GPT – Income Play

GPT now trades on a forward yield of 4.8% with distribution per unit in FY17 of $0.24

Owning GPT at $5.00 and selling long dated covered call options into March 17 at the $5.25 strike, creates $0.15 in premium. Add in the  December dividend of $0.12 and total cash flow equals $0.27. If exercised,  an additional 5% capital gain or $0.25 on top of the $0.27 takes that total return to $0.52 or 10% for 6 months exposure.

GPT

Domestic Trade Balance for August

The Australian Bureau of Statistics will announce the Domestic Trade Balance for August today at 11:30. The consensus forecast is for a deficit of A$ 2.65 billion. The Bureau reported a trade gap of A$ 3.19 billion in June of this year, an increase of 32% from the A$ 2.42 billion deficit reported in May.

The domestic trade balance has not printed a surplus since May of 2014 with a record high deficit of A$ 4.43 billion reported in April of 2015.

The RBA held overnight interest rates unchanged at 1.50% on Tuesday but expressed concern that a rising AUD/USD could dampen economic growth and cause the trade balance to widen further. We expect a larger than consensus reading could weaken the AUD/USD, support local ASX stocks, and increase the RBA’s easing bias into the end of the year.

Trade Balance

Global Macro

Last Friday’s US Non-Farm Payroll data were unspectacular in the sense that they offered investors little clarity about the likelihood of a rate hike at the FOMC meeting on September 21st. The Headline jobs growth printed at 151,000, which was lower than the consensus 180,000, wage growth slowed to .1% and the unemployment rate was unchanged at 4.9%.

The US Dollar was sold off initially but regained bids mid-session and finished stronger by the holiday shortened NY close. The USD’s resilience in the face of the disappointing jobs data reflects the feeling that the report didn’t alter the FED’s information set, or sway investor sentiment very much for another move to normalize rates either this month or in December.

As a result, the SP 500 posted another firm close above the 30 day moving average at 2172.00, the US 10-yr note yield inched back over 1.60% and the US Dollar index close above recent resistance at 95.50.

In short, over the last two weeks, the primary market drivers have been about the US monetary policy trajectory. First, it was the Jackson Hole confab where the FED leadership all confirmed they were reading from the same “data-dependent” playbook. They all signalled the time was approaching to take another step in the normalization of interest rates, without specifying exactly when. Then, the market focused on the US Jobs report; which FED Vice-Chairman Stanley Fischer had identified as important to the timing of the next move.

With those US-centric events and information absorbed into the market, we believe that this week’s European Central Bank (ECB) policy meeting (and press conference) will be the primary driver for foreign exchange flows.

In addition to the usual discussions about the path of EU monetary policy, this Thursday’s meeting will also include updated staff economic forecasts. Aside from the uncertain political nuances of these staff forecasts, two points are patently clear: the EU economy doesn’t have much forward momentum from Germany and inflation remains well below the 2% target throughout the entire region.

We expect the ECB chief Mario Draghi to take direct aim at these two lingering issues and probably add comments about slowing exports due to the UK decision to leave the EU back in June. Of the additional stimulus measures on the table, the extension of the current Quantitative Easing (QE) program beyond March 2017 appears to be the decision of least resistance.

Other changes to the current asset purchase program include removing the interest rate floor on the securities pool so the ECB could buy assets which yield LESS than -.40% , cutting the ECB deposit rate deeper into to negative territory and expanding the total purchase amount above the current €1.7 trillion. On balance, we feel that there is little political or economic appetite for lowering the ECB base rate deeper into negative territory and that expanding toward a QE3 program is a more likely way of lowering the Euro and supporting EURO zone stock markets.

Transurban – approaching value

Transurban (TCL.ASX) is now trading back on 4%+ yield on current numbers. Allowing for the increase in yield into FY17 where the dividend should grow from $0.44 cps in FY16 to $0.50 cps in FY17, the stock now trades on a forward yield of 4.5%

With the above metric in mind and the reducing chance of a September interest rate rise in the US, (following Friday’s US employment data), we’re likely to see some buy side interest in TCL and other defensive yield names this week.

Look to establish an entry point within the $11.30 – $10.70 range.

TCL

 

 

 

 

Boral – get ready to buy

Boral has been triggered by the algorithm engine as a “buy alert”.

Fy17 NPAT is forecast to be up 10% ($280m) on last year, based on EPS of $0.38 cps, placing the stock on 17x PE and assuming $0.24 in dividends, Boral trades on a forward yield of 3.8%

The stock has pulled back 15% from the late August high. Buy within the $6.40 – $6.00 value range.

BLD

 

 

Amcor – adding growth

Amcor (AMC.ASX) acquired Sonoco’s North American rigid plastics operation for $280m. The acquisition will be EPS accretive by 2 – 3%.  Amcor management expects to save $20m+ in synergy benefits.

FY17 Amcor should generate revenue of USD$9.7b, EBIT USD$1.1b, EPS growth of 8% and DPS of USD$0.44, placing the stock on a forward yield of 3.8%

We like AMC and see this as a suitable buy-write candidate for client portfolios. The stock trades ex-dividend tomorrow AUD$0.29.

Buy today and sell $17.00 calls into January.

AMC

 

Buying Opportunities – add these to your watch list

Today’s report is a summary of what I’m watching following some of the recent price action in the market. On the 30th of August I wrote a blog post under the heading “Property Trusts” and the commentary there still remains relevant. If the Fed Reserve doesn’t raise rates in 2016, we’ll see the yield names rally 5% to 10%. With this in mind, WFD, GPT, SCG are worth keeping on your watch list. AGL, TCL, BXB, IAG, SUN and BLD have also been triggered by the algorithm engine as buying opportunities that should be tracked for an appropriate entry point.

Other names that we’re waiting for a buy signal on include JHX, SGR, QUB, RMD, TWE, SHL, CWN, AMP and NVT. Out of this group, QUB and CWN are the closest to the entry condition being triggered.

 

AUD/USD

The AUD/USD, in particular, looks vulnerable to further downside range extension. After posting a technical double top at .7755 on August 10th and 11th on Thursday, the AUD/USD finished the week with two consecutive losses for the fist time in almost two months and the first close below the 30-day moving average since July 25th. Technically, the pair has been in a strong uptrend over the last three weeks but the RSI has now rolled over below the 50.00 level.

The 11.3% surge in building approvals (reported this week) was 10 times more than expected and the strongest reading in over two years. However, it was not sufficient to lift the Aussie above the high of .7580

AUD