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There is an investing narrative that suggests with three interest rate cuts in the past few months, companies are about to unleash a capex spending spree. I'm skeptical. Yesterday's capex data, which surveys both past and future company capital expenditure, supports my skepticism.


Australian Private capex


I need to preface all of this with the observation (raised before) that for some sectors, forecasts are misleading. You need to be careful about which conclusions are safe to draw. Some sectors are good at forecasting capex, and some are terrible.


One of the only growing sectors is mining equipment:


mining equipment capex


mining capex


But for mining, the good news gets wiped out by the bad.


Once you get into the industrial sectors, a bleak outlook is standard:


IT & Media Capital Expenditure


Manufacturing capital expenditure


Transport, Postal and Warehousing Capex


I have a keen interest in the construction sector, which I think will be patient zero if the Australian economy falls into recession. The construction sector has poor growth forecast.


Unfortunately, construction capex forecasts are historically inaccurate. I'm reluctant to read too much into construction forecasts, even though they support my thesis.


Optimists can seize on the one good subsector out of about 20:


Utilities Capital Expenditure


No white horse, maybe a white flag?


  • The Reserve Bank has effectively run out of interest rates cuts to stimulate the economy
  • The Reserve Bank wants the federal government to spend on capital expenditure
  • The federal government refuses to spend more on capital expenditure
  • The federal government wants companies and state governments to spend more on capital expenditure and research
  • There are few property transactions, putting pressure on state government budgets which rely on stamp duty
  • State governments also can't spend more on capital expenditure - the federal government collects most of the taxes and is focussed on delivering surpluses
  • Companies are refusing to spend more on capital expenditure due to the uncertain outlook


Far from riding to the economy's rescue, the private sector seems to be hunkering down and not spending.


Investment Outlook


My view is that without considerable federal government stimulus, there is nothing on the horizon to suggest a recovery in the Australian economy. On the contrary, there is a range of risks which could result in considerable economic downside.


For our investors and superannuation clients, cognisant of the risks, we are carrying close to minimum weight in Australian stocks.


 

Damien Klassen is Head of Investments at Nucleus Wealth.

The information on this blog contains general information and does not take into account your personal objectives, financial situation or needs. Past performance is not an indication of future performance. Damien Klassen is an authorised representative of Nucleus Wealth Management, a Corporate Authorised Representative of Nucleus Advice Pty Ltd - AFSL 515796.

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Damien Klassen
Post by Damien Klassen
November 28, 2019
Damien has a wealth of experience across international equities (Schroders), asset allocation (Wilson HTM) and he helped create one of Australia’s largest independent research firm, Aegis Equities. He lectured for over a decade at the Securities Institute, Finsia and Kaplan and spent many of those years as the external Chair for the subject of Industrial Equity Analysis. Damien runs the investment side of Nucleus Wealth, selecting stocks suggested by analysts and implementing the asset allocation. Damien started Nucleus Wealth after 20+ years in financial markets. He wanted to come up with an investment solution for ordinary investors that delivers the same types of personalised investment portfolios high net worth investors use.