SA CEOs told nationalisation a possibility

by 4. August 2011 06:51

Risk analyst says mining companies dismiss the prospect of nationalisation at their peril.

(Bloomberg) The ruling party may institute some form of mine nationalisation, a step that could throttle investments in the world’s biggest producer of platinum and chrome, according to a confidential report prepared for mining executives by a risk analyst.

 A drive to seize mines, banks and land is being spearheaded by Julius Malema, 30, who won an uncontested second term as the leader of the youth league of the ruling African National Congress in June. The ANC in November instituted a study into the viability of nationalisation. The findings will be the “key political issue” in party leadership elections in December 2012, Claude Baissac, the Johannesburg-based founder of country- risk consultants Eunomix, wrote in the report.

 “The possibility of the ruling party voting for a major policy shift affecting security of tenure and ownership of the mines is now greater than at any point since the end of apartheid,” Baissac wrote in the report obtained by Bloomberg News. Mining companies “will now dismiss the prospect of nationalisation, whichever form it ultimately takes, at their peril.”

South Africa is the continent’s largest producer of gold, supplies European and Indian power plants with coal and depends on mining for half of exports. In April 2010, Citigroup valued the country’s mineral resources at $2.5 trillion, the most of any nation.

“It is only our policy conference that is going to bring some finality to the matter,” Jackson Mthembu, a spokesman for the ANC, said in an interview from Johannesburg on July 29.

“Studies are being conducted. We can’t therefore jump the gun.” Malema told reporters in Johannesburg on Sunday that the party is studying how to implement nationalization rather than whether to go ahead with the policy.

An ANC vote for nationalisation “would represent the crossing of the Rubicon for both the ANC and for the country,” Baissac wrote. Shares of companies “with a large exposure to South Africa would tumble. Foreign capital would rush out of the country, bringing an immediate collapse of the rand”.

On July 26 2002, shares of Anglo American (JSE:AGL) Plc, the biggest investor in South African mining, plunged as much as 12% after the Mines Ministry said it was considering a proposal that would require mines to be 51% black-owned. The rand declined as much as 1.9% against the dollar.

Let’s talk property - South African property and how to evaluate the best investments?

by 5. May 2011 07:15

Scott Picken, IPS CEO will interview Dr Hannes Dreyer, the global leader in Wealth Creation. Retiring at 37 and living off his property portfolio, Dr Dreyer devised a successful strategy for analysing any property to ensure you can retire and have financial freedom as soon as possible. The most important component is his strategy works in a rising market as well as a falling market, something no one else in South Africa can prove and show their successful results.

What will be covered:

i.              What is happening with SA property market? Where is it going?

ii.             How to analysis a property investment?

iii.            How to calculate the risks and growth?

iv.           How to decide whether to sell property you have – which is not great property?

v.            How to find the best properties in South Africa?

96% of people in South Africa will retire poor and only 1% will retire financially free.

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Let's talk property - Offshore Investment - Why and How?

by 5. May 2011 07:11

Dr Hannes Dreyer, the global leader in Wealth Creation, will interview Scott Picken, IPS CEO. Scott Picken has helped over 2000 people invest in international property to a value of R1.6 billion as is the leading expert in South Africa on Offshore Investment and International Property.

What will be covered:

i.              What is happening in global markets?

ii.             5 fundamental risks facing all South Africans

iii.            Why invest offshore?

iv.           Where? USA, UK, Aus, other markets?

v.            Risks and Growth

vi.           Analysis the investment?

Over 80% of people who invest overseas actually loose money for a number of reasons. Learn what you have to know to ensure you don’t join them and you achieve your goals of Wealth Preservation, a Plan B and most importantly Peace of Mind for your family and you.

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·         Date: 24th May 2011

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IPS is looking for Professional Ladies who want to work from home! Great Earning opportunity!

by 24. January 2011 21:35

ARE YOU TIRED OF HAVING TO ASK YOUR HUSBAND FOR AN ALLOWANCE?

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DO YOU MISS EARNING WHAT YOU USED TO NOW THAT YOU’RE AT HOME WITH YOUR LITTLE ONES?

DO YOU WANT TO EARN YOUR OWN OFFSHORE INCOME WHILE WORKING YOUR OWN HOURS – NO RIGOROUS OFFICE HOURS!

DO YOU WANT TO SECURE YOUR FAMILIES FUTURE?

DO YOU WANT OVERSEAS TRIPS?

 

DO YOU WANT TO HAVE YOUR CAKE, AND TO EAT IT – I.E. SPEND THE TIME YOU WANT WITH YOUR CHILDREN, AS AND WHEN YOU NEED IT; AND THEN STILL MEET YOUR CLIENTS AND DO BUSINESS AT CORPORATE EXEC LEVEL AROUND YOUR CHILDREN?

Are you a stay at home mum who desperately wants to spend the time needed to watch your babies grow, but you’re starting to miss the excitement and thrill of your old career?

Do you want to be able to earn from R16 000 to R200, 000 + pm, but with complete freedom as to your hours and place of work?!

IPS Australia” is looking for highly experienced and dynamic ex-Business Women/Executives for our Australian Division!

We’re looking for the “New Age Mums” – the ones who combine their maternal instinct and new life as a mother with their career experience and Business Exec ambition! The ones who excel at communicating with high nett worth individuals and who thrive on helping clients invest offshore with confidence! The ones who’d prefer to be a mum first and foremost, but without having to give up their previous earning standards entirely and who want to continue generating their own income - within their own command!

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All training will be provided by our Offshore Specialists, you’ll enter into the Team with an already distinguished brand, an exceptional After-Sales Team as your partners to take care of the Purchase Management Process with you and your clients, introductions are already generated and are handed to you, and the extraordinary demand for what we do naturally occurs in the ever increasing market!

You will already be completely internet and email savvy, and have your own set up from home – this is especially because you’ll be there for your little ones whenever you need to! Our boardroom and office facilities are, however, always ready for you should you wish to meet your clients in a business environment other than their own offices or meeting venues of their inclination...

You will have an exceptional level of business communication skills with very high nett worth Investors, and a keen sense of financial acumen – you are, of course, going to be assisting clients in preserving and enhancing their wealth! Your previous business experience in whatever field will naturally secure client trust in your ability and integrity as a consultant and representative in what we do.

We look forward to having you join our Team and assist us by representing how we offer discerning solutions for the discerning investors!  

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The demand is there - we just need the select few who will suit the position!

South Africa - Keeping a wide view on the Rand after all

by 24. January 2011 19:40

 

By Cees Bruggemans, Chief Economist FNB                                     Cees@fnb.co.za

17 January 2011

Traditionally I have kept a wide (200 cent) view on the Rand’s one-year trading range (because that’s the kind of movement history has regularly shown) and an open mind on the outcome of crises. This past week both these traditions converged with a vengeance.

 

Barely had I opened the 2011 innings with the suggestion of a 100 cent Rand band (6-7:$ and 8-9:€) or events started steadily marching the other way.

 

Just goes to show that where currency volatility is concerned one should always think WIDE even if it makes planning and position-taking difficult if not impossible.

 

After having seen 6.55:$ in December, this morning the Rand is nearer 6.90:$. More significantly, after having seen 8.70:€ the Rand today is nearer 9.25:€.

 

Commodity currencies have experienced some setbacks, Aussie understandably following the floods and damage, but focus remains on China where last week they raised bank reserve requirements once again (after doing so six times last year), and where the next interest rate increase is apparently on the table.

 

Good Chinese growth data are expected shortly, and inflation will probably be higher than wanted this year. The growth performance should guide commodity prices, but if policy is tightened it may have the bigger sway.

 

One also notes the growing awareness of rising emerging market inflation potential, making their bonds less of a buy, something we have seen already for some months now.

 

So despite the liquidity engines in the US and Japan working overtime, other forces could be tempering their influence, inviting Rand pullbacks.

 

In the case of the Rand/Euro, this past week saw a lot more Euro-positive movement and the Rand weakening.

                     ---------------------

Europe’s political machinery is moving glacially in agreeing further institutional innovations, mostly reactive to crises rather than proactive to prevent them.

 

There are rumours about an eventual increase in the size of the peripheral lifeboat, finally able to receive more candidates (Portugal still seen as certain and rumours remaining about Spain and others).

 

There is talk of the lifeboat being allowed to buy peripheral debt in secondary markets. Such purchases of distressed debt at advantageous prices would be to the benefit of peripheral countries, while taking over the ECB role of addressing perceived mispricing.

 

There is talk of the lifeboat also being allowed to undertake capital injections (recapitalization) of banks (starting this overdue process, weaning such banks off ECB dependence, thereby also less overburdening the ECB).

 

And the price of lifeboat credit remains a debating point, with the current 300 points over Bunds considered too high (according to some, though not all, commentators for it supposedly still disallows Club Med sustainability).

 

This, though, will be the hardest nut to crack for it will decide the real level of Germanic subsidy transfers to Romanic peripherals.

 

Something far less strenuous than 300 points (but still risk-related) is apparently being aired, such as say 100 points over Bunds. This would allow Club Med sustainability, provided ironclad agreements are in place about Club Med fiscal austerity being sustained, and would not be ‘excessive’ favours demanded of Germanic taxpayers (or so say those who won’t be paying this subsidy).

 

Though only crisis stations seem to get European politicians to move on all these fronts, what is important is that it eventually happens. Though there remains a lot of noise in the ether, hints suggests there is movement on most of these fronts.

 

As in 2007-2008 in the US, one is reminded of Paul Gallico’s plot in “The Poseidon Adventure” where the few surviving desperadoes slowly, experimentally grope their way towards freedom and redemption, though never again being the same for having participated in the adventure.

 

Markets certainly have taken heart this past week, with good support for Portuguese and Spanish debt auctions. Together with speculation about coming lifeboat enhancements it put markets in the mood to lower the Club Med spreads over Bunds, in some case impressively so.

 

If that wasn’t enough, ECB President Trichet then saw the opportunity of sounding confident and hawkish, signaling that European headline inflation of 2.2% in December was outside the ECB target range. If this were to persist (note the qualification) he wouldn’t hesitate to start raising interest rates, and considered this entirely doable while continuing with providing liquidity support and where necessary buy debt assets.

 

It was enough for the market to look at the Euro with different eyes, both structurally and cyclically.

 

The worst might not after all happen and has been over-discounted in too many minds (though not shown up to the same extent in surveys) and the inflation bogey (commodity-led, as in so many other countries) has resurfaced, potentially changing the playing field.

 

As the Fed patently isn’t swayed by similar sentiments (it sees US resource slack keeping US core inflation nearer 0.5% for some time and considers the US recovery not advanced enough to worry about anything else), the Fed is likely to stick to its current stance of zero interest rates (potentially through 2012) and finishing QE2 (with presumably still an open mind as to what happens after mid-2011, though US growth momentum is showing encouraging firmness now, arguing against further actions, as many observers already convincingly do).

 

Thus we have another Macro Theme change. It is true that Trichet has already since 3Q2010 been speculating about an eventual change in ECB policy stance, but one always wonders in their case (this being Europe) to what extent that represents playing the political gallery, trying to gain leverage.

 

But this time the excuse (2.2% inflation) seems real, if European inflation really continues elevated. One cannot but note, though, that the comments came in a week when markets were taking heart about debt actions, and these ECB comments helped to boost the Euro at an important psychological moment.

 

For a minimal outlay (a few words spoken and eyebrows raised), market confidence was crucially reinforced, and the ability to keep the faith (in the Euro) strengthened.

 

One should not underestimate the ECB on this score.

                 --------------------------

The effect on us was electrifying, though, with our exporters in a very short space seeing the Rand back at 9.25:€ after that sinking feeling in December when 8:€ seemed to be coming into view shortly in the New Year.

 

These global tendencies had a still wider impact. Although gold had a few times breached $1400 in recent months, and platinum even re-conquered $1800, events of the past week reduced the near-term risk of global mayhem and did we see gold pull back (again).

 

Have we witnessed the reaching of the high water mark?

 

Certainly the short-term US prospects are for steady consolidation with the Fed in support (though longer term there remain many questions about US fiscal behaviour).

 

Chinese prospects aren’t necessarily unhealthy (high growth continuing) even as that country keeps tweaking its policy stance firmer (though also longer-term one may question its choice of policy preferences).

 

Emerging market space generally has kept policies accommodating while recovering from global recession, but with output gaps closed or closing fast, and commodity price surges further reinforcing inflation potential, a number of emerging countries may have to ‘normalise’ their interest rates a little faster this year.

 

But none of this is expected to derail the global boat. And though some people will keep muttering, the real risk of 2011 never resided in any of these, even if markets will adjust relative prices between regions.

 

The real risk of 2011 was perceived as Europe, and it only took the second week of the New Year to already gain some new Dutch courage as rumours swirled, politicians looked busy, sense seemed to prevail in the end (doesn’t it always in modern times?) and Trichet judged the moment opportune for a rapid beating of the drums, giving a ‘heads-up’ on the Euro. Not an ‘all clear’, mind you, but certainly a sliver of blue on the horizon of an otherwise still threatening leaden sky.

 

This tremor may be an important psychological change. In the Anglo-Saxon crisis we went through something similar in early 2009. No clear sailing thereafter, with double-dip questioning and other horrors still regularly trotted out, but in retrospect proving to be entering quieter sailing waters than 2007-2008 had been.

 

Despite momentous European actions still needed to be taken shortly on sovereign debt and Eurozone governance and its banks more thoroughly cleaned out over the coming year, at least the ship seems to be less pointed at a rocky coastline in stormy conditions and more towards open sea where it can weather things more comfortably.

 

On all these scores there could still be disappointment, causing sentiment to swerve unpredictably once again. But one senses, as in late 2008 in the US, that there seems to be movement in the right direction. And this counts.

                 -----------------------

What’s in it for us?

 

Global growth should continue more robust than some fear, with 5% mentioned by various sources. Our exports should continue to participate in that with our own shortcomings determining how much of a benefit we can garner here.

 

The fortunes of commodity prices may differ significantly with energy and agricultural prices in steep ascendancy. Precious metal prices may have less reason to expect further major gains, though the world remains fickle in its risk views, with longer trends yet to fully show.

 

For instance, has the last word been spoken about US monetary and financial conditions? Similarly, is the new Europe taking shape really viable? And will China still surprise us by losing its way?

 

Not in the short term, but on a longer leash?

 

There remain forces favouring Rand firming (US and Japanese liquidity especially), but others (Chinese actions, European comeback) may argue against this. Worldwide, bonds may be less supported (overvalued?) while equities may be doing more of the running.

 

That need not take the full shine off us, though the composition of forces may be changing. As bottom line this warrants the traditional wide (200 cent) view of the Rand rather than a narrow channel, as events can push our currency around at remarkable speed and in wide swings.

 

So I am back at 6-8:$ and 8-10:€ and want to see what next Macro Theme change the world wants to come up with, for good or bad.

 

On balance I remain positive global recovery, with the US proceeding steadily for now, Asia and associated emerging markets tweaking policy firmer and Europe regaining a better footing (though its play out will take years).

 

This may allow somewhat less unhealthy Rand overvaluation, but also allow less compensation for commodity inflation surges. What we gain through a better growth balance we may have to trade-off with a lesser inflation balance.

 

So for us these global changes may imply (still modest?) changes in composition. For now.

 

But the world is proceeding at a furious pace so be ready to modify our course shortly once again.

 

Cees Bruggemans

Chief Economist FNB

Cees@fnb.co.za

 

Register for free e-mail articles www.fnb.co.za/economics 

South Africa - Inflation Titans marshalling 2011 forces

by 24. January 2011 19:38

 

By Cees Bruggemans, Chief Economist FNB                                    Cees@fnb.co.za

17 January 2011

Having dipped as low as 3.2%, CPI inflation has already been rising for two months back to 3.6%, with forecasts of 4.5% this year and 5.5% next year.

 

This, though, is a ‘risk-free’ scenario, discounting some base effects boosting inflation higher in 2011, and assuming a ‘neutral’ Rand above 7:$ and 9:€, mostly ‘benign’ food inflation as good harvests have created protective buffer stocks (and the summer rains being most promising for continuing repeats, dam levels gratifyingly high, despite damage incurred), public charging continuing as tax source of last resort but baked into the cake, and labour pricing itself modestly out of real jobs (with job losses and productivity gains the usual shock absorbers, preventing unit labour costs from rising excessively).

 

Right, but what if?

 

What if labour keeps confusing nominal with real demands? Will society keep polarising between fewer survivors in formal employment, unionised and non-unionised, with the remainder forced into state subsistence?  

 

Are these going to be the Three Pillars (thinking Chinese new-speak thought) of our New Society?

 

This fearful prospect provides its own answer in ongoing job losses and greater productivity gains, technology assisted (especially in labour-intensive services), with the state (meaning taxpayers) employer of last resort and welfare support.

 

Then also, we keep on humming about the ‘developmental’ state we are supposedly creating, but reality seems to be coming close to turning us into a ‘parasitical’ state, its sustainability a source of wonder for those so engaged.

 

What else should we really be concerned about when it comes to inflation prospects?

 

Globally, there are two candidates.

 

Firstly, negative output gaps turning positive in many emerging markets (high resource slack increasingly making way for overheating cost-push shortages).

 

Secondly, commodity price explosions (primarily agriculture, secondarily energy and some metals, and lastly industrial intermediate prices).

 

Some emerging markets and commodity producers have had a good recession and/or recovery, cyclically closing their output gaps, modestly boosting inflation prospects.

 

This is far from being a global phenomenon yet, thinking US, Europe and Japan, but also industrial China. Still, in some regions this already features and leads the global inflation cycle this decade.

 

Greater concern focuses on commodities. Intermediate industrial goods prices may not be a major source of new inflationary pressure soon due to much slack, but energy (oil), some metals (copper) and especially agricultural commodities are another matter.

 

Especially so where the new resource nationalism is most developed, whether rationing oil supply, rare metals or putting bans on agriculture exports due to poor harvests and resulting low inventory buffers. It reminds of overheated cyclical endgames in 2007-2008.

 

Endgames? But the new cycle is barely 18 months old? A cyclical endgame should take years to develop?

 

Tell it to the new global nationalists. Time was that freewheeling business titans gave young capitalism a bad name, but that’s 140 years ago. Today’s rapacious state monopolists are as good in squeezing global consumers for what they are worth.

 

High Asian demand growth driven by its explosive middle class expansion and constrained global supply conditions in many commodities are simply triggering old-fashioned price rationing.

 

Only Mother Nature could short-circuit this by deluging us with serial record harvests overfilling global buffers, but so far no sign, though ‘backwardation’ is noted (some forward prices lower than spot as future demand/supply looks better).

 

During 2H2010 agricultural price increases were already explosive, and more may be seen in 2011, steeply boosting inflation prospects in especially poorer country importers with high food components in inflation baskets.

 

South Africa, as food exporter, non-interventionist, great buffers and good seasonal rains may be saved from the worst initial stirrings here. But for how long?

 

Remember, our previous inflation upswing in 2006 also had major oil and food ingredients.

 

Oil has seen $70 but is now flirting with $100, while global food prices are sending warning signals of a violently turning tide.

 

Our GDP growth may remain modest near 3%-3.5%, held back by underperformance in state and private fixed investment, assisted by sector-specific constraints (electricity, credit, Rand). So our still large output gap and its anti-inflation effect may not disappear soon.

 

In contrast, the commodity universe could provide us again with early inflation boosts. Industrial goods prices and agricultural commodities may not be early harbingers (hopefully), but energy probably will be.

 

This leaves one other buffer, the overvalued Rand, preventing commodity shocks from spilling into inflation.

 

The unnerving requirement here is for the Rand to keep firming to match newly reviving commodity prices. Being already substantially overvalued through 2010, one wonders how much of a safety valve this could still be.

 

Though Rand firming proceeded smartly in December, January has so far provided a pullback towards 6.90:$ and 9.20:€. Will such pullbacks set a new course to even lower levels, or will renewed firming materialize, keeping commodity price impulses contained?

 

The cycle is young, the world willing and our Rand probably unable to keep this werewolf from the door forever, like repeats of 2005-2008. Eventually our inflation could also break higher.  

 

Cees Bruggemans

Chief Economist FNB

Cees@fnb.co.za

 

Register for free e-mail articles www.fnb.co.za/economics 

 

South Africa - The 2010s Decade

by 24. January 2011 19:36

 

By Cees Bruggemans, Chief Economist FNB                                     Cees@fnb.co.za

17 January 2011

With the economy entering a new growth cycle from October 2009, how much of an expansion can we expect this decade in terms of amplitude and durability?

 

What will boost growth, restrain it and ultimately cut it short? And how will this play by sector/industry?

 

Our population growth has dwindled to less than 0.5% annually, though African migration remains potentially a source for tapping major labour reservoirs.

 

The likely expansion of the economy’s output, however, will be more determined by the increase in the formally employable labour force, the pace of fixed investment and productivity gains. That’s an output view.

 

Equally important will be the income and spending drivers, business risk-taking and government locomotive roles in making things happen (or not happen ………).

               ----------------------------

These past 90 years, the South African economy has averaged 3.5% growth annually. Will this also be the norm for the 2010s, and if so, will we just meet it, underperform or outperform it?

 

In order to underperform the long-term growth norm for a full decade, our headwinds must be particularly bad.

 

Tail risks (high-risk low-probability events) that could jointly or severally cause such underperformance include:

  • another overseas crisis causing global recession and falloff in our exports. Chances this decade: ?
  • major drought (or several years of drought) severely hurting agricultural and associate output. Chances this decade: not minor (after two decades of rain)
  • major epidemic (flu?): Chances ?
  • political strains causing loss of confidence and consequent falloff in investment: Chances ?
  • policy stances turning out to be costly mistakes. Chances: not minor (with our history?)

 

A naturally pessimistic frame of mind can find many reasons as to why our brief and fragile revival so far could be cruelly cut short, and yielding underperformance in the 0%-1% GDP growth range (our lot in the 1980s for mainly political reasons and the bad policy choices made as a consequence).

 

I fully acknowledge such potential, but term it tail risk as I don’t feel confident that the likelihood thereof is high. Yet we have experienced all such things at some point or another in the past 100 years, sometimes severely, and there exist excellent reasons to fear future repeats. So go cautiously.

 

Even so, the underlying growth reality appears more stable and promising (though not all will see it this way, nor should we be blind to global cyclical conditions capable of cutting short our expansions, just as much as that they can prolong them).

                -----------------------

Overperformance requires an absence of constraints and an exuberance overcoming many internal shortcomings.

 

We have shown before that we are capable of such exuberance and growth outperformance, especially late in long cyclical expansions, such as in the 1960s (growth outperforming at over 5% annually, if for less than five years) and again for four years (2004-2007) during the past decade.

 

But these spurts of outperformance have been few and far between, once every generation at most, hinting at exceptionally lucky convergence of favourable conditions? This has never really happened for a full decade during our post-industrial maturity.

 

For that kind of outperformance you need to go back to our modern industrial take-off in the closing decades of the 19th century (1870-1900), during our gold mining rushes and the start of our major urbanization and industralisation drives, for which GDP estimates don’t exist (but going by folklore these were WILD times).

 

So without trying too hard, for the immediate future one falls back on the long-term growth average of 3.5% this past century, which has been our average for a reason.

 

Our path dependence (resource economy, migrant society, turgid politics) created an institutional fabric which may be more resilient than the daily news flow may suggest, but which also has its shortcomings. That fabric has its own rules and its own performance yardsticks.

                ----------------------

There are three very good reasons why we may have another decade-long expansion, potentially getting us to 2020 in one piece. A lot of luck (timing, position) is involved in having shaped present conditions at this juncture (so don’t blame any hard work by anyone just as yet).

 

Firstly, there is Asiatic catch-up growth, with Latino, Aussie and other commodity producers in tow. Three-quarters of the world’s 7bn population is poor, impatient and willing to exert itself using rules proven elsewhere.

 

This is firing 10% growth in countries like China and shortly India (potentially for decades) and keeps the emerging half of world GDP growing at over 6%, as its middle classes, cities and industrial capacities are forcefully expanded from very humble beginnings.

 

In the process, much demand for our exports is created and export prices are kept high, for decades (not just this coming one).

 

Secondly, the rich half of the world has incurred bad financial crises only very recently, and is still struggling with their protracted aftermath.

 

US labour market conditions show massive deviations from potential which may take the entire decade normalizing.

 

Europe is also going through public and private debt adjustments that may take a decade to be completed.

 

Japan continues to struggle with deflation already active for two decades and giving little sign of abating.

 

These respective struggles are important for us, as for the duration there is much anxiety and policy support (feeding precious metal prices and boosting our export prices as much as the Asian growth story does).

 

But these struggles also create oversupply (US labour), maintains minimal global inflation, keeps interest rates low for years while inviting additional policy stimulus (fiscal and QE), between them causing global capital flows to seek higher returns elsewhere.

 

Such incoming capital dissolves our balance of payments constraint (except in short episodes of extreme risk aversion), keeps our currency strong and overvalued, suppresses inflation, boosts asset markets and skews growth towards domestic sources (also because we now have low interest rates).

 

And if these two decade-long global drivers aren’t enough, our own domestic configuration (with much current resource slack) can also sustain ‘moderate’ (average) growth for many years (potentially even a decade counting from 2010) without creating major bottlenecks (though watch out for balance of payment deficits, electricity and professional skill shortages).

 

Our fixed investment ratio relative to GDP has been lifted above 20% of GDP and can probably be maintained, if healthy support can be sustained from the public sector.

 

The labour force is so constituted that out of a 50 million population and 22 million labour force about 9 million formally employed workers are responsible for generating 90% of GDP.

 

The recent recession and ongoing annual crop of new labour cohorts has created a pool of over one million matriculants and graduates available for work.

 

In addition, we deliver annually nearly 400 000 new graduates and matriculants, of which at most 100 000 are needed to replace retirees. Thus quite a pool of new labour exists this decade to support a modest GDP growth rate, in addition to which there is still the contribution from less skilled labour more informally deployed or in time also absorbable by the formal sector as presently constituted.

 

As to WHY the economy then grows relatively modestly in the presence of 20% capital formation and such copious labour supply, there are many factors holding us back.

 

One factor is the rule-makers, their presence and actions potentially creating many diverse obstacles to less inhibited risk-taking, labour absorption, income growth, spending and output expansion.

 

Other growth constraining factors are more sector-specific, such as electricity availability, the more constrained credit culture, and the overvalued Rand.

 

Ours is a noisy society. That can be fruitful, but our modern mature make-up doesn’t support 10% growth. It is a 3%-4% engine, at best (and it has bad hair days, too ……).

                     --------------------

Despite these three long-term drivers potentially sustaining modest growth for a decade, are there features other than excessive tail risks that can cut us short?

 

Yes, the obvious one also in play five years ago is inflation, specifically commodity driven, originating in the global growth drive overwhelming global supply abilities (and triggering nationalistic constraints).

 

We see this mainly in oil and food. As and when these commodity prices become too lively, our inflation rate tends to rise, triggering second-round effects in a growing economy. Countering such tendencies, we find SARB raising interest rates, potentially sufficiently so to snuff out the upswing.

                   -------------------------

Thus the main outlook is for a decade-long 3%-4% growth expansion, initially slow but eventually stronger, with growing risk of getting caught and brought low by new commodity price surges and SARB interest rate increases, with in the background massive tail risk potential ignored at one’s peril.

                  -------------------------

The make-up of our cyclical upswings, especially after a recession shock, tends to be consumption-led, with fixed investment only gradually coming back on stream as resource utilization, business confidence and balance sheets improve.

 

Thus the experience of the past 18 months is nothing new, and can be projected further out into the decade.

                  -------------------------

The lead sector is household consumption durables, especially where pent-up demand has been created due to long delays in replacement cycles.

 

The car industry is well into recovery, with a 25% gain in 2010. Its gains will become less massive in the 10%-15% range through 2012 as the replacement cycle keeps normalising. By mid-decade, this industry should be expanding in line with urban and formal employment gains in the 2%-5% range.

 

Household appliances, furniture and communication equipment also incurred delayed replacement and their pent-up demand should similarly allow 5%-10% growth rates through mid-decade, and half that thereafter.

 

Household consumption semi-durables (clothing, footwear) have benefited from low import prices, income growth and redistribution via social allowances, also benefiting from lifestyle emphasis. Growth of 5%-10%.

 

Non-durable goods (food, drink, everyday necessities) benefit from income growth, and especially base-spreading effects through employment gains and more people receiving social grants. Real household income gains of 3%-4% should ensure similar growth in this sector.

                  ----------------------

In contrast, fixed investment shows a much more complex expansion story.

 

During the 2009 recession, private fixed investment fell off by 15% peak-to-trough, with machinery and equipment falling off by a third, stabilizing at these levels in 2010. Though 2011 will probably still be slow, resource improvement thereafter should see a gradual revival in these spending categories, cycle-bound, in 5%-10% territory post-2012.

 

Private residential building activity has gone through a slump, but has probably bottomed at low levels.

 

Its recovery should have been fast, going by previous upswings, given the interest rate declines (prime dropping by 6.5% from 15.5% to 9%) during 2009-2010.

 

Yet this time could be different, with the overseas housing crises, the National Credit Act and the high household indebtedness making access to credit more selective, maintaining for longer an oversupply of living space and limiting house price gains, favouring renting over buying, possibly for some years through mid-decade.

 

Residential building activity may therefore face a long recovery cycle, if at much slower growth gains than in previous cyclical upswings. Real growth of 2%-3% from later this year looks feasible.

 

Non-residential building activity traditionally lags residential activity, may only bottom out next year, but should be back in modest recovery mode after 2012.

 

Public infrastructure investment has seen a major build-up in base load activity during 2004-2008, as there was bunching of electricity, railway, roads, airports and sport stadia mega-projects.

 

Some of these activities have come to an end, but the infrastructure needs in other areas (electricity, roads, water, municipal) remains massive.

 

Contract flow, however, has slowed and appears to be a function of state capacity. Activity may eventually stabilize and start growing again, hopefully from 2012 if the state could find a new urgency to get contract awards flowing faster again.

 

For now it seems unlikely that the cracking pace of pre-World Cup days will be achieved any time soon, even if infrastructure maintenance, replacement and expansion needs are gigantic, and engineering contractors never give up hope of this ship turning eventually.

 

Export volumes continue to expand only very slowly, with cars a leading growth sector. Mining should be a star performer and has come back from recession lows, but is yet to show signs of matching the rapid expansions observable elsewhere in the world. Legal issues keep dogging the industry, with infrastructure capacity (especially electricity, rail transport, harbours) also a drawback, keeping new investment relatively subdued.  

 

Retail, manufacturing, transport and communication look set for 4%-6% growth rates this year and next.

 

Government will likely remain an important absorber of labour, supporting household income flows.

                    --------------------

In sum, the outlook henceforth is for steady, if modest, output gains in most domestic sectors.

 

The main weaknesses initially can be observed in the building and construction sectors (relative to potential) with mining also struggling to make most of the global opportunities on offer.

 

Spending-wise, it is fixed investment and net exports where the growth shoe pinches most, probably still for some years, holding back the overall economic performance to modest growth.

 

Cees Bruggemans

Chief Economist FNB

Cees@fnb.co.za

 

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SA Interest rates stable for some time

by 24. January 2011 19:30

 

By Cees Bruggemans, Chief Economist FNB                                         Cees@fnb.co.za

20 January 2011

SARB left interest rates unchanged today, taking the view that provided there are no significant surprises interest rates may remain relatively stable for some time.

 

SARB noted the improved GDP growth outlook, rising from 2.8% last year to an estimated 3.4% this year and 3.6% next year. Especially the recovery in domestic consumption spending is expected to be sustained.

 

Interest rates are at their lowest level in over 30 years and the real rate is below 1%. This helps the recovery in consumption spending and should stimulate domestic investment through a low cost of borrowing.

 

However, low interest rates on their own cannot ensure sustainably higher long-run trend growth and job creation (for which other role players in the economy should take responsibility – a deeply significant truth).

 

Though there are increasing upside risks to inflation (oil, food from the outside, with SARB remaining deeply concerned about Europe), inflation is projected to remain within the target range through 2012.

 

Thus, while vigilant about inflation and doing what it can to support the economy through the lowest interest rates in decades, SARB is indicating it is doing its level best on all fronts to assist the nation in these challenging times.

 

Interest rates appear to be at an appropriate level and the decision was to keep them unchanged. As there are no signs of incipient excess demand, and provided there are no significant surprises changing the outlook, interest rates may remain relatively stable for some time.

 

As to how long that may be, there were no hostages given to fortune, as always. Anybody’s guess, apparently.

 

Cees Bruggemans

Chief Economist FNB

Cees@fnb.co.za

 

Register for free e-mail articles www.fnb.co.za/economics

Africa - how has it preformed for the last 10 years?

by 21. January 2011 20:44

“The lion kings? Africa is now one of the world’s fastest-growing regions” – Economist

“MUCH has been written about the rise of the BRICs (Brazil, Russia, India and China) and the shift in economic power eastward as Asia outruns the rest of the world. But the surprising success story of the past decade lies elsewhere. An analysis by The Economist finds that over the ten years to 2010, no fewer than six of the world’s ten fastest-growing economies were in sub-Saharan Africa (see table).

The only BRIC country to make the top ten was China, in second place behind Angola. The other five African sprinters were Nigeria, Ethiopia, Chad, Mozambique and Rwanda, all with annual growth rates of around 8% or more. During the two decades to 2000 only one African economy (Uganda) made the top ten, against nine from Asia. On IMF forecasts Africa will grab seven of the top ten places over the next five years (our ranking excludes countries with a population of less than 10m as well as Iraq and Afghanistan, which could both rebound strongly in the years ahead).

Over the past decade sub-Saharan Africa’s real GDP growth rate jumped to an annual average of 5.7%, up from only 2.4% over the previous two decades. That beat Latin America’s 3.3%, but not emerging Asia’s 7.9%. Asia’s stunning performance largely reflects the vast weight of China and India; most economies saw much slower growth, such as 4% in South Korea and Taiwan. The simple unweighted average of countries’ growth rates was virtually identical in Africa and Asia.

Over the next five years Africa’s is likely to take the lead (see chart). In other words, the average African economy will outpace its Asian counterpart. Looking even farther ahead, Standard Chartered forecasts that Africa’s economy will grow at an average annual rate of 7% over the next 20 years, slightly faster than China’s.

So it should, of course. Poorer economies have more potential for catch-up growth. The scandal was that Africa’s real GDP per head fell for so many years. In 1980 Africans had an average income per head almost four times bigger than the Chinese. Today the Chinese are more than three times richer. Africa’s rapidly rising population still dampens its growth in real income per head but that, too, has risen by an annual rate of 3% since 2000—almost twice as fast as the global average.

For Western firms Africa’s economy still looks tiny, accounting for only 2% of world output. Emerging Asia’s is ten times larger. But Africa’s share is rising, not only because of brisker growth but because GDP has been seriously understated in many economies. In November the size of Ghana’s economy was revised up by a massive 75% after government statisticians improved their data and added in industries such as telecoms. Other countries are likely to revise their GDP levels and growth rates upward over the coming years.

Africa’s changing fortunes have largely been driven by China’s surging demand for raw materials and higher commodity prices, but other factors have also counted. Africa has benefited from big inflows of foreign direct investment, especially from China, as well as foreign aid and debt relief. Urbanisation and rising incomes have fuelled faster growth in domestic demand.

Economic management has improved, too. Government revenues have been bolstered in recent years by high commodity prices and rapid growth. But instead of going on a spending spree as in the past some governments, such as Tanzania’s and Mozambique’s, have put money aside, cushioning their economies in the recession.

Some ambled through the decade rather than sprinted. Africa’s biggest economy by far, South Africa, is one of its laggards: it posted average annual growth of only 3.5% over the past decade. Indeed, it may be overtaken in size by Nigeria within ten to 15 years if Nigeria’s bold banking reforms are extended to the power and the oil industries. But the big challenge for all mineral exporters will be providing jobs for a population expected to grow by 50% between 2010 and 2030.

Commodity-driven growth does not generate many jobs; and commodity prices could fall. So governments need to diversify their economies. There are some glimmers. Countries such as Uganda and Kenya that do not depend on mineral exports are also growing faster than before, partly because they have increased manufacturing exports. Standard Chartered thinks that Africa could become a significant manufacturing centre.

Formidable obstacles to Africa’s continued progress loom, among them political instability, the weak rule of law, chronic corruption, infrastructure bottlenecks, and poor health and education. Without reforms, Africa will not be able to sustain faster growth. But its lion economies are earning a place alongside Asia’s tigers.” – Economist, 6 January 2011

Pre auction, Auction, Sheriff, Repossessed & PIP Properties

by 8. December 2010 02:56

What amazing times we live in. On Friday we found out that FNB alone has over 90 000 home owners who are distressed sellers (missed payments for the last 3 months). Imagine the opportunities with all the banks? Although most people know that they should be buying bank repossessed properties, most people don’t know how and are concerned of some of the horror stories which people talk about. If you are interested in taking advantage of some of these amazing opportunities there are a number steps.

1.       Step 1 is you have to get educated. Basically you have to understand the process and the fact there are actually 5 stages in which people buy “bank repossessed properties” and each stage has different attributes, risks and transparency. It is very important to understand these so that you can make educated decisions as to the stages you would like focus on. Please click on this link to download the presentation I recently did. I have made the quality small so that you can download it. It is the audio which is most important (just over an hour).

2.       Step 2 is you have to have your financing in place. It is very NB to get yourself pre-approved as you need to have this before you can start making serious offers. The banks now have special departments who deal with this and we can assist you. Adele at adele@ipsinvest.com can assist you with this.

3.       Step 3 is choosing the property. It is very NB that you have a system and a way of evaluating property so that you can determine which properties suit your requirements. When you go to auctions all the properties sound so good and sometimes you forget you are buying property. There is a strategy to being successful at an auction and you need to go to as many as possible and watch (not buy until you are ready). Trust me it is a mixture between an art and a science and you need to watch who is good and how they do it. If you are inexperienced you will be in for some nasty surprises if you go in gung-ho and start raising your hand at every opportunity! When you are ready to buy, do as much due diligence as possible, like pulling reports on market valuations of the property (Private Property can help you do this for free), then you need to go and view the property. You must always remember there is a reason this property is going to auction. Sometimes it is because of the seller, but often it is also because of the property! You need to make sure you know what you are buying, BEFORE you go to the auction. I also use a system called Property Pro from Dr Hannes Dreyer. I believe it is one of the best financial systems in South Africa to take the 27 variables involved in property and show you which property is the best for the growth and also to manage the risk. If you have a system like this it will vastly reduce your chances of making mistakes!

4.       Step 4 – buy the property. I am not going to go into this in detail as it is different in all the 5 stages of a property being repossessed by the bank and at what stage you are buying. Please make sure you understand the risks of each stage, as it can really go wrong if you don’t understand the process and the commitment you are making.

On Saturday, after IPS’s successful event, I then attended the FNB rapid auction, where there are no reserves. There were 82 properties and I stayed for the entire auction (5 hours) to learn as much as I could and let you know where the opportunities are. The bottom line is that only 19 were actually sold and this is where they received a higher enough offer (went live) where the bank was happy and accepted the offer. For the rest there is no reserve and whoever has the highest offer on the 20th of December will get the property – no matter what that offer is.

I have a schedule of some of the best properties from Gauteng, Free State, KZN and the Western Cape. The properties for the presentation we did all the research for, including the rentals and the valuation reports (ask and I can send them to you). If you are interested in another property, please let me know and we can research the information. I have presented you with as much of the information I could from being at the auction – you would not know this unless you were there. Please email me on scott@ipsinvest.com if you want the details.

IPS also prides itself on providing allot more research. One of my friends bought a property on Saturday at the FNB auction and thought he had a great deal till he went there on Sunday!

In any market, the people who make real money are those that buck the market trends. Enjoy, get educated and take advantage of the many opportunities.

PS I have attached an article which explains how people made their fortune in the Great Depression.

Thanks

Scott Picken

IPS CEO

IPSInvest Blog

Scott Picken, CEO of International Property Solutions (IPS) believes a paradigm shift is occurring: 10 years ago, people would only invest in property in their own neighbourhood. Now, investors are starting to seek the best investments globally. IPS was created 7 years ago to facilitate international investments and provide an end-to-end solution to ensure that investors can invest with confidence!

About the author

Scott Picken

I am the CEO and Founder of IPS and was born in South Africa. I undertook my first construction project at the age of 13, my first development project at 19 and bought my first property at 22, which we later converted into 6 townhouses. I have an Honours Degree in Construction Management (Cum Laude) and a Masters Degree in Construction IT (Cum Laude). As an International Investor who is passionate about property, I created IPS to facilitate global property investment. Everything is based on Zig Ziglars saying, "If you help enough other people get what they want, you can have anything you want!" Based in London for 9 years and now living in JHB, we have created an international business helping over 2000 investors Invest Internationally with Confidence!

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