EVENTS:   Best Equity Short Ideas Conference Call 12 - Zach Shannon/Corto Capital Advisors & Craig Huber/Huber Research Partners & Thomas Beevers /Forensic Alpha & Ed Steele/Iron Blue Financials & Bill Campbell/Paragon Intel - 12 Nov 25   Will AI Deflate the World? Macro Lessons from Three Industrial Revolutions and China - Manoj Pradhan/Talking Heads Macro - 13 Nov 25     ROADSHOWS: Forest Products Sector Equity and Commodity Research With Expertise in Distressed Debt - Kevin Mason /ERA Research   •   London   12 - 14 Nov 25       Buyside to Buyside Forum and Expert Calls across TMT, Consumer, Healthcare and Fintech - Andrew Peters /Revelare Partners   •   London   17 - 19 Nov 25       Fundamental US Healthcare Short Ideas - Dr Elliot Favus /Favus Institutional Research   •   London   17 - 19 Nov 25      

IRF Lunch - The Year of Contrarian Thinking

Stray Reflections

The Lansdowne Club, Mayfair, W1J 5JD

Thu 06 Jul 2023 - 12:30 BST

Summary

Jawad shared 3 big ideas - first, despite all the macro uncertainty we are in a secular bull market and these markets usually last around 15 years and this one started in 2013. During such periods pullbacks are narrower and shallower. Second, each decade has a zeitgeist which is a trend that turns in to a mania - it was gold in 1970s, Japan in 1980s, Internet in 1990s, China’s entry in the WTO in 2000s, Software in 2010s. In 2022 that zeitgeist unravelled mainly in Silicon Valley, and Jawad believes Climate is the zeitgeist for this decade with the race to zero emissions being the catchphrase. Here we must focus on China and EVs. Thirdly, on the US economy it’s much more robust than consensus believes in the short-term with sensitivity to interest rates being at historical low and there being secular tightness in the labour market. There is no credit crunch on the horizon.

Topics

We are in a secular bull market and these markets usually last around 15 years - this one started in 2013.

Each decade has a zeitgeist, Jawad believes it will be Climate for this one with focus on the race to zero emissions.

The US economy is much more robust than consensus believes with sensitivity to interest rates being at historical lows and secular tightness in the labour market.