For a variety of reasons, itâs been a while between drinks for my now-normal Friday format. So letâs get back into it.
ANZâs warning for businesses⦠and investors
ANZ Group Holdings Ltd (ASX: ANZ) CEO Shayne Elliott was in todayâs Australian, quoted as saying:
âItâs been the fastest increase of interest rates globally in history. They have gone from zero to a hundred in a very short time.
âThese businesses were set up in a different environment of low interest rates so many of them donât have any experience on how to deal through this.â
Who are the âthese businessesâ heâs referring to?
â…itâs starting to get rocky and the casualties will be those businesses with too much debt and those with no pricing powerâ.
Heâs right.
And heâs not just talking about small or unlisted businesses, either.
Iâve been saying it for a while⦠there will be opportunities (and risks) as we go back to the âold normalâ. Make sure you understand what you own, and the risks those companies face.
Another one bites the dust
Vitamin company Blackmores Ltd (ASX: BKL) (full disclosure: Iâm a shareholder and former employee) seems destined to leave the ASX, having accepted a $95 per share bid from Japanese conglomerate Kirin (best known to Australians for its eponymous beer, but it also owns the old âLion Nathanâ beer brands: XXXX, Tooheys and others).
Largest shareholder (and son of founder, Maurice Blackmore) Marcus Blackmore has committed to selling his shares, and the board has recommended the takeover, unless thereâs a higher bidder. The deal has to get regulatory approval, but that also seems likely.
I donât love the idea of the ASX losing yet another consumer branded business to an overseas buyer. But Kirin is notoriously long-term focused, and sees value in Blackmores. Value that Australian investors didnât seem to see. Perhaps Kirin is wrong. But if itâs right, thereâs a lesson for investors â buyers that take a long term view often recognise more value than the ASX does, given its notoriously short-term view.
As individual investors, thereâs not much we can do to change the market⦠but we can learn some lessons and invest accordingly.
If the cap fitsâ¦
Look, I donât love getting involved in political fights â each team tends to think their side is whiter than white, while the other mob have never had a good idea in their lives â but I donât mind putting my head above the parapet on policy.
Or policies.
The federal government has today been reported as announcing a cap on the growth in NDIS spending. And is considering a cap on rental increases. Thatâs after announcing a cap on the gas price and, in more familiar territory, a cap on Super balances (after which a different taxation arrangement applies).
I mean, I donât mind the odd Akubra, but as far as caps go, I think the government has me covered.
Now, before half of you send me hate mail and the other half are happy that Iâm bagging the government, let me say the NDIS is a great scheme, but also seems prone to rorting and mismanagement. And that Iâm in favour of large Super balances being taxed less generously. I also think we need to help people who canât afford power, and fix the broken rental system.
But youâll notice my comments, above, relate to the issues. And thereâs a difference between acknowledging a problem and believing that a solution â any solution â must be right.
Weâve had caps before. They donât work and create perverse outcomes. Better than nothing, you say? Maybe. But not as good as actual structural changes. And thatâs what governments (and Oppositions) should be focused on.
Quick takes
Overblown:Â The changes to the rate-setting committee of the RBA are underwhelming. The current board has got stuff wrong. But Iâm not sure how a structural change makes any meaningful difference.
Underappreciated: As above, but with a twist. The new committee, composed of different people, may take the same approach as the current lot. Or a very different one. And they might be very good at the job. Or awful. In trying to âsolveâ a current perceived problem, a new board adds a whole lot of uncertainty⦠right at a time when stability would have been much better.
Fascinating: Wow, is AI on the march. I have no preconceived view where it ends up, but when you consider what is now possible, using ChatGPT and other âbotsâ, it doesnât take much imagination to consider how meaningfully AI could impact many, many parts of our lives. The question is whether it becomes its own thing, or just an enabler, much the way we use the internet today.
Where Iâve been looking:Â Iâve written before about what I expect to be the continued growth of online retail, both from pure-play companies and those who make the bricks-and-clicks / clicks-and-mortar change successfully. Amazon (I own shares) and Kogan.com Ltd (ASX: KGN) (ditto) have made good strides recently, and I think other retailers, on cheap multiples, might make for market-beating investments.
Quote: âOnly when the tide goes out do you discover who’s been swimming naked.â â Warren Buffett
Fool on!
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More reading
- Here’s what’s happening with Blackmores shares following yesterday’s Kirin fuelled surge
- No savings at 30? I’d invest $3 a day in ASX shares to target a second income of $10,824 a year
- Here are the top 10 ASX 200 shares today
- 3 All Ords stocks rocketing over 10% on Thursday
- Why Allkem, Blackmores, Helloworld, and St Barbara shares are charging higher
John Mackey, former CEO of Whole Foods Market, an Amazon subsidiary, is a member of The Motley Foolâs board of directors. Motley Fool contributor Scott Phillips has positions in Amazon.com, Blackmores, and Kogan.com. The Motley Fool Australia’s parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. has positions in and has recommended Amazon.com and Kogan.com. The Motley Fool Australia has positions in and has recommended Kogan.com. The Motley Fool Australia has recommended Amazon.com and Blackmores. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.
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