A beginners guide to Bitcoin investing.

Initial Comments:

So I have decided to post this article as a Weekend Special Edition. Bitcoin is a topic that I have invested a lot of time in myself. This article is a long read for people who really want to try and understand the Bitcoin technology.

As there is no uniform terminology we will refer in this article to Bitcoin as the technology and to bitcoin as the underlying currency itself.

This article will be solely focused on Bitcoin and the underlying Blockchain and is divided in 5 sections:

  1. Introduction
  2. What is Bitcoin? How does the Blockchain work?
  3. Is the Bitcoin setup impenetrable?
  4. An empirical analysis on the usage of bitcoins.
  5. Valuation of bitcoins
  1. Introduction

Bitcoin is a digital currency that creates unique, non-duplicable electronic tokens using software (dubbed mining) with an asymptotic limit of creation of 21 million tokens. Every four years the number of bitcoins created is scheduled to be cut in half until 2040 when creation is supposed to go to zero. The system operates by clearing transactions in a peer-to-peer decentralized system. If you don’t understand the previous sentences, it’a fine as we will come to the core of Bitcoin and the workings of the underlying technology. Since Bitcoin first started trading (on stock exchanges) the 16th of July 2011 the price has increased by baffling 5’209’254% (as of 29.06.2017). Officially Bitcoin was introduced to public in 2009, when Satoshi Nakamoto (allegedly a pseudonym) introduced his whitepaper entitled :”Bitcoin: A Peer-to-Peer Electronic Cash System”.

BitcoinChart.png

The bitcoin has enjoyed an enormous increase in valuation, reaching a total market capitalization of 40 billion USD. As shown in the graph above Bitcoin surged for the first time in November of 2013 reaching an all time-high, at a market cap of 13,9 billion USD. Bitcoins plummeted afterwards and hit the floor on a market cap of 2,4 billion USD. On the 11th of June 2017 bitcoins rallied up to a record-breaking 2895,44 USD. Given this recent , nearly unseen rise, it’s astonishing that many people don’t understand what Bitcoins are and how they work. In this article we will try to get to the core of Bitcoin and the underlying blockchain, we will support our assumptions with empirical analysis. One resource will be the whitepaper released by Satoshi Nakamoto. As the concept of Bitcoin is technically complex we will be quoting the most relevant extracts, try to paraphrase them and supplement them with practical examples. If you are a curious and tenacious mind I suggest you read Nakamotos paper yourself.

2. What is Bitcoin? How does the Blockchain work?

“A purely peer-to-peer version of electronic cash would allow online

payments to be sent directly from one party to another without going through a

financial institution.”

This first quote is taken from the abstract and elaborates on the Bitcoins doctrine, a decentralization of cash-flow. Our current methods of making transactions require our money to go through Financial Institutions such as Banks, the FED or any other governmental institution. For years we have trusted financial institutions as middlemen for all of our transactions, the repercussions can be enormous as history has proven. In 2015 Greece was facing a sovereign default, with the Banks having no liquidity and with no re-financing possibilities at first. People were standing on the streets, raiding every ATM they could find in the hopes of saving what was left on their bank deposits. The Greek Government debt crisis has various catalysts, among them a corrupt government and rigged banks. Private Greek banks started according dubious loans and creating a credit bubble that burst in 2010. Two years beforehand Lehman Brothers, a real estate hedge fund disguised as an investment bank, was the originator of the subprime-mortgage financial crisis when it filed for bankruptcy on the 15th of September 2008. By that time, Lehman had assets of $680 billion supported by only $22.5 billion of firm capital. From an equity position, its high risk commercial real estate holdings were three times greater than capital. In such a highly leveraged structure, a three- to five-percent decline in real estate values would wipe out all capital, which finally ended up by happening and causing a financial mayhem . So this really begs the questions: “Why do we entrust banks with our money?”. Because we plain and simply lack alternatives to them. Clearly having all our financial transactions , like loans, credit transactions and savings-account, handled by banks bears a concentration risk. Projects like Kickstarter have been a real alternative to banks, crowdfunding projects thus replacing the process of inquiring for loans at banks. What Nakamoto proposes is that there is a possibility to replace banks as middlemen for online transactions. If we think about electronic money transfer, we have to think this process is just an entry in a register, as no physical cash gets exchanged. If we are able to set-up a public and anonymous register, are we then able to construct an online transaction network without middlemen?

“Commerce on the Internet has come to rely almost exclusively on financial institutions serving as trusted third parties to process electronic payments. While the system works well enough for most transactions, it still suffers from the inherent weaknesses of the trust based model.”

This paragraph extracted from the Introduction accurately pinpoints which problems need to be faced to institute a decentralized network. Nakamoto proposes that the “inherent weaknesses of the trust based model” is a hurdle to online transactions. Completely non-reversible transactions are not possible, since financial institutions cannot avoid mediating disputes. The cost of mediation increases transaction costs, limiting the minimum practical transaction size and cutting off the possibility for small casual transactions. With the possibility of reversal, the need for trust spreads. Merchants must be wary of their customers, hassling them for more information than they would otherwise need. A certain percentage of fraud is accepted as unavoidable. Nakamoto suggests that the trust-model should be replaced by a mathematical model. We will now slowly start to dig into how the blockchain works.

Imagine you are a group of 5 friends sitting in a circle. Everyone in the circle has a sheet of paper and a pen. Friend A wishes to make a 10 euro transaction to friend B. He will now say it out loud and notify the whole group. Everyone in the group verifies if friend A has enough balance to pay friend B and then takes note of the transaction. Whenever enough transactions have been made and documented, all friends put their respective page away in their own folders and start a new one. As you might be able to tell everyone will store away the same amount of information. But before putting away the page, the group of friends needs to make sure that no one can alter the content of what has been documented. The pages need to be sealed with a code that everyone in the group agrees to. In the Bitcoin jargon the process of sealing is defined as mining.

“We define an electronic coin as a chain of digital signatures.”

This is where it starts getting technical. Firstly we will have a closer look at hash functions, as they are the main component of the mining process. A hash function is any function that can be used to map data of arbitrary size to data of fixed size. Suppose you have the number 100 as an argument and run your hash function on it. The output will be “ghakjdhg”. Given our argument that we have now defined as 100. the output will always be the same, in this case “ghakjdhg”. No one will know how your argument got converted into “ghakjdhg” and moreover the process is irreversible, eliminating any possibility of backtracking the functions logic. This means that given the word “ghakjdhg”, it is impossible to tell what our input was, hence why hash functions are very helpful in cryptography. As you might have figured out, hash functions play a role when it comes to Bitcoin mining. To illustrate the usefulness of hash functions in the mining process we will come back to our example with the group of friends. Let’s assume that the total sum of all transactions on one page is equal to 275 Euro, so we label this page with the number 275. Then we will try to find a second number that when added to our number gives us an output of that starts with 4 a`s. After some calculation we may find that this number is 45678. In such a case, 45678 will become the seal for the number 275. To seal the page that bears the sum of 275 euros we will put a badge labeled 45678 on it. An altering of the transaction sum, to lets say 300, would change the output of the hash function. The sealing of numbers is called proof-of-work, as defined in chapter 4 of Nakamotos paper .

“To implement a distributed timestamp server on a peer-to-peer basis, we will need to use a proof-of-work system similar to Adam Back’s Hashcash, rather than newspaper or Usenet posts.The proof-of-work involves scanning for a value that when hashed, […] , the hash begins with a number of zero bits.”

So we have come to the conclusion that the combination of the sealing number and the total sum of transaction gives us a unique output. But who calculates the sealing number? Let’s go back to our group of friends, who has just finished another page of transactions. Everyone in the group engages in the process of calculating a matching sealing number. The first to figure it out will then announce it to the rest of the group. As soon as the sealing number gets announced everyone double-checks if it yields the required output or not.

Some readers now might be asking themselves: “Why should I waste time and energy figuring out a sealing number if eventually someone else might do it?”. This problem gets addressed in Chapter 6, named “Incentive”. Obviously in the real world the process of finding the adequate sealing number, takes up electricity and deteriorates your GPU and/or CPU. The twist is that the first one to calculate the sealing number gets compensated for his success. So imagine we get back to our circle of 5 friends and friend C is able to calculate the sealing number. Friend number C will be rewarded with a freshly printed 1 Euro piece for his efforts, effectively not decreasing anyone’s balance (disregarding any inflationary effects).

We will now advance to digital signatures and how they are embedded in the Bitcoin network. Digital Signatures play a critical role when sending and receiving bitcoins. Digital signatures are the public-key primitives of message authentication. In the physical world handwritten signatures are used to make contracts or documents binding. Similarly, a digital signature is a technique that binds a person or an entity to some sort of digital data and is much less susceptible to fraud.This binding can be independently verified by the receiver as well as any third party. A digital signature is a cryptographic value that is calculated from a secret key, belonging to the signer.

Depicted above we are able to see the flow of a standard normal digital signature process.

Each person involved in the signature flow will have a public and a private key pair. Generally the key pairs used for encryption/decryption and signing/verifying are different. The private key used for signing is referred to as the signature key and the public key as the verification key. The signer feeds some data to a hash function and generates a hash of that data. After obtaining a hash value, its is packed together with the signature key and the package is then fed to the signature algorithm. The algorithm will then proceed to create the digital signature. The signature is appended to the data and both are then sent to the verifier. The verifier then feeds the digital signature and the verification key into the verification algorithm. The verification algorithm gives some values as output, meanwhile the verifier also runs the same hash function on the received data to generate a hash value. This hash value and the output of the verification algorithm are compared. Based on the comparison result, the verifier decides whether the digital signature is valid. The digital signature will be unique, as it is created by the verifier’s private key.

“Each owner transfers the coin to the next by digitally signing a hash of the previous transaction and the public key of the next owner and adding these to the end of the coin. A payee can verify the signatures to verify the chain of ownership.”

To illustrate the Bitcoin transaction procedure we will annex the process flow chart from Nakamotos paper.

For person 1 to transfer a coin to person 2, person 1 signs the hash of the last Bitcoin transaction to occur and the public key of Person 2. Because the network is high-velocity, most of the major parts in the Bitcoin network are high performance supercomputers and dedicated servers that have enough processing power to manage all of the transactions across the continents.

It stands out that bitcoin transactions are very unique in the sense that transactions can be made between parties on opposite sides of the globe via the Internet. Due to the underlying mathematical models no middlemen, such as banks, are needed anymore.

3. Is the Bitcoin setup impenetrable?

While bank robberies and money counterfeiting are of course no problem for an electronic currency, Bitcoin online platforms face severe hacker attacks. Furthermore, due to the lack of regulation the Bitcoin ecosystem remains a “Wild West”. Because Bitcoin transactions are non-revocable, hackers have frequently stolen bitcoins of individuals leaving the victims without recourse. The most common source of scourge to afflict Bitcoin participants has been the denial-of-service attacks (DDoS). These are inexpensive to carry out and quite disruptive. Records show that competing services carry them out in order to improve their market share. A massive DDoS attack hit OKCoin, a China-based Bitcoin exchange, the 10th of July 2015. The platform saw a massive distributed denial of service attack on the which resulted in the international site being shut down for a week. Furthermore the platform compensated traders for losses incurred due to the DDoS. Other times exchanges similar to OKCoin have just shut down without explanation, often with customers losing their deposits. Empirical papers like Vasek et al (2014) show, the number of attacks has increased over time. Böhme et al. (2015) argue that DDoS attacks are especially attractive as stolen Bitcoins can easily be converted into money. We will not dwell into the depths of how such attacks occur but have a look at their frequencies and repercussions. Despite their apparent frequency, very little is known about the true prevalence of DDoS attacks.

From May 2011 to October 2013 142 DDOS attacks on 40 Bitcoin services were documented. Most currency exchanges and mining pools are much more likely to have a DDoS protection such as CloudFlare, Incapsula or Amazon Cloud. Vasek et al (2014) found that 7% of all known operators have been attacked, but that currency exchanges, mining pools, gambling operators, eWallets and financial services are much more likely to be attacked than other services. The study found that big mining pools (those with historical hashrate shares of at least 5%) are much more likely to be DDoSed than small pools.

This Graph issued by Vasek et al. (2014) plots the shift in the DDoS attack targets. We can see that the number and target of reported attacks varies greatly over time. Initially, in the second half of 2011, most DDoS reports concerned mining pools. Then there were very few reported attacks of any kind during the first half of 2012. During the second half of 2012, DDoS attacks picked up again, initially targeting pools, but more frequently targeting currency exchanges and other websites. During 2013, attacks on pools continued, but they were joined by DDoS on gambling websites, eWallets, and currency exchanges. Attacks on currency exchanges dominated the totals from March–June 2013, coinciding with rising exchange rates and unprecedented interest in Bitcoin.

This second table, also published by Vasek et al. (2014), allows a categorisation of DDoS events. Currency exchanges and mining pools make up for nearly 80% of the DDoS attack targets, whereas gambling sites make up for 9%. The figure on the left depicts a cumulative distribution function off how recurrent DDoS attacks are on certain entities. It can be observed that 44% are only attacked once while 15% are attacked on at least on five different occasions. The leader in suffered DDoS attacks was Mt. Gox, with 29 suffered attacks. Mt. Gox was responsible for almost 90% of all the exchange operations in the network before filing for bankruptcy. Mt. Gox has filed for bankruptcy protection from creditors in February of 2014. In April 2014, the company began liquidation proceedings. Out of the 1236 Bitcoin related services only a mere 203 services (16%) have adopted an Anti-DDoS application. The adoption rate among services who have been hit by DDoS attacks is with 54% comparably higher, nonetheless still considerably low.

The Bitcoin’s Proof of work system has been developed to prevent double spending schemes. A double spend attack, is a scheme which enable a certain set of bitcoins to be spent in more than one transaction. Karame et al. (2012) have been able to show that it is possible to bypass the proof of work. While the Bitcoin payment verification process is designed to prevent double spending, Karame et al. show that the system requires tens of minutes to verify a transaction and is therefore inappropriate for fast payments. The security of using Bitcoin for fast payments was analyzed. The paper shows that unless appropriate detection techniques are integrated in the current Bitcoin implementation, doubles spending attacks on fast payments succeed with overwhelming probability and can be mounted at low cost.

4. An empirical analysis on the usage of BTC’s.

We will now take a closer look at what bitcoins are used for and by whom. There are many types of statistics and graphs about the Bitcoin network which can be readily downloaded from the Internet (https://blockchain.info/charts). However these types of statistics tend to describe some global property of the network over time such as the number of daily transactions, their total volume, the number of bitcoins mined so far and the BTCUSD exchange rate. It is very difficult to get accurate information about how bitcoins are used in practice. A paper released in 2013 by Dori Ron and Adi Shamir entitled “Quantitative Analysis of the Full Bitcoin Transaction Graph” provides a detailed understanding off the Bitcoin network . This paper gives a great insight off all transactions from the first time Bitcoins became fully operational up to the 13th of May 2012.The data was gathered from the Bitcoin wallet, which tracks all transactions anonymously Even though the landscape, as of 2012, might have changed this paper provides a great insight towards the typical behaviour of users.

At the time there were 3’730’218 different public keys. 3’120’948 of them were involved as senders in at least one transaction, while the rest of 609’720 appeared to form a network of receivers. One entity (person or company) can have multiple Bitcoin addresses. The paper determined that the total of 3’120’948 addresses can be attributed to 1’851’544 entities. Adding the 1’851’544 entities to the network of receivers only we get a total of 2’460’814 entities involved in the Bitcoins transactions. This implies that on average every entity has 1,5 addresses. However there is a huge statistical variance in the number of addresses an entity manages and in fact one entity is associated with 156’722 different addresses. The paper was able to determine the entity behind all these addresses as being Mt. Gox. The paper made one very interesting finding regarding the distribution of Bitcoins. Of the 9’000’050 bitcoins that were in circulation 7’019’000 bitcoins could be attributed to the 609’720 addresses which only receive and don’t send any bitcoins which were almost 78% of all existing bitcoins. 76.5% of these 78% (or 5’369’535 bitcoins) are what is defined in the paper as “old coins”, this meaning that these coins have not been moved over a time-period of 3 months. The analysis of the total volume of transactions resulted that 40% of all addresses had received fewer than one bitcoin and 59% of the addresses had received fewer than 10 bitcoins over their lifetime. Bitcoin allows for micro transactions, which are called satoshi and are of the order of 10^(-8), this is the smallest fraction into which a bitcoins can be broken up. The paper also goes to show that on the other end of the distribution there was only one address which received over 800’000 bitcoins. The current balance of almost all 98% of all entities was less than 10 bitcoins. 93% percent of all addresses had fewer than 10 transactions each, while 80 addresses used the network for more than 5000 transactions. The paper also goes ahead and dissected the nominal of each transactions. 84% of all the transactions involved fewer than 10 bitcoins. On the other hand large transactions are rare with only 340 transactions larger than 50’000 BTC’s. The paper also went ahead and filtered out 19 of the most active entities. I attached the Table below.

Source

The table shows that Mt. Gox had the most addresses but not the largest accumulated incoming bitcoins nor the largest number of transactions. Six out of the 19 entities have each made fewer than 30 transactions with a total volume of more than 400’000 bitcoins each. A fair conclusion that we can draw from this paper is that most of the mined BTC’s remain dormant in addresses which had never participated in any outgoing transaction. We can also concluded that there is a huge number of tiny transactions which move only a small fraction of a single bitcoin, but there were also hundreds of transactions which moved more than 50’000 bitcoins.

Bitcoin has also been massively linked to the Silk Road in the past, an anonymous, international online marketplace that operates as a Tor hidden service in the past. “More brazen than anything else by light-years” is how U.S. Senator Charles Schumer characterized Silk Road which was shut down March 2015. The Silk road had reportedly between 30’000 and 150’000 active users. The Silk Road was an online “black market” which offered a variety of goods but had a clear focus on drugs. The users were able to stay anonymous, bitcoins granting anonymity even trough the payment process.

5. Valuation of bitcoins

As of now we have only been assessing the design and the technology underlying the decentralized infrastructure of Bitcoin. As this is a financial-centered blog we will try do identify if there are any valuation models for bitcoins. To be able to assess if we can erode a bitcoins value we elaborate whether Bitcoin is primarily an alternative currency or just a speculative asset. According to Kaplanov a currency can be used as a mean of trade, a vehicle to store value, or a unit of account in order to compare the value of different goods or services. Dirk B. et al state that:

“Bitcoin cannot be considered a currency. Its high level of volatility makes a reliable exchange impossible and adversely affects the store of value and unit of account properties. In addition, the fact that it is not an official currency in any country and not backed by any government implies that the high level of volatility affects every Bitcoin transaction, within-country and cross-country transactions. […] Hence, Bitcoin might better be classified as an investment. Its appeal lies in the large historical price movements and expected future returns. Whilst most assets exhibit at least some fluctuations of its price and can thus be labeled risky, Bitcoin appears to be particularly risky and clearly belongs to a high-risk (speculative) asset class.

Speaking in terms of exchange rates an empirical analysis on volatility shows that minima and maxima observed average daily return for Bitcoin are about 10 times higher than for the Euro or Yen.The standard deviation of realized volatility for the Bitcoin markets varies between 229 and 558 basis points per day, which is 100 times higher than in the FX markets. The Euro FX market exhibits an average of volatility of 50 basis points per day. The figure, published by Dirk B. et al shows that all markets but BTC and Zaydo, from the chosen sample these had the lowest market shares, exhibit moderate statistical skewness. For those two markets the chosen samples show a leptokurtic distribution.

As bitcoins do not provide the feature of an interest rate in contrast to traditional currencies, where interest rates are provided by central banks, valuation models relying on given interest rates are rendered meaningless. Users are left to determine the value of bitcoins themselves by gathering and evaluating information in news and web resources. The price is therefore determined on exchanges by demand and supply. Considering that there is a cap at 21 million bitcoins, as of 8 February 2017 there were 16’152’087,5 bitcoins in circulation, off which many may be lost or not in circulation, it follows that an increasing growth of the demand side is leading to increasing prices. An example how prices can be driven up by an increasing demand can be exemplified with Baidu. On October 14, 2013, Baidu, a web services company that runs the largest search engine in China, began accepting bitcoin. This single action opened the bitcoin network to roughly 570 million internet users in China and prompted other internet companies to consider the cryptocurrency more seriously. The closing price of bitcoin, which averaged just $124 over the 2-week period prior to the announcement, increased to $170 over the 2-week period following the announcement. As we have seen recently the mixture of media attention, the novelty of both the design and the features of a cryptocurrency, combined with its global availability over the internet , have lead to an exponential growth of demand. It seems to be a fair assumption to say that an increase in the number of Bitcoin participants is associated with an increase in the Bitcoin network volume, leading to an increase in the Bitcoin price. It follows that if Bitcoin participants seek to use Bitcoin primarily as an asset, they will not leave a footprint within the Blockchain. This is supported by the common practice of exchanges to keep internal accounts on behalf of their customers. That is, the exchanges are handling accounts of their customers in an internal accounting system, guaranteeing for keeping record of the on-exchange purchased and sold Bitcoins without actually transferring these Bitcoin through the Blockchain. We would expect that those users’ Bitcoins primarily remain within the exchange internal systems.

Users pursuing Bitcoin for its purpose as an alternative asset also lack a valid valuation method. Given that there is no fundamental pricing methodology available, sources of information, like the media, are likely to have a higher influence on prices. Negative news like the announcement of security issues revealed in the underlying protocol should concern users who are using Bitcoin for operational transactions and push some users to re-evaluate the utility and usability and eventually sell their Bitcoin, hence lowering prices on exchanges. Due to the volatile character and the volatile historical prices of the underlying an investor may be aware that they invest in an instrument with a high price uncertainty. Hence, it is a valid assumption that these users only invest a small amount of their total portfolio. They buy Bitcoin at an exchange and store it, waiting for prices to rise. An investor might also keep in mind that if Bitcoin is rendered illegal by change of law, the Bitcoin immediately lose their value. What seems to be noteable is the correlation between the price of Bitcoin and the daily English Bitcoin Wikipedia views, which has been pointed out by Florian Glaser et al. in 2014. This graph helps to identify the mass of particularly uninformed users who have only limited knowledge about Bitcoin and therefore acquire initial information from an initial source of information like Wikipedia.

 

View at Medium.com

BlackRock earnings: EPS up 10%

After a good start to the week, the German Index had to incur some losses in the afternoon and is now steadily tumbling around the 12580 mark and the market seems to have given up on the 12600 mark for the day. The up and coming ECB conference scheduled for Thursday is leaving Investors worried. After some ECB members had announced an easing of the imposed monetary policy, the actual inflation rates don’t support this possibility, making an easing unlikely. The Euro zone headline inflation slowed in June but the core figure excluding volatile unprocessed food and energy rose, the European Union’s statistics office said on Monday, confirming its earlier flash estimates. Eurostat said consumer prices in the 19 countries sharing the euro rose 1.3 percent year-on-year in June, in line with market expectations, decelerating form 1.4 percent in May and 1.9 percent in April. But its core measure of price growth, which excludes unprocessed food and energy and is closely watched by the European Central Bank, rose to 1.2 percent on the year from 1.0 percent in May.  The figure was above market expectations of a 1.1 percent rise, but matched Eurostat’s earlier flash estimate released at the end of June.

The major U.S. equity indexes ended a strong week for those long equities on a very upbeat note on Friday. On Friday, U.S. stocks began the day on a positive, albeit uneven note. Each of the major indexes spent most of the opening hours above their respective breakeven line, save for the Dow’s momentary, finance-related dip shortly after the opening bell. But after traders digested some mixed information from Corporate America and the business beat, most equities extended their morning gains well into the afternoon. The Dow and S&P 500 each set all-time intraday trading highs in the final hour, while the tech-laden NASDAQ, Friday’s strongest performing index, rose to within striking distance of its own high mark, as well. Despite the broad-based gains in nearly every pocket of the exchange, there was some selling pressure stemming from the earnings front early on. Disappointing updates from a trio of banking giants contributed to the financial sector’s morning struggles. That is, while JPMorgan Chase and Citigroup each beat consensus earnings estimates for the June interim, lackluster investment income figures and less-than-encouraging outlooks weighed on investor confidence. Speaking of earnings, the second-quarter reporting season kicks into high gear this week, highlighted by reports from nine Dow-30 companies. This week will provide many clues as to how the second-quarter earnings season will likely play out. Over the next several weeks, analysts expect to see updated corporate earnings data play an outsized role in determining how the market moves. Sure, investors also will be keeping a close eye on the Capitol, particularly as it relates to the healthcare developments, but the performance of Corporate America will be the headlining force in trading through early August.

Today BlackRock posted second-quarter earnings and revenues that missed expectations. The world’s largest asset manager reported second-quarter adjusted earnings per share of $5.24 on revenue of $2.965 billion. In the year-earlier period, the company had posted adjusted earnings of $4.78 per share on sales of $2.804 billion, documenting a Quarter on Quarter increase of 9,62%. BlackRock shares fell 2.8 percent in the premarket following the report’s release. The firm’s second-quarter assets under management rose 16 percent year over year to $5.689 trillion, topping analyst expectations. The company, which now oversees $5.7 trillion in assets, received $94 billion in net investor money during the quarter, with $74 billion of that amount flowing into the company’s iShares-branded exchange traded funds. BlackRock now manages $1.5 trillion in exchange traded funds, passive investment vehicles that track a wide variety of indexes and investment strategies.

Valeant Pharmaceuticals International Inc. has agreed to sell its skincare business, Obagi Medical Products, to a Hong Kong-based firm for US$190mln in cash. Obagi, a drug company that specialises in products for skin aging, skin damage and other skin probems, will be sold to Zhonghua Finance Acquisition Fund I LP. Proceeds from the sale will be used to cut Valeant’s debt as the company works to turn around the business following a troubled year. The deal is expected to be completed in the second half. Valeant sees Obagi generating a net profit of US$85mln and adjusted underlying earnings (EBITDA) of US$30mln.

Bitcoin briefly fell below $2,000 for the first time in two months amid anxiety its dominant status is under threat. As enthusiasts consider adopting two competing software updates, raising the possibility that bitcoin will split, it’s lost about a third of its value since attaining a peak of just below $3,000 on June 12. Calls for a revamp of the cryptocurrency come as exchanges have struggled to keep up with rising volumes.

A reading of New York-area manufacturing cooled in July from a two-year high, according to data released Monday. The New York Fed’s Empire State manufacturing index fell to a seasonally adjusted reading of 9.8 from 19.8 in June. Economists polled by Econoday expected a reading of 15, on a scale where any figure above zero indicates improving conditions. Readings in July for new orders, shipments, inventories, delivery times and number of employees all decelerated. That said, the Empire State index has been positive for six out of seven months in 2017.

 

JPMorgan Chase and Citigroup beat Wall Street estimates.

The German indices seem to be with nailed down and are not able to profit on the front-running in the U.S. The DAX is stuck at the moving average of 12’640 points and the MDAX is floating around the 25’124 point mark. The main catalyst for the cooling down on the European markets (CAC 40 +0,01%) is the strong rise of the European currency.

In the U.S. equities put in a choppy session yesterday, but ultimately made some progress. At the close of trading, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was ahead 21 points; the S&P 500 Index was up five points; and the technology-heavy NASDAQ was higher by 13 points. Market breadth was supportive, as advancers outpaced decliners by a modest margin on the NYSE. Most of the major equity groups pressed ahead, with respectable gains in the financial and energy names. In contrast, the utility and industrial issues were areas of weakness. Meanwhile, traders received a few economic reports. Specifically, the Producer Price Index (PPI) rose 0.1% in the month of June. Analysts had been looking for a somewhat tamer reading, but inflationary pressures still are not likely a concern. Elsewhere, initial jobless claims came in at 247,000 for the week of July 8th, which was in line with expectations. Tomorrow we will get look at the Consumer Price index (CPI) for the month of June. Retail sales and the latest monthly industrial production figures also will be released. Today we will hear from quite a few big banks, including JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo and Citigroup. JP Morgan Chase crashed Wall Street estimates with adjusted earnings per share of $1.71 versus $1.58 estimated by Thomson Reuters analysts’ consensus. JP revenues was 26.41 billion USD versus a 24.96 billion USD estimate. The bank lowered its net interest income forecast for the year by about half a billion dollars to a $4 billion increase from the prior year. JPMorgan’s Chief Financial Officer Marianne Lake said on the firm’s conference call that the majority of that reduction came from lower-than-expected net interest income in the second quarter. Citigroup reported a 1,28 USD EPS and Revenue of 17,9 billion USD. Citigroup also stated that its fixed income markets revenue totaled $3.215 billion, down from $3.432 billion in the prior-year period and down from $3.622 billion in the first quarter of this year. These reports signal that the second-quarter earnings season is underway. Traders will, no doubt, be looking carefully at the numerous reports being released over the coming weeks. Of ultimate importance will be the guidance that companies offer for the remainder of the year.

Fiat Chrysler Automobiles said today it is recalling 1.33 million vehicles worldwide in two separate campaigns for potential fire risks and inadvertent airbag deployments.  The Italian-American automaker said it is recalling about 770,000 sport utility vehicles because of a wiring issue that may lead to inadvertent deployment of the driver-side air bag and is linked to reports of five related minor injuries, but no crashes.The recall covers 538,000 2011-2015 Dodge Journey vehicles in North America and 233,000 2011-2015 Fiat Freemont crossovers sold elsewhere. The automaker is also recalling 565,000 vehicles to replace their alternators because of fire risks. The company said hot ambient temperatures could lead to premature diode wear, may result in a burning odor or smoke, could impact the anti-lock braking system or lead to engine stalls.

Today’s economic calendar:

  1. CPI
  2. Retail Sales
  3. Industrial Production
  4. Consumer Sentiment

 

EU to end disciplinary measures against Greece?

Today the DAX was able to break the daily high set yesterday and is up to the 12’630 mark. Considering the rise in the EURO, which has reached the 1,145 EURUSD mark, the growth in the German Index is remarkable.

Yesterday was expected to be a quite mid-summer session on Wall Street. After all, there were few news items of note on the business calendar. Yesterday’s trading began in uneventful and rather flattish fashion, with the averages moving back and forth and achieving little. The calm was then broken down with the Dow Jones Industrial Average tumbling to a session-worst decline of about 130 points or 1% in a range of 30 mins. The reason for that sudden reversal were the e-mails released by Donald Trump Jr. The Dow’s plunge reflected renewed concerns about the Russia controversies that have plagued Mr. Trump’s Presidency from the outset. Traders lamented that each time there is a flare-up of this sort, the potential for policy reform–the main cog in the stock market’s steep climb since last November–lessens somewhat. And with health care reform hanging in the balance, this was the last thing the market needed. By mid-afternoon, the Dow was back on the plus side of the ledger, as was the NASDAQ, the Russell 2000, and the S&P Mid-Cap 400. The large-cap S&P 500 Index, though, retained a small loss on the political concerns. The likely reason for the later comeback was the announcement by Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell that the Senate’s planned August recess would be delayed.

United Continental, an airline holding company headquartered in the Willis Tower in Chicago, sees Q2 unit revenue up 2% and capacity up 5.0% to 23.644B available seat miles. The June load factor went up 1,4% to 85.7%. YTD load factor -10 bps to 81.7%. UAL is up1,12% premarket to 77.78USD.

Naga’s winning streak shows no signs of letting up, with the Hong Kong-listed casino operator posting another impressive half-year result, reporting profits up more than 20 percent year-on-year during the first six months of 2017 on a surge in VIP rollings and visits to its main gaming floor. Gross gaming revenue soared nearly 40 percent year-on-year to $386.8 million at its NagaWorld hotel and casino in Phnom Penh, while net profit increased 20.3 percent to $150.6 million, the company said in a filing late Monday of unaudited results for the first six months of 2017. Naga also linked the performance to a strengthened balance sheet and rising international status. The company’s assets were valued at $5.4 billion in March 2017 by Colliers International, while it remains debt-free.

BMW Group, which owns the Mini, Rolls-Royce and BMW brands, said its June car sales rose 2.1% worldwide, despite a 16.5% sales dip in Germany. For the BMW Group, June passenger car sales were up 2.1% on the year to 232,620 cars, of which 192,873 were sales of BMW branded cars, the company said.

Greece‘s fiscal position has improved and the European Union should end disciplinary procedures against it over its excessive deficit, the EU commission said on Wednesday, paving the way for the country to return to international bond markets. Greece recorded a 0.7 percent surplus last year and is expected to have a deficit of only 1.2 percent in 2017. “Our recommendation to close the excessive deficit procedure for Greece is another positive signal of financial stability and economic recovery in the country,” EU Commission Vice President Valdis Dombrovskis said in a statement. Ending the procedure – a step that must still be confirmed by EU states – would further reduce the pressure on Athens after euro zone creditors unblocked new loans to it worth 8.5 billion euros ($9.6 billion) last week as part of its 86 billion euro bailout program.

Eu antitrust regulators hit Google with a record 2,42 billion euro fine

Good Morning dear Readers.

 

The miserable Wall Street performance yesterday and the strong Euro have been the main stimulants for the weak DAX performance this morning. Yesterday the DOW Jones closed with a loss of 0,5% and the Nasdaq closed with an even bigger loss of 1,6%. Tech-stocks had recovered as of lately, but talks of over-valuation have never seized. During the Dodd-Franck act talk addressing the easing of regulations on financial Markets, Janet Yellen took a hard stance towards over-valuation, saying many stocks were over-priced and that the planned de-regulation would not be advisable. The DAX has followed up on its downward movement by losing 0,86 percent hitting the 12’561 points mark.

The Euro set a new 52 week high by reaching the 1,1379 EURUSD mark. Mario Draghi´s speech in Portugal, with the narrative of a healthy and wealthy European Union was the main Catalyst for the Euro outbreak. During his speech Draghi confirmed that the ECB would be able to reach the 2% inflation target.

According to Bloomberg reports Deutsche Bank is on the verge of realizing a loss of 60 million USD. This loss is related to derivate-trading. These derivates were used to gamble on the US inflation. The reports states that all risk limits were exceeded by the Managers. This deal is under internal investigation as of now.

EU antitrust regulators hit Alphabet unit Google with a record 2,42 billion Euro fie on Tuesday. It is the biggest fine the EU has ever imposed on a single company in an antitrust case, exceeding a 1,06 billion euro sanction handed down to U.S. chipmaker Intel in 2009.

The Economic Calendar for today:

International Trade in Goods

Pending Home Sales Index

EIA Petroleum Sales

 

Apple changes narrative in Qualcomm lawsuit.

Good Morning Dear Readers.

Yesterday, the DAX had a not so convincing performance. After the massive Oil-losses, investors seem to become risk-averse. This can also be interpreted by monitoring the VDAX, which shows signs of increase in volatility. This sentiment was reflected by the bad opening of the Dax in the morning, falling down to 12740 points.

As mentioned the Oil Prices fell sharply yesterday, which begs the question if the politics applied by the OPEC are to be seen as sane. In the morning hours the Brent Price seems to have stabilized itself. The price for Brent this morning was 44,79 USD and WTI was 42,52 USD. The falling Oil Prices will also have a negative effect for Central Banks as it will stain the Inflations Target. While the Fed is on way to tightening up interest rates, a possible deflation is bad news.

The Bank Industry and its stocks have been suffering as of the past weeks. As there is no sign of Inflation in the Eurozone, no change in the monetary policy is in sight. Banks have been suffering under the current conditions. The imposed monetary policies have been pressurizing banks a lot as their operating margins have become smaller.

Italy’s second biggest Bank, Intesa Sanpaolo has communicated that it would support two little Italian banks. Under a set of conditions imposed by Intesa, they would be willing to take over Banco Popolare die Vicenza and Veneto Banca. According to several sources these acquisitions should not decrease or affect dividends. Meanwhile the Italian government has opened a criminal investigation against five Italian Banks, one of them Intesa Sanpaolo. Allegations state that there have been irregularities in the diamond sales.

Apple is taking a new narrative in the patent lawsuit against Qualcomm. Apple has been talking about an increasing amount of proves that Qualcomm is on fact using an illegal business model. Qualcomm is accused of cashing in twice on its patents for certain technologies and computer chips. Qualcomm has denied the accusations.

The DAX is down , what next?

Good Morning dear Readers.

After Wall Street lost points on Friday, it was the DAX yesterday who closed at 12’690, losing one percent. Analysts are predicting a stabilization for today and prognosing an upwards-trend up to 12’718.

The Deutsche Bank court case concerning the manipulation of the reference interest rate on the Euribor, was settled. Deutsche Bank accepted to pay a settlement sum of 170 million USD.

BASF and Syngenta have presented their offers for Bayer-share. Bayer is obligated to sell some shares due to cartel law reasons, in relation with the Monsanto deal. The main affected assets would be LibertyLink and the cotton seeds business.

The Eurogroup and the IMF should be about to agree on plans presented by Christine Lagarde concerning the Greek debt relief  According to Reuters, the IMF will want to continue to support the decrease of the Greek debt. The Funds main condition for supporting the program will be a gradual and sustained debt relief.

The Economic Calendar for today is:

I) NFIB Small Business Optimism Index

II) The Producer Price Index

III) The Willian Dudley Speech

I am excited for today and I hope you are as well.

 

 

 

 

Tories lose majority in House of Commons

Good Morning dear Readers,

the Elections seem to be a done deal this morning. The Tories lose their majority but are still the strongest Party in the House of  Commons. They have 319 out of 650 seats, missing the total majority by 7 seats. The Labour Party  reaches a total of 261 mandates. With this outcome there will be negotiations for coalitions to form an absolute majority. On the markets this has lead to a 2% drop in the EURGBP. In total the election outcome didn’t shake up the Markets to much, as investors seem to be confident, the Tories will be able to build a coalition. The EURUSD was hit by the ECB-Meeting even though no new information hit the market. During the ECB-Meeting the EURUSD fell under 1,12. After the Meeting the EURUSD climbed back to 1,123 and with the Exit Polls released the EURUSD curve fell under 1,119.

Since the 5.5.2017 there has been no noticeable movement on the DAX. With a VDAX of 12,99% which is a 25 year low. The DAX has been trading in a range between 12500 and 12850, it really seems the DAX is asleep. The deeper meaning of the DAX hibernation is that the Investors have total confidence in the positions they hold and that the people who sold in May see a bubble in the prices we are dealing with.

Deutsche Bank refuses to answer question of the U.S. Congress in regard of a relationship between the Bank and the U.S. President Donald Trump. The Bank states that releasing any form of information, would break with the Data Protection Laws a bank has to comply with. Adding to the Comey hearing that happened yesterday, this seems to be yet another faux pas, the Trump Administration will have to get straight.

Today some Economic Data will hit the Markets. The Main Data will be the wholesale Trade and the Baker-Hughes Rig Count.

I am excited for today and I hope you are as well.

What Pokémon taught me about Portfolio-Management

If you don’t know Pokémon by now you must have been living under a rock. Pokémon is one of the biggest franchises to ever have existed. It has fascinated old and young for 20 years now. The basic Concept of Pokémon is having a team of up to 6 Pokémon and fight other Pokémon-Trainers to become the best Trainer there has ever been. You might be wondering where the link between Pokémon and Portfolio-Management is.

 

To Answer this question, and maybe prove you that I’m not completely crazy, we will go more in depth about how Pokémon works. The Pokémon Universe contains more than 1000 Pokémon and keeps growing steadily. Whenever I started playing the Pokémon count was at 151. There are various Types of Pokémon, Fire, Grass, Water, Fly, Ghost and much more. The particularity about the diffrent Types is are their strengths and weaknesses. So for example a Fire Pokémon, will be really strong against a Grass Pokémon but will rarely succeed to win against a Water-Type.

 

A common mistake is that people tend to setup up their Team in a really unbalanced way. An “unbalanced team” is a team consisting of Fire-Types only. The Idea of having a team overexposed to any kind of Types might sound like a good Idea, but it is a common mistake made by beginners. Even though the Fire-Types are really strong, a Team only composed off Fire Pokémon is a poor Idea. The Team will obviously excel against Grass-Types, but get demolished by Water Types. 1 or 2 Water Pokémon that are the same or lower level then your Fire Pokémon will be enough to finish you. So obviously as a Fire-Type trainer, running into a Water trainer, that you have to beat to advance in the story, is pretty frustrating. Same applies to having a team composed of only one Pokémon, that has a really high level.

 

In all the other cases it will be more efficient having a diversified Team. Fire is not strong again any other Type, it just deals normal damage. So if you are fighting against a trainer having Rock-Type Pokémon your task will be much easier if you have a Team with one Water-Type Pokémon, as Rock Pokémon’s are weak to Water attacks.

 

By now it might be clear what the parallel between Pokémon and Portfolio-Management is. If not let me refer to the novel “Don Quixote”. Out of this novel surged one of the pillars of Finance. The line I’m referring to is the following: “It is the part of a wise man to keep himself today for tomorrow, and not venture all his eggs in one basket.”. As crazy as Don Quixote seemed to be, he knew that you should never put all your Eggs in one basket. This is a piece of advice goes to say that one should not concentrate all efforts and resources in one area as one could lose everything.

 

If you are still wondering, why you shouldn’t put all your Eggs in one basket I will try to explain it. Obviously you might be thinking if the market, industry or company does really good I might get a really high return. This might be true, but at this point you are not investing anymore but you’re gambling. In one scenario you might beat the market, but in the other case you might lose a lot of money if the company you invested in defaults. In this case you might lose all your money. Psychologically speaking the loss of a certain amount will hurt you more than a monetary increase of the same amount.

 

In Finance this phenomenon is referred to as diversification. The benefits of diversification are various, a simple explanation was delivered by Markowitz and Tobin. They explain the concepts of correlation, minimum-variance portfolio and of the tangential portfolio which I will not go into detail much more. I’ll present you an example my Finance Professor used to introduce us to the concept of correlation.

 

To explain diversification, we are going to make some little assumptions. We will be in a stock market that is composed of only one country. So imagine that in the little Republic of Finance there are only four stocks:

 

  1. Umbrella Corp ( NOT the Resident Evil military organization)
  2. Rubber Boots Corp
  3. Sun Cream Corp
  4. Ice Cream Corp

 

If you could make portfolios of up to two stocks you would have the possibility to make up to 6 different Portfolios. Let’s compare three possible Portfolios:

 

  1. Portfolio A (Umbrella, Rubber Boots)
  2. Portfolio B (Sun Cream, Ice Cream)
  3. Portfolio C (Umbrella, Ice Cream)

 

Portfolio A and B are really seasonal and have therefore both a positive correlation. If the sales off Umbrella increase, the sales of Rubber Boots will increase as well, as we might be in a bad weather period. This is referred to as correlation. A positive correlation indicates that if the amount of Umbrella sales increases the amount of rubber boots increases by a smaller or bigger amount. This does not mean that an increase in sales off Umbrellas is due to an increase in sales of rubber boots. And vice-versa. In most cases the reason for the increase in sales is an externality, in our case for example announcement of a rain period or a rain period itself.

 

Portfolio C is not dependant on seasons as it has one asset of Umbrella Corp and one asset of Ice Cream Corp. These assets combined have a negative correlation. This means that if the sales of Ice Cream increase, the sales of Umbrella Corp will decrease and vice-versa. Portfolio C will be generating steadier incomes and cash flows. Due to its negative correlation it will be much less volatile then Portfolio A and B. Volatility is the measurement of risk, which an investor will always want to keep at a minimum.

 

So an Investor will always seek to diversify its portfolio and keep his income less volatile. Diversification is the Alpha and Omega across Sectors. You will never want to have a too big exposure to a certain company industry or even asset class. This is what Pokémon has taught me about Portfolio Management.