United States

Daily USA: Monthly Geopolitical Comment: Redrafting of Global Map of Political Alliances to Continue in 2019 and more

In this briefing:

  1. Monthly Geopolitical Comment: Redrafting of Global Map of Political Alliances to Continue in 2019
  2. Autonomous Driving. Waymo Leading The Charge With Ten Million Miles Driven And Counting
  3. Are US Stocks Still Expensive?
  4. Business Happenings in the Americas that May Be “Below the Radar” – Week Ending December 22, 2018
  5. MYOB Caves And Agrees To KKR’s Reduced Offer

1. Monthly Geopolitical Comment: Redrafting of Global Map of Political Alliances to Continue in 2019

The year 2018 has proven tumultuous for global markets. Rapidly changing geopolitical priorities of the US, an erstwhile hegemon, have played a role no less significant than the withdrawal of liquidity by leading central banks or US monetary policy tightening. The US has openly declared that it is in a state of “cold war” with China. Despite the recent truce, signs are abundant that the confrontation between the two global superpowers will continue into 2019 and beyond. In 2019, we expect more countries to find themselves in a position where they must choose who they want to side with, the US or China. There are other tectonic shifts, too, which are causing re-alignment of global geopolitical alliances.

2. Autonomous Driving. Waymo Leading The Charge With Ten Million Miles Driven And Counting

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Waymo CEO John Krafcik made some bold decisions after taking the helm at Alphabet‘s self-driving project in September 2015. Chief among them was the fact that the company abandon its plans for Level 3 automated driving and focus exclusively on levels 4 & 5. Furthermore, he decreed that Waymo would no longer manufacture its own vehicles but would instead integrate their technology into those of other automakers. Three years later, those decisions would appear to be finally paying off.

On October 10 2018, Waymo reached a significant milestone having completed 10 million self-driving miles across 25 cities in the US. While their first million self-driving miles took 18 months to complete, Waymo now clocks up over a million self-driving miles per month.  The company also recently announced the launch of its robo taxi service in Phoenix, Arizona and looks set to quickly follow suit in California. Plans to extend its self-driving technology beyond robotaxis, most notably for trucks and last-mile transportation solutions are also in the works. Furthermore, the company has begun laying down a framework of innovative B2B revenue models which should help accelerate the speed with which they can eventually monetize their technology.

It hasn’t been smooth sailing all the way for Waymo however. Earlier this year, the company was derided for the driving style of its autonomous vehicles and faced the criticism that its driverless cars continue to have safety drivers. There was also an embarrassing incident where one of those very safety drivers caused the self-driving car he was monitoring to hit a motorcyclist when he attempted to take control of the vehicle. According to Waymo’s own analysis of the vehicle log files, the accident would not have happened had he not intervened. 

With ten million self-driving miles under their belt and a thoughtful, strategic approach to monetizing their technology beginning to emerge, Waymo remains firmly ahead of their peers in leading the autonomous driving charge.  

3. Are US Stocks Still Expensive?

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There are striking parallels between 1929 and 2018.  

The 1929 crash put a halt to a nine-year bull run on the market.

Up until October 1929, same as this year, market consensus was that asset prices could only go up from their current level.

As we mentioned in When the Tide Goes Out, Dominoes Fall, a decade of building up excesses meant a painful burst, back 79 years ago: between October of 1929 and September of 1932, eighty-nine percent of the value of stocks was erased and the market didn’t recover to its former peak until 25 years later.

Are we in a similar situation right now? 

4. Business Happenings in the Americas that May Be “Below the Radar” – Week Ending December 22, 2018

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Highlights of significant recent happenings include:

  1. Feeding the Dragon – Sumitomo Corp (8053 JP) buying into massive Chile copper project; Mitsui & Co Ltd (8031 JP) and Tokyo Gas (9531 JP) announced plans to be long-term buyers of Mexican LNG.
  2.  Local News on Global Companies Huawei Technology (40978Z CH)‘s to do “whatever is required” to meet Canada’s 5G security standards; Ant Financial (1051260D CH)’s Sesame Credit be used to apply for Canadian visas;  Facebook Inc A (FB US) offered data to  Netflix Inc (NFLX US) and Royal Bank Of Canada (RY CN)BlackBerry Ltd (BB CN)‘s high-security reputation increasingly valuable; Fedex Corp (FDX US) and  United Parcel Service Cl B (UPS US) deny negative impact from  Amazon.com Inc (AMZN US)‘s Amazon Air operations; and Anheuser Busch Inbev Sa (Adr) (BUD US) and Tilray Inc (TLRY US) are doing “joint” product development.
  3. Trade Deals & No Deals – Bosideng Intl Hldgs (3998 HK) got an unexpected boost, while Canada Goose Holdings (GOOS CN) took an unexpected hit as a consequence of the U.S.A. Government’s problems with Huawei Technology (40978Z CH)
  4. Outliers – Another “silver lining” to global warming?  The Warming Arctic Opens the Northwest Passage as a Potential Maritime Superhighway

5. MYOB Caves And Agrees To KKR’s Reduced Offer

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It could have gone either way.

After securing a 19.9% stake from Bain in early October and initially pitching A$3.70/share, in a textbook bear hug, KKR (marginally) bumped its indicative offer to A$3.77/share to a get a look under the hood, then following seven weeks of due diligence, backtracked with a lower price of A$3.40/share, citing adverse market conditions.

MYOB Board’s response last week to the reduced offer was to inform KKR that it is not in a position to recommend the revised proposal, however, “it remains in discussions with KKR regarding its proposal”, leaving the door open for ongoing negotiations. KKR for its part, said there were no landmines following the DD process. The price action last Friday suggested the outcome was a coin toss.

Today, KKR and MYOB entered into Scheme Implementation Agreement (SIA) at $3.40/share, valuing MYOB, on a market cap basis, at A$2bn. MYOB’s board unanimously recommends shareholders to vote in favour of the Offer, in the absence of a superior proposal and subject to an independent expert concluding the Offer is in the best interest of shareholders. The Offer price assumes no full-year dividend is paid.

The agreement provides a “go shop” provision until the 22 February 2019 – when MYOB is expected to release its FY18 results – to solicit competing proposals.

The Offer appears reasonable when compared to peers and with regards to the 14% decline in the ASX technology index; but conversely, could be construed as being opportunistic.

A Scheme Booklet is expected to be dispatched mid-March with an estimated implementation date of 3 May. Currently trading at a 3.8%/11% gross/annualised spread. 1 January makes a new year and there will be investors who would want to take an agreed deal at 11%.