Food for Thought #6
Peace, Temporary shock, Implication for Metals, Keep an eye on it, In case you missed it ($MELI, $STNE, $RRRP3)
Disclosure: All posts on Giro’s Newsletter are for informational purposes only. This post is NOT a recommendation to buy or sell securities discussed. So please, do your work before investing/gambling your money.
(12 minutes read)
Today’s outline
Peace
Temporary Shock
Implication for Metals
Keep an eye on it
In case you missed it ($MELI, $STNE, $RRRP3)
Weapon to protect the portfolio I (PRO)
Weapon to protect the portfolio II (PRO)
Portfolio (PRO)
Research Schedule (PRO)
Watchlist (PRO)
Links to Interactive Models (PRO)
Stone ($STNE), Petrobras ($PBR), 3R (BVMF: RRRP3), Sinqia (BVMF:SQIA3), Vale ($VALE).
Peace
Throughout the week, the world witnessed Russian forces moving by air and land to attack Kyiv, hitting defenses across Ukraine that U.S. and British defense officials said were unexpectedly strong.
Yet, at the same time, Moscow signaled openness to hold talks with the Ukrainian government. Though Russians are reasoning the situation, one cannot tease with war.
The Western seems speechless, with few sanctions or harsher actions targeting Russia. Though it rages me, the situation requires patience.
Autocrats win in the short term; systems win in the long run. There is a substantial military advantage for an autocrat with centralized resolutions against a system with decentralized institutions. Often, autocracies are run by individuals, not collegiates.
Also, after invading Ukraine, Russian authorities ordered Meta to stop the independent fact-checking and labeling content posted on Facebook by four state-owned Russian media organizations, a movement intended to silence the critics.
However, things change with succession, as the autocrat is not a system. And he has no successors. Even his immediate staff are afraid of him. So there is no structure in Russia tackling Ukranian people, just Mr. Putin.
Temporary shock
As discussed in the previous weeks, a prolonged commodity supply shortage is unlikely. Yet, uncertainty around sanctions creates a narrative around a possible supply shock.
Uncertainty leaves an upside risk for commodities in case of further escalation in conflicts, especially prices for European natural gas, wheat, corn, and oil higher from already-elevated levels.
If broad sanctions are imposed, exposure to Russian material can create legal costs, as physical aluminum traders learned during the 2018 Russian sanctions.
Although the shock looks temporary, it changes a few dynamics, such as any prospective Iran deal, in which higher oil prices give some flexibility to the country.
Also, since there was no physical shock to Russia's supply, the odds for OPEC+ to accelerate ramp-up in the following months sound unlikely, leaving space for a rally in oil prices while sanctions persist.
Implication for Metals
The most susceptible markets to a phase of impacted Russia supply within the base metals would be aluminum, copper, and nickel.
Although given inventory levels in all three of these base metals, markets are at lows given significant ongoing deficit conditions, prices will be more sensitive to any volume loss.
Also, the risk for a stoppage in metals production is unlike. Instead, a more probable scenario is a remapping of metal flows, exporting to markets that accept buying products from countries under sanctions.
The most likely scenario is Russia redirecting its volume to China, as Iran does with its oil. However, this adjustment would be significantly more straightforward in the copper and nickel markets. China already accounts for 60% of Russia's refined copper exports and a third of their refined nickel exports.
Keep an eye on it
Throughout the week, there were a bunch of movements looking like a breakout, though we saw a strong rebound on Thursday and Friday.
Investors should be looking forward to next's week performance in the tech universe. In the past two days of the week, there was a significant rebound in mid-cap technology companies.
Two-day performance has low significance, but the chart above is second evidence that tech companies might be facing support for the next leg-down or a rebound.
From a different angle, inflation expectation is in a box looking for the next breakout, as shown above. So we’re talking about a 20 years breakout.
Also, the UST10 is close to another major breakout. All inflations since 1973 have been oil-related. If this bull market in crude oil continues higher—as price action indicates—then there will be no relief from inflation.
Finally, the table above tells you an exciting story about momentum in the past few days. Between 17th and 23rd, the 12-month GS momentum pair basket (BBG: GSPRHIMO Index) saw a 14% move higher, a 3.8 std move (ranked 99.5% in history).
Momentum has quietly outperformed 25% since late December. The momentum trade is long energy/fins/cyclical and short secular growth and healthcare.
The momentum basket pair is correlated to rates and oil and increasingly value vs. growth. So although I've carried a very optimistic view on Value factor stocks, it's essential to keep an eye out for potential crowding dynamics.
The significant momentum move of late has exacerbated growth stock underperformance as the growth stock peak was almost exactly a year ago.
Momentum had a violent reversal intraday (~8%), closing down 4.7% despite oil higher and rates rebounding from depressed levels. Nevertheless, for now, I'm doing nothing with my value positions.
In case you missed it ($MELI, $STNE, $NU)
$MELI earnings
$NU earnings
About my new experiment
B3 will launch its operation in the registrar business
BVMF: #RRRP3 earnings
PRO Content
Closed Ideas in 2022
Keep reading with a 7-day free trial
Subscribe to Giro's Newsletter to keep reading this post and get 7 days of free access to the full post archives.