Saturday 30 March 2024

Global Market Data 31Mar2024 - vrk100 - 30Mar2024

Global Market Data 31Mar2024

 
 

 
(This is for information purposes only. This should not be construed as a recommendation or investment advice even though the author is a CFA Charterholder. Please consult your financial adviser before taking any investment decision. Safe to assume the author has a vested interest in stocks / investments discussed if any.)  


(please look at the blog dated 12Jan2024  for data from 2013 to 2023)
 
Quarter-to-date global market data, as on 31 March 2024 (29th March is last trading of Mar2024), of stocks, bonds, currencies and commodities is as follows: 
 
Table 1: (please click on the image to view better) 



As shown in the table above, the biggest surprise in global stocks, during the first quarter of 2024, is the spectacular rise of 20.6 percent in Japanese benchmark index Nikkei 225. German stock index Dax 30 and the US' S&P 500 index too have done well with more than 10 percent each in the same period.
 
Soaring Nikkei 225 index is driven mainly by strong corporate profit growth in Japanese companies (including those of semiconductor stocks) and weaker currency Yen. 

After decades of slump, foreign investors are increasingly drawn to Japanese stocks, reposing their confidence in Japan. Legendary investor Warren Buffett too has been investing in Japanese conglomerates for quite some time.

Indian, Chinese and the UK stocks have given muted returns, with the Hong Kong's Hang Seng losing 3 percent of its value in the Jan-Mar2024 quarter.


(story continues below)

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Related blogs:

Global Market data 2013 to 2023 (11-year data)

Global Market Data 2012 to 2022 (11-year data)

Global Market Data 31Dec2023

Global Market Data 30Sep2023

Global Market Data 31Mar2023

Global Market Data 31Dec2022 

Global Market Data 30Sep2022

Global Market Data 30Jun2022

Global Market Data 31Mar2022

Global Market Data 31Dec2021

Global Market Data 30Sep2021


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The US 10-year Treasury yield rose by 34 basis points (100 basis points equal one percentage point) to 4.21 percent -- due to concerns about the US Federal Reserve not cutting interest rates soon enough.

India 10-year G-Sec bond yield is down 12 basis points.

Crude oil is the biggest gainer among major commodities, with WTI crude and Brent gaining 16.5 and 12.9 percent respectively during the first quarter of 2024. Gold has been reaching all-time-highs recently, with gains of 8.8 percent for the quarter.

Bitcoin too has been hitting all-time-highs with the US Sec granting permission to launch spot Bitcoin ETFs or exchange traded funds. However, Bitcoin is extremely volatile and excessively speculative.

Investing in crypto currencies, like Bitcoin and Ethereum, is not for novice investors and the faint-hearted. It may be a promising asset class for a select few who can bear the vicissitudes of their prices, but for most investors it is a no-go area.
 
The US dollar index (DXY) gained 3.1 percent during the quarter due mainly to weakness in Japanese Yen (JPY). JPY depreciated versus the US dollar even though Bank of Japan (BoJ is Japan's central bank) made two policy pivots in its management of currency and monetary policy -- one is BoJ ending 17 years of negative interest rates and the other ending its yield curve control (YCC) policy.

Among agricultural commodities, Cocoa futures soared to a fresh all-time-high level of USD 9,900 per ton, due to poor harvest in Western African nations of Ivory Coast and Ghana.

On the contrary, Steel futures slumped to a four-year-low of CNY 3,664 per ton on 28Mar2024 due to increasingly pessimistic outlook on Chinese demand.

Global stocks and bonds will, in future, be driven by how central banks respond to incoming data in the next two quarters. It is expected the US Federal Reserve (US' central bank) will be cutting interest rates at least three times in the remaining part of 2024.

Global bond yields, generally, have risen in the past quarter -- due to concerns about major central banks keeping their interest rates higher for longer.

- - -
-------------------
 
Read more:
 
Blog of Blogs Theme-wise 
 
Understanding Real Sensex and Currency Debasement
 
Select Gilt Funds Performance 
 
R K Swamy Ltd IPO - Highlights from Prospectus
 
SEBI Categorization and Rationalization of Mutual Funds
 
AMFI List of Market Cap: Categorization of Large-, Mid- and Small-Cap Stocks
 
Stocks and Peer Comparison by Industry 
 
Zydus Lifesciences Buyback Offer 2024 
 
Equity ETFs and Equity Index Funds Compared
 
Mutual Fund Asset Class Returns 31Dec2023
 
BSE 500 versus S&P 500 Indices Compare 31Dec2023
 
NSE Indices Comparison 31Dec2023
 
Nifty 50 Index Yearly Movement 31Dec2023
 
Global Market Data: 2013 to 2023
 
Global Bond Yields Fall Sharply 
 
India: Prospects and Challenges
 
Buyback Offers and Weblinks
 
Negative Impact of Debt Mutual Fund Tax Changes

Weblinks and Investing

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Disclosure:  I've got a vested interest in Indian stocks and other investments. It's safe to assume I've interest in the financial instruments / products discussed, if any.

Disclaimer: The analysis and opinion provided here are only for information purposes and should not be construed as investment advice. Investors should consult their own financial advisers before making any investments. The author is a CFA Charterholder with a vested interest in financial markets. 

CFA Charter credentials  - CFA Member Profile

CFA Badge

  

Viewing Options for this blog in different formats:
 








He blogs at:

https://ramakrishnavadlamudi.blogspot.com/

https://www.scribd.com/vrk100

X (Twitter) @vrk100

Thursday 14 March 2024

Understanding Real Sensex and Currency Debasement - vrk100 - 14Mar2024

Understanding Real Sensex and Currency Debasement
 
 
 
 
(This is for information purposes only. This should not be construed as a recommendation or investment advice even though the author is a CFA Charterholder. Please consult your financial adviser before taking any investment decision. Safe to assume the author has a vested interest in stocks / investments discussed if any.)
 
(Even though the article was written on 14Mar2024, the following update dated 24Mar2024 was added at the end of the blog) 
 
 

 
 
In late 1923, a loaf of bread in Germany was costing around 200 billion marks -- yes, you read it right, it was 200,000,000,000 marks.
 
People literally had to carry a cartload of money to buy a loaf of bread in Germany in 1923. 
 
After the First World War, Germany experienced high inflation. During 1922 and 1923, it turned out to be hyperinflation, which is known as Weimar inflation that happened during the Weimar Republic. The highest currency note printed at that time was in the denomination of 50 trillion marks, according to Wikipedia.  

Countries, like, Zimbabwe, Venezuela, Austria, Brazil, Hungary and Argentina too have undergone episodes of hyperinflation. 

Inflation means rise in prices and it reduces the standard of living for consumers, unless their wages too rise proportionately. There are times when rise in workers' wages will be much lower than increase in prices of goods and services.
 
Inflation is a silent killer. It's robbery by stealth. With persistent inflation, purchasing power of money comes down. Inflation hurts everybody, except the governments. 
 
 
(blog continues below)
 
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Related blog:
 
Real Sensex (inflation-adjusted) from 1990 to 2021

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Currency debasement
 
“Lenin is said to have declared that the best way to destroy a capitalist system was to debauch the currency,” wrote John Maynard Keynes.
 
“By a continuing process of inflation, governments can confiscate, secretly and unobserved, an important part of the wealth of their citizens,” he further added.

With high budget deficits, large doses of money printing and enormous debt levels, governments both in the developed and developing world have been inflating away the economies imposing heavy burden on common people.
 
When governments and central banks print money recklessly, what they do is they increase money supply without any corresponding increase in productive capacity of economies.

As a result of increases in money supply, citizens chase the same amount of goods and services with more currency or bank notes. This results in high inflation afflicting the pockets of people like you and me.
 
Lowering the value of currencies continually in economies leads to currency debasement. 
 
Currency debasement is not a modern phenomenon. It has been going on for almost 2,000 years.
 
In the first century CE, Roman emperor Nero diluted the Roman currency by reducing the weight of silver coins; and by diluting the silver used in such coins with a base alloy. This is currency debasement for you. 
 
The relentless rise in prices of crypto currencies, like, Bitcoin and Ethereum, is one of the after-effects of massive currency debasement of fiat currencies engineered by fiscal and monetary authorities around the world. 
 
Paper currencies we use today are called fiat currencies, because governments can create them by fiat. In the olden days, currency coins used to be backed by precious metals, like gold and silver. This is no longer the case. 
 
In a way, the advent of crypto currencies, which have a total market cap of USD 2.75 trillion as of today, as an asset class is a kind of rebellion against fiat currencies, that are getting diluted every day. 

You may be aware the supply of Bitcoins, for example, is controlled and as such it's seen as a counter to debasement of fiat currencies.
 
However, we don't know how long this arrangement continues for Bitcoin and how the fiscal and monetary authorities respond to the rise of crypto assets. Significantly, the US SEC has recently approved spot Bitcoin ETFs in the US.

Now, let us discuss how Sensex looks like in real terms, that is, when adjusted for inflation.


Real Sensex

A few days ago, India's benchmark stock market index, Sensex, reached a record high of over 74,000. Equity investors are in high spirits. Naturally. Sensex has risen from a level of 38,000 five years ago, almost doubling in value. 

There is a catch here. What investors see here is only in nominal terms, but not in real terms. Real terms means we need to adjust or correct Sensex for inflation. 

Cumulative consumer price inflation (CPI) in India in the past five years is around 32 percent, as per official numbers declared by Government of India. (It may be noted the official inflation figures declared by governments are manipulated to suit the finances of the governments. Actual inflation will be much higher than the official numbers).

If you adjust the 74,000 Sensex level with 32 percent inflation, you will get a level of nearly 57,450 for Sensex. It means, real Sensex in the past five years has grown from 38,000 to 57,450, an annualised return of 8.62 percent (51.4 percent absolute return) in real terms.

But in nominal returns, which everybody observes, Sensex has given an annualised return of 14.26 percent (94.7 percent absolute return).

The difference between 94.7 percent nominal Sensex return and 51.4 percent Sensex real return is 43.3 percent in the past five years. 

Investors feel comfortable looking at the nominal return, while ignoring the real return adjusted for inflation. The difference of 43.3 percent in the past five years is eaten away by inflation monster.

"Plots of historical stock price indices in the media are almost invariably shown in nominal terms, not the real (inflation-corrected) terms," wrote Robert Shiller in his epic book "Irrational Exuberance."

We are unable to appreciate the impact rising prices have on our finances. We only see things in nominal values, not in inflation-corrected real terms.

CPI inflation is nothing but rise in prices of a basket of goods and services consumed on average by households. Of course, the basket keeps on changing from time to time -- depending on changes in consumer preferences. 
 
Maybe, we are consuming a broader range of goods and services in recent decades.

Since hitting a record high of 74,000 on 07Mar2024, Sensex has declined to 72,700 as at close of yesterday.
 
India's Economic Reforms were started in 1991. So, the following is a table detailing the rise of Sensex since 1990 and its yearly growth in real terms, that is, corrected for inflation:
 
 
 
As shown in above table, Sensex was 781 as on 31Mar1990 and it reached a nominal level of 72,762 yesterday; while the real Sensex grew from 781 to a mere 7,073 in the same period.

The table also shows the real Sensex return for each financial year since 1990. As can be observed from the 34-year data: in real inflation-adjusted terms, Sensex has given positive returns in 20 years, and provided negative returns in 14 years.

 
Real Sensex growth in 34 years

In nominal terms, Sensex grew from 781 in 1990 to 72,762 now, a compounded annual growth rate (CAGR) of 14.3 percent, which looks impressive over a long period.

But when you adjust or correct Sensex for inflation, real Sensex grew from 781 in 1990 to 7,073 only showing a moderate CAGR of 6.7 percent -- the difference between nominal and real Sensex growth reflects its erosion by inflation. 

Consumer price index in the past 34 years has gone up by 10.29 times -- as per official numbers (that is, if you believe them). When you divide the nominal Sensex level of 72,762 by 10.29, you get real Sensex of 7,073.

Table >



What really matters is real Sensex and real returns, that are adjusted for inflation, not the nominal returns we are fed by the media every day. 

 
 - - -
 

P.S.: After writing the blog, the following updates are added with new information / images:

 

Update 24Mar2024 :  How much returns did Sensex and real Sensex give on a 5-year rolling return basis between 1990 and now? 
 
The following table provides the rolling return data as at the end of every financial year between 1995 and now based on data from 1990 > 
 
The returns shown in the table are absolute, not annualised. 

As on 31Mar1995, Sensex 5-year return is 317 percent absolute (not annualised). As on 31Mar2020, the 5-year return is just 5.4 percent as global stocks, including those in India, collapsed in Mar2020 due to outbreak of COVID-19 Pandemic.
 
Of the 30 data points (as per table 2 below), Sensex had given negative returns only three times, that is, as on 31Mar1997, 31Mar1999 and 31Mar2003 -- but real Sensex had given negative returns nine times out of a total 30.

Obviously, this 5-year rolling return data are only from a small sample of data as at the end of a financial year -- if you take 5-year rolling returns for Sensex on a daily or a monthly basis, the data may provide better insights.

(Please click on the image to view better)

 
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References and Additional notes:
 
India's CPI inflation from 1990 to 2023:


Trading Economics: India CPI for the past 12 months



 
In 1923 Germany, Children use bundles of bank notes as building blocks (source: Mashable)



 
Germany hyperinflation / Weimar inflation of 1922 and 1923 (GCSE Modern World History)

Gresham's Law Investopedia - "Bad money drives out good." - during the Revolutionary War in the US, bad paper money drove out all valuable gold and silver coins (good money) from circulation - 

Currency / silver coins debasement under Nero - Gresham's Law mentioned here

50 trillion mark bank note in Germany
 
Inflation and Fall of Roman Empire - St Louis Fed PDF with chart

CoinMarketCap crypto currencies market cap

Tweet 11Jan2024 US SEC approves spot Bitcoin ETFs

RBI Handbook of Statistics on Indian Economy (HBIE)

-------------------
 
Read more:
 
Blog of Blogs Theme-wise 
 
Select Gilt Funds Performance 
 
R K Swamy Ltd IPO - Highlights from Prospectus
 
SEBI Categorization and Rationalization of Mutual Funds
 
AMFI List of Market Cap: Categorization of Large-, Mid- and Small-Cap Stocks
 
Stocks and Peer Comparison by Industry 
 
Zydus Lifesciences Buyback Offer 2024 
 
Equity ETFs and Equity Index Funds Compared
 
Mutual Fund Asset Class Returns 31Dec2023
 
BSE 500 versus S&P 500 Indices Compare 31Dec2023
 
NSE Indices Comparison 31Dec2023
 
Nifty 50 Index Yearly Movement 31Dec2023
 
JP Morgan Guide to Markets 31Dec2023
 
Global Market Data: 2013 to 2023
 
Global Bond Yields Fall Sharply 
 
India: Prospects and Challenges
 
Buyback Offers and Weblinks
 
Negative Impact of Debt Mutual Fund Tax Changes

Weblinks and Investing

-------------------

Disclosure:  I've got a vested interest in Indian stocks and other investments. It's safe to assume I've interest in the financial instruments / products discussed, if any.

Disclaimer: The analysis and opinion provided here are only for information purposes and should not be construed as investment advice. Investors should consult their own financial advisers before making any investments. The author is a CFA Charterholder with a vested interest in financial markets. 

CFA Charter credentials  - CFA Member Profile

CFA Badge

  

Viewing Options for this blog in different formats:
 








He blogs at:

https://ramakrishnavadlamudi.blogspot.com/

https://www.scribd.com/vrk100

X (Twitter) @vrk100