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Dog-gone double devaluation & Don’s Domino’s

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It has been a dog-gone doubly devaluating week for China, which stole the limelight from reporting season but external or foreign events have a habit of railroading the local issues that should be a lot more important to the companies we invest in. Of course, the bottom line health of those companies eventually wins through but, in the short-term, external stuff can be distracting.

Case in point? Domino’s Pizza here in Australia, where the share price is up over 60% in a year! I’ve interviewed the CEO, Don Meij, over the last three years and he’s always talked up his company, its overseas expansion, its hi-tech innovations linked to better customer service and the fact that France is the second biggest pizza market in the world! How does that happen?

Need more proof that a company’s reporting story eventually wins through over external events? Well, just remember how the GFC hurt the CBA’s share price, which was under $30 in 2008 and now look at it. We squeal and buy it in the low $80 region, so how good does the one-in -23 offering look at a 13% discount to $71.50 for existing shareholders?

Given the China devaluation story was over-hyped and those poor guys in Beijing are just trying to put more life into an economy we’ve all heavily depended on, especially since the GFC, the CBA story is the big one for the week. Don’t forget that China was the economy that rode to capitalism’s rescue when the GFC showed how dodgy capitalism can be! China spent big time and didn’t complain when the US used quantitative easing so aggressively that our Aussie dollar went as high as $US1.10! Sure, there was a bit of a mining boom in that dollar exchange rate but there was also a lot of weak greenback. The Yanks used a huge devaluation to resuscitate their economy, so we hardly should be chiding China for a bit of currency crushing.

The devaluation was only 3% but the yuan is up 30% in five years in real trade weighted terms and 80% over the past decade. Give ’em a break!

What I liked this week

What I didn’t like

Tip: Let your kid play basketball

This week, Michael Jordan’s battle with a grocery store that used his name without permission in an ad in 2009 has shown us what he has earned being the greatest NBA player of all time.

Nike has paid him $US480 million, Sirius radio $US25 million, Gatorade $US18 million, Upper Deck $US14 million, etc. And CNBC says for a personal appearance the price range is $5,000 to $500,000! He even has a trademark on his famous number 23!

Jordan has to be one of the greatest slam-dunk sports stars of all time, when it comes to leveraging his brand.

Top stocks – how they fared

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The week in review

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What moved the market

The week ahead

Australia

Overseas

Calls of the week

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Food for thought

Failure is success if we learn from it

– Malcolm Forbes, publisher of Forbes magazine.

Last week’s TV roundup

Stocks shorted

ASIC releases data daily on the major short positions in the market. These are the stocks with the highest proportion of their ordinary shares that have been sold short, which could suggest investors are expecting the price to come down. The table also shows how this has changed compared to the week before.

This week the biggest mover was Myer Holdings, with a 1.59 percentage point increase in the proportion of its shares sold short to 20.50%. The next biggest mover was Slater & Gordon, with a 1.13 percentage point increase to 13.31%.

20150814 - Large Short positions [21]

My favourite charts

Yuan a talk about the dollar?

20150814 -yuan [22]

The chart above shows the sharp devaluation of the yuan in comparison to the US dollar during the past week (blue line). The red line shows how the Aussie dollar is faring.

Debt savvy?

20150814 - lending [23]

It appears we’re becoming savvier with our lending commitments, with total new loans (personal, business, housing and lease) rising by just 0.8% in June after easing by 4.3% in May.

Top 5 most clicked on stories

Peter Switzer: 5 experts 5 stocks for 5 months [4]
Charlie Aitken: Bite the bullet and buy in gloom [14]
James Dunn: Earning season darlings –Telstra, Capilano Honey and CSL [6]
Paul Rickard: 3 reasons why you need to buy Asia [5]
Tony Featherstone: 6 travel stocks to buy as tourist numbers soar [9]

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