Author Archives: Scalper1

Alibaba Hits Merchandise Milestone, But Growth Challenges Lie Ahead

Total sales transaction on e-commerce websites owned by Alibaba ( BABA ) have surpassed 3 trillion yuan ($463 billion), up from 1 trillion yuan in 2012, in what Executive Vice Chairman Joe Tsai referred to as a milestone that’s just a gas stop on the road ahead. The 3 trillion yuan milestone in gross merchandise volume was achieved with 10 days remaining in Alibaba’s fiscal year, which runs through to the end of March. That’s up 23% year over year in local currency, in line with Wall Street expectations though marking a slowdown from 46% growth in fiscal 2015. Alibaba stock was up more than 2%, near 78, in early afternoon trading in the stock market today . The stock has risen than 30% since falling to 59.25, near an all-time low, on Feb. 9. Alibaba has an IBD Composite Rating of 82. The milestone is one of several that Alibaba has set to spur revenue and profitability, Tsai wrote in his first blog post , published Monday. “We are proud of what this achievement means for China,” he wrote. “It reflects economic growth propelled by consumption and job creation in the service sector.” The shift toward consumption and services is a massive transformation that will drive a new Chinese economy for years to come, he wrote. The gross merchandise volume represents the total value of goods sold on Alibaba websites. Alibaba gets a cut from the sale of goods. In the e-commerce arena, Alibaba competes primarily with JD.com ( JD ), which is the largest online direct-sales company in China. JD — which offers a wide range of electronics, apparel, home appliances, food and beverages and other general merchandise — reported Q4 earnings on March 1. Revenue rose 57% in local currency to $8.35 billion, year over year. Gross merchandise volume rose 69% to $22.2 billion In his blog post, Tsai acknowledged challenges ahead. “Growth is meaningless unless it is sustainable. Thus, we have turned our focus to quality growth and broadening domestic consumption,” he wrote. Alibaba’s challenges also include removing counterfeit goods and fake product sales that have plagued its reputation. In the past year, Alibaba has stepped up efforts to bring “quality producers and brands” onto its platform, especially from overseas, Tsai wrote. It also has a program to penetrate 600,000 villages across China. “We still have a lot of work ahead of us,” he wrote. Image provided by Shutterstock .

Un-Expectedly High Expected Return Of Global Equities

It seems just about everyone I talk to these days is underwhelmed by the long-term expected return of the global stock market. I too am more worried than normal about owning equities. However, my defensiveness arises from their negative momentum, not their valuation, which I see as surprisingly attractive. The valuation picture is blurred by the dramatic divergence between US and non-US equities. For the past four and half years, the US equity market has outpaced non-US equities by more than 10% a year. After that relative outperformance, US equities do appear overvalued, but the attractive valuation of non-US markets more than compensates in a global portfolio. The table below shows the cyclically adjusted earnings yields (using the past 10 years of earnings) of each regional equity market. The Baseline regional weights I’m using fall in between the weights published by MSCI and those calculated by Bloomberg using their WCAP function. 1 Click to enlarge The earnings yield of the global equity market is 6.6%. To get to an estimate of the long-term expected real return, I assume that 60% of earnings can be paid out in dividends (besides sounding like a reasonable assumption, it also happens to be the average payout ratio from 1915 to 2015 in the US), which will grow at about 1.5% above inflation in the long term. Many observers prefer the even simpler estimate of just using the earnings yield itself, which is 6.6%, but I prefer basing the estimate on cash flow to investors, which is generally more conservative. This results in 5.5% for the long-term expected real return for global equities (6.6% * 0.6 + 1.5%). 2 So how attractive is a 5.5% expected return above inflation? Here are four perspectives to consider: US equities returned 5.4% after inflation in the 50 years from 1965 to 2015, which many people view as having been a good time to be an equity investor (although not nearly as good as the 8.2% from 1915 to 1965). The chart below shows that 5.5% is well above the average expected return of 4.5%. It is in the top decile of expected returns calculated this way since 1985, a period of time longer than the careers of 80% of the people currently employed in the finance industry. 3 By contrast, other assets, such as fixed income and real estate, are currently offering low expected real returns in the bottom decile of expected returns over the past 30 years. It is difficult to come up with a simple prospective measure of expected real returns for alternatives such as hedge funds, but they certainly have been struggling recently to generate the attractive returns they produced in the ’80s and ’90s. Caution: Equities can get a lot cheaper, quickly. Just a month ago, global equities were more than 10% lower than they are now, in case we need any reminder. While 5.5% appears attractive as a long-term expected real return, we need to keep in mind that we may see much higher expected returns than that in the future. Bottom line: Global equities are pretty attractively valued, and when they enter a period of positive momentum, we’ll probably see very healthy returns. Click to enlarge Footnotes: MSCI bases its weights on strict investible market cap data while Bloomberg bases theirs on unrestricted market cap. The Baseline weights used here go beyond market cap, using other economically relevant data to compute weights. See this note for details, and here for a further comparison of weighting schemes. Based on the belief that earnings and dividends will grow at less than the rate of real GDP growth due to various slippages. For a more detailed discussion, watch this video , and read this short note . Furthermore, if we think of this as the central case in the return distribution, and if we believe the long-term return is distributed relative symmetrically around this value, then there is a convexity adjustment that makes investing in equities even more attractive. A back-of-the-envelope illustration is to note that if we thought there were two equally likely long-term (say 30 year) outcomes for the real return, of say 5.5% + 2% and 5.5% – 2%, we would see that the return associated with the expected value of equities would be 6.02%, or 0.52% higher than the 5.5% base case. From US BLS data, here . Disclosure: I/we have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it. I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.