Tag Archives: Media

article 3 months old

Four Phases Of Asian Equity Markets

By Greg Peel

Asian markets, say Citi's Asia Pacific equity strategists, tend to move in four phases over time. (“Asia” here means ex Japan as Japan is considered a mature and thus “Western” market for comparison purposes).

The fourth of these phases is that of collapse, which is where we have been because of the GFC this time, but we will return to Phase Four in a moment. Assuming a collapse has occurred, Phase One represents the recovery from the lows. This phase tends to last 12 months and features high price/earnings (PE) multiples because the market is applying a price to earnings that will come eventually but not right now. Investors are getting in early to effectively buy an “out-of-the-money call option” on earnings recovery.

Once prices have pushed up to a point where the market is satisfied with its pricing for future earnings (average return 59% in this phase), Phase Two begins. Phase Two might be called the “show me the money” phase in which investors look for confirmation of pre-pricing from actual earnings recovery. This phase tends to take 24 months and is much more of a slow grind than the rapid rally of Phase One. Companies do not suddenly wake up one day to find their earnings have returned to normal levels, rather earnings growth is a slow graft. In this phase investors need to be patient.

This phase will feature a drop in PE multiples because while prices won't move too dramatically, actual earnings will begin to catch up, that is the denominator will rise faster than the numerator. The average annual return over this two-year period is 20%.

Phase Three develops thereafter when the original downturn is now forgotten, earnings have normalised and investors go back to the momentum trade of believing stock markets just go up forever. PE multiples rise again more on sentiment than on earnings growth. Returns average 51% per annum and the phase lasts an average of 17 months.

Phase Four begins when the euphoria has pushed too far, when PE multiples have overrun realistic pricing and when, simply, the bubble bursts. The market collapses using the elevator and not the stairs. Citi offers no average return data on this phase nor average duration. Suffice to say that the average return on Asia (ex Japan) equities over 20 years is 5.3%, so if we have one year of 59%, two of 20% and another 17 months of 51%, you don't want to be in equities in Phase Four.

Currently, says Citi, we are in Phase Two. Now, Citi is providing numbers specifically for Asian markets but we can realistically assume that this four-phase pattern can be applied to mature markets as well. The difference is that immature markets tend to be more volatile, thus providing these big return numbers, but in the case of the GFC Western markets have swung through similar levels of volatility for the first time in a while.

The US and Australian markets have rebounded around 60% from the lows over a period of about a year and have now stalled. It looks like a grind upwards is the best we can hope for in the near term. In the case of Australia specifically we can contend that given the significant influence China's economy now has on Australia's economy, it is likely Australia will fall more into line with Chinese (and thus Asian) fluctuations.

Of course, if we're talking “grind”, we're referring to the index and not necessarily every single individual stock. There will always be stocks which outperform or underperform the index. One of the problems associated with a broker's “Buy” rating on a stock is that investors are unclear as to when to stop buying. To that end some brokers qualify their Buy ratings. GSJB Were, for example, has its “Conviction List”. For BA-Merrill Lynch it's an “Australia Focus One” portfolio.

Merrills qualifies its AF1 list as being “actionable buys” amongst its current universe of Buy-rated stocks, or “best ideas”. Given a broker rating typically is a six-to-twelve-month recommendation, some stocks are seen as a better trading opportunities than others.

Merrills today added transport logistics operator Asciano ((AIO)) to its AF1 list. The broker notes port volumes have been recovering strongly in 2010 to date and that coal haulage earnings in particular should jump significantly into FY11. Looking at FY11 forecasts, the broker sees Asciano trading at an enterprise value to earnings multiple of 9.1x while global ports are trading at 10.3x and global rail 8.9x.

In other words, Asciano is not overvalued. The broker expects management will soon provide a profit guidance upgrade.

The other stocks on Merrills' AF1 list are Commonwealth Bank ((CBA)), Computershare ((CPU)), CSL ((CSL)), Foster's ((FGL)), Lend Lease ((LLC)), MAP Group ((MAP)), Oil Search ((OSH)), Rio Tinto ((RIO)), Virgin Blue ((VBA)) and Ten Network ((TEN)).

Following on from other FNArena themes this week, Citi has upgraded its view on the media sector (GSJB Were did the same on Monday).

Last week Citi economists upgraded their 2010 GDP growth forecast from 3.5% to 4.0% and the stock analysts note that traditionally newspapers and television earnings are strongly leveraged to economic growth. Radio earnings tend to be more defensive. As a result, they have upgraded Fairfax ((FXJ)) from Hold to Buy and upgraded Ten Network forecast earnings. (Ten remains on Hold given its current share price).

PayTV names should also be benefitting, but Citi notes a lot of money is being spent on rolling out new High Definition boxes and that's impacting on current earnings. To that end the analysts prefer a cash-laden Cons Media ((CMJ)) to Austar ((AUN)) at present. Citi has a Buy on CMJ and a Hold on AUN.

JP Morgan has been travelling the country this week assessing state home building markets, and yesterday stopped into Queensland.

In the Sunshine State home builders have noted a drop-off in first home buyers post-stimulus but this has been partially offset by the return of trade-up and investment buyers. Tighter lending conditions are impacting on buyer demand but builders are also finding funding tough, such that the bigger builders are elbowing out smaller builders.

Confidence among builders is nevertheless much improved but JPM points out this is coming off a very low base. The resources sector is obviously an important driver of Queensland housing demand but this is very much a regional proposition. All up, the broker is cautiously optimistic.

article 3 months old

On Bank Provisions, The Housing Market And Media Companies

By Greg Peel

In 2008 as the global credit crisis was accelerating even before the fall of Lehman, Australian banks were forced to shift earnings into provisions against loan losses rather than booking profits. Already there had been some big-ticket failures, such as ABC Learning for example, but banks feared the next phase of small businesses going to the wall in number.

From this phase would flow job losses (peak levels of 8% were forecast) and thus mortgage foreclosures. Housing demand collapsed. Job advertising collapsed. All advertising collapsed. Australia, it was assumed, was heading into the worst recession since at least 1992, if not since 1932.

But it wasn't to be.

There are several reasons why Australia did not suffer the sort of recession levels experienced by the US and UK, for example. Firstly, our minimal level of “subprime” mortgages were not even very “sub”, our own banks were in more robust positions in terms of leverage, or lack thereof, and had little exposure to offshore toxic debt instruments. Employers reacted by cutting working hours rather than jobs per se (although this occurred elsewhere as well) and China began buying up our raw material exports in record numbers at 2008's lingering high prices when analysts had expected the opposite.

And of course the RBA slashed interest rates very aggressively and the government guaranteed bank deposits and poured in fiscal stimulus very quickly, in line with global policy.

The result is that not only has Australia avoided a recession (by technical definition) it has apparently returned very swiftly to trend growth, to the point where the government suggests we may return to surplus by 2011 instead of the 2015 estimate first made.

Crisis? What crisis?

So now we have the big banks in particular sitting on mountains of cash as provisions against bad debts that don't look like happening. Unemployment seems to have peaked having not even reached 6%, let alone 8%. Australian house prices are back on their upward price trajectory and newspapers and media networks are reporting a bounce-back in advertising. Everything looks hunky-dory.

Bank analysts had expected Australia's economic rebound, and thus a subsequent rebound in bank earnings, to occur in FY11. The beginning of FY11 is now only three months off, but already interim bank earnings reports have forced analysts to pull their timing forward to include the beginnings of the rebound in FY10 expectations as well as lowering the expected peak of bad debts. Bank earnings have positively surprised the market and the next step might naturally be assumed to be even more profits being booked as banks decide they no longer need such hefty provisions against loan losses. The return of provisions to the P&L could make for some very handsome FY10 final results for the banking sector.

But there is one small problem.

The RBS banking analysts point out that come 2014 a new international banking standard will come into force. The finer details of the standard are still up for discussion until the end of 2010 but the spirit of the law is clear, and banks have the option to adopt the new standard ahead of time to allow for smooth transition. To date most regulatory reform discussion has centred around capital and liquidity levels, and changes are yet to be legislated, but IFRS 9 deals specifically with loss provisions.

It is proposed that loss provisions shift in basis from “incurred loss” to “expected loss”. In short, this would mean banks must retain greater provisioning as a natural course of business than those levels in place before the crisis. Banks spent 2008 topping up provisions for what they feared or “expected” rather than just what they had “incurred”. The implication is banks may look ahead to new rules and decide compliance could mean hanging on to a lot of the provisions they have now.

Thus RBS is warning the market not to necessarily expect a large and “profitable” rush of provision monies hitting bank bottom lines soon. Investors may be disappointed.

A year is a long time in banking, but RBS has crunched its numbers out to FY13 and decided ANZ Bank ((ANZ) appears worst off among the Big Four with a potential 29% shortfall on expected loss provisions come that time. Westpac ((WBC)) is at the other end of the scale with only a 6% shortfall.

While RBS has been pondering bad debts, JP Morgan has been chatting to home builders. First up JPM has attempted to gauge recent sales activity and home builder confidence in Australia's most populous state, New South Wales.

As noted above, one reason Australia didn't fall heavily into recession was that the RBA slashed interest rates and the government provided swift fiscal stimulus, most notably in the form of first home-buyer grants. The result was Australian house prices dipped only marginally and briefly despite record levels of household debt. But the surprising economic rebound has meant four interest rates hikes since, and the unwinding of the home-buyer stimulus.

How is the housing market looking now?

JPM noted from its survey that none of those polled in the NSW home builder industry described the market as “poor” at present. However, the analysts qualify this result as part of cycling back from crisis levels a year ago. Anything looks good. But nor did any respondents suggest things were “very good” in sales, only 10% suggested traffic (inquiries) were “very good” (down from 40% previously) and 80% noted tightened lending conditions (on top of rate rises) and 75% loss of sales as a result.

The big banks may have sucked up a wealth of new, government-stimulated mortgages but they've learned a lesson on giving money away too readily.

The results have led JP Morgan to conclude the NSW housing market is “flat” at best. While home builders were still prepared to be confident near-term, the analysts suggest longer term problems will rear as affordability continues to decline in the face of higher rates and a lack of stimulus.

In the meantime, ANZ's job ad series has rebounded with a vengeance as unemployment peaks. Along with improvement in classifieds, media networks are reporting a solid return to advertising bookings following the near-death experience of 2008-09 when corporate cost-cutting meant ad-spend was the first to go.

GSJB Were reports a new independent survey of agency ad bookings has commenced, providing analysts with greater visibility than previously. Bookings through agencies represent 50% of the ad market, and they are up 10% over January-February on the same period last year.

With the economy clearly improving, and business confidence surveys trending upward, Weres has elected to upgrade its earnings forecasts for the media sector. The result is an upgrade for West Australian Newspapers ((WAN)) from Hold to Buy, although curiously Austereo ((AEO)) has been downgraded to Hold from Buy, possibly on recent share price performance.

Weres now has three media companies on its “Conviction List” of Buy recommendations – News Corp ((NWS)), Seek ((SEK)) and the Ten Network ((TEN)). The analysts also have Austar ((AUN)) and now West Oz as Buys, but not on the “List”

Many observers find this a curious system, myself included, given the implication is the West Oz rating is now Buy (But We're Not Convinced).

article 3 months old

Brokers Recognising Improving Conditions For News Corp

By Chris Shaw

With News Corporation ((NWS)) shares currently trading at around half the level of their highs of 2007, the stock is causing brokers to have another look at the numbers and those to have done so recently like what they see. GSJB Were today listed News as one of its top 10 stocks for 2010, while yesterday Deutsche Bank upgraded its rating to Buy from Hold.

For GSJB Were, the story starts with recent share price appreciation of peer media stocks in both the US and Australia, as this has caused the broker to mark-to-market its earnings forecasts for the company. The changes also reflect an improvement in advertising markets, as industry feedback suggests scatter pricing has increased to 20-30% above upfront price levels.

Management at News has been aware of this and already lifted earnings guidance but in GSJB Were's view there are more upgrades to come, so it sees its earnings per share (EPS) forecasts of US83.1c for FY10 and US105.5c for FY11 as likely to prove conservative.

The revised EPS forecasts of GSJB Were compare to Deutsche Bank at US87c and US101c, up from US86c and US97c previously to reflect a strong quarter for US television and newspaper earnings, while Macquarie is forecasting US97.3c and 128.1c respectively.

Deutsche bank notes its new numbers are above current guidance but it sees this as reasonable given the rebound in ads, solid network TV ratings and strong cable net growth. Deutsche also sees scope for longer-term growth opportunities via new revenue streams such as securing payment for retransmission fees and for online news content. To reflect this the broker is forecasting double-digit EPS growth for the next few years.

Even on its new numbers, Deutsche estimates the stock is trading on an adjusted EV/EBITDA (enterprise value to earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation) multiple at the bottom of the 5.7-7.4 times range of its peers, while its P/E multiple is also at the bottom of the 12.4-16.0 times range of its US peers.

Even in relation to its Australian peers, Deutsche sees value as on the analysts' numbers valuation is in the middle of the 11.5-22.4 times P/E range for the media sector, this despite their view News has a superior mix of businesses in its portfolio. As well, GSJB Were suggests capital management is now a matter of "when" and not "if" as the current significant cash reserves will at some point be seen as an inefficient use of capital given an expected recovery in the US economy. It estimates a buyback of as much as US$2.0 billion could comfortably be announced sometime in 2010, which would also be positive for earnings per share.

In the short-term, the major impact on earnings for News is likely to come from the release of the 3-D movie Avatar, which Macquarie notes is the most expensive film ever made given a budget of around US$300 million. It points out early reviews for the film have been positive, so there is potential for a substantial boost to earnings if the movie does become a box office success.

This implies some potential for upside to Macquarie's valuation-based price target of $22.06, which compares to the targets of Deutsche Bank of $20.75 and GSJB Were at $20.30. Overall the FNarena database shows an average price target on the stock of $20.76. Following the upgrade by Deutsche Bank the database shows News is rated as Buy seven times, Hold once and Reduce once.

Shares in News Corporation today are higher and as at 10.40am the stock was up 42c or 2.5% at $17.32. This compares to a range over the past year of $8.93 to $17.37.
article 3 months old

APN News & Media On The Comeback Trail

By Andrew Nelson

A little heralded and commented upon two-day investor conference has those analysts attending thinking good thoughts about the recovery prospects for APN News & Media ((APN)).  By most accounts the company's operating environment is beginning to show improvement, while the push to on-line seems to be continuing a-pace.

The conference saw management take the opportunity to reiterate its 2009 net profit guidance in the range of $90-$95m versus consensus forecasts that currently range from $93-$97m. The three Australian brokers covering the event; UBS, Credit Suisse and Deutsch Bank, have all kept their forecasts unchanged, with no dissent noted on the earnings line.

The stock rates a 0.4 on the FNArena Sentiment Indicator based on 5 Buys, 3 Holds and 1 Sell. UBS and Credit Suisse hold two of the Buys, while Deutsch Bank sits at Hold. Deutsche's comments post the briefing seem fairly positive, hence the Hold is a valuation call given the stock is currently trading 11.4% above the broker's target.

In fact, this seems to be the stock's problem when looking at the averages posted by the nine brokers in the FNArena database that cover it. As at yesterday's close, the stock was trading at a 0.3% premium to the current consensus target price, although it is a 13.9% discount to UBS's number and at a 3.8% discount to the target published by Credit Suisse.

On Credit Suisse's numbers, the stock is trading on an FY adjusted, fully taxed FY10 PE of 12.5x, while UBS has the stock trading on a PE of 10.8x FY10 and 9.8x FY11. "Undemanding" and "attractive" are the words these two brokers use to describe their current valuation metrics. And with Fairfax and West Australian Newspapers trading on PERs of 15.4x and 17.8x respectively, on CS's numbers, there's little wonder why they like the valuation case.

Credit Suisse is convinced that the company's trading environment is beginning to show improvement, especially in Publishing and Outdoor. The broker notes both divisions had seemingly returned to normal trends in the 4Q. The Australian publishing business has also surprised to the upside over the past four weeks, notes the broker, with advertising revenues now getting close to last year's levels.

The Australian radio division is also enjoying improving conditions, notes Credit Suisse, who points out the company expects CY09 radio advertising to be better than the current year to date decline of 3.9%. However, while trends in the New Zealand radio market are also improving, the broker points out that APN still expects the market to be down 10% on the previous year.

Analysts at Deutsche think the restructuring of the Australian and NZ publishing businesses will play a big part going forward given the company's push to a centralised content generation model, which it thinks should help improve an already "strong competitive advantage in regional markets".

The broker also notes that APN is repositioning its Mix network to target a younger demographic, which  management at least believes will lead to a deeper audience engagement. Meanwhile, the broker also holds out some extra optimism for Outdoor, with a new measurement system due to be introduced early next year possibly leading to more advertisers accepting the medium.

What Deutsche really zoomed in on, however, was the company's increasing focus on on-line, which it sees as a key. "Finda", an ad funded local marketplace for news and community information is being further developed, while "Sella", an auctions and classified site in New Zealand will also be available in Australia next year.

However, while a move in the right direction that is showing some promising early signs, the broker thinks these initiatives are still early stage projects that at best will only help recover lost ground in the on-line space. UBS concurs with the earnings argument, saying it doesn't expect either Finda or Sella to be material to earnings, even over the medium term.

What UBS does think is that overall, APN offers a good exposure to an economic recovery that seems to be in progress. Highly cyclical print classifieds and outdoor advertising revenues, for which it has a positive outlook, will help drive earnings moving forward, says the broker.

UBS notes that in Australian and NZ publishing, weekly revenues are closing the gap with the prior year's run rate. In fact, the broker estimates that with much lower costs now in both divisions, earnings are probably tracking above last year right now. In Outdoor, while it admits the volatility remains high, forward bookings into 1Q10 are up also up year on year.

The broker does cite some structural concerns about newspapers longer term, but it notes that these fears are more than offset by positive earnings momentum in the medium term. What does the broker like? Solid regional exposure where print to on-line issues will be slower to play out, plus the group's ability to diversify revenues via Radio and Outdoor.

Credit Suisse also ultimately see the stock as a recovery play, saying the pace of economic recovery and an advertising recovery in Australia and New Zealand remain the keys for APN. The broker also thinks that one of the key overhangs on the stock, the stake held by Independent News & Media, also appears to be easing

Analysts from Deutsche also chime in on the recovery argument, saying real estate in NZ is improving, while it also sees some early signs of a job recovery in commodity related regional markets. Another plus, it notes, is that the retail category and Radio has remained resilient through the downturn.

One audible hiccup was heard by at least one broker during the investor conference, however, and it was that not only didn't APN pay a 1H09 dividend, its payout ratio remained "under review" The board is expected to make a decision on the final dividend in February, however UBS notes that CFO Peter Myers said it was unlikely that APN would return to the historic payout levels of 80-90%.

As at 11.50 today, shares in APN News & Media were trading 1c lower at $2.36 versus a 12-month trading range of $0.89 - $2.71.

article 3 months old

Fairfax Indicates Ad Trends Are Improving

By Chris Shaw

At the annual general meeting of Fairfax Media ((FXJ)) yesterday, management provided an update on operations for FY10 so far, one that included comments suggesting advertising trends continue to show some signs of improvement. This is consistent with the early stages of a cyclical recovery in the broader economy.

As RBS Australia notes, this means while earnings in the first half of FY10 are still declining the pace of decline is slowing to around 15% for the four months to October compared to the 43% fall recorded in the six months to the end of June. This implies RBS's earnings forecasts were overly conservative and so have been revised up slightly, the change measuring out at 7% in earnings per share (EPS) terms in FY10 and 3% in FY11.

This puts RBS Australia's revised EPS estimates at 10.7c and 13.8c for FY10 and FY11, while Bank of America Merrill Lynch is at 9.1c and 13c respectively and Credit Suisse is forecasting 10.3c and 11.7c. Consensus forecasts according to the FNArena database now stand at 9.8c and 12.4c for FY10 and FY11.

In the view of JP Morgan yesterday's guidance suggests there is limited if any downside to the market's forecasts for FY10 and this means the focus should turn to FY11, where the cyclical recovery story remains on track. Given this, JP Morgan retains its Overweight rating on the stock, a view shared by Credit Suisse and RBS Australia.

But Deutsche Bank continues to be less convinced in that while the analysts agree with the view advertising markets trends are improving, causing modest increases to its earnings estimates, they believe it is too early to assume earnings will recover by as much as is being priced into the stock at present given the economic environment remains somewhat uncertain.

As well, Deutsche points out the company still has a number of structural issues to deal with such as the loss of key revenue streams to digital media and other platforms, in classifieds in particular. Factoring this in Deutsche doesn't expect total group revenue to return to 2008 levels until 2013 at the earliest, thus limiting the upside potential of the stock.

What may also be a limiting factor is confirmation from management the dividend payout ratio will be restricted to 20% for the foreseeable future, as the focus remains on reducing the level of debt the group is carrying. Bank of America Merrill Lynch doesn't see this as being a long-term issue however, forecasting an increase in the payout ratio to 45% by FY11 and a return to the previous level of 80% by FY12.

While Deutsche Bank has lifted its price target to $1.40 from $1.05 post the AGM update this remains comfortably below the current share price, so it sees no reason to shift from its Sell rating given the issues it has identified.

This puts the broker at odds with the market as the FNArena database shows Fairfax is rated as Buy seven times compared to one Hold, one Reduce and Deutsche at Sell. The average price target on the stock is $1.78, up from $1.70 prior to the AGM, with RBS Australia and Credit Suisse most bullish with respective targets of $2.00 and $2.05.

Shares in Fairfax Media today are slightly higher and as at 11.40am the stock was up 3.5c at $1.67. This compares to a range over the past year of $0.795 to $1.895. 
article 3 months old

More Upside For Ten?

By Chris Shaw

CanWest, the major shareholder in the Ten Network ((TEN)), has announced the sale of its 50.1% stake in the company, a move the market expects will remove a potential share overhang in the stock given the group has long been a rumoured seller due to its own financial issues stemming from the global financial crisis.

While this is usually positive for the remaining shareholders, there is but little excitement about the move with respect to Ten, largely as brokers covering the stock continue to see the shares as expensive at current levels. This comes despite some initial guidance for FY09 suggesting a result somewhat better than had been expected.

On the back of the guidance, which is for a result in EBITDA (earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation) terms of $151 million, Citi has lifted its earnings estimates by 12% this year, 17% in FY10 and 16% in FY11 to earnings per share (EPS) outcomes of 6.2c, 5.4c and 8c respectively, the changes reflecting signs of a stronger advertising market.

Others have followed suit, Bank of America Merrill Lynch increasing its EPS numbers by 6-8% in FY10 and FY11, also as a result of management giving  indications the advertising market's fundamentals are beginning to improve. Its new estimates puts the broker's EPS numbers at 6c this year, 7.2c in FY10 and 9.7c in FY11.

Consensus EPS forecasts according to the FNArena database now stand at 3.8c this year and 5.9c in FY10, though it should be noted not all brokers to cover the stock have updated their numbers to reflect the earnings guidance offered yesterday.

Among those that have updated their models, value remains the big issue as Bank of America Merrill Lynch notes even assuming an 8% improvement in the metropolitan TV advertising market in the second half of FY10, which would be better than the broker's current estimate of a 3% improvement, such scenario would only lift its valuation on the stock to around $1.40 against its current valuation of $1.21.

This suggests there is little upside in the stock as $1.40 would be only around 2% higher than yesterday's closing price, at which the broker estimates the shares are trading on a 25% premium to the All Industrials ex Banks index. This compares to its historical average of parity to that index, leading the broker to reiterate its Underperform recommendation.

Others agree the stock is expensive, Credit Suisse also taking the view the current valuation premium is difficult to justify as there remains significant earnings sensitivity to TV ratings. The broker did point out the stock is highly leveraged to any economic recovery however, estimating if FY11 advertising revenues came in 2% above its current forecasts there would be around 12% upside to its EPS numbers in that year.

While the broker has lifted its target  to $1.28 from $0.85 on the back of increases to its earnings numbers and the CanWest sale, Credit Suisse retains its Underpeform recommendation while suggesting the current share price already factors in a significant amount of good news with respect to both ratings and advertising.

JP Morgan rates the stock as Neutral, the broker suggesting the removal of the CanWest overhang is a positive for remaining shareholders as the registry has been cleaned up and there is now no majority shareholder. But it too struggles with finding value and suggests it is too early to turn more positive on the shares as there needs be evidence of improved performance before the stock re-rates.

Citi was the only broker to adjust its rating post the result, upgrading to Hold from Sell while lifting its target to $1.35 from $1.15. This means the FNArena database now shows a total of four Holds, four Sells and one Buy courtesy of GSJB Were, though it shold be noted this rating has not been updated for the CanWest transaction.

Morgan Stanley is not part of the daily FNArena coverage but it too rates the stock as Overweight against an In-Line industry weighting as in its view the company is well placed to lift its ratings share and its share of the advertising market. As well, Morgan Stanley argues the best time to buy TV assets is at the bottom of the TV advertising cycle, which it suggests is the situation at present.

The average price target on the stock according to the database is now $1.17, up from $1.03 previously. Morgan Stanley's price target is $1.50. Shares in Ten today as at 12.25pm were down 0.5c at $1.36, which compares to a range over the past year of $0.615 to $1.68.
article 3 months old

Oz Labour Demand Turning The Corner

By Rudi Filapek-Vandyck

Economists at ANZ bank report total job ads on the internet and in newspapers in Australia increased by 4.1% in August, marking the first monthly increase in this series since April 2008.

Newspaper job ads rose by 5.5%, while internet job ads grew by 4%. The economists conclude the August survey indicates that total job advertisements in Australia have bottomed out and are now on the way up, albeit from very low levels. To keep things in perspective they highlight the number of job ads remains 48.1% lower than a year ago.

The ANZ Job Advertisements Series released today showed the total number of jobs advertised in major metropolitan newspapers and on the internet grew by 4.1% in August to a weekly average of 130,326 per week. The first monthly rise since April last year follows a fall of 1.7% in July.

In trend terms, the total number of job advertisements still declined by 1.3% in August, following a 2.7% fall in July, to be 50.6% lower than 12 months earlier. The rate of decline in trend terms is weakening, note the economists.

The number of job advertisements in major metropolitan newspapers increased by 5.5% in August to an average of 8,613 per week. This follows a 0.4% fall in July. Newspaper advertisements are now 43.1% lower than in August 2008. In trend terms, the number of newspaper job advertisements grew by 2.4% in August to be 45.4% lower than a year ago.

Note ANZ economists: most states in Australia experienced increases in newspaper job ads in August with Victoria (-15.2%) the only state to experience a fall. New South Wales (+24.1%) experienced the largest rise in percentage terms, followed by Western Australia (+10.2%), South Australia (+9.3%), the Northern Territory (+9.2%), the ACT (+7.8%), Tasmania (+4.3%) and Queensland (+1.2%).

Meanwhile, the number of internet job advertisements grew 4% to average 121,713 per week, and were 48.4% lower than 12 months earlier. In trend terms, internet job advertisements fell by 1.5% in August to be 51% lower than in August 2008.

While ANZ economists are positive about the implications of the August data survey, they are quick in adding it may take some time to see sustained net job growth in Australia.

In the near term, they still expect to see continued deterioration in the labour market, due to the very low level of demand for new labour, some residual job shedding and continuing strong growth in labour supply. They still expect employment to fall by around 15,000 in August and the unemployment rate to rise to 6%, when the ABS releases its labour force numbers for August this Thursday.

Looking further ahead, today’s numbers confirm ANZ economists' optimism that the pace of decline in employment will not be as severe as envisaged six months ago. Australian economic activity has been remarkably resilient in recent months, the economists point out, particularly in some of the country's largest employing industries such as retail trade, health services, government and construction.

Furthermore, the rebound in business investment (up 2% in Q2) and good growth rates across most domestic industries in last week's national accounts indicate that some of the main sources of downward pressure on labour demand are now easing. In particular, note the economists, Australian manufacturing, which saw job cuts of 76,500 in the year to May 2009, experienced growth in real output in Q2 (+0.7%) for the first time since last June.

ANZ have reviewed its forecasts and now expects the Australian unemployment rate to peak at around 7.25% in mid 2010.

article 3 months old

The Overnight Report: Fighting Hard

By Greg Peel

The Dow closed down 39 points or 0.4% while the S&P closed down 0.3% at 1002 and the Nasdaq fell a more substantial 0.9%.

Early economic data releases saw the Dow drop sharply in the first half hour to be down 114 points. This took the S&P 500 down below 1000 to 994 while the Nasdaq was weak all day, finishing below 2000 at 1993. Both the Dow and the broad index were supported by a lot of shenanigans going on the financial sector.

I noted on Tuesday that the level of 1000 in the S&P 500 was conquered following a raft of manufacturing index readings across the globe which showed actual growth (China, UK) or at least a reduction in contraction (Australia, EU, US). The US index only just fell short of 50 in July and is expected to exceed that number in August to finally indicate growth. However, I also noted the US manufacturing sector only represents 20% of US industry. Non-manufacturing, or "services" (banking, information technology, health etc), represents the other 80% of industry in terms of contribution to GDP.

(Just in case there's any confusion, readers will note I constantly point out the consumer represents 70% of GDP. That's the demand side. The supply side is split 20/80 between manufacturing and services.)

In June the US ISM services index marked 47.0. Economists were expecting the July reading to match the manufacturing index in terms of a reduction in contraction to 48.0, but instead it slipped to 46.4 to mark the tenth straight month of decline. It was on this news that Wall Street hit the Sell button. The subsets of business activity, new orders and employment were all lower within the index.

Next came the ADP jobs number, which is a private organisation's measurement of private sector employment and is seen as a precursor to the official jobs number which always follows on the Friday. Early on in the GFC the ADP numbers and official numbers rarely correlated, but recently the ADP has been surprisingly accurate (following a change in methodology). Its measure for July was a loss of 371,000 jobs.

This was both bad news and good. It was bad because economists had forecast only a 350,000 drop, but it was good because June saw a 430,000 drop in a declining trend of job losses, so July maintains that trend in that each month is showing a slowing of unemployment growth.

But there was also more good news. New factory orders were expected by economists to fall 1.0% in June, consistent with a fall in durable goods orders, and despite both April and May showing rises. Factory orders are orders for all manufactured products, durable and consumable. But in June, factory orders rose 0.4%. The light at the end of the tunnel grows, but again bear in mind this reflects the 20% manufacturing sector.

The earnings reports highlights from last night came after the bell.

News Corp ((NWS)) posted a quarterly loss of US$203m, which translates to earnings of US8c per share compared to US43cps in the same quarter last year. Aside from a plunge in advertising revenue, the loss represented a big write-down in value of Rupert's MySpace acquisition. Adjusting for such one-offs, the apples-to-apples EPS was US19c which was a penny better than Wall Street expectation. Revenue also just beat estimates. News Corp shares were unchanged in the after-market.

But commentators suggest News is increasingly looking like an Old Media company staring down extinction. Rupert is on record as calling the advertising slump now past its trough, but industry experts do not expect the recovery in advertising (if there really is one yet) to ever return meaningfully into twentieth century concepts such as newspapers, magazines and free-to-air television. This leaves News Corp's only real jewel in the crown as cable television, given the big write-down in its New Media diversification move - MySpace. While MySpace initially looked like a brilliant move on paper, it has now become so-last-week. Everything newer from Facebook to Twitter has left MySpace looking like a relic, and no doubt everything newer will also look like a relic in the next decade, such is life in the New Media game.

Database specialist and recently-added Dow component Cisco also reported after the bell. Cisco posted a 46% drop in profit from the same quarter last year but on apples-to-apples EPS, US31c beat the consensus forecast of US29c. Revenue was right on the money. Cisco's CEO also heartened the market by suggesting new orders are implying the trough in IT sales has also now been seen. But Cisco shares fell 3% in the after-market. Tech has had a pretty good run lately.

I noted yesterday that the key to any economic recovery - anywhere in the world but certainly in the US - is consumer spending. As we begin to see the end of the US earnings season approaching, we note that 74% of reporting companies have beaten Wall Street EPS estimates. That's a record. But at the same time, 54% have fallen short on revenue estimates. That's also a record. Revenue means sales.

It was all happening in the US financial sector last night. Firstly, we recall that it was the banks that kicked of the rally in March. They then largely stalled in June as investors moved to buy other sectors, including materials. But in the last couple of weeks banks have been back again leading the charge as investors decide improving economic conditions will filter straight into bank bottom lines, and banks were so, so beaten down in 2007-08. Indeed, the bank sector index was up last night despite more general weakness, which is why the Dow and S&P did not fall as much as the non-bank Nasdaq. JP Morgan shares last night traded above their pre-Lehman bankruptcy level for the first time.

But the highlight was AIG, the former global insurance leader now 80% owned by the US taxpayer. Unconfirmed rumours that the government was looking to now swap all or perhaps some of its loans to AIG into ordinary shares saw those shares jump over 60% in the session. The extent of the move was attributed to short covering. The rumour also had a guilt-by-association affect on our old friends Fannie and Freddie, which jumped over 30% each.

Adding to overall bank sector strength was the previous move by Citigroup to swap some of its preferred stock into ordinary shares (which is ostensibly also a debt for equity transfer). The move impacted last night because the increase in Citi's ordinary share count was officially included in S&P 500 index weighting calculations, providing Citi with a higher weight. This then means every index tracking fund - those that simply buy and hold the S&P 500 in its correct weights - has to buy more Citi shares to readjust their portfolios. Citi shares were thus up 10% on the session.

In theory, this should be a zero dollar sum game for the index trackers. In other words, they will have to now sell some parcel of the 499 other stocks in the index due to their subsequent weighting reductions.

In other news last night, Goldman Sachs analysts raised their second half 2009 US GDP growth forecast from 1% to 3%. Given the second quarter GDP reading was an annualised negative 1%, Goldmans is forecasting a return to actual annualised growth (albeit below trend) in 2010. This may have also helped the intraday recovery in the stock market, but it had a greater impact in the bond market - Goldmans is a significant primary bond dealer. The ten-year yield shot up 14 basis points as a result to 3.64%. The connection is that a return to economic growth implies an increase from the Fed funds rate above its current zero-based range.

The US dollar index ticked down slightly again with bond sales no doubt helping, to 77.56.

Weekly crude inventories last night came in slightly above expectation, but oil rallied nevertheless, adding US55c to US$71.97/bbl. But it's all happening in base metals at the moment.

While the commodities boom that lasted through to 2008 featured the endogenous factor of increased emerging market demand and slow-to-respond global supply, price spikes were also felt due to the exogenous factor of mine-worker strikes. Mining companies were quick to book extraordinary profits but slow to allow workers to also enjoy the spoils. While most strikes end eventually with some sort of settlement, history shows mine strikes can drag on for months and send metal prices flying to the moon on resultant supply-side squeezes.

Aside from a tentative return to demand growth in the stainless steel market, the nickel price has recently been affected by ongoing strikes at Vale's two big nickel mines in Canada. As Vale moved to declare force majeure on deliveries last night, nickel consolidated above the US$20,000/t mark for the first time since the 2008 commodity down-leg commenced in July. Over in South Africa, workers in general have become restless about economic conditions and are letting new prime minister Zuma know. Power workers have downed tools, threatening the country's aluminium industry. Power problems in South Africa were also a feature of early 2008 commodity price jumps.

Last night aluminium and zinc jumped 3% while nickel jumped 4.5%. Copper lead and tin were all up around 1.5%. Basemetals.com reports the recent big moves up in metal prices can mostly be attributed to buying from commodity funds.

Just like a reweighting of Citigroup shares in the S&P 500 can force index trackers into buying more shares, increasing metals prices force commodity funds to buy more metal which in turn pushes up prices, which in turn...

Gold fell US$2.40, after a big rise on Tuesday, to US$964.50/oz. The Aussie, which has been rocketing recently, decided to remain unchanged last night at US$0.8407.

The SPI Overnight added 3 points.

article 3 months old

Investing In A Deflationary Environment

(This story was originally published on March 10, 2009. It has now been republished to make it available to non-paying members at FNArena and readers elsewhere.)

By Greg Peel

"Current fears are that the crisis in the real economy could continue to interact negatively with the financial crisis it has grafted onto, plunging the global economy into a depressionary spiral in which recession and deflation are mutually reinforcing."

This comment from economists at Credit Agricole deftly sums up the global financial crisis, past and present. Recall that in mid-2007 the US experienced a "subprime crisis", which soon morphed into a more worrying "credit crunch", which then took root as a full-blown "credit crisis" which began to impact on the entire global economy, sending us spiralling into the "global financial crisis". At the outset, the subprime crisis was dismissed as trivial, and even the credit crisis was seen to be something contained within the financial sector and not overly threatening to the real economy.

But now that the real economy has "grafted onto" the financial crisis, as Credit Agricole puts it, global recession is at hand and, more ominously, global deflation is looming.  A recession is simply a contraction of economic growth, and while usually causing "disinflation" (inflation growth slows) a recession rarely causes actual "deflation" (inflation turns negative). Says CA:

"The stakes are high: deflation is a rare economic phenomenon - rare but sufficiently devastating as to be avoided at all costs."

In simple terms, deflation occurs when general prices fall for a prolonged period of time. This leads to reduced margins and profits, reduced wages, and a resulting effective increase in debt. Nominal debt does not change over time, but the capacity to repay it reduces in a deflationary period. This offers the spectre of working hard week in, week out, to simply be looking at an even more onerous debt burden down the track. It is thus no surprise that deflationary periods are "depressing" in a psychological sense, let alone potentially in an economic sense. The problem is that deflation, like high inflation on the opposite hand, can be self-fulfilling. Consumers and businesses put off buying of all but essential items and shy away from any borrowing. The economy does not just contract, it contracts at a pace.

The economic term "depression" refers not to the psychological state of the same name, but to what is best illustrated on a graph of economic activity over time. A recession means negative growth and a depression supposedly requires negative growth of 10% or more, but it also requires a length of time of contraction and a long period before recovery. Such a period would appear as a depression of a line of economic growth. Or perhaps if you think about travelling across the countryside towards a distant peak, a recession might equate to have to drop down briefly to cross a river bed but a depression would be having to drop down into and cross a giant crater. The irony is that depressions are more likely to occur if everyone gets depressed.

The most famous deflationary episode was the Great Depression of the 1930s, over which the US economy contracted by a total of 26.5%, consumer prices fell 24.4%, and unemployment reached 25% in an era before unemployment pensions were available (which obviously exacerbated the situation). President Roosevelt was slow to react with stimulatory measures including monetary easing, and a shift to protectionism ensured the Depression became a deep-set global phenomenon. Also slow to react to financial crisis was Japan in the early 1990s, and failure to ease monetary policy rapidly and rationalise a failed banking system led to the second most famous deflationary episode which lasted over a decade.

[See the FNArena special report "Deflation, Hyperinflation and Depression: Where is America Headed?" available to paying subscribers.]

The last time deflation posed a real threat was the bursting of the internet bubble in 2000. Here we had a stock market bubble based on heavy debt but little or no earnings to speak of. The tech-wreck led to recession, but the US Federal Reserve acted quickly to cut interest rates, and monetary easing became even more earnest in the wake of 9/11 in 2001. The recession ultimately proved short-lived because easy monetary policy allowed banks to fuel credit markets through both traditional lending and, growing in popularity, financial intermediation (such as packaging mortgages for on-sale).

The current recession might also have been a brief one if banks had a similar capacity to pull the system back onto its feet. Certainly the monetary policy response is there. But this time the crisis began in the banks, and therein lies the problem. There has been no cheap credit-led recovery. It is now all down to the public sector. And one can clearly argue that the response to the tech-wreck only served to exacerbate what we are now experiencing, such that the brevity of the 2002 recession is now being paid for in multiples. That time deflation was a risk but never materialised for more than a very brief period. The world was not plunged into a recession-deflation-depression spiral. The longer it takes for banks to be back up and lending this time around, the greater risk of a spiral beginning.

And we are clearly no closer to bank revival. However, this time around the world's governments and central bankers are doing the right thing as far as economists are concerned, by fighting disinflation with "reflation" - the twin stimulus packages of fiscal handouts and easy credit (low interest rates). If reflation can match disinflation, then deflation is avoided. So far we have seen rapid disinflation as the price of oil and other commodities have crashed overnight. But an affect on general prices is yet to manifest itself in the data. Central banks look at "core" inflation rates (ex energy and food) and those are falling in growth at the moment, but not so quickly as to assume deflation is at the door.

However, battling disinflation and winning is currently a big ask.

"All financial crises," notes Credit Agricole, "originate with an excess accumulation of aggregate liabilities, against the backdrop of a collective error in assessing risk. The current crisis conforms to the rule in that it follows a long period of excessive, imprudent credit expansion".

The collapse of this major credit bubble contains the "seeds" of the debt-deflation mechanism, the CA economists suggest. As asset values fall, the relative value of a corporation's debt tends to increase, which may require a reduction in debt leverage (take any property trust in Australia as an example). Debt can be reduced through income (cashflow), raising new funds, and/or asset disposals.

Take your choice of Australian resource companies in difficulty at present (or any sector for that matter). Debt levels are too high and commodity prices have fallen, drying up income. The cost of refinancing has become prohibitive and as share prices have collapsed, equity raisings are out of the question given massive dilution. The remaining option is to sell assets. And that is what a very large number of corporations in every sector in the economy in every economy on the planet is trying to do right now, simultaneously. And the lower asset prices fall, the greater debt to asset value measures rise, forcing more debt reduction, forcing more asset sales.

This is a deflationary spiral before you even start moving into the consumer economy.

Banks are not only the source of the crisis, they remain an ongoing part of the crisis. As asset values fall, collateral values against loans fall, causing banks to restrict lending. That's why debt refinancing for corporations is either expensive or unattainable. This leads to an increase in  loan defaults, and the subsequent impact on bank balance sheets leads to credit rationing, despite lower credit demand, and despite low interest rates.

So the question remains: Will the reflationary efforts of governments and central banks across the globe, fuelled by money printing (particularly in the US but elsewhere as well) be enough to ward off the deflationary avalanche of snowballing forced asset sales? Can monetary reflation overcome the overwhelming rush of credit deflation - so-called global deleveraging?

Credit Agricole believes, with respect to the US, that it will. "Indeed we are betting on the effectiveness of the measures," the economists note, "albeit without any proof so far. Still the measures taken as a whole augur well for fighting the risk of deflation".

Despite Europe appearing to be potentially an even bigger basket case than the US at present, Credit Agricole does not believe the risks of deflation are greater in Europe than in the US, but actually less so. Consider this observation:

"It is true that Member States [of the EU] found themselves in a relatively favourable situation before the economic cycle went into a downswing. Until the summer 2008, they were facing inflation, not deflation pressures. After two years of above-potential growth, industrial capacity utilisation rates were running at record highs. The labour market had become tighter, with a steady fall in the number of unemployed, which began in 2005. At the same time, the sharp rise in commodity prices threatened to put pressure on input prices, wages, and spread to all consumer prices by a contagion effect."

One might easily substitute "Australia" for "Member States" in this quote, except that Australia had come off the back of more than a decade of solid economic growth rather than just a couple of years. The common argument is that Australia was in a much better position than most economies going into the GFC, so it should thus not suffer as much.

Macquarie economists note that the first fall in the Australian inflation growth in the cycle occurred in the December quarter just passed, when the headline CPI dropped 0.3% to an annualised rate of growth of 3.7%. It is a long way from plus 3.7% to minus, and Macquarie considers Australian deflation a "low-probability event".

From a global perspective, Macquarie has taken a look at nominal long bond yields in different economies compared to real yields (adjusted for inflation). Inflation levels across the globe are falling but, like Australia, remain positive for now. When inflation prevails, real bond yields are lower than nominal yields because inflation erodes the value of the payout. But if the market is anticipating deflation, then nominal yields (at which you buy a bond now) will fall towards real yields. The lower the differential along the bond curve, the longer the period of deflation is being expected.

At present the UK is looking at deflation until 2011 on this measure, while Japan and the US have settled in for a decade's worth. (Australia not analysed). Now, market prices do not reflect future certainties, and as such opinions will change, but remember that deflationary spirals begin when the constituents within an economy begin to believe in deflation setting in for some time.

The International Monetary Fund suggests the risk of global deflation is currently the highest it's been for a decade (and the World Bank has just decided the global economy will recede in 2009, for the first time since the War) and that deflationary risk will remain elevated throughout 2009, but nevertheless the IMF believes "the most likely outcome is that sustained deflation will be avoided".

That's good news, other than no one can remember the last time the IMF actually got anything right. And if it is at all a measure of Macquarie's own confidence in its "low-probability call", the equity team has nevertheless decided to examine the effects of deflation on each of the Australian stock market sectors.

How does deflation affect the various sectors?

As already noted, deflation is not goods for banks. Falling asset values mean higher debt to asset values and falling incomes mean less capacity to service growing debt. This leads to an increase in defaults. The Big Four Australian banks have enjoyed a spurt in margins and revenues as they regain market share from foreign and small banks and non-bank lenders, but this is still in a climate of falling credit demand. Banks need to generate enough revenue growth to overcome growing loan defaults and delinquencies in order to stop their balance sheets contracting. And to use a now hackneyed expression, the elephant in the room is commercial property. We are yet to see the sort of collapse in commercial property prices we did in the 1992 recession, but there's not a lot to suggest we won't.

While many believe Australian banks will still be forced to cut dividends and raise capital ahead, Macquarie believes "the structural integrity of the major banks today leaves them in a relatively strong position, regardless of falling asset prices and low interest rates". Note that Macquarie suggests "relative" strength, which can imply "bad, but not as bad as others" as opposed to "good".

Deflation + banks = not good.

The property question provides a segue into the listed property sector. Clearly deflation is very bad for this sector as it relies heavily on property assets funded by debt, the income from which pays distributions. As asset values fall, debt ratios are greater, and that debt needs to either be refinanced in a market little willing to lend or reduced through asset sales. At the same time, (commercial) occupancy rates will likely fall, leading to lower rent income, and rents themselves may need to fall to avoid more vacancies. Asset sales are forced to occur at the same time everyone else in the sector is doing the same thing, and willing buyers are limited.

Macquarie sees the Australian listed property sector divided clearly into two camps - those with manageable debt levels and reliable income streams and those with critical debt levels and tenuous income streams. In the former case, such trusts would be defensive, and may even outperform in a deflationary climate given their yields. In the latter case, the ten foot pole comes out, before being put away again.

Deflation + property = bad.

The listed infrastructure trust space can be grouped in with property trusts given the nature of the investment model. This is separate from infrastructure construction which is more your basic materials and construction sectors - your Borals and Leightons. The two most popular infra trust investment targets are roads and airports. Within all the infra trust space, however, the same rules apply with regard to too much debt.

Macquarie suggests toll road takings have shown to "remarkably resilient". (Is this the point where we proffer the Sydney public transport system as one reason?) However, while numbers of cars on the road clearly rise with time the spanner in the works is unemployment. Regular toll road users do so to get to work, so if there's less work to go to there will be less cars on the road.

Airports are vulnerable in a deflationary environment given most flights are discretionary, unlike trips to work. And watch for a surge in cross-ocean internet meetings now that the technology is readily available and reliable.

Deflation + infra trusts = not good.

Turning to Australia's "other sector" (outside of banks), being resources, we can again put forward a simple dichotomy. Clearly all commodity prices have materially reduced, thus reducing mining company income. The resource sector has always undergone lengthy cycles and one day it will turn around again. But for now, Macquarie suggests "it is increasingly difficult to get positive on the resource sector".

In a deflationary climate, there will be no let up for weak commodity prices. The best a mining company can do is to go into a hibernation of sorts and await the spring. Core production will continue but marginal production will cease. Revenue will be greatly reduced (although raw material costs will also reduce, providing a dampener), which thus brings us to the dichotomy. Those companies with little or no debt, or at least sufficient core cashflow to cover debt, will slumber peacefully. Those with overhanging debt problems will need to sell assets. In selling assets, a mining company reduces the capacity for cashflow generation in the future. Some mining companies will not survive.

The perfect example of this dichotomy is BHP and Rio.

Deflation + resources = not good.

Gold, while considered a commodity, is more effectively a currency, and thus its fate in a deflationary environment is a different kettle of fish. In theory, gold is the universal hedge against inflation, so logic would suggest that a period of deflation would weigh on the price of gold. However, gold is most importantly a store of wealth.

We buy gold in times of inflation because inflation erodes the value of otherwise positive returns on, for example, the stock market. But we will also buy gold in periods of deflation to avoid losing any more money on the stock market, or elsewhere. Macquarie draws on the favoured example of gold in the Great Depression - a period of lengthy deflation. The actual US dollar gold price was fixed at the time, but gold miner Homestake saw its shares (a rough proxy for gold) rally from US$70 to US$300 between 1929 and 1933 - a period when the S&P 500 lost 60%.

The gold price can also hold up in a deflationary period in anticipation of high inflation ahead. The US, for example, is printing big time to reflate its economy. If the world stops buying US bonds on the other side of the ledger, the US dollar will collapse and the gold price will soar.

Deflation + gold = not bad.

If the resources sector follows lengthy cycles, so does the basic materials sector. As a proxy for problems in basic materials one need only look at the US housing market, to which many Australian companies are exposed. No one can see the end of the downward price spiral (deflation) at this stage. New construction has dried up. The Australian housing market is better placed, but there is little reason to suggest new home building is about to surge again - government grant or no government grant. In the non-residential sector, government spending on infrastructure is a boost but commercial property is clearly a drag.

Once again, material sector companies will live or die on debt levels, given income will be greatly reduced.

Deflation + basic materials = bad.

The energy sector is currently offering up a tale of two fossil fuels - oil and gas. While the prices of both are clearly depressed, oil is seen as the old way and gas (cleaner liquid natural gas) is seen as the new. The energy sector, again, lopes through extended cycles. The world's big oil companies have been around for decades and have seen it all before. They know that the bottom of a cycle is the time to invest for the future, and that's exactly what's going on at present in the LNG space.

The alternative energy space should be seeing the same interest, but alternative energy investment requires a greater level of venture foresight from lenders or investors at a time when debt is being rationed and risk aversion is the name of the game. Moreover, alternative energy will either surge or stutter depending on whether carbon cap-and-trade markets ever get off in the ground in Australia and the US.

So energy companies should be investing at the bottom of the cycle and never at the top, but as the Macquarie analysts note, many energy companies can't help themselves investing when oil prices are high, and are now paying the price. The oil price has collapsed a long way but the market is pricing energy companies as if this is an "oversold" condition, with expectations for a bounce in the not too distant future. Macquarie notes that the share prices of energy companies are currently materially higher than they were in 2004 when the oil price was last in the US$40s.

Deflation will thus reduce the attraction of energy companies, particularly those which have overstretched their balance sheets (the common theme). But those with healthy balance sheets and acquisitive capacity will stand to benefit in the long run. Macquarie suggests "given the capital-intensive nature of the upstream industry, the potential cost deflation clearly provides a huge opportunity for those participants with balance sheets large enough to exploit it before the oil price rises and drags activity levels and costs up with it".

Energy production is a very cost-intensive industry, requiring not only simple inputs such as steel, but also service costs. Service costs have collapsed as production and exploration has slowed, leading to a severe strain on the energy service sector. The service space (your Boart Longyears for example) became very crowded in the oil price boom and is now suffering from competition and price wars. Deflation is very bad for energy servicing, with the exception, at present, of those companies with secure maintenance cashflows and exposure to LNG development.

Deflation + energy = bad for some but not all.

Moving downstream to the utility sector, we enter the grounds of what is consumer discretionary and what is a consumer staple. While deflation causes consumers to postpone spending on discretionary items, one has to eat, so staples such as food are not much affected. Therefore prices are not much affected either (which is one reason why food is not considered part of "core" inflation). The same can be said for electricity and gas. Maybe a recession might prompt Dad to run around turning lights off after teenagers and scold them for spending too long in the shower, but conservation considerations have already prompted such activity anyway. In short, we still need as much electricity and gas whether we are in a boom or a bust.

Hence utility prices are unlikely to deflate meaningfully and utility companies should still provide relatively secure returns.

Deflation + utilities = not bad.

We now segue nicely into the retail sector. Retail is divided into the two camps of discretionary and staple.

For discretionary retail, there is probably nothing worse than deflation. For deflation implies that consumers are not buying, or putting off what they might otherwise have bought. At one end, small ticket items such as restaurant meals become an expensive and unnecessary indulgence, while at the other, big ticket items like a new car become just too much of a risk, particularly when debt is involved. The option is available to eat at home and to stick with the old clunker for another year.

At the wholesale level there is some respite in the form of lower input costs (materials and labour), but wholesalers also have large amounts of sunk capital to fund. Retailers have little sunk capital (they tend to just lease a shop) but are clearly exposed to falling demand and subsequent discounting price wars. Familiar brands tend to fair better than unknown brands, but a brand name won't ward off deflation.

Deflation + consumer discretionary = bad to very bad.

Consumer staples, like utilities, are largely immune from deflation. While we might shy away from the Wagyu beef and go for the cheap mince in a recession, we will still eat. And we will still drink Coke and plenty of beer - maybe even more so if we're down in the dumps. We will still buy pills and go to hospital, so you can just about lump the entire healthcare sector in with consumer staples. We just won't spend up big, so while consumer staple companies (such as Woolies) will likely outperform, they won't necessarily rise in value. You can also consider telcos to be in the staple camp to a large extent, for we will still make phone calls.

Deflation + consumer staples = not bad.

There was a survey the other day, I think in the Sunday paper, which suggested beer, fast food and pokies were havens for the recession-hit Aussie. We've discussed the first two, which thus brings us to the gaming industry.

So far gaming revenues have held up well. This is no surprise, given it provides cheap entertainment for some, and for the more desperate a hope to win some money to ward off trouble. But lower interest rates and petrol prices have also had an immediate impact on household budgets to date, freeing up funds to be blown on the pokies. This will not, however, last in a deflationary environment, because rising unemployment will force less participation.

Deflation + gaming = not good.

If consumer discretionary is one sector hit hard by deflation, there is a flow on effect into the media sector. Advertising revenues from goods and services have collapsed. As unemployment rises, advertising for jobs crashes. The only saving grace for the media sector in a period of deflation is the split between old and new media.

While new media companies such as Seek have seen revenues fall as unemployment rises, this has occurred as a pullback in a longer term trend of new media growing at the expense of old media. Thus companies exploiting new media and subsequent advertising revenue will at least have some dampening effect at work. The opposite is true for free to air television and newspapers and magazines. Old media is now losing revenue from both recession and lost market share. Radio remains relatively immune from market share erosion as radio is a "staple" in the sense that we will always listen around the breakfast table and in the car, and to sporting events. Radio will still lose revenue in a deflationary environment, nevertheless.

Deflation + media = bad to very bad.

That brings us to the end of our sector discussion. If there is one thing that stands out, I have used the labels of "not bad", "not good", "bad" and "very bad" in relation to a deflationary climate, but never "good". This sums up what deflation does to stock markets.

The question thus is: Is anything good?

Over the past twelve months investors in government bonds have done very well. Government bond investment is considered the antithesis of stock market investment. When inflation is strong, stocks rally and bond prices fall with rising yields. Under deflation, stock prices fall and bond prices rally with falling yields. Under deflation, real yields can be higher than nominal yields (they are always lower under inflation). It is thus no surprise, therefore, that government bonds are considered a "safe haven". This is clearly the case at present in the US.

Should we thus all rush out and buy bonds, particularly given the Australian government is now issuing them by the truckload?

The problem with bonds is that they are undermined by government attempts to reflate the economy. Taking the US example, the government is relying on exporter countries buying the constant issues of bonds as a means of investing their surpluses and thus funding the US deficit. At the moment, all global economies are in strife but the world is preferring the "haven" of the reserve currency. This is all well and good, until it stops.

We learned yesterday that the world's second biggest economy - Japan - has gone into current account deficit for the first time in 13 years. Before China arrived on the scene, Japan was the greatest exporter of manufactured goods on earth. To this day it still relies on selling Toyotas and Sony products. But so extraordinary has been the turnaround in Japan's export fortunes (exacerbated by a rising yen) that its current account has swung wildly into deficit - much more wildly than anyone ever imagined.

Japan owns a very big chunk of US bonds. If it begins to sell bonds (as a deficit suggests it should) then the floodgates could open. Germany and China are also big owners of US bonds and their fortunes are not exactly rosy at the moment either. If the US bond market collapses, so will the US dollar, because all that will be left will be printed greenbacks with no economic value.

While Australia's situation is not nearly as tenuous, deflationary environments are not necessarily a safe one for government bonds. Disinflation - yes. Deflation - dodgy, because deflation can rapidly turn into high inflation if governments over stimulate.

That only leaves gold.

There are no two ways about it: deflation is bad for investors. We can only hope, as Credit Agricole, the IMF and Macquarie (to name three) do, that government and central bank reflationary strategies across the globe will work.