Ben's Market Chat - Insights and Interviews
Check out our YouTube Channel @BensMarketChat for this week’s comment. Don’t forget to like, subscribe, and tell a friend. Join our email list to be the first to see these videos every week: https://mailchi.mp/traderoutescapital/giuox24tmg This week we parse through Jay Powell’s decision to remain on the Fed rate setting board and the key results from last week. Alphabet rose (justifiably) by 10% whilst Meta fell 10% (unjustifiably in our opinion) by 10%. Jay Powell becomes one of 8 members of the Fed rate setting committee that are non-aligned with the Trump administration wish to keep reducing rates at almost any cost. The other 4 Trump appointed governors are likely to push through with the dovish agenda. Question is, how many of the 8 will turn? We think that ceteris paribus, re the economy ie assuming we remain in the current range of activity, the Fed will likely reduce by a further 25-50bps this year. A positive for risk assets. A slew of major results were announced and digested last week. We’ll not dwell on each suffice to say that Alphabet came in as the champ whilst Meta won the wooden spoon in terms of share price reactions. As an ongoing theme, capex continued to rise but companies also highlighted faster data centre growth and capacity uptake as well improved metrics on margin and uptake thanks to the AI capex initiatives. Meta has been perceived of late as a net loser in the AI race. They are spending almost as much on capex as the DC players but with no DC platform and have, what some may call, a lame LAMA LLM (Large Language Model) product. What the market, we believe is missing, is that Meta probably has the most transparent route to AI monetisation of all the MAG7. Ad revenue targeting is already allowing for a re-acceleration in revenues. According to consensus estimates, revenue is set to rise by 25-30% this year and next. That’s a $130-150bn incremental growth over 2 years. Even at this early stage that’s pretty impressive ROI and payback. In terms of valuation, Meta (according to consensus estimates) is trading on 20x 26 p/e with revenue growth of 25-30%. This is by far the most attractive of the MAG7. Meta has been through investor shunning before and then bounced back. This could well be another such episode. Mastercard & Visa are a backbone to any global portfolio in our opinion. Little in last week’s announcement and guidance has shifted our view. These act as a duopoly in a global payment processing market with EBITDA margins in excess of 65%. There are few if any existential threats to their dominance, at least on the medium term horizon. Always do your own research or seek the advice of your professional financial advisor. You can find us on LinkedIn and YouTube, Money Matters, Ben Hakham CEO at Traderoutes Capital.
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