Dividends and Intel, Tower Semiconductor deal terminated after China fails to give green light

Sometimes companies do everything they can to do a mutually agreed merger and the government says no. One can easily imagine the CEO has identified companies to merger with, lined up the financing, reach out for a friendly merger, and then went to the government agencies for them to sign off. Many times the process works seamlessly and people do not hear about the process.

In an article from the Associated Press, Intel wanted to buy for $5.4 billion an Israeli chip manufacturer called Tower Semiconductor.

The deal required approval from a number of regulators worldwide, including those in China. The Chinese did not want to sign off. There was plenty of lobbying, for example Intel’s CEO Patrick Gelsinger went to China to win over the Chinese. Intel had hoped to use Tower to expand manufacturing capacity and open up opportunities in the US, Israel, Italy and Japan. In China the regulator was China’s antitrust regulator, the State Administration for Market Regulation.

The problem for Intel was China imposed export controls on 2 metals used in computer chips and solar cells. In the US, the government has tightened controls and imposed restrictions aimed at China’s production of advanced computer chips.

Intel has to pay Tower Semiconductor $353 million as a breakup fee, however Tower CEO Russell Ellwanger said we were excited to join Intel and appreciate the efforts of all parties.

Linking to dividend paying stocks, sometimes companies can do all the right things, but government policies get in the way. When policies change, the merger could go through but until then it is a lost opportunity. On a friendly merger, there is always the prospect of a next time when things do not go right.

There are more questions than answers, till the next time – to raising questions.

Dividends and Russia’s central bank hikes key interest rate to 12%

One of the roles of the central bank of any country is to monitor and maintain the value of its currency. The bank has a number of methods to do this but one method to attract savings is increase the interest rate. People and institutions will buy the currency and keep it to earn higher rates of interest guaranteed by the government. If it works, the economy is stablizied and eventually the central bank can lower interest rates.

In an article by Alexander Marrow of Reuters, in mid August the Russia Cental Bank hiked interest rates by 3.5% to 12% as the Russian currency the ruble fell in foreign exchange trading.

The reason being the falling price are high government spending on the military and Western govenment’s continuing sanctions on Russian trade.

Timothy Ash, senior EM sovereign stategist at BlueBay Asset Management said as long as the war continues it just gets worse for Russia, the Russian economy and the ruble. Hiking interest rates may slow the decline, but the core problem of the war is still ongoing.

Russia’s widening budget deficits and stark labor shortages have contributed to rising inflationary pressures. (Russia was considered an oil and gas economy and is selling less oil and gas).

Linking to dividend paying stocks, there are always alternatives to invest. As a dividend investor you need to pay attention to the core reasons why you invest in any stock. When that changes it is time to find alternatives.

There are more questions than answers, till the next time – to raising questions.

Dividends and China’s property sector cash crunch intensifies

If you look at pictures of China of 20 years ago and now you will notice a great deal more high rises both commercial office towers and apartment complexes. As China expanded its infrastructure system and people moved from the country to cities there was great deal for housing and being China, the government encouraged the building of the complexes. However, since COVID when the government shut down the economy for months, China is experiencing a downturn in its economy. For decades the only numbers from the government were about growth, with a downturn comes in companies not paying its debt.

In an article by Clare Jim and Shuyan Wang of Reuters, China’s largest private real estate developer is seeking to delay payment on a private offshore bond for the first time. What will Beijing do?

Adding to worries about contagion risk, a major Chinese trust company that traditionally had a large exposure to real estate, Zhongrong International Trust Co, has missed its repayment obligations on some investment projects.

In China, the trust companies are known as shadow banks and is roughly a $3 trillion industry. JPMorgan in a research paper said the rising trust defaults would drag the economy down by 0.3 to 0.4% points directly. It also expects a vicious cycle of real estate financing challenges.

Chinese President Xi Jinping has signaled he wants a different type of economy – one less dependent on government money propping up real estate values and funding infrastructure development. He wants high quality growth. He would perfer real estate companies fund their developments with up front sales.

China’s problems have been brewing for a number of years with the problems of aging labor force and high government debt, particularly at the local level. For years the country has kept the forces at bay with high government spending that often found its way into the housing market. Beijing has been stating housing is for living in, not speculation.

Country Garden has 3,121 projects outstanding and China Evergrande Group has 800 which translates into over 1 million houses and apartments under construction.

Country Gardens bonds are trading on less than 10 cents on the dollar and Evergrande has declared Chapter 11 bankruptcy.

Linking to dividend paying stocks, property companies use debt to finance construction and as long as they can pay it off, all is good. When property values and markets go into a cycle, there are concerns and for the most part investors are better to find alternatives and watch till the good cyce returns.

There are more questions than answers, till the next time – to raising questions.

Dividends and Goldman CEO struggling to turn the tables

In every industry there is a leader, and it always seems the leader has the breaks or beats expectations regarding its stock price. For the outsider looking in, it seems the company is well managed, profitable and it has the correct people in place no matter what the economic cycle. Then something happens and the stock begins to underperform and the questions about leadership surface. Eventually the person who everyone wanted in the top job, the differences come to light, is this the person to lead us?

In an article by Rob Copeland of New York Times News Service, the CEO of Goldman Sachs is a wonderful illustration of the above. Under previous management, Goldman Sachs was seemingly an advisor to every government in the world, its trading desk both for trading for Goldman and trading for outside clients was making lots of money, the new issue desk had many clients wanting to go public and the company stock was doing very well.

This year Goldman Sachs is not doing as well, the company tried to make money in consumer banking but has lost money. Trading activity is down on Wall Street which means layoffs have happened, the stock price is down and people look towards the CEO.

Every CEO has many positives and a few negative points, but the Board of Directors pick the CEO they believe will lead them well. When things are not going well, people look to the CEO for direction, but according to many, David Solomon does not have the personality which gains the loyalty and respect of his subordinates. If you are looking for a guy to pat you on the back, Mr. Solomon is not that guy, he is direct and focused on results.

Often times people will examine how the CEO spends his time outside of the day job. One of the things Mr. Solomon likes to do is be a DJ. He relaxes at private resorts owned by a company he has personally invested in.

Goldman is not likely to change its CEO for Mr. Solomon has held the job since 2018 and is the 10th CEO in 154 years. The CEO typically lasts for 15 years plus. As well as Goldman’s clients are still trading and working with Goldman.

Linking to dividend paying stocks, it is relatively easy to invest in a company when it seems it is the top company and has been for a number of years. As a top company, people say almost anyone could be the leader and the company would make money. It is never quite true for every profitable company needs to ensure the way it generates its profits continue and are consistent for the future. What services or products are profitable and who pays the bills? Having determined the answer you can determine will the people paying the bills continue? If the answer is a resounding yes, you can do nothing? if you are not positive seek alternatives.

There are more questions than answers, till the next time – to raising questions.

Dividends and Storm damage upending US towns, insurance firms

In the decade there have and will be debates about climate change, from an economic point of view is what does the insurance world think? For an average person, they need to buy insurance if they own a car – can not renew your license; if you have a mortgage or a house – the financial institution requires you have insurance; and for a majority of people living paycheck to paycheck – the biggest part of their estate maybe the life insurance. We all look at insurance in different ways, but insurance is basically having a wide number of people in the pool and hopefully most do not collect early. If people collect too early, rates go up. If people collect too early and too often, insurance companies find different markets or raise rates so fewer people will buy. One of the indicators of climate change is the cost of natural storms – storms that bring rain, wind, hail, thunderstorms, flooding.

In an article by Michelle Chapman of the Associated Press, according to Swiss Re Group, one of the biggest Reinsurance companies in the world, in the first half of 2023, storms caused $34 billion in insured losses.

The storms in the US were so severe there were 10 that resulted in damages of $1 billion or more, almost double the average recorded over the past decade and Texas was the state hit the hardest. A series of thunderstorms was the most expensive single event in the US will the loss at $8.4 billion.

Reinsurers are the insurance industry’s insurers, covering losses that could upend an individual company. The biggest reinsurers are Munich Re and Swiss Re.

One of the lessons of going through a storm is to ensure the annual accounting for the cost of what is inside a building and what it would cost to rebuild or annual audits. In the case of Kerry Symons, of Perryton Texas one building had done its audit and the valuation was easy. Another building had not and months afterwards they are still discussing money.

It is noted State Farm and Allstate has pulled back offering insurance in Florida and California. Travelers lost money and AAA has pulled back in hurricane states. This leads the only insurance as a state insurance which was designed to be a last backstop. The state offers something but not replacement costs.

Linking to dividend paying stocks, when you decided on an action you need to watch the monetary flows. Is money flowing into the company or out, people vote with their feet and their wallets or they may say one thing but do another when it comes time to spend. With dividend stocks, you need to watch the cash flow to profits to paying of dividends.

There are more questions than answers, till the next time – to raising questions.

Dividends and Indiana attempts to make itself into a chips hub

Every government announces big plans for the economy, most of the plans gather dust as the existing companies use their existing facilities to expand or continue with the economic plans. Once in a while, companies have the ability to go anywhere to build or expand, an opportunity has come with the Chips Act. The $52 billion Chips Act is intended for companies making chips for computers to build them in the US rather than Asia. Where will the companies break ground to build?

In an article by Cecilia Kang and Ana Swanson of the New York Times News Service, one state has implemented an action plan to lure the companies which will provide long term jobs, the state is Indiana.

Indiana is not the first choice, because states such as Arizona and Texas have existing chip plants. Indiana has little experience with the complicated manufacturing process, but they wanted to catch up. The push is led by Senator Todd Young, Republican, who was a co-author of the bill.

The federal government was looking for 10 sustainable tech hubs. Indiana does have advantages. The state has ample land and water. Purdue University has an engineering school to turn on the researchers and technicians needed for chip production.

In January 2022, Indiana lost out to Ohio for plans by Intel to build 2 factories valued at $20 billion. Brad Chambers, Indiana’s commerce secretary said they learnt some lessons in terms of an attractive package of land, infrastructure and workforce programs. In 2023, the state landed SkyWater’s $1.8 billion investment for 750 jobs.

The land is 24,000 acres of corn and bean farms, the state has been buying for a tech park called LEAP Innovation District. The installation of water and power lines has begun and talks with companies such as SK Hynix and TSMC have begun. The attractions are relatively cheap rent, tax incentives, access to labs and researchers at Purdue University and training programs at the local community college – Ivy Tech.

In May, the first tenant arrived Eli Lilly, the giant pharmaceutical company.

Linking to dividend paying stocks, to be consistently profitable companies need to work with governments at all levels to ensure they have the ability to use the talent in the communities they are located in. Colleges and University programs are very important for people to move into the industry with the skill sets required, there is a very good reason why companies donate money to colleges and universities. For your investments, why schools are they donating to?

There are more questions than answers, till the next time – to raising questions.

Dividends and Trucking giant Yellow Corp declares bankruptcy

Most of us work in one industry or another and do not really know what is going on in other sectors of the economy. All industries abide by the rule to stay in business need revenues to exceed expenses. It is relatively simple until you add debt into the equation, if debt is too high it is very difficult to get revenues exceeding expenses. If you have gone on a highway drive, among the many trucks on the road were yellow ones which allowed people to see them.

In an article by Wyatte Grantham-Phillips of the Associated Press, in mid August the trucking company Yellow Corp declared bankruptcy or Chapter 11 after years of financial struggles and growing debt. In August the Nashville based company had 30,000 employees across the US as well as debt of over $1.5 billion.

3 years ago, the company received $700 million in pandemic-era loans which means the government is one of the many creditors. The loan was given on the basis of national security.

Bruce Chan, research director at Stifel, said the financial chaos at Yellow is likely 2 decades in the making pointing to poor management and strategic decisions dating back to the early 2000’s.

22,000 of the workers were unionized under Teamsters and general President Sean O’Brien called the news unfortunate but not surprising.

Linking to dividend paying stocks, as an investor you do not want to hear the words it was not surprising negative results happened. If the results are surprisingly good that is different. Part of the reason not to hear not surprising is doing your homework. If you are investing in an industry that you know only know a little about, you need to read reports or watch videos on the industry or talk to people in the industry and find out why it is a good investment. If you are thinking about the long term when making a decision this will allow you use to patience. A good company will still be there in another quarter.

There are more questions than answers, till the next time – to raising questions.

Dividends and 6 Billion shoppers

When you read the heading, you are thinking about the world’s shoppers and potentially that is a large market, but reality is you will not likely sell to most of them. In pitches to potential investors there is generally a wow factor, how the market is x amount and if the product or service captures just 1% or more even a little more, the revenues and profits will just flow in. You do not have to look very hard to find numerous pitches that sound like the above, what you need to hear are about real numbers and why the product or service is going to capture those sales?

In a book called Six Billion Shoppers by Porter Erisman published by St. Martin’s Press, NY, 2017 the issue is how will shoppers be captured by internet shopping. During the pandemic, the number of online shoppers climbed dramatically, and some companies benefited, and some companies were left by the wayside. The book was written before the pandemic but does help explain under what conditions online shopping will tend to grow.

In North America and parts of Europe, the mall and the acceptance of the mall and supermarkets normal retail business. In the book, the author describes different countries and regions and how they shop. For them to become online, how does it happen?

In most countries around the world, the shopping experience is dominated by thousands of small independent stores who over the years have determined how to stay in business. In most countries around the world, the infrastructure – the roads, the highways, the distribution channels, and the phone system are not as good as the US. For that reason, there was limited choice for shoppers. With the invention and continuing lowering of prices of the cellphone, choices open up. Due to the cellphone, millions of people that were unbanked are banked and they have access to a phone. If your choice was to deal with a moneylender and now there is the ability to use the phone to pay bills, what would you choose? That was the choice in many countries and with cellphones monthly rates declining many other services come forth. There is opportunity, but according to the author shopping has to be catered to the fashion which people traditionally shop. In India, it tends to somewhat chaotic, or at least from the outside. When a mall was opened up, it was too quiet and people needed to hear more chaos for the mall to have customers. The owners lost money then realized he needed to hire more workers to make the mall seemingly a little chaotic and achieved success.

In a previous post, there was a post about a book called Bank 4.0.(you should see the You Tube media talks), the change of the bank leads to change in shopping online. If a company is going to sell online, it has to determine how customers will shop and how to ensure the distribution works in the company. In many countries, the infrastructure in the US of the Postal Service, FedEx, UPS and the rest of the suppliers do not exist, but other channels could work.

The author Mr. Erisman provides a wealth of detail of the trends and what can work in different countries and many are different. If you see a company doing a one size fits all, watch it lose money, just try to ensure it is not your money it is wasting.

Linking to dividend paying stocks, you invest in these types of companies because they are successful and can generate profits. It is harder than you think, but fortunately for you the companies report quarterly, and you can measure how they are doing. If you believe they are following the correct strategies, then it helps to be a passive investor. If you are suspect, find alternatives. Reading a book such as 6 Billion Shoppers can help you formulate questions.

There are more questions than answers, till the next time – to raising questions.

Dividends and Butler to the World

In the movie My Fair Lady, a professor bets a friend, he can teach proper English to a flower girl and present her into upper society. In the movie, he does and then there are consequences what happens to the girl? In addition, her father inherits some money, and he sings a song about middle class morality or values. Before inheriting he had less than middle class values or living day to day. Now he has to think about tomorrow. Every society has values for its citizens to live by and they teach the public what is good and not so good. Values can and do change, sometimes it is the economy of the country which influences them.

In a book called Butler to the World by Oliver Bullough published by St. Martin’s Press, NY, 2022 the values of Britian have changed and Mr. Bullough would suggest not for the better. During the Victoria times, Britian or UK or England emerged as the most powerful country in the world backed by the British Navy. At the heart of the success was trade which brought raw materials to the ports to be transformed into goods to be shipped back to over 2/3s of the world’s population. The British institutions became the most important in the world because of the resources to maintain and enhance them. After WWII the empire fell apart and the wealth that flowed to Britian fell. What was the country to do?

The country tried to maintain some semblance of power by seizing control of the Suez Canal which connects the Red and Mediterranean Seas or the short cut between trade from India and Europe. To seize control the British sent in the army to run the government of Egypt. If British could not control India, at least it could control the sea routes. It was the top reason why General Nasser led the revolt to change governments in 1952.

After Britian could not control the seas, what could she control. In Mr. Bullough’s book, the British economy moved slowly at first now it is a given to help the world’s worst people launder money and ensure the global powerhouse of the City remains a powerhouse in financial services. Within the billions of dollars that are traded in the City are what middle-class morality says is dirty money and the institutions of the banks, hedge funds, insurance companies, law firms help to ensure the money is not dirty. Some of the clean money pays for expensive real estate in and around London.

In the old movies, one of the middle class moral sins was gambling. In the online world, one of the most profitable industries is online gambling and some of the biggest firms are formerly based in London. If you are a sports fan, read the sporting advertisements for the names. At the time of the writing, many companies moved their operations from London to Gibraltar whose government welcomed the companies as they built new offices and provided employment to those living in Gilbraltar. The country is one of the tax havens of the world where domiciled companies pay no tax. The other tax countries mentioned in the book are British Virgin Islands and Cayman Islands. If you go to the Cayman Islands, you will see office buildings with many financial firms that are based in and around New York City.

Linking to dividend paying stocks, if you are in the position to enjoy a good income from dividend paying stocks it tends to mean you have accumulated money. At one point you will think can I even pay less tax on my income after going through the income tax. What will your middle-income morals think you should do? Open an account in a tax haven? It is relatively easy to do. If you own a company that has been a leader and has a downturn, at some point in time the old management will want to grasp at something that made them feel as they were the leaders again. Think of the reason why England took control of the Suez Canal and had to send an army to maintain it. It is wise to watch from the sidelines till management has changed, then you can nimble again.

There are more questions than answers, till the next time – to raising questions.