Research Notes

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Research Notes

The final piece of Queensland’s energy puzzle?

Omega Oil & Gas
3:27pm
March 17, 2025
We initiate research coverage on Omega Oil & Gas (OMA) with a Speculative Buy rating and A$0.64 target price. OMA’s flagship Canyon Gas Project has a ~1.7 TCFe resource located strategically close to the east coast gas market. Early frac results from Canyon-1H are encouraging, with flowback now underway. OMA is trading at a discounted A$0.07/GJe (vs undeveloped peers at A$0.21/GJe). Gas producers trade on A$0.77/GJe showing the ultimate ‘size of the prize’.

Getting on with it

Neurizon Therapeutics
3:27pm
March 17, 2025
NUZ is planning to commence two animal studies in the coming weeks which are expected to take four months from start to finish. The studies aim to address the questions FDA placed on NUZ-001 around systemic exposure. Positive data here is required to remove the roadblock currently in the way on its entry into the HEALEY ALS Platform trial. The delays push timelines to trial commencement by ~6 months, and to the end of the 12-month buffer we originally placed on the program for unforeseen delays. Key here will be positive feedback from the FDA which aligns with the studies NUZ will have already commenced. No changes to forecasts although note the additional timelines to trial commencement due to the additional studies sit at the limit of our model assumptions.

International Spotlight

Adobe Inc.
3:27pm
March 17, 2025
Incorporated in 1983, Adobe operates as a globally diversified software company. It operates through the following business segments: 1) Digital Media, which offers creative cloud services (including software such as Photoshop, Adobe Illustrator, Adobe Premiere Pro and Acrobat); 2) Digital Experience, which provides solutions including analytics, social marketing, media optimisation etc, and 3) Publishing and Advertising, which includes legacy products for eLearning and technical document publishing, web application development.

Cessation of coverage

Arcadium Lithium
3:27pm
March 16, 2025
We discontinue coverage of Arcadium Lithium (LTM) following the company being acquired by Rio Tinto Limited (RIO). Our forecasts, target price and recommendation should no longer be relied upon for investment decisions.

1H’FY25 result: focused on ramp-up and improving recoveries

Liontown Resources
3:27pm
March 14, 2025
LTR reported an in-line result with key cash flow items largely pre-reported. Underlying EBITDA of A$66m was ahead of expectations as LTR capitalised all costs related to LTR ramp-up as LTR declared commercial production post 1H’FY25. Net debt is A$651m which is in-line with expectations. We maintain our Hold rating with a A$0.66ps Target Price (previously A$0.68ps).

International Spotlight

Constellation Software
3:27pm
March 14, 2025
Constellation Software (CSU) acquires, manages and builds industry specific software businesses aka Vertical Market Software (VMS) companies. Uniquely they are perpetual owners of all their businesses. CSU has six operating groups: Volaris, Harris, Jonas, Vela Software, Perseus Group and Topicus, which service customers in over 100 markets worldwide. Each operating group serves as a holding company for dozens of underlying software companies. The company is headquartered in Toronto, Canada, and has offices in North America, Europe, Australia, South America and Africa.

International Spotlight

Home Depot
3:27pm
March 13, 2025
The Home Depot is the world’s largest home improvement retailer with operations in the US and internationally. It sells various building materials, home improvement products, lawn and garden products, and décor products, as well as facilities maintenance, repair, and operations products.

Fundamentals look the best in years

Orica
3:27pm
March 12, 2025
ORI’s trading update was stronger than expected and has resulted in both us and consensus upgrading 1H25 and FY25 forecasts. Pleasingly, given its strong balance sheet, ORI has announced up to A$400m on-market share buyback. With a leverage to attractive industry fundamentals, market leading positions, strong earnings growth, proven management team and strong balance sheet, we think ORI’s trading multiples are undemanding and reiterate our Add rating.

A mixed 1H25 result

COG Financial Services
3:27pm
March 11, 2025
COG’s 1H25 NPATA attributable to shareholders (A$11.8m) came in slightly ahead of unaudited guidance given on 29 January (A$11.6m). We saw the 1H25 result as a mixed outcome overall. The Novated Leasing business continues to deliver strong results, but that was offset by tougher conditions in COG’s other divisions. We lower our COG FY25F/FY26F EPS by ~1%-4% mainly on lower top-line growth assumptions across COG’s various businesses. Our target price is set at A$1.09 (previously $1.16). We maintain our Speculative Buy call.

Trading update confirms materials slowdown

Brickworks
3:27pm
March 11, 2025
BKW has issued a 1H25 trading update, flagging particular weakness across its North American building materials business, with Australian building materials flat (vs pcp). Whilst largely expected, the share price move has notionally written off the majority of value ascribed by the market to the building materials division. As we look forward we struggle to see catalysts for BKW, with investment market uncertainty to likely outweigh any potential tailwinds from rental income growth across the industrial property portfolio. We retain our Hold rating, with a $25.00/sh price target.

News & Insights

The U.S. and China, through negotiations led by the Chinese Deputy Premier and U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, agreed to a 90-day tariff reduction from over 125% to 30% and 10% respectively

US and Chinese actions had led to an unintended embargo of trade between the world’s two largest economies.

In recent days there has been discussion of the temporary “cease fire” in the tariff war between the US and China.

The situation was that both countries had levied tariffs on each other more than 125%. This had led to a mutual embargo of trade between the two world is two largest economies. Then as a result of negotiation between the Deputy Premier of China and US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent both China and the US agreed to a 90 day pause in “hostilities” where both sides agreed to reduce the US tariff on the China to 30 percent and the Chinese tariff on the US to 10%.

Some suggested that this meant that “China had won” others suggested that the “US had won.” To us this really suggests that both parties were playing in a different game. The was a game in which both sides had won.

To understand why this is the case we must understand a little of the theory of this type of competition. Economists usually use discuss competition in terms of markets where millions of people are involved. In such a case we find a solution by finding the intersection of supply and demand which model the exchange between vast numbers of people.

But here we are ware talking of a competition where only two parties are involved.

When exceedingly small numbers like this are involved, we find the solution to the competition by what is called “Game Theory.”

In this game there are only two players. One is called China, and the other is called the US. Game theory teaches us that are there three different types of games. The first is a zero-sum game. In this game there two sides are competing over a fixed amount of product. Again, this is called " A zero sum game “. Either one party gets a bigger share of the total sum at stake and the other side gets less. This zero-sum game is how most of the Media views the competition between the US and China.

A second form is a decreasing sum game. An example of this is a war. Some of the total amount that is fought over is destroyed in the process. Usually both sides will wind up worse than when they started.

Then there is a third form. This form is called an ‘increasing sum game.’ This is where both sides cooperate so that the total sum in the game grows because of this cooperation. We think that what happened in the US and China negotiation was an increasing sum game.

As Scott Bessent said at the Saudi Investment Forum in Riyadh soon after the agreement was signed, “both sides came with a clear agenda with shared interests and great mutual respect.”

He said, “after the weekend, we now have a mechanism to avoid escalation like we had before. We both agreed to bring the tariff levels down by 115% which I think is very productive because where we were with 145% and 125% was an unintended embargo. That is not healthy for the two largest economies in the world.”

He went on, “when President Trump began the tariff program, we had a plan, we had a process. What we did not have with the Chinese was a mechanism. The Vice Premier and I now call this the ‘Geneva mechanism’”.

Both sides cooperated to make both sides better off. Bessent added “what we do not want, and both sides agreed, is a generalised decoupling between the two largest economies in the world. What we want is the US to decouple in strategic industries, medicine, semiconductors, other strategic areas. As to other countries; we have had very productive discussions with Japan, South Korea, Indonesia, Taiwan, Thailand. Europe may have collective action problems with the French wanting one thing and the Italians wanting a different thing. but I am confident that with Europe, we will arrive at a satisfactory conclusion.

We have a very good framework. I think we can proceed from here.”

What we think we can see here is that the United States and China have cooperated to both become better off. This is what we call an increasing sum game.

They will continue their negotiation using that approach. This will do much to allay the concerns that so many had about the effect of these new tariffs.

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Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent’s adept negotiation of a US-China tariff deal and his method for assessing tariffs’ modest impact on inflation, using a 20.5% effective rate, position him as a formidable successor to Henry Morganthau’s legacy.

In the 1930s, the US Treasury Secretary Henry Morganthau was widely regarded as the finest Treasury Secretary since Alexander Hamilton. However, if the current Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, continues to deliver results as he is doing now, he will provide formidable competition to Morganthau’s legacy.

The quality of Bessent’s work is exceptional, demonstrated by his ability to secure an agreement with China in just a few days in complex circumstances.

The concept of the "effective tariff rate" is a term that has gained traction recently. Although nominal tariff rates on individual goods in individual countries might be as high as 100% or 125%; the effective tariff rate, which reflects the actual tariffs the US imposes on imports from all countries, is thought to be only 20.5%. This figure comes from an online spreadsheet published by Fitch Ratings, since 24 April.

Finch Ratings Calculator Screenshot

This effective tariff rate of 20.5% can be used in assessing the impact of import tariffs on US inflation. To evaluate this, I used a method proposed by Scott Bessent during his Senate confirmation hearing. Bessent began by noting that imports account for only 16% of US goods and services that are consumed in the US Economy. In this case, a 10% revenue tariff would increase domestic prices by just 1.6%. With a core inflation rate of 2.8% in the US, this results in a headline inflation rate of 4.4%. Thus, the overall impact of such tariffs on the US economy is relatively modest.

A couple of weeks ago, Austan Goolsbee, the President of the Chicago Fed, noted that tariffs typically increase inflation, which might prompt the Fed to lift rates, but they also reduce economic output, which might prompt the Fed to rate cuts. Consequently, Goolsbee suggested that the Federal Reserve might opt to do nothing. This prediction was successful when the Open Market Committee of the Fed, with Goolsbee as a member, left the Fed Funds rate unchanged last week.

A 90-day agreement between the US and China, masterfully negotiated by Scott Bessent, has dramatically reduced tariffs between China and the US. China now only imposes a 10% import tariff on the US, while the US applies a 30% tariff on Chinese goods—10% as a revenue tariff and 20% to pressure China to curb the supply of fentanyl ingredients to third parties in Mexico or Canada. It is this fentanyl which fuels the US drug crisis. This is a priority for the Trump administration.

How Import Tariffs Affect US Inflation.

We can calculate how much inflation a tariff adds to the US economy in the same way as Scott Bessent by multiplying the effective tariff rate by the proportion that imports are of US GDP. Based on a 20.5% US effective tariff rate, I calculated that it adds 3.28% to the US headline Consumer Price Index (CPI). This results in a US headline inflation rate of 6.1% for the year ahead. In Australia, we can draw parallels to the 10% GST introduced 24 years ago, where price effects were transient and vanished after a year, avoiding sustained high inflation.

Before these negotiations, the US was levying a nominal tariff on China of 145%. Some items were not taxed, so meant that the effective tariff on China was 103%. Levying this tariff meant that the US faced a price effect of 3.28%, contributing to a 6.1% headline inflation rate.

If the nominal tariff rate dropped to 80%, the best-case scenario I considered previously, the price effect would fall to 2.4%, with a headline US inflation rate of 5.2%. With the US now charging China a 30% tariff, this adds only 2% to headline inflation, yielding a manageable 4.8% US inflation rate.

As Goolsbee indicated, the Fed might consider raising interest rates to counter inflation or cutting them to address reduced output, but ultimately, it is likely to maintain current rates, as it did last week. I anticipate the Fed will continue to hold interest rates steady but with an easing bias, potentially cutting rates in the second half of the year once the situation stabilises.

My current Fed Funds rate model suggests that, absent this year's tariff developments, the Fed would have cut rates by 50 basis points. This could be highly positive for the US economy.

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In a lively presentation to the Economic Club of New York, Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago President Austan Goolsbee highlighted tariffs as a minor stagflation risk but emphasized strong U.S. GDP growth of around 2.6%, suggesting a resilient economy and potential for a soft landing.

I’d like to discuss a presentation delivered by Austan Goolsbee, President of the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, to the Economic Club of New York on 10 April. Austan Goolsbee, gave a remarkably animated talk about tariffs and their impact on the U.S. economy.

Goolsbee is a current member of the Federal Reserve’s Open Market Committee, alongside representatives from Washington, D.C., and Fed bank Presidents from Chicago, Boston, St. Louis, and Kansas City.  

Having previously served as Chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers in the Obama White House, Goolsbee’s presentation style in New York was notably different from his more reserved demeanour I had previously seen when I had attended a talk of his in Chicago.

During his hour-long, fast-paced talk, Goolsbee addressed the economic implications of tariffs. He recounted an interview where he argued that raising interest rates was not the appropriate response to tariffs, a stance that led some to label him a “Dove.” He humorously dismissed the bird analogy, instead likening himself to a “Data Dog,” tasked with sniffing out the data to guide decision-making.

Goolsbee explained that tariffs typically drive inflation higher, which might ordinarily prompt rate hikes. However, they also tend to reduce economic growth, suggesting a need to cut rates. This creates a dilemma where rates might not need adjustment at all. He described tariffs as a “stagflation event” but emphasised that their impact is minor compared to the severe stagflation of the 1970s.

When asked if the U.S. was heading towards a recession, Goolsbee said that the "hard data" was surprisingly strong.

Let us now look at our model of US GDP based on the Chicago Fed National Activity Index. This Index   incorporates 85 variables across production, sales, employment, and personal consumption.  In the final quarter of last year, this index indicated the GDP growth was slightly below the long-term average, suggesting a US GDP growth rate of 1.9% to 2%.

However, data from the first quarter of this year showed stronger growth, just fractionally below the long-term trend.

Using Our Chicago Fed model, we find that US GDP growth had risen from about 2% growth to a growth rate of around 2.6%, indicating a robust U.S. economy far from recessionary conditions.

Model of US GDP

We think that   increased government revenue from Tariffs might temper domestic demand, potentially guiding growth down towards 1.9% or 2% by year’s end. Despite concerns about tariffs triggering a downturn, this highlights the economy’s resilience and suggests   a “soft landing,” which could allow interest rates to ease, weaken the U.S. dollar, and boost demand for equities.

We will provide monthly reviews of these indicators. We note that, for now, the outlook for the U.S. economy remains very positive.

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