

We made it to Friday. Hereâs my wrap of the week.
We Will Remember Them
Today, as Iâm sure you know, is Remembrance Day.
Remembrance is a sacred duty. It goes beyond the day-to-day. Yes, the ASX is open. So are businesses and workplaces.
But we still take a minute to pause and reflect. To remember those who served, suffered and died in our countryâs name, and those of our allies.
Iâve written more about it, here.
We will remember them.
Lest We Forget.
Well, that happened quickly
I was asked on radio yesterday what might happen when the US inflation numbers were released last night. I donât mind saying that I didnât have âUS shares to rise 5.5%â on my bingo card!
It is, of course, blatantly absurd that a moderate fall in inflation â from ulta-high levels to merely pretty-bloody-high â should see US shares gain the equivalent of half an average yearâs returns in a single day.
As in, madness. Ridiculous. Stupid.
But, well, here we are.
No-oneâs complaining about the gains, of course (well, other than short-sellers or those who were âwaiting for the coast to be clearâ and were sitting on cash). But⦠itâs silly.
Which doesnât mean lower inflation isnât good news. It truly is.
And it doesnât mean that shares werenât cheap before last nightâs rally â I think some of them were.
But it is a rolled-gold example of how much we should take from daily market moves â in either direction: none.
And little more from the actual index levels, too. Remember, markets tell you what theyâre thinking and feeling⦠and thatâs not the same as objective valuation.
A fight for energy supremacy
If every dog has its day, perhaps every sector gets its time in the sun.
From what has otherwise been a pretty unappealing and unrewarding recent history, the energy sector is certainly enjoying its time in the sun.
First, it was Mike Cannon-Brookes and North American asset manager Brookfield, who lobbed a bid for AGL Energy Limited (ASX: AGL). Rebuffed, Cannon-Brookes decided to press on as a (large) minority shareholder.
We now know that whatever Brookfield saw in AGL, it also saw in Origin Energy Ltd (ASX: ORG), with the latter now the subject of an $18.4b takeover bid, from a consortium being led by Brookfield.
Great news for Origin shareholders, no doubt. And probably vindication for the management team who were arguing that Origin was being undervalued by the market.
I will be fascinated to see what Brookfield sees in Origin, as this rolls on, and whether their hopes are fulfilled or dashed. One thing, though â private equity mobs arenât known for their interest in lowering prices for consumers⦠so weâll see what comes of this one, if it goes ahead.
Quick takes
Overblown: âNew normalsâ are almost always overdone. Even more so when they assume that some historical experiences are going to be permanently altered. Like, I donât know, commodity prices. Itâs very brave to assume gas prices wonât fall. Or coal. Or, you know, billionaires paying too much for media assets⦠Iâm not saying that buying Twitter is Elon Muskâs âAlan Bondâ moment, but Iâm not saying itâs notâ¦
Underappreciated:Â When we recorded this arvoâs episode of the Motley Fool Money podcast, Andrew and I chatted about things happening âslowly, then suddenlyâ (his phrase), and the fact that disruption is stupidly hard, but when you reach âescape velocityâ, the strength and size of the incumbents goes from an almost-unassailable advantage to an enormous millstone (my analogy). Whether youâre investing in disruptors, or incumbents, be very wary of these inflection points.
Fascinating:Â Vanguardâs new Superannuation product has been announced. The fees look cheap, without being dirt-cheap (yet), and thereâs some good innovation in the way the products will be both managed and offered. Itâs early days, but Vanguard is one of the good guys, and Iâm glad theyâll be adding to the competition in this really important sector. (And, for what itâs worth, if youâre someone who doesnât use an industry fund because you donât like their union links, this might be well worth looking into as an alternative to â usually higher-fee â retail funds.)
Where Iâve been looking:Â This is a harder question to answer after todayâs market jump! No, not really â even after those jumps, many, many companies are still far below their 52-week highs. Iâm not one for âscreeningâ, but Iâve been having a look at profitable companies that are growing revenue, and that the market has left behind. Itâs not the only place to look â and not every company meeting these criteria will be successful â but there are a lot to choose from, and I think the odds should be good, at prevailing share prices.
Quote: âIt’s insane to risk what you have for something you don’t needâ â Warren Buffett, on leverage.
Fool on!
The post Elon Musk’s ‘Alan Bond’ moment? appeared first on The Motley Fool Australia.
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More reading
- 5 of the craziest things making news on the ASX this week
- Here are the top 10 ASX 200 shares today
- Here are the 3 most traded ASX 200 shares on Thursday
- Why Lycopodium, Origin, Perpetual, and Sandfire shares are charging higher
- 3 ASX 200 shares shooting the lights out on Thursday
Motley Fool contributor Scott Phillips has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia’s parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. 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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