consolidation, de-listings, price discounts, activist investors entering - it’s what typically happens at business cycle troughs, and it’s happening to LICs now. That may present a potential opportunity.

The public servants demanding $3m super tax exemption

The $3 million super tax will capture retired, and soon to retire, public servants and politicians who are members of defined benefit superannuation schemes. Lobbying efforts for exemptions to the tax are intensifying.

Latest Updates

Retirement

Uncomfortable truths: The real cost of living in retirement

How useful are the retirement savings and spending targets put out by various groups such as ASFA? Not very, and it's reducing the ability of ordinary retirees to fully understand their retirement income options.

Shares

On the virtue of owning wonderful businesses like CBA

The US market has pummelled Australia's over the past 16 years and for good reason: it has some incredible businesses. Australia does too, but if you want to enjoy US-type returns, you need to know where to look.

Investment strategies

Why bank hybrids are being priced at a premium

As long as the banks have no desire to pay up for term deposit funding - which looks likely for a while yet - investors will continue to pay a premium for the higher yielding, but riskier hybrid instrument.

Investment strategies

The Magnificent Seven's dominance poses ever-growing risks

The rise of the Magnificent Seven and their large weighting in US indices has led to debate about concentration risk in markets. Whatever your view, the crowding into these stocks poses several challenges for global investors.

Strategy

Wealth is more than a number

Money can bolster our joy in real ways. However, if we relentlessly chase wealth at the expense of other facets of well-being, history and science both teach us that it will lead to a hollowing out of life.

The copper bull market may have years to run

The copper market is barrelling towards a significant deficit and price surge over the next few decades that investors should not discount when looking at the potential for artificial intelligence and renewable energy.

Property

Global REITs are on sale

Global REITs have been out of favour for some time. While office remains a concern, the rest of the sector is in good shape and offers compelling value, with many REITs trading below underlying asset replacement costs.

Sponsors

Alliances

© 2024 Morningstar, Inc. All rights reserved.

Disclaimer
The data, research and opinions provided here are for information purposes; are not an offer to buy or sell a security; and are not warranted to be correct, complete or accurate. Morningstar, its affiliates, and third-party content providers are not responsible for any investment decisions, damages or losses resulting from, or related to, the data and analyses or their use. To the extent any content is general advice, it has been prepared for clients of Morningstar Australasia Pty Ltd (ABN: 95 090 665 544, AFSL: 240892), without reference to your financial objectives, situation or needs. For more information refer to our Financial Services Guide. You should consider the advice in light of these matters and if applicable, the relevant Product Disclosure Statement before making any decision to invest. Past performance does not necessarily indicate a financial product’s future performance. To obtain advice tailored to your situation, contact a professional financial adviser. Articles are current as at date of publication.
This website contains information and opinions provided by third parties. Inclusion of this information does not necessarily represent Morningstar’s positions, strategies or opinions and should not be considered an endorsement by Morningstar.