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Tuesday, October 25, 2011

EAX Energy Action


EAX

I noticed that this company we use at work has listed on the stock exchange in the last month. They are an energy auction company, but also offer services to assist companies to reduce their energy efficiency. I had to go back (to here) to remind myself that I have excluded the 'efficiency' sector, but included companies who offer offset services (under the sector CARBON).



Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Carbon Tax and the Clean Energy Index

So, if you're paying attention, you'll know that I haven't yet resolved the Clean Energy Index, but I have created the index based on Capitalisation. I look at it most days, but I'll really just using it as a stand in and to learn about the different companies which make up the mix. Which means I can't really answer that question, however, looking at the cap index, after 9 months of nearly consistent decline, the index bounced up nearly 10% in the last week.

If you look at the image below, you'd probably suggest that the bounce is more related to the confidence that has returned to the share market in the last week or so. I've read that the market has already priced in the effects of the carbon tax, although I am rather skeptical of these kinds of statements, but perhaps stock traders are a lot cleverer than I give them credit for.


Today the 'cap' index moved up by 1.1%. I have no idea if that is a lot or a little for one day, but we'll see how it goes compared to the ASX200 over the next couple of days.




Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme II

Today we got past the first hurdle on the putting in a pollution trading scheme. Here it's called a "Carbon TAX", which is Julia's way of inflicting the most pain on herself via the polls, but I'd rate it over the name Kevin failed to get through. There is a great review of this event over at Annabel Crabb's blog.

I first read about carbon trading around 10 years ago, probably in the book "Natural Capitalism", which you can read free online (Nat. Cap.) and at the time I thought it would never be possible for our society to get to that point. Today we're here, and it feels like no time has passed.

As a tongue in cheek celebration, I went out and bought cakes for the staff in the office. I don't think there was one other person in the office who thought it was even remotely sensible for us to bring in carbon trading, with at least one person boycotting the morning tea offer. At the end of 15mins of heated discussion, explaining to me why it was a bad idea, I only got back to my desk by 'agreeing to disagree'.

My point in relating this anecdote is to say that I think the carbon tax has a very small chance of survival, I hope that the Australian Labor party can sharpen up its ability to communicate, or that Malcolm Turnbull will replace the monkey who's leading the Liberals before the next election, but after 11 years of John Howard as PM, nothing would surprise me in Australian Politics.

Thanks Julia - you did a good thing.

 You can see what the Guardian thought here (the source of the image)


Monday, October 10, 2011

Splitting up the market

OK, so the last post bar one focused on how I could modify the split of the index to better represent the quality stocks - the different between a capitalisation approach and a fundamental approach. Remembering that I'm trying to create an index, which should be impartial to my feelings or intuition and rely only on data. So far, I'm still unresolved - as I look at the data right now, I have to make an algorithm which compares the losses of 30 companies against the profits of just 3.

At the same time, one of the biggest issues I see is that one of the best looking companies for selling and manufacturing of solar power (Silex or SLX) is also supplier of nuclear fuel processing technology. They are also the single biggest company in the index as it stands today - at around 28% of the index.

So the question I am pondering on this is - do you buy the for the upside or ignore them for the downside?

Or can I add something else into the equation? Sure, if we buy shares in SLX, the investment is in all the business units, but perhaps reviewing the fundamentals might adjust for their relative engagement in nuclear vs. solar - at least scale the 28% down by whatever the breakup of the business was.

I've spend a bit of time trying to understand the company and see where the money comes from or goes to, but it comes back to the same question: which fundamentals do you use to divide things up? Here, we have hardly any choice - the information in the annual report is:

SECTOR :          SILEX   SSOLAR   SOLARS  TRANS CHRONO
REVENUE         33%      66%           1%            0%         0%
BOOK               72%      11%           16%          1%         0%
PROFIT              $1M     -$18M       -$6M         -$4M     -$1.7M

By revenue, SILEX SOLAR and SOLAR SYSTEMS make up the larger share of the company - at 67%, but by book value (assets less liabilities) the make up a small fraction of it (27%). By profit however, is another story altogether - if fact, I can't do a percentage, since they give losses, while Silex systems uranium enrichment technology is providing positive results.

I have to get my head around comparing a profit to a loss as a percentage....

If you support Nuclear energy, check these guys out - it's brilliant that they've maintained the two solar manufacturing businesses that we have here in Australia and it would be great if you could go out and buy some solar panels made in Sydney!!

http://www.silex.com.au/







Saturday, October 8, 2011

Serendipitious Support

I went to the library today,  looking for books on indexes, but while I was there I found this book:

http://au.wiley.com/WileyCDA/WileyTitle/productCd-0470283564.html

It starts:
"
Welcome to the next great bull market. ... Bigger and longer lived than the tech-stock and housing booms combined. I'm referring, of course, to clean tech.<br>
"
Within a few pages, he's excluding nuclear, clean coal and traditional hydro - which is also my point of view, but exactly how to enact that I have figured with the merging of solar and nuclear clean (see Silex SLX).

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Drowning in a sea of data

Whilst I drown in a sea of data, or lack of data, the share market is continuing its downward spiral, each day making the proposition to buy more and more attractive.

But which stocks to buy and in which volume?

Here's a snapshot of the data I've been looking at and some notes on the quality*:

Price/Book - a:33/33, b 29/33
of which 7 companies are listed with different numbers
4 are negative numbers??

EPS - a33/33, b 31/33
of which 8 are different
only 4 of the 33 are positive numbers....

P/E - 4/33 for both, however
these are not the same companes and
the 2 that do overlap are different.
They are all positive, which probably means that all the rest would be negative, hence not reported.

As a quick thought, some mix between P/B and EPS would make some sense - that would include the Price, the profit and the book value should the operations cease to exist.

My thought is to take Market Capitalisation as step one, and they create a simple formula to weigh in the factors above.

Manana.


* a- is from Morningstar Australia, b is from Google Finance.