Crispin Odey: Markets Giving Misleading Signals

Crispin Odey, CIO, Odey Asset Management, shares a wealth of insight in his 2008 year-end Letter to Shareholders reflecting, in the following excerpts, on the mixed signals the markets are sending about valuations, and commodities. Unlike his former protege and partner, Hugh Hendry, who is avoiding equities for the time being, and long long-term government bonds, Odey likens the current pricing climate in bank shares, "like trading options," and believes there will be a bear market in bonds within 12 months. Read on:

"Keynes believed that economics was a polemical science. He made economics popular and powerful because he abstracted ideas that in the workaday world looked sensible and showed them to be dangerous if followed by everyone. Thus he changed the way that policy makers and people thought. Has there been a better time to renew the challenge?"

"Given that all of this is a long way away from being accepted we must reluctantly conclude that the world economy is not yet in a recovery position. The recession only started to get into its stride in September of last year. Most companies will have been guilty of over-trading as they have sought to cover falls in orders by accepting any orders. They will be finding themselves with customers going bust and inventory still rising. Profit numbers will be dire. The only good news is that at some point the survivors will be able to charge more for less, and margins will be higher on the other side of this hill".

"Current investments come about from the outstanding opportunities being opened up by the pain from the falls in share prices that we have seen over the last year. This anguish is sorely felt by us all but it is also the time to be investing. We have become big buyers of the UK clearing banks. This reflects quite how cheap they are. The shares are trading like options. After Northern Rock and Lehman Brothers, many are now convinced that they will be nationalised. However, the government has realised that nothing is solved by nationalising them, and in the UKā€™s case, that there is everything to be gained from letting them live. In an election year who else has Brown got to blame?"

"Given that on the other side of this disaster these banks can earn multiples of their current share price, the risk/return is wrong. In many ways these purchases remind me of Marconi, when the share price fell to 10p but the lack of covenants on the Ā£4 billion bank loan meant that it could not be bankrupted for four years. We made 450% on that trade. Hopefully these banks will fare better and for longer. Given time and distance they will be fine".

"This is because the markets have been giving misleading signals for some time. Wheat is a typical example. There is barely any surplus supply over demand in wheat. Yet last year farmers found themselves with rising input costs, thanks to the oil and fertilizer price hikes, and then falling incomes with wheat prices that were some 60% off their highs. They had one of their worst years ever. As a result this year plantings are way down, farmers are distressed and in Brazil and Argentina facing droughts. The wheat price is likely to soar".

"All in all I expect that within 12 months government bond markets will go into a bear market which may be long and protracted. The stockmarkets remain good value and would prosper after some worries if inflation came back and my portfolio should do quite well in that environment. However it remains hard work in the main".

Hat tip: Jonathan Davis, Independent Investor

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