Showing posts with label Facebook. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Facebook. Show all posts

Thursday, 8 February 2018

Double Tap


To market to market to buy a fat pig. Markets are all over the place at the moment; volatility is on the up. There are not many days when you see so many companies in the Top 40 moving higher by more than 3%. Some of the big movers yesterday were, NEPI Rockcastle up 16.8%, STAR up 10.9%, Investec PLC up 7.5%, MTN up 4.5%, Tiger Brands up 4.2%, and Discovery up 3.5%. In total, 16 companies in the top 40 were up over 3%!

Our large dual-listed companies haven't been fairing as well, partly due to their primary listing coming under pressure but also our strong Rand. Over the last three months, Richemont is down 16% on the JSE and only down 5% in Switzerland. Looking at Naspers, the gap between its value and Tencent continues to grow. I suspect the reason has to do with Naspers's complex holdings structure, coupled with the Multichoice saga and a stench hanging over South African business because of Steinhoff.



Market Scorecard. On US markets, the bulls and bears were in a constant fight for supremacy. On the open, the bears were winning. The bulls then banded together to push the market into the green by 1%. From lunch until around 40 minutes before the market close, things bumbled along. Then just before the market close, the bears staged their counter-attack. The Dow was down 0.08%, the S&P 500 was down 0.50%, the Nasdaq was down 0.90%, and the All-share was higher by 0.90%.




One thing, from Paul

If your investing strategy involves funds with strange names or letters of the Greek alphabet, there is a strong chance that you don't know what you are doing. Or that you are playing with firecrackers!

We saw an amusing example of this on Monday, where a Frankenstein financial product called the Velocity Shares Daily Inverse VIX Short-Term ETN (code: XIV) literally exploded. XIV is an exchange-traded note underwritten by Credit Suisse that gives "investors", roughly speaking, negative 1 times the return on the CBOE Volatility Index (the VIX) each day.

Wait what? Ok, slowly. The CBOE Volatility Index is a measure of the stock market's expectation of near-term volatility implied by S&P 500 index options, calculated and published by the Chicago Board Options Exchange (CBOE). It is sometimes referred to as the fear index or the fear gauge. Volatility has the greek symbol σ. That's the lower case of Sigma. You still with me?

All you need to know is that recently, the VIX has been low and declining. Markets had been very calm. So people made lots of money owning the XIV, because it delivered the opposite of the VIX, and went up almost every day. Plus, people owning it got to say cool sounding things like "I'm killing it right now, 'cos I'm short vol". The fund had almost $2.0 billion in units in issue at the start of the week.

See the chart of what happened next:






Company Corner

Bright's Banter

Facebook had a stellar 2017 year when it comes to earnings as they have managed to beat expectations relentlessly without fail. Here's is what the Zuck had to say about the year:

"2017 was a strong year for Facebook, but it was also a hard one," He went on to say: "In 2018, we're focused on making sure Facebook isn't just fun to use, but also good for people's well-being and for society. We're doing this by encouraging meaningful connections between people rather than passive consumption of content. Already last quarter, we made changes to show fewer viral videos to make sure people's time is well spent. In total, we made changes that reduced time spent on Facebook by roughly 50 million hours every day. By focusing on meaningful connections, our community and business will be stronger over the long term."

We saw the shares go down around 5% when the news above was made public, but the shares then recovered sharply to be up around 2% during the earnings call when management gave more information on how they are going to make the platform more meaningful to the users.

Now lets take a look at their final quarter and full year numbers:

    - Revenues: grew by 47% for the quarter to $12.97 billion bringing the total revenue for the year to $40.65 billion.
    - Net Income: grew by 20% for the quarter to $4.27 billion bringing total net income for the year to $15.9 billion.
    - Monthly Active Users: 2.13 Billion, up from 2.07 Billion last quarter.
    - Daily Active Users: 1.40 Billion, up from 1.37 Billion last quarter.


However, the reduction in Facebook's net income fell $3.19 billion from Q3 to Q4 due to a once off charge tied to changes in the US tax system. This comes as no surprise at all as we have seen other companies reporting similar tax charges.

Infographic: Facebook's You will find more infographics at Statista

We like the fact that Facebook is going back to first principles by revamping the News Feed and prioritising posts from friends and family over advertised viral videos/content from publishers with an agenda. This will help avoid hurtful content that goes viral from time to time and dilutes the user experience. Most importantly, it'll help curb the invisible hands that have been swaying election results all over the world by perpetuating fake news on the platform. This move could see Facebook's advertising revenues grow slower in the interim, but it'll boost the company's growth long-term, as advertisers/brands will trust the platform more, and engagement will be more meaningful for users.

We are not really worried about the slowing user growth on Facebook itself. Instagram is becoming more relevant; since it introduced Stories, which was the feature Snapchat was created around (RIP Snap). Engagement keeps increasing and advertisers are recognising this, joining in on the action. Corporate accounts are growing by high double digits per month, especially those which trade directly to consumers. They do product deals with influencers to promote their product, a strategy that has helped the likes of Adidas flourish in recent times.

For the first time, Facebook admits to dragging its feet in response to the Russian hacking reports. This is wonderful news as it is what ultimately led the company to revamp its news feed to prioritise friends and family. This is reassuring to the people of the U.S.A and the rest of the world; that this will never happen again as they're finally regulating themselves as the media company that they are! We think this will help ease the regulatory scrutiny and management can focus more of their time exploring other growth avenues.

Let's not forget the fact that this machine still has more relationships than Islam, Capitalism, and Communism. These relationships are proving to be more and more meaningful as they're not going to be spammed with viral videos and unnecessary content that's targeted to change the way they perceive certain political candidates for example. With WhatsApp now being Facebook's second-biggest property followed by Messenger and Instagram, we think the company is finally doing the right thing in society and as a result we hold and buy more!




Linkfest, lap it up

Michael's Musings

Imagine going to the supermarket and then freshly picking the herbs that you want? With urban/vertical farming, you can now do just that - Balderton Capital leads $25M Series A in 'urbanfarming' platform Infarm

When Jobs made his comeback to Apple, the company was weeks away from going bust. I stumbled across this article which reminded me that it was Microsoft who threw them a lifeline. I wonder if Microsoft regrets helping Apple? - Aug 6 1997: Apple Rescued - By Microsoft




Home again, home again, jiggety-jog. Our market is slightly down on the open, rather boring compared to how the rest of the week has gone. Tesla's numbers last night showed that they burnt through $675 million during their last quarter, not much of a reaction from the stock though. We will have a more detailed breakdown of the numbers in the next couple of days. Then later today, it is the weekly initial jobless claims read from the US. Considering how the market was spooked last week by a strong labour market, the data this afternoon might have a bigger impact than normal.




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Friday, 10 November 2017

Instaprofits


To market to market to buy a fat pig. This whole week Wall Street has been trying to guess what the final tax bill will look like and when it will finally pass. Yesterday, the US Senate released their version of the tax bill for discussion. The big factor for US business is that the tax cuts will only be implemented in 2019, which would mean delays in the increased profits that analysts have started pricing into stocks. For now, we just need to wait and see where the politicians decide the middle ground is.

Market Scorecard. It wasn't a great day all-round for equity markets, they were red which isn't a colour we are accustomed to seeing. The Dow was down 0.43%, the S&P 500 was down 0.38%, the Nasdaq was down 0.58% and the All-share was down 0.36%. You know you have become accustomed to the current, low volatility bull market when you are complaining about less than half a percent downward move. Nvidia, the GPU chip maker, reported market-beating numbers after the close last night. The stock is trading higher by 3% in after hour trade, meaning it has doubled in 2017 and is up 1500% since the end of 2012! We will have more on the results in days to come.




Company corner

Bright's Banter

In his book, Prof. Scott Galloway mention's the fact that Facebook owns three of the five platforms that got to 100 Million Active Users the fastest, i.e. Facebook, WhatsApp and Instagram. People laughed at the Instagram purchase. Instagram was bought for $1 Billion and everyone and their dog second guessed it. Fast forward to today, it's worth between $60-$100bn in most traditional valuation metrics. Probably one of the best acquisitions in tech in the past 20 years. Instagram is all about the double V's; the visuals and vanity which millennials love so much! This was a big bold bet, and Zuckerberg and team kept the growth going, maintained passion among millennials, it's been a fantastic acquisition.

Now let's segway a little bit and talk about Apps. If the phone is the most important screen in our lives and the most important technology device. Studies show that 80% of the time spent on our phones is "in App" and six of the top ten Apps are owned by Facebook. The phone isn't just a piece of technology, it's basically a utility for Facebook Inc.

Millennials now have more disposable income than boomers, they are the most influential. If you look at what a lot of successful consumer brands now have in common for growing their shareholder value, is that their core competence is being able to advertise successfully on Instagram.

Now lets take a look at their 3Q numbers:

- Revenues: grew by 47% to $10.33 Billion vs $9.84 Billion expected.
- Earnings Per Share: $1.59 vs $1.28 expected.
- Monthly Active Users: 2.07 Billion, up from 2.01 Billion last quarter.
- Daily Active Users: 1.37 Billion, up from 1.32 Billion last quarter.

The Zuck did caution investors to lower their expectations going forward because of the political noise that is clouding the business with regards to the 2016 election which I talk about below. Here is what he said "Our community continues to grow and our business is doing well. . . But none of that matters if our services are used in ways that don't bring people closer together. We're serious about preventing abuse on our platforms. We're investing so much in security, that it will impact our profitability. Protecting our community is more important than maximizing our profits" he said that in this press release.



Statista's Neil McCarthy reminded us in a recent email that "When Accel Partners invested $14.8 million in a website called 'thefacebook.com' back in 2005, they made a return of $5.6 billion - 378 times their original outlay." He did emphasise the fact that more often than not, however, startups tend to fail brutally!



Prof. Scott Galloway notes that Facebook's response to accusations about U.S. 2016 elections being swayed by a foreign adversary have evolved from a crazy allegation, to millions of people being impacted, and finally to hundreds of millions. He continues to say that if a firm wittingly or unwittingly becomes weaponised by Russian intelligence, isn't the responsible thing to do to shut the company down?

The average age of a Cleveland Cavaliers players is 29, Detroit Lions is also 29; however the average age of a Facebook employee is 28. Is it possible that Facebook management doesn't have the historic context regarding the important role the fourth estate plays in our society? When you claim it's impossible to ensure your platform is not weaponised, don't you really mean unprofitable? It could be stopped but its substantial detriment to your free-cashflow? Haven't you chosen profit over country? If the New York Times can protect us from the intelligence arms of the Russian Government with $100Million in free-cashflow, shouldn't Facebook be able to with $12 Billion?

Facebook needs to reassure the people of the U.S.A and the rest of the world that this will never happen again.

Facebook might be facing a lot of regulatory scrutiny in the interim, but here at Vestact we have argued about different scenarios, and the conclusion is that their earnings will continue to be strong as ever, as long as their Daily Active Users keep increasing. Over 2 Billion people have a relationship with Facebook, that's more than any Islam, capitalism, communism etc. the only thing I can think of that has more meaningful relationships than Facebook is Soccer and Christianity.




Linkfest, lap it up

Michael's Musings

Accenture released a report on the 10 'Mega Trends' impacting the payments industry. The basic conclusion of the report is, adapt or risk becoming irrelevant in the next decade - Driving the Future of Payments. Visa is well positioned for the future of payments, thanks to their network being a connector of merchants to new fintech applications. The biggest threat is to banks, who may find themselves cut out of the payments market.



This real life incident is probably the best advert for having driverless cars - A Human Driver Crashed Into Las Vegas's Driverless Shuttle In Its First Hour Of Service. It was interesting to see some news outlets spin the headline to imply that the driverless car was at fault. I suppose humans don't like change and a headline implying that driverless cars are unsafe would get more clicks than one implying humans are the unsafe variable on our roads.




Home again, home again, jiggety-jog. Asian markets are mostly lower this morning and Tencent is flat, expect our market to open slightly down. Richemont released their 6-month numbers this morning, which looked good. The stock is up 1%. Good luck to the Bokke and Bafana this weekend!




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Tuesday, 26 September 2017

Mark Zuckerberg is a Legend


To market to market to buy a fat pig. Or if you celebrated heritage day with a braai, you may have bought some boerie, lamb chops or a big chunk of steak. The price of meat has been increasing at a very fast rate in SA. In last month's inflation data we saw a 15% increase in the meat price, a lot higher than the rest of the basket. Having said that, meat here is still relatively cheap compared to many developed markets.

On Friday stocks were down across the board. North Korean tensions again rearing its big fat ugly head with rim glasses and a terrible crew cut. Trumps recent comments seem to be fuelling the fire. As investors, these are the kind of tensions and speed bumps we need to absorb. If you stayed out of the market because of political tensions, you would never be invested. Markets do not like uncertainties. If everything was certain, investing would actually be a lot harder because there would be no opportunities.

US stocks also took a hit yesterday for the same reasons. Tech stocks were hit the hardest, as they often are when uncertainties arise. Facebook declined 4.5% because Mark Zuckerberg ditched plans to create a new class of shares which would allow him to keep control of the company whilst selling shares to fund his charities. Because the shares had done so well, he no longer needs to restructure the company's share scheme. He plans to sell 35-75 million shares over the next 18 months. At the current price, 75 million shares equates to $12.4bn. Good on the Zuck, a great example of business and capitalism making the world a better place.




The oil price has hit 2 year highs. In the past, higher prices has pushed US frackers to bring operations back on line and ramp up production. In turn, this has forced OPEC members to break alliances and ramp up their own production. So far OPEC has managed to keep to their latest agreements. I am sure at current prices the temptation to ramp up production is tantalising. The good old prisoners dilemma. In my opinion OPEC will eventually be a thing of the past because of increased competition. I cannot stand collusions, OPEC is the second biggest collusion in history and I cannot wait for increased competition and alternate energies to end them.

You may ask then, what is the biggest collusion of all time? Remember this is all my opinion, this is not based on fact (Byron here, you are more than welcome to challenge me on this). The answer is taxi drivers. The fact that most taxi drivers around the world use a set price is crazy. They should be competing against each other for better prices and better service levels. Poor consumers have been ripped off for decades until Uber came around. That is why I love Uber so much, another great example of business making services better and more transparent. I am very disappointed that London has banned Uber from their city. See Bloomberg article titled Uber Losing Battle in London After Regulator Revokes License.

Sounds like a successful lobbying campaign to me. London is supposed to be a forward thinking city which encourages innovative disruptors. Another step backwards for a city plagued by the likes of Brexit. Uber do have the right to appeal. Lets keep an eye on it.




Linkfest, lap it up

Two Things from Paul

In case you thought that China had stopped investing in infrastructure, they have not. Look at the details of their Belt and Road initiative. It is seven times larger that the Marshall Plan after World War 2. China's Belt and Road Initiative.



Is Mexico ethically challenged? At the recent Mexico City Marathon, the organisers deployed a timing chip and mat system for the first time, only to discover that 5800 athletes (20% of the field) cheated. What the Hell Happened at the Mexico City Marathon?




Brights Banter

Remgro is swapping its Unilever's South Africa stake for Unilever's Spreads Business. We don't know for sure what prompted this move, but knowing the Remgro management, it was probably a deal that made lots of sense for shareholders otherwise why would they go ahead with it right? - Remgro Sells Minority Interest In Unilever SA

Mastering excel is a very important skill if you're planning on having a successful corporate career. John Dumoulin is only 17 years and he's already the champion of Excel, this opens so many doors in corporate as every big corporate has an eye on him. Not all heroes wear capes! Be like John and become the best Excel guy at your firm - Microsoft Excel Champion

The Zuck is planning on selling 35 million to 75 million shares of Facebook stock over a period of around 18 months from 22 September 2017 in order to fund his philanthropic endeavours. In the words of Bobby Axelrod from the TV series "billions" - Make the money and give it all away! - Mark Zuckerberg Selling Up To 75 Million Facebook Shares




Home again, home again, jiggety-jog. We have opened up horribly in the red, playing catch up to two days of market uncertainty. Naspers is down 3% in sympathy with the tech stocks.




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Thursday, 27 July 2017

The Facebook Beat Goes On

"A few Harvard mates (led by the Zuck) created a platform, before the launch of thefacebook.com, which originally was for connecting people through social networks at colleges. The likes of Berkley, Chicago, Columbia, Cornell, really an Ivy League connection tool."




To market to market to buy a fat pig Stocks locally nearly broke into record territory by the close of trade, the Jozi all share index was boosted by a broad based rally, from financials to resources, industrials to banks, it was one of those days. Session end the Jozi all share added nearly two-thirds of a percent, South32, MTN and Bidcorp were at the top of the leaderboard, Kumba down over four percent after the prior days remarkable session.

Glencore struck a 12 month high early in the session, only to close marginally lower on the day. We do not talk enough about what is a huge constituent and potentially (as a result of their mining for battery inputs) a very important company into the future. Funny, the Glencore price, in Rands, here in Jozi is down 15 percent over three years, for the last 12 months however it is a completely different picture, up a whopping 60 percent.

In their London listed price, i.e. Pound Sterling, the one year return has been much better, up 78 percent. Three years? The stock is down 12.6 percent. The Pound, due to the pickle (an awful pickle old chap) of Brexit, is going to struggle to find a level in the coming months/years, as Brexit talks are weighed down by the machinations of politics. I suspect that we are going to see the same old, a watered down event that will have so many concessions on both sides that the "people have spoken" event of last year may seem closer to a Greek no vote on austerity. Talking Greece, they were back from a bond issuance hiatus with a nod of approval from the German Finance minister, which is no mean feat.

This morning there is a whole host of moving parts announcements, including a trading statement from MTN for their half year (results next Thursday), the company expects basic earnings per share to clock between 280 to 300 cents. It looks "light", a large part of the movement of MTN has in some essence been related to the fortunes of the oil price, remembering that two of their three territories (Iran and Nigeria) are hugely reliant on oil revenues. We shall see how the stock reacts at the open.

Anheuser-Busch InBev or AB InBev as we know it, also reported numbers this morning for their half year. A massive day for European markets, VW and Nestle, Orange and Bayer, Airbus and Deutsche Bank. Royal Dutch Shell ....... wow. It is going to be an incredibly difficult day to try and analyse all of these "things".




Janet Yellen and her trusty crew were the focus once again, the 45 day cycle continues to roll around with the regularity of the good old fashioned milkman. Here goes: Federal Reserve issues FOMC statement. Inflation, or to be more precise, a lack thereof, has meant that the Fed can continue to easy pedal into unwinding the vast balance sheet and the multiple programs that they have engaged in, post and during the financial crisis.

One learns along the way that whilst the Fed is wildly important in trying to hold and keep the punch bowl at several different levels and heights, they are definitely not the be all and end all of the financial markets. Too much emphasis (for us equity investors) is placed on central banks with regards to equity market movements. Earnings drive share prices, and we are in the midst of what is a very important week as far as that is concerned.

Boeing soared, perhaps a giant short squeeze, the stock rallied nearly ten percent over the course of the session. Strangely I saw a broker report suggest that there is as much as 40 percent plus downside from here, tell that to the happy long only owners. Amgen shed some ground post what were good numbers, we are mindful that it has been a good year for not only this business, equally for the overall markets, I suspect that many have been caught off guard. And will always be caught off guard, it was the great Peter Lynch who said that (and I am paraphrasing here) most people spend large amounts of time worrying about infrequent events in equity markets. i.e. the chattering classes are always worried about "losing" and don't stay the whole distance.

Scoreboard time. As the bell went clang, stocks had in some parts reached another record closing high, the S&P 500 added 0.03 percent, the Dow Jones cracked on the pace, advancing 0.45 percent, with the nerds of NASDAQ up 0.16 percent by the close. A weaker Dollar (as a result of a dovish Fed) meant that a broad based commodities rally was no doubt going to transpire. More results tonight, the busiest thus far this year, standby tomorrow for some analysis!




Company Corner

It is still a phenomenal story, the growth of Facebook from a dormitory, nearly 13 and a half years ago now. The date most people take as the launch of what is now a sprawling network is 4 February 2004. I had been sitting in my Vestact chair for a little over a year. A few Harvard mates (led by the Zuck) created a platform, before the launch of thefacebook.com, which originally was for connecting people through social networks at colleges. The likes of Berkley, Chicago, Columbia, Cornell, really an Ivy League connection tool.

It was pretty lame by the high standards we expect today, yet is was simple and effective and pulled at the core of us all, communication. It is what separates us from the beasts, the ability to communicate more effectively (sometimes it seems not) than any other species. Facebook enables us to keep abreast of our friends and their lives, what is important to them and what they think about it.

Along the way, Facebook acquired Instagram and WhatsApp (Buying WhatsApp), as well as "less successful" (for now) Oculus. They spun out Messenger from the core product offering, that application is used widely and will continue to have multiple applications (like paying friends, etc.). For laughs, kicks and giggles, let us share the "original" Facebook image, those are freely available on the web, here was one I found:



At the time of the IPO in May 2012, it was the largest valuation of an IPO ever, over 100 billion Dollars at 38 Dollars a share. At the time, the company raised the third largest amount in US IPO history, 16 billion Dollars. Technical glitches at the get go overshadowed what was the highest trading volumes for an IPO ever, the next few months were horrid for the stock. By the end of that year, the main platform had a billion users, monetising them on mobile was the next market handwringing moment. By late August of 2012, the stock had halved (and some more) from the IPO price. The rest, as they say in the classics, is history. Revenue growth has been nothing short of eye popping, from 400 thousand Dollars for the year 2004 to 9.321 billion Dollars in revenues for the quarter just passed.

For the quarter? Wow. Revenue estimates for this year are for close to 39 billion Dollars, and then the market expects beyond 50 billion the year after, maintaining the growth trajectory. As a result of the company being able to monetise their multiple platforms aggressively, earnings growth has kept pace too. The market expects earnings per share for the current year to come in at about 5.10 and then over 6 Dollars a share for 2018.

In the pre-market the stock trades at 171.10 Dollars a share, meaning that on current year estimates (yes, estimates), the stock trades on 33 times. Next year, 28 times. With around 18-20 percent earnings growth expected by Mr. Market, that means the PEG is 1.55 times. My Bloomberg app on my (not so fresh anymore) iPhone, tells me that the estimated PEG ratio is closer to what people would consider good value, 1.01 times.

For what it is worth, people have consistently gotten the price of Facebook "wrong", their estimates have always been way too low and the company has been able to evolve at a breakneck speed. In part due to their incredible in-sync with the trends, and in part just plain old user adoption. According to the Internet World Stats, of a global population of 7.5 billion people at the end of March 2017, 49.7 percent of all people used the internet.

So I guess we are at that point, where the world drops over to more than half of us using the best tool and the finest leveller of them all, the internet. I share "The Zuck's" theory on that, the more people have access to this tool, the better their lives will be. Cost is the key here, internet costs that is. What is also very interesting, for Facebook and their competitors is that there is room for growth across many regions, Facebook has a pretty good spread, herewith their monthly active users by geographical regions:



The reason why I think that there is plenty of scope for growth is that the average revenue per user for Facebook in North America is three times higher than in Europe, and around four times the average worldwide user. There continues to be growth across all of their regions, see the slide from the presentation below here:



That slide from the presentation is the most important for me. The stock market reaction to the earnings was interesting, initially the stock sold off sharply and then rallied as the earnings conference call proceeded to unfold. Whilst the company has aggressively added to their staffing compliment along the way (there are now over 20 thousand Facebook employees), all the major metrics have kept inline from a costs point of view. The research and development expense still hovers around 20 percent of revenues, marketing and sales in the low teens, general and administrative in the 6-8 percent bracket. Operating margins have fluctuated between 40 and 50 percent over the last two years, currently 47 percent. This is important, the company continues to search for growth whilst being mindful to keep an even keel.

Part of the reason that the stock popped later is that even in light of increased spend from the company, they are going to explore ways to monetise WhatsApp and Messenger more aggressively. What to do? I get the feeling that we are still in the infancy of exploring all sorts of applications on the existing platforms, using artificial intelligence to serve you the content that you should be getting, connecting you with likeminded people, finding new favourable and lasting relationships, be that with new service providers or opportunities. We continue to recommend Facebook as a strong buy, obviously one needs to keep an eye on trends a little more closely, they have all the "right people" at the helm. And ..... the company is about to breach the half a trillion Dollar mark, not bad for a flopped IPO now, wouldn't you say?




Linkfest, lap it up!

The growth in China's economy has been massive which has been good news for wealth creation both in China and the globe - Capital accumulation, private property, and inequality in China, 1978 - 2015. As China has created more wealth, so has the inequality, which makes sense. Those who own capital early benefit the most from growth but those who are at the bottom have benefited from the growth too, just not as much. How big of a problem is that?

    "Despite the decline in its share of world population, China's share of world GDP increased from less than 3% in 1978 to about 20% by 2015"


Even large economies are not immune from the effects of uncertainty. Brexit is a big question mark over what the UK economy will look like in a few years time, the result is lower investment, which also contributes to a weaker Pound - The Brexit slowdown continues - Britain's economy grew just 0.3% in the second quarter.

I love reading about how people's views on the stock market changes over time. Generally people are influenced by what worked recently in deciding what to do going forward, in this piece Ben takes a look at what the stock market meant once the great depression was over - A Market History Lesson From Peter Bernstein




Home again, home again, jiggety-jog. Stocks across Asia are mixed to mostly higher, phew Tencent is up nearly two percent this morning to a record high. Naspers might well propel the local market to an all time this morning. That would be good.



Sent to you by Sasha, Byron and Michael on behalf of team Vestact.

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Thursday, 4 May 2017

Facecooking

"OK, Facebook numbers quickly. The Facebook platform is nearing two billion monthly users, currently 1.94 billions, which represents a little over one-quarter of all the folks on the planet. I guess at some level there will have to be a subscriber ceiling."




To market to market to buy a fat pig May the Fourth be with you, it is Star Wars Day, Michael told me this morning. Man, I wasn't into Star Wars or Star Trek, and marginally into Indiana Jones. It is possibly as a result of living in less desirable places and the movie and TV scene being nonexistent when I was growing up. As such, Readers Digest became my Star Wars and Star Trek. The A-Team, MacGyver and all that, sorry about that, I had books to pass my time. I suppose it was probably better for me in the end. Star Wars, Indiana Jones and all their friends had to wait until the digital era. Oh, talking of that, retraction from yesterday, we thought (the internet said) that May Day was not celebrated in Germany. A client is in Germany and said WRONG, they did have a holiday. Our humblest apologies. Darn internet.

Markets locally, in the city founded on a whole pile of gold, finished the day much lower from where we started off. Down six-tenths by the close. Industrials sank around one-fifth, financials around four-fifths. The resource stocks, which sank nearly a percent and one-third were all to blame for the lower markets on the day, and in particular the resource stocks. Expect more of the same today, copper prices dropped some three and a half percent last evening. Platinum prices are off around three percent on the session.

Unsurprisingly, Amplats was down five and three-quarters of a percent yesterday, leading the losers. Glencore fell nearly three and three-quarters of a percent, Anglo was down two and three-quarters. Anglo now trades at the same price from around six months ago. At the other end of the spectrum there was gains for some Rand hedges, AngloGold Ashanti and Richemont (which is now trading at the best level since November 2015) were at the top of the leaderboards. New 12 month lows for Clover and Distell, amongst a few others.




There was so much going on, in the midst of earnings season in the US, we had an ADP read and a Federal Reserve meeting announcement. And we had political machinations around budget approvals and of course loads of talk about trade deals and the like. There was lots to get distracted about, we remain focused on the business of companies, their quarterly numbers are often reflection time, if not a reason to react one way or another. Normally, earnings on a quarterly basis are time to breath, to do deep research and time to make sure that you stay on top of the news flows.

Before that, let us touch briefly on the ADP numbers, which was down from March and a slight beat in terms of what the consensus was - April 2017: ADP Employment Reports. As you can see, pretty much a broad based hiring from all types of businesses, only construction the noticeable loser. We have seen quite a lot of consistency on the jobs front since the horror of 2008/2009:



See that? Seems pretty much a V shape to me. So much for the Nouriel Roubini double dip recession, or the new normal from Pimco (El Erian and Gross). When forced to stick your neck out, or make longer dated predictions, you are probably going to get lots wrong, as well as right. We were looking in the office at the museum of failed products in Sweden and believe it or not, there was an Apple competitor to the Palm Pilot (remember that awesome gadget) called the Apple Newton that "failed". Whilst the Apple Newton product failed, it laid the foundations for the iPod and ultimately the best selling consumer device of all time, the iPhone. When 50 odd million devices a quarter is a miss, you know that you have high standards.

And then there was the conclusion of the Fed meeting, and the statement after the two day deliberation - Federal Reserve issues FOMC statement.

    "The Committee views the slowing in growth during the first quarter as likely to be transitory and continues to expect that, with gradual adjustments in the stance of monetary policy, economic activity will expand at a moderate pace, labor market conditions will strengthen somewhat further, and inflation will stabilize around 2 percent over the medium term."


Rates on hold and expectations are that perhaps a rate hike at the next meeting is in order. All members voted. As did Kashkari of course, the brilliant fellow who weirdly looks like Sylar from the series Heroes. Those eyes, perhaps Kashkari wants to eat our economic brains for himself. Enough of that. The markets in New York closed the session mixed, better than the earlier part of the day. The Dow managed to squeak into the green by the close, up 8 points by the close, the broader market S&P 500 gave up 0.13 percent, whilst the nerds of NASDAQ lost nearly four-tenths of a percent by the end of the day. Results from Apple overnight, the stock reacted by giving up three-tenths of a percent, hardly one way or another. With that, straight into the results from last evening.




Company corner

Facebook has changed the ways that we communicate with one another. Perhaps the improvements in hardware, handheld mostly, has given platforms like Facebook/Messenger, Instagram and WhatsApp the ability to grow sharply. If the front and very important back cameras and delivery mechanism to the internet (Wifi and LTE - 5G nearing) did not exist, we wouldn't be able to share our thoughts, pictures and experiences immediately. It must be far harder to make important decisions as a teen and in the early stages of adulthood when there are all these platforms around. At the same time, it has never been easier to stay in touch with one another than at any other stage in humanity.

The ancient Persians are attributed with having the first reliable postal system, the Indians and Chinese too. The Romans, like many things of that era, perfected the system to a degree not seen, around 2000 years ago. Modern mail, like our grandparents became used to, was as a result of modern transportation strides by humanity. Remember the very lightweight "airmail" letters when sending overseas? One page that you could seal to have one and a half pages of writing ..... Ha ha, those were the days my friends of lightweight blue paper. Mail volumes have steadily declined over the last decade, email and social media platforms make it far easier to communicate. Thanks to Facebook, and the wonders of handheld devices, network infrastructure and the like, you can call (via WhatsApp and not "wifi" calling) anyone, anywhere in the world at almost any moment. So there.

OK, Facebook numbers quickly. The Facebook platform is nearing two billion monthly users, currently 1.94 billions, which represents a little over one-quarter of all the folks on the planet. I guess at some level there will have to be a subscriber ceiling. Owing to the age thing (one has to be a certain age to get an account) and the fact that internet penetration around the world isn't 100 percent (and is unlikely to be any time soon), I suspect we may see a levelling soon.



The other platforms are big, in fact huge. Messenger has 1.2 billion monthly users. Equally, Facebook businesses is used by 70 million living and breathing companies across the globe. That is a LOT. Instagram crossed 700 million users in the last few months. Instagram revenues are included within Facebook revenues, they don't break those out. How did those ads impact your user experience? Not at all ...... WhatsApp is 8 years old in February, they have 1.2 billion users. These are all big numbers, obviously many of them are overlaps, I use all four.

Revenues for the first quarter of their 2017 financial year topped 8 billion Dollars, that represents nearly 50 percent growth from this time last year. 85 percent of revenues were derived from mobile. Remember the anxiety when they (Facebook) were going to struggle to monetise mobile? WRONG! Cash on hand is 32.3 billion Dollars, which represents around 7.3 percent of the market cap. Markedly lower than their "peers" (of which there are none, really). Diluted earnings per share clocked 1.04 cents (a 73 percent growth on the corresponding quarter), meaning that the rolling 12 month multiple is 43 times earnings. And the PEG ratio, the price to earnings ratio relative to the growth rates forward is around 1. Which actually means that the stock is cheap by that metric.

The trick will be to keep all the irons in the fire at top heat, bashing out the multiple platforms present and future (VR is still going to be big, the hardware needs to catch up). Capex is likely to be around 7.5 billion Dollars at the top end of the range, a 50 percent increase over last year. The headcount is 38 percent higher than this time last year, Facebook now employs 18,800 people. From a dorm room in 2004 to a big employer, that is something astonishing.

A few things are starting to happen here, one, the share price is growing into the company delivering astonishing earnings. Costs are likely to pick up as the user base and product widens. The key will be cost control, that will undoubtably come in the next half a decade or so. Revenues are likely to expand off a higher and higher base, I suspect people will hardly notice the changes in their streams (WhatsApp and Messenger) which will see adverts and relevant content displayed. We continue to recommend what is an entertainment business with many different avenues. A little steam has gone out of the stock, post these results, use it as an opportunity to buy on weakness.




Linkfest, lap it up

What! The average holding period for an ETF is only 150 days. People can't help themselves, being patient and sitting on your hands probably seems lazy? Given the diversification in most ETFs there should be almost no reason to be jumping in and out of them - Are You An ETF 'Trader' Or An ETF 'Investor'?.

We touched on Apple's cash pile yesterday, here is are some companies you could buy with it today - What Apple's Cash Pile Could Buy. The pile is just short of the entire GDP of South Africa, at that size it makes you think Tim Cook and his management team should be paid more?

Infographic: What Apple's Cash Pile Could Buy | Statista You will find more statistics at Statista

Sticking with Apple, here is how it's current market value stacks up against other companies - A History of Ridiculously Big Companies. Apple still looks small when compared to the large shipping companies from centuries gone by!






Home again, home again, jiggety-jog. Stocks across Asia are mixed, Hong Kong down, Japan up. Futures in the US are up marginally. Jobs data tomorrow! Woo hoo!



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Thursday, 2 February 2017

Looky, looky Facebooky!

"I've said before that I see video as a megatrend on the same order as mobile. That's why we're going to keep putting video first across our family of apps and making it easier for people to capture and share video in new ways."



Attention: One of our sub-tenants is moving to Cape Town so we have some open offices to lease. There are 2 spaces available, one is 32 square meters, the other is 12 square meters. Fully serviced, in Melrose Arch. Please get in touch if you are interested.




To market to market to buy a fat pig Apple held it all together, I saw an Eddy Elfenbein tweet that went like this: "Apple is worth roughly 80 points in the S&P 500, and 880 points in the Dow." He also estimated that Apple added 5 points to the S&P gains on the day, in the end the maker of fine products had results that were cheered by Mr. Market, up over 6 percent on the day.

Old Jim Cramer from Mad Money is taking some credit for the call a while back of "own it, don't trade it", something which we subscribe to down here. And why not, the three month return of the largest company by market capitalisation is 15 and a half percent. One year, up 32 percent. All time high? May 2015, the stock topped 132 Dollars. Normally this is always the case, your return can only be measured where you draw your line in the sand. Did you know that Nike and Apple listed at about the same time? A piece of history for you.

At session end the Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 0.14 percent, the broader market S&P 500 managed to squeeze in a marginal 0.03 percent gain, whilst the nerds of NASDAQ added half a percent, buoyed by healthcare stocks to some extent, the pharma bosses meeting with number 1 at the White House seems to have been favourably received by Mr. Market. There was the small matter of a Fed meeting that revealed an expected wait and see approach - > Press Release: "The Committee expects that economic conditions will evolve in a manner that will warrant only gradual increases in the federal funds rate; the federal funds rate is likely to remain, for some time, below levels that are expected to prevail in the longer run."

There was also the precursor to the non-farm payroll number (tomorrow), the private payrolls processor, ADP, releases an employment number every month titled - The ADP Employment Reports. Small business reported a surge in hiring, and as we suggested, sentiment may well be driving reality, and vice versa. This is the best month for employment (in their report) since June last year. And now that we have years after the financial crisis of 2008, we can unequivocally say that the recovery was V shaped and not bath tub shaped like the bearish forecasters said, check it out:



Things almost always turn out better than you believe at the time, the human spirit is powerful. Mind you, if you had woken up on the 14th of August 1961 in East Berlin, you had to wait until November 1989 to cross it. Formal demolition of the wall started in June 1990, completed in 1992. The wall was everything that represented "the wrong" with communism and the associated oppression. Border controls of capitalism normally keep out those trying to "make it" and live the dream, in communism they shoot you trying to get out. Oppression versus hope. 'Nuf said, cast your mind forward to Friday now, expectations have risen somewhat.




Locally we had markets higher on the day, the All Share index added six-tenths of a percent, Kumba had another screamer of a day, up six and one quarter of a percent. Resources led the overall charge, up over a percent on the day. General retailers fell nearly one and a half percent on the session. Woolies was at the other end of the spectrum, down over two percent on the day. Steinhoff had a smashing day, up over three and a half percent, albeit off a very low base. Still, not much by way of clarity from the pending deal, to create Retail Africa.

There were numbers from Vodacom, which we will review in due course, they looked OK at face value, by the end of the session the stock had sold off around one-quarter of a percent.




Company Corner

Facebook reported numbers after hours, for the full year and the fourth quarter. Another beat on both metrics, revenues income - Facebook Reports Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2016 Results. Revenues for the full year clocked 27,638 billion Dollars, an increase of 54 percent from last year. Wow. Net income for the full year topped 10 billion Dollars, up 177 percent from the year prior.

Earnings per share grew 171 percent to 3.49 Dollars, from 2015 to 2016. At this sort of growth rate the stock trades on 38 times earnings historic, which you would expect. Bloomberg has the forward multiple as 25.4x, with estimated earnings for the full year at 5.25 Dollars per share. That means that the simple PEG ratio is less than 1, at a very respectable 0.75 times forward. By most metrics, a spectacular failure of an IPO (as it was called at the time) has turned into a roaring success as a business. As the Zuck pointed out on the earnings call, yesterday marked five years exactly from when Facebook announced they were going to IPO.

And also, remember how the company was going to struggle to monetise mobile? Remember how the share price halved after the IPO, inside of the first six months of being listed? Mobile revenue now represents 84 percent of group revenue, up from 80 percent this time last year. And the group is hardly ex growth, I was quite astonished by the increases in users, you have to expect those to plateau at some stage, not everyone in the world will "sign up", even if that is the mission of the Zuck. Daily active users grew to 1.227 billion folks, 1.146 billion on mobile phones. Monthly active users grew to 1.86 billion, on mobile that number is 1.74 billion.

Advertising revenue is being driven (at a geographical level) by North America, Average Revenue Per User (ARPU) in the US and Canada now stands at 19.81 Dollars, for the whole world (all their users), it is 4.83 Dollars. In Europe that stands at 5.98 Dollars. Down in our part of the world (rest of world categorised) it is 1.41 Dollars. As per the annual report, just in case you were thinking that this was an annualised number or monthly number, it is not: "We calculate our revenue by user geography based on our estimate of the geography in which ad impressions are delivered or virtual and digital goods are purchased. We define ARPU as our total revenue in a given geography during a given quarter, divided by the average of the number of MAUs in the geography at the beginning and end of the quarter." Check out the global ARPU spread:



That 19.81 Dollars ARPU is basically 6.60 Dollars per user per month. Or advertisers in Canada and the US are spending 22 cents per user per day. Down here, in our part of the world, it is around one and a half cents per person using the platform per day. Even in Rand cents, that is next to nothing, 21 ZA cents per day on users. Advertisers certainly have plenty of scope to push hard with this advertising platform, I suspect that not everyone has gotten their heads around advertising in this way. Once they do, the fact that the database is so malleable and your target audience can be met so easily, there is big scope to grow.

Before the earnings call, which included guidance from the CFO (that is what everyone is making reference to) that ran a little short, the stock touched all time highs. This was the commentary in the prepared commentary from the CFO "Consistent with my comments on the Q3 call, we continue to expect that our ad revenue growth rate will come down meaningfully in 2017." That has attracted quite a lot of attention, meaningfully cannot really be quantified.

For the time being, the next focus is going to be on video. I am sure that the mobile operators are thrilled that more people are going to be watching videos on their phones! Zuck (second name Elliot) says on the (Conference Call): I've said before that I see video as a megatrend on the same order as mobile. That's why we're going to keep putting video first across our family of apps and making it easier for people to capture and share video in new ways.

The company is in great hands. Sheryl Sandberg, Mark Zuckerberg are about as dynamic as you can get. I suspect that what often happens with businesses like this is that they attract high quality talent, we often make the point that quality attracts quality. The core product is still the core product, the other platforms are growing like gangbusters too, and that presents multiple channels for advertisers. Instagram has 400 million daily active users (count me in there) and 600 million monthly active users. WhatsApp has 1.2 billion active monthly users (I am a daily user), sending 50 billion messages a day. Whoa. At peak SMS, the Zuck notes that there were around 20 billion messages being sent daily.

There is a careful balance on the user experience, I am very sure that they will get that right. i.e. The advertisers would prefer a more direct access, the users would prefer it toned down. This is also useful, the Zuck says in the prepared remarks: "In the past we've taken steps to reduce spam and clickbait, and now we're approaching misinformation and hoaxes the same way."

Lastly, what is the share price worth? Based on the old and trusted PEG ratio, I suspect that there may be as much as 20 percent upside over the next year, depending on user traction remaining the same, and advertisers seeking maximum bang for their buck. The biggest risk to their platforms is competition. It may come, other advertising platforms, I suspect that they will be trend setters for the time being. We maintain our buy recommendation up to the 150-160 Dollars range.




Under Armour released results two days back, pre-market. The market thought the results were absolutely awful, relative to their expectations, the stock was absolutely pounded. A drop of over one-fifth in a day means that the market was expecting a lot more than the company delivered. In part the lofty valuation has been as a result of the company having grown so quickly, so anything less than a meet would have been viewed negatively by the market. As a result of the company missing by a long way, relative to the lofty expectations, the result was a turndown of 25 percent plus for the voting shares (code UAA) and 23 percent (and a bit) for the non voting shares, (code UA).

Revenues grew 11.7 percent year-on-year on the comparable quarter, earnings per share and net income were lower than the prior year. Again, and I don't like to repeat this, a bit tough when the stock trades on a 30 plus multiple to justify that valuation. For the full year sales increased nearly 22 percent to 4.828 billion Dollars. Two huge bright spots were that international revenues grew 55.2 percent (still a small part of total sales at 16.5 percent), footwear revenue grew by 36 percent.

As I saw from a search, this sales disappointment breaks a 26 quarter streak where sales had grown by over 20 percent year on year. i.e. six and a half years. Now you can understand why the stock fell so heavily. Added to the slowing revenue growth was the fact that the CFO, Lawrence 'Chip' Molloy, who has only been there for a year, is leaving for personal reasons. A solid chap, a navy pilot for 10 years, his bio said. David Bergman, a company veteran, will step into the role as the new CFO. To add insult to injury, the company has cut their forecast pretty heavily.

There is an old story that describes the interaction between Mark Parker, the CEO of Nike and the late Steve Jobs, the founder and former CEO of Apple. It goes something like this, when Parker asked for advice, Jobs said the following: "Nike makes some of the best products in the world. Products that you lust after. But you also make a lot of crap. Just get rid of the crappy stuff and focus on the good stuff." I think Under Armour do this, their shoes and apparel certainly are not cheap, nor are they inferior in quality. Whilst CEO Kevin Plank is not exactly everyones cup of tea, he is hard charging and is a victim (on paper) of his own success. I am sure that Kevin Plank cares about the share price, as he well knows, there is little to nothing that he can do about it.

Having recently finished Phil Knight's book Shoe Dog, I remember that it took them 17 years before they were settled, Under Armour has just turned 20 recently. There have been some recent stumbles, some of them associated with the bankruptcy of a large distributor of their shoes and apparel. The stock now looks cheap, and perhaps for a reason, the folks trumpeting from the roof tops have all turned into doubting Thomas', price targets have been slashed and burned, now they are all scared. That may be the moment to own them, I am sure however we will get our opportunity to bolt on more over the coming year or so, you are going to have to be very patient with the recovery. Look out for a selective moment to own them, if you have them already, it is definitely a hold. Hang tough!




Home again, home again, jiggety-jog. Stocks in Japan are lower. Stock futures are lower, there is the small matter of Amazon and Amgen results tonight to look forward to, that should be very exciting! As always, we will attempt to keep up to date with all of these results.




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Thursday, 3 November 2016

Whatsinsta Facegram


"Facebook. You may have heard of this business. You may use the products, Facebook being the core one, WhatsApp and Instagram following on their heels very closely. Heck, your Gran may use Facebook."




To market to market to buy a fat pig A pretty dramatic day by most standards here in the deep south of Africa. You cannot get further South in Africa, that is for sure sports lovers. Dramatic scenes on the telly and even more dramatic scenes from the chattering classes post the release of the PP report in the afternoon. I read it at a very high speed. I was so engrossed that I even skipped a residents meeting and only remembered when I was twenty minutes late. The thunder and lightning was an apt backdrop.

I shan't analyse the report, it is not our domain and we are not experts here, leave that to the masses the professionals. Read them all, make up your mind. I guess it all depends on what happens next that is important. It depends on what recourse there is. If someone was considering sticking in a full battery slash solar option in response to Eskom price increases and general unhappiness (a rich people problem), then I guess you may be more motivated to do this.

There was a Fed meeting yesterday. American politics and local issues trumped that. Things were so fluid, should I say, that the ADP monthly number release floated by. The ADP number is the precursor to the non-farm payrolls number which is tomorrow of course. ADP showed a contraction in construction jobs, perhaps a lack of building or a slowing ahead of the US elections, perhaps a lack of confidence in the two candidates. By the end of the session, the Dow fell 0.43 percent, the broader market S&P 500 lost two-thirds of a percent and the nerds of NASDAQ sank 0.93 percent. It has been a tough two weeks for equity markets.

So, what about the Fed? What did they say and do? See -> Monetary Policy Releases. Some people interpreted this, bar for a shocking jobs number Friday (this Friday), the Fed are likely to raise rates in December. No two ways about it. Or perhaps not. Heck, what does the market know? Five years ago everyone was suggested that a rate hike was close, that hasn't exactly turned out right now, has it?

Locally stocks were being trounced by the Rand rollicking along, interference from the state institutions is losing the grip, and this is seen as positive for the outlook. Resources sold off 2.2 percent, the all share index sank 1.21 percent. In the shares up and down department it was a mixed bag, again British flavoured shares were dealt a blow, Theresa May earlier in the week suggesting a "hard Brexit". Part that and part stronger Rand. Anyhows, what can you do about politics and currencies? Nothing.




Company corner

Facebook. You may have heard of this business. You may use the products, Facebook being the core one, WhatsApp and Instagram following on their heels very closely. Heck, your Gran may use Facebook. Your teenage friends (more likely kids and grandkids) may not, they go to school with their friends all day and every day, why do they need it? For the record, the folks who spend and are served ads, possibly have larger buying power. Over one billion people exclusively use their mobile phones to interact with Facebook. i.e. no desktop, no laptop. That in itself is amazing. 1.055 billion mobile only monthly users.

Equally amazing is when I see an advert insert on Bloomberg over the future of the internet, I am once again reminded that many people do not have access to the greatest leveller, the internet. As of now, according to Internet Live stats, only 46.1 percent of the world uses the internet. i.e. More than half do not. That means that more than 4 billion souls on the planet (including babies) do not use the internet. Over the last ten years global internet penetration has gone from 17.6 percent in 2006 to the 46 percent now number. And we have added 800 million people in that time, we the collective are breeding like crazy.

In short, the internet age may be something that we have always subscribed to (us reading this letter), I recall using the thing that Al Gore invented over 20 years ago. I can't recall being amazed, it was just there. I recall flat pages with no images (they took too long to download), moving parts only came later. Nowadays, we are all about videos and heck, you can even livestream. Some dumb idiot live streamed his "capturing" of a police car. Yes, this is 2016 and we are still dumb. Norway at 98 percent internet penetration is not Eritrea at 1.1 percent. For the record, South Africa is in the middle, at 52 percent. So more than half the population have and use the internet, the others neither have the resources to use it (no smartphone) or are not quite sure how. Either way, there is lots of heavy lifting for humanity to still do on the internet front. China has the same internet penetration as us, yet has the great overall number of internet users, at 720 million. And no Facebook.

To Facebook results from last evening. Revenues for the quarter were 7.011 billion Dollars, mobile ads are 84 percent of total revenue. Remember when they couldn't monetise mobile? This time last year it was 4.5 billion, this time in 2014 it was 3.2 billion Dollars. It has more than doubled in two years. Margins have improved and stabilised, operating income (GAAP) topped 3 billion Dollars for the first time. 3.122 billion Dollars. I recall people saying this business was a passing , they now make serious money. GAAP net income was 2.379 billion, annualised this at the current growth rates, you get a business that makes over ten billion Dollars a year. Non-Gaap diluted earnings per share registered 109 US cents, a comfortable beat relative to expectations.

So why was the stock down so heavily after market? Well, some people worry that average revenues per user are not growing as much. And Ad loads (not so easy to understand) expected to have muted growth. That is simply the amount of ads that can get served to a single user (on your organic feed), i.e. the feeling that your user experience is not compromised with too many adverts. The more you "use" the products, the more adverts you are served. I think that the next growth areas will be emerging markets and the "other" platforms. The analyst community has pencilled in around 37-38 billion Dollars in revenue and 4 to 4.10 Dollars worth of earnings. That means that the stock trades forward on 28 times earnings. Growing revenues and profits like gangbusters, this is a definite buy at these levels. Ignore the headline writers, almost always. Except our one.




Linkfest, lap it up

People are living longer, with more people dying of causes related to lifestyle and old age. Note that road deaths are in the top 10 and above that of HIV/Aids - The global burden of disease.

    "Since 2005 alone, deaths from both HIV/AIDS and malaria have been reduced by 40%, and maternal mortality by 30%."




Here is a look how the globe is broken down based on GDP. It gives some perspective as to how big or small certain economies are - World Divided Into 4 Regions With The Same GDP



PC sales have been slowing thanks to technology advances. Having a computer in the form of your cellphone helps but also the upgrade cycle has slowed. No longer is your PC out of date after 2 years - The PC's Misery Hasn't Affected Apple. With the upgrade cycle slowing, it makes sense to spend more to get a Mac.

Infographic: The PC's Misery Hasn't Affected Apple  | Statista
You will find more statistics at Statista

Forget the World Series Baseball and the Cubs winning for the first time in 108 years, the League of Legends (LoL) World Championship took place in Los Angeles at the Staples Centre a few days back, watched by 20 thousand fans. IeSF president: "Our biggest goal is to make esports an official Olympic event"




Home again, home again, jiggety-jog. Stocks have started lower again, the all share is in danger of slipping below 50 thousand points again. Not good! I guess that we will have to all sit and wait and see what transpires next at a politics level, be that here, or the US elections or the ongoing Brexit talks. In the meantime, we will do our best to try and chat about earnings and the companies that we hold.



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