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 Interactive Brokers (IBKR), IBKR users, welcome!

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SUSTOS
post Nov 1 2022, 11:41 AM

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FT 011122: https://www.easybook.com/en-my/bus/booking/...umpur-to-penang

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No BT today, not sure why...

QUOTE(Toku @ Nov 1 2022, 11:00 AM)
swiss franc under pressure to go down?
*
Hmm... That depends on whether UBS and Julias Baer can bring more HNWI clients into Switzerland. laugh.gif

Anyway, those losses are just an accounting issue lah. They are still sitting on a 100 billion CHF distribution reserve.

Of the 140 billion CHF loses, half are from fixed income asset markdowns, another 35% from equities markdowns and the rest from forex losses due to appreciation of CHF against other currencies.

USD/CHF looks stable. https://finance.yahoo.com/quote/usdchf=x/

This post has been edited by TOS: Nov 1 2022, 11:45 AM
SUSTOS
post Nov 1 2022, 12:36 PM

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QUOTE(Hansel @ Nov 1 2022, 11:52 AM)
Bro,... SNB is the Swiss Nat Bank,... why does it have shareholders ?
*
BoJ, Greece and Belgium central banks have private shareholders. https://www.swissinfo.ch/eng/business/centr...l-bank/43480764

The answer to your question is, according to SNB: "they are so widely held by the public" laugh.gif https://www.snb.ch/en/ifor/public/qas/id/qas_unternehmen#t9

By the way, since you are from a legal background: https://www.fedlex.admin.ch/eli/cc/2004/221/en biggrin.gif

I haven't done more studies on SNB, so don't know a lot about its past history. But one thing is for certain, SNB answers to the cantonal governments and the federal government, not to the private shareholders. In fact your dividend would be capped at 15 CHF per share annually at all times regardless of how much profit SNB has made from its foreign investments. Those proceeds go to the currency reserve first, then 15 CHF per share for all shareholder, and lastly the remaining is distributed as follows: 1/3 to the federal government and 2/3 to the cantonal governments (given the volatile nature of earnings, some part of this earnings are held in distribution reserves rather than distributed entirely). Private shareholders also have very limited rights.

In fact, some has suggested treating SNB shares like a perpetual sovereign bond rather than typical equities given the ability for SNB to print its own money.

Its stock is not cheap either. At 4250 CHF a share, a 15 CHF per share dividend translates to 0.35% p.a. dividend yield.

Other interesting reads: https://www.ft.com/content/889c82e4-c06a-42...c3-a711eecb3ae3

This post has been edited by TOS: Nov 1 2022, 01:02 PM
SUSTOS
post Nov 1 2022, 12:52 PM

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QUOTE(Hansel @ Nov 1 2022, 12:47 PM)
Tq bro,... I leanrt something new today,...

Looks like,... it's something like the SSBs,... but how volatile is the share price of the SNB ? Does it swing up and down a lot ?
*
lol it swings ridiculously...

https://www.tradingview.com/chart/?symbol=NASDAQ%3AAAPL

Notice the sharp jump from 5000 CHF to nearly 8000 CHF in March 2022 when war is raging in Ukraine.
SUSTOS
post Nov 1 2022, 08:53 PM

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A few companies reporting today:

Eli Lilly (now the world's 2nd largest Big Pharma by market cap): https://investor.lilly.com/financial-inform...arterly-results

Pfizer: https://investors.pfizer.com/Investors/Even...22/default.aspx

BP: https://www.bp.com/en/global/corporate/inve...nd-webcast.html

AMD and Mondelez reporting aftermarket.
SUSTOS
post Nov 2 2022, 11:09 AM

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FT 021122: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1H7y-szi1rM...?usp=share_link
SUSTOS
post Nov 2 2022, 02:35 PM

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Novo Nordisk results announced. https://www.novonordisk.com/investors/financial-results.html

Press release: https://www.globenewswire.com/news-release/...hs-of-2022.html

(PDF version): https://ml-eu.globenewswire.com/Resource/Do...0c-73ba63b846eb

Presentation slides: https://www.novonordisk.com/content/dam/nnc...resentation.pdf

Financial statements: https://www.novonordisk.com/content/dam/nnc...l-workbook.xlsx

This post has been edited by TOS: Nov 2 2022, 07:24 PM
SUSTOS
post Nov 2 2022, 07:05 PM

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Estee Lauder reporting results: https://www.elcompanies.com/en/news-and-med...-2022-104527105

This post has been edited by TOS: Nov 2 2022, 07:05 PM
SUSTOS
post Nov 2 2022, 08:36 PM

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QUOTE(Hansel @ Nov 2 2022, 08:31 PM)
Rogers tumbled nearly 50%, bro,... failed buyout by a chemical co....
*
Ah that's out of my radar. Unless picked up by PNB, then it would interest me.
SUSTOS
post Nov 3 2022, 09:05 AM

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FT Alphaville: Investing in funds

The volatility laundering, return manipulation and ‘phoney happiness’ of private equity
Are investors the mark, or in on it?

by Robin Wigglesworth (YESTERDAY)

user posted image


The widening performance gap between public and private markets is a huge topic these days. Investors are often seen as the gormless dupes falling for the “return manipulation” of cunning private equity tycoons. But what if they are co-conspirators?

That’s what a new paper from three academics at the University of Florida argues. Based on nearly two decades worth of private equity real estate funds data Blake Jackson, David Ling and Andy Naranjo conclude that “private equity fund managers manipulate returns to cater to their investors”.

This is not an entirely new suggestion. Academics (and some practitioners) have boggled for years over why investors seem willing to pay extra for illiquidity, completely contrary to what financial theory and common sense would seem to suggest.

For example, a 2014 paper examining the impact of fair-value accounting on European private equity found that it increased correlations to public markets and hurt European LBO fundraising. In 2017 the chief investment officer of the Idaho pension system apparently dubbed the lack of volatility the “phoney happiness” of private markets.

More recently, AQR’s Clifford Asness argued in 2019 that “big time multi-year illiquidity and its oft-accompanying pricing opacity may actually be a feature not a bug” of private capital (Full disclosure: some journalists have written about this as well.) Since then Asness has been on a campaign to get this called “volatility laundering”.

But Jackson, Ling and Naranjo’s findings are more than just a stylised mental model to explain the popularity of private capital. Their central conclusion is that “GPs do not appear to manipulate interim returns to fool their LPs, but rather because their LPs want them to do so”.

QUOTE
Similar to the idea that banks design financial products to cater to yield-seeking investors or firms issue dividends to cater to investor demand for dividend payments, we argue that PE fund managers boost interim performance reports to cater to some investors’ demand for manipulated returns.

. . . If a GP boosts or smooths returns, perhaps by strategically timing asset acquisitions and dispositions or by misstating the values of underlying assets, investment managers within LP organizations can report artificially higher Sharpe ratios, alphas, and top-line returns, such as IRRs, to their trustees or other overseers. In doing so, these investment managers, whose median tenure of four years often expires years before the ultimate returns of a PE fund are realized, might improve their internal job security or potential labor market outcomes.

Return manipulations can also produce significant paper wealth for LPs. For U.S. public pension LPs, this can marginally improve funding statuses or alter required contribution funding rates. Because PE returns are often quoted in IRRs, such return manipulations can even permanently window dress the PE fund’s end-of-life returns, which possibly protects LP investment managers in bad states.
This probably helps explains why private equity firms on average actually reported gains of 1.6 per cent in the first quarter of 2022 and only some modest marks downwards since then, despite global equities losing 22 per cent of their value this year.

Just to highlight real estate — the main source of data for the University of Florida paper — Blackstone’s giant private property trust BREIT took in $4.2bn in the third quarter and eked out a small gain even as publicly traded Reits lost 12 per cent of their value over the same period.

However, the increasingly anomalous accounting values of private holdings gets harder to defend when there is an increasingly active market for trading stakes in private equity funds. A record $57bn worth of fund stakes changed hands in the first half of 2022, according to Jefferies.

user posted image


Typically, the “secondary” private equity market was where some investors might sell a chunk of one of their investments because their allocations were a bit overweight, they needed to raise cash for some other investment, or the fund stank and they wanted to get out. The stakes therefore usually traded at a discount.

In 2019 the hunger for private equity exposure was so immense that some investors would actually pony up a premium, but in the first half of 2022 the average stake traded at 86 per cent of the fund’s net asset value, according to Jefferies. And yet the reported accounting value of those funds seems remarkably resilient?

This increasingly insane divergence was a big subject in an interesting Q3 letter to investors from Justin Hughes at Phase 2 Partners, a San Francisco investment firm, which someone kindly sent us.

QUOTE
. . . We recently reviewed a 13- page list of private equity interests available for sale through a bulge bracket investment bank. Every single fund on the 13-page list is available at a discount to the manager’s stated value. Smoothed returns that rely on mark to model accounting, we believe, may be leading to an overallocation of assets to private markets. We recently met with a leading private market manager with an interesting view — it was their view that private markets are the new ‘core’ asset class as opposed to public markets. Specifically, we wanted to know how their portfolio seemed to be worth a 40% higher EBITDA multiple than the public markets.

The company explained to us that these are completely different markets — the private markets, the new ‘core’ asset class deserves a premium to their liquid cousin, the public market. Wow, I am old! I immediately went home, pulled out my latest edition of Ibbotson & Associates: Stock, Bonds, Bills & Inflation and ripped up the chapter on liquidity premiums! Starting next month, Phase 2 will issue all of its returns using mark to model! JUST KIDDING!
Maybe investors are just in on the joke, rather than being the butt of it?

Source: https://www.ft.com/content/d20a750b-9544-49...a4-72050c658967

This post has been edited by TOS: Nov 3 2022, 09:06 AM
SUSTOS
post Nov 3 2022, 10:57 AM

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FT 031122: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1CBWeCEMxZF...?usp=share_link

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No BT today, check SGX Counter thread tomorrow for updates.
SUSTOS
post Nov 3 2022, 06:20 PM

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Air Products and Chemicals Q4 FY22 results: https://investors.airproducts.com/earnings

Earnings release: https://investors.airproducts.com/static-fi...da-40f0e19ade17

Slides: https://investors.airproducts.com/static-fi...ae-438b9693e8bf

Non-GAAP to GAAP reconcilation tables: https://investors.airproducts.com/static-fi...09-7910222499ac

This post has been edited by TOS: Nov 3 2022, 06:24 PM
SUSTOS
post Nov 4 2022, 07:53 AM

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QUOTE(tadashi987 @ Nov 4 2022, 12:54 AM)
blink.gif  blink.gif  confused.gif

received this from IBKR, triggered from my action that was trying to amend my mailing address

cant get the logic why i need to close and open new account just because I unlinked from Tradestation UK and now parked under IBKR UK.

user posted image
*
Legal problem I guess. I was told during the application process to start over a new application when I try to open IB Singapore with my existing credentials.

Just follow them and you should be fine. Call their toll-free number using Skype if needed.
SUSTOS
post Nov 4 2022, 12:26 PM

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FT 041122: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1FZOohIaPvG...?usp=share_link

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FT Big Read: Currencies

Japan's central bank raises the stake

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SUSTOS
post Nov 4 2022, 06:51 PM

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Hershey, US largest confectionery and no.2 snacking company, reporting Q3 results today premarket: https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/he...-301668516.html

Webcast, slides and other information can be found here when updated: https://investors.thehersheycompany.com/en_us/home.html

Hershey's stock has had a stellar run-up this year, rising 20% YTD excluding dividends, bucking the S&P500 downtrend. Big Chocolate seems to stay strong despite multiple headwinds.

This post has been edited by TOS: Nov 4 2022, 06:53 PM
SUSTOS
post Nov 5 2022, 01:21 PM

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FT Weekend 05-061122: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1VLXQg0JSeL...?usp=share_link

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FT Big Read. Corporation Tax

Windfall taxes: good politics, tricky policy

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FT Life & Arts part 1: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1Z9l1gCywgO...?usp=share_link

FT Life & Arts part 2: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1mp77cN8oXd...?usp=share_link

(There is an interesting read on Howard Schultz's return to SBUX for the third time by FT's US business editor, Andrew Edgecliffe-Johnson near the end of Part 2)

FT House & Home: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1m2z64qE0_6...?usp=share_link

Oh, and...

With no capital gains, inheritance tax or minimum income requirement, it's easy to see why more people are calling Guernsey home. laugh.gif

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Enjoy your weekend reads. biggrin.gif
SUSTOS
post Nov 5 2022, 02:43 PM

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I found some other interesting reads too, from 天下杂志 CommonWealth Magazine 0510-181022

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1KQrhvfvTgo...?usp=share_link

Not competing on the basis of CP value, TSMC's pricing strategy is all about pricing power. The editor-in-chief shared Warren Buffett's interview with FCIC post-2008 crisis on why he bought Moody's.

You can find the book here: https://www.amazon.com/Buffetts-Interview-F...n/dp/1607963566

And also the online transcript: https://ritholtz.com/2016/03/fcic-buffett/

QUOTE
Dun and Bradstreet had a very good business, and Moody’s had an even better business. And basically, the single-most important decision in evaluating a business is pricing power. If you’ve got the power to raise prices without losing business to a competitor, you’ve got a very good business. And if you have to have a prayer session before raising the price by a tenth of a cent, then you’ve got a terrible business. I’ve been in both, and I know the difference.


Remember, investors. It's all about pricing power, not market share!

This post has been edited by TOS: Nov 5 2022, 02:52 PM
SUSTOS
post Nov 5 2022, 08:02 PM

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Berkshire Hathaway 3Q results out:

News release: https://www.berkshirehathaway.com/news/nov0522.pdf

10-Q: https://www.berkshirehathaway.com/qtrly/3rdqtr22.pdf
SUSTOS
post Nov 6 2022, 09:57 AM

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QUOTE(xerxesbear_1 @ Nov 6 2022, 09:25 AM)
Hi all, I am having qualms about which brokerage is safer. IBKR or brokerage tied to local Msia banks like RHB or maybank.

Just some background context, I am asking this question because I now have almost close to RM 1 million  in my Interactive brokers account. Back when I first started I only had a few thousand ringgit so I wasn't so worried. But now as I made some gains and the value keeps rising, I'm starting to worry about the money being offshore.

I chose Interactive brokers because I know it's top tier, renowned and regulated by SEC and CFTC. It has the cheapest fees and best UI.
But one drawbank ( not sure if its considered a drawback), is that IBKR is not regulated by the SC (suruhanjaya commission). If there is a black swan event and IBKR goes bust (touch wood), do I get my money back?

On the flipside, if my shares were held by the RHB invest or Maybank trading, if something were to go wrong will my money be insured since the banks are regulated by the SC?

I invest only in US stocks and looking to invest for another 5-10 years so the platform I use must be safe and secure.

What are you guy's thoughts on this? How big of a role does being regulated by SC play when deciding which brokerage offers the best security and guarantee?
*
Your concerns are legitimate. The best protection IBKR offers you is the SIPC insurance protection in case the broker goes bust. You are protected up to 500k USD, including 250k USD of cash.

https://www.sipc.org/for-investors/what-sipc-protects

You can file a claim here when IB is in trouble or your assets are transferred to a trustee. https://www.sipc.org/cases-and-claims/

As far as I know, Malaysia does not have such an insurance scheme. Please correct me if I am wrong.

I do know SIDREC: https://www.sidrec.com.my/

But that is more of a dispute resolution center rather than a post-hoc claiming facility.

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

As for regulation, not familiar with legislative stuffs. Maybe Hansel can help you.

As far as I know, US brokers are self-regulated, whereas MY brokers are regulated under SC. Surely the later has less conflicts of interest than the former. To be fair, IB has had issues before.

https://brokercheck.finra.org/firm/summary/36418

Financially the are still strong on liquidity and profitability. You can check the quarterly reports and SEC filings for this.

QUOTE(Ramjade @ Nov 6 2022, 09:36 AM)
SC Malaysia is a joke. Kindly ignore them. Hey bam legitimate broker like TD. If you are worried you can try split it into TD. Both have SIpc, TD SG is regilarrd by MAS sg.

I wouldn't put too much thought about SC regulation especially if it comes to.legitimate overseas broker. SEC is more than enough.
*
Bro, have you woken up yet? laugh.gif

"They ban", "regulated", "to legitimate"

Treating patients can be tiring...

This post has been edited by TOS: Nov 6 2022, 12:24 PM
SUSTOS
post Nov 6 2022, 10:40 AM

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-Deleted-

QUOTE
Funds and assets of IB (U.K.) Limited customers are maintained at Interactive Brokers LLC, which is a member of SIPC. As with all securities firms, SIPC coverage provides protection against failure of a broker-dealer, not against loss of market value of securities. Futures and options on futures are not covered by SIPC.


This post has been edited by TOS: Nov 6 2022, 10:53 AM
SUSTOS
post Nov 6 2022, 02:00 PM

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QUOTE(Ramjade @ Nov 6 2022, 01:33 PM)
Not me. It's my friend. Btw I am having poor quality sleep. Keep waking up at night.
*
That's why must stop writing options and stop buying your favourite techie counters. laugh.gif

Buy NESN then can sleep well every night. laugh.gif

Correct? dwRK

lol

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