Japan looks all deflated | IBM has a meltdown |

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Hi John, here's what you need to know for January 25th in 3:14 minutes.

☕️ Finimized over a toffee nut latte at Steps with Theera in Bangkok, Thailand (33°C/92°F 🌤)

Today's big stories

  1. Fresh data showed Japan’s economy fell into deflation last quarter, and the rest of the world might be about to follow
  2. There are a couple of reasons bitcoin almost certainly won’t become a major currency – Read Now
  3. IBM reported shrinking revenue, which might worry any investors betting big on cloud computing

The Price Ain’t Right

The Price Ain’t Right

What’s Going On Here?

According to data out late last week, the prices of Japan’s goods and services shrank last quarter compared to a year ago – plunging its economy back into deflation.

What Does This Mean?

The prices Japanese shoppers paid in October, November, and December fell versus the same time the year before, and in December specifically, that drop was 1% – the country’s biggest in over a decade. This isn’t exactly new territory for Japan: it’s long struggled to push prices up and, in turn, get its economy firing on all cylinders. This time, though, the country’s anti-coronavirus measures could make things a lot worse: new curfews will discourage people from spending their money, making businesses less likely to raise their prices and more likely to offer cut-price deals.

Why Should I Care?

For markets: Deflation’s bad for growth.
Shoppers don’t spend as much on nice-to-haves when there’s deflation: falling prices, after all, mean things will probably be cheaper tomorrow, and the day after that, and the day after that. The longer that downward spiral continues, the more it stunts economic growth – which is why central banks do everything they can to avoid deflation. The European Central Bank, for example, is worried it won’t be able to stop eurozone deflation, while the US Federal Reserve might need to step in if the government’s big spending isn’t enough to create inflation.

Zooming out: Already knee-deep in deflation.
Veteran investor Mark Mobius thinks economists are wrong, and that we’ve actually been in a state of global deflation for years. See, economists don’t compare apples to apples when they look at inflation trends: they measure the prices of a typical basket of goods for the era. If you were to compare two apples-to-apples products over time – like, say, a car from the ’50s and one from today – the older one would be cheaper today than it was back then. In other words, prices have been falling, not rising.

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2. Analyst Take

Nope, Bitcoin Isn’t Replacing The Dollar

What’s Going On Here?

There’s no doubting bitcoin’s incredible performance last year, rising by more than 300% and hitting new record highs.

But a huge part of its attraction – particularly for newly enthusiastic institutional investors – is the idea that it could one day become the world’s “reserve currency”.

That’s the money held by central banks to help their countries conduct international transactions and influence their domestic currency’s exchange rate.

The US dollar’s currently the biggest of them, accounting for around 60% of official global reserves.

The idea that bitcoin has a shot of being a reserve currency is being pushed by a lot of people. Big names too, like senior analysts at US investment bank Morgan Stanley.

But it’s fundamentally flawed for two very important reasons – and when that dawns on investors, it could have some serious implications for anyone holding the cryptocurrency.

So that’s today’s Insight: why the argument’s so flawed, and how much damage it could do to your crypto holdings.

Read or listen to the Insight here

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IBM-ergency

IBM-ergency

What’s Going On Here?

IBM reported worse-than-expected quarterly results late last week, and investors – who sent its share price down 10% – aren’t sure switching it off and on again is going to fix things.

What Does This Mean?

IBM’s fourth-quarter revenue came in 7% lower than a year ago, and it fell short of investors’ expectations as well. Those investors might not have been too fussed about that, mind you: they’re used to the company’s declining revenue now that this is the tenth quarter in a row it’s happened.

What they probably were fussed about was the drop in the cloud and software revenue that IBM’s been relying on to offset its shrinking legacy business. See, the company spent $34 billion on open-source company Red Hat in 2018 with the aim of shoring up its software segment, and it’s bought seven other cloud-focused firms since October too. But given that those acquisitions don’t seem to be paying off, growth-focused investors might be losing interest. Even IBM’s plan to split its "high-growth" cloud business into a separate company entirely mightn’t win them back unless, y’know, it actually grows…

Why Should I Care?

For markets: So much for cloud nine.
IBM blamed the drop-off on pandemic-related uncertainty, but – judging by this update and those from Oracle and SAP last year – cloud computing is generally proving a tough nut to crack. And while IBM’s hopeful that its cloud business will come good this year, it’ll have to pull something special out the bag: Microsoft and Amazon look ready to make the $1 trillion industry their own.

Zooming out: Go hardware or go home.
We’re in the earliest stages of this economic cycle, when growth makes its way back from lows and demand for construction materials and industrial machinery typically outstrips demand for IT services (tweet this). And that’s not been lost on investors: Siemens’ stock rose 7% on Friday after the industrial conglomerate announced stronger-than-expected quarterly earnings.

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💬 Quote of the day

“If they don’t give you a seat at the table, bring a folding chair.”

– Shirley Chisholm (an American politician, educator, and author)
Tweet this
🤔 Q&A · RE: Hot Shot

“How do zero-commission brokers make money?”

– Chuck in Wisconsin, USA

A: “There are a few ways brokers earn cash outside of fees, Chuck. For one, your broker will probably charge you a ‘spread’ on anything you buy and sell – so if a stock’s worth $100 on the stock market, they might charge you $102 and pocket the difference. For another, they could use any uninvested cash sitting in your account to buy into super-safe assets, and make a return on those without much risk. Brokers can earn cash from your shares too: they might lend them to investors who want to ‘short’ a stock (i.e. bet it’ll fall) and charge a fee for the privilege. And last but not least, there’s the controversial practice of selling your trading data to market makers – a.k.a. ‘payment for order flow’ – which is a whole thing. You can read more about that here.”

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✌️ Stay safe out there

There’s a world of crime in the big wide world, but who’s going protect us? Batman? No, he’s busy. James Bond? No, he keeps getting held up. Autonomous security robots? You got it: join the CEO of Knightscope on January 27th to hear how they’re shaking up the security sector, and why there’s big money in ‘bots.

🤖 The Opportunity for Autonomous Tech: 1pm New York Time, January 27th

💪 Live Q&A with Finimize CEO & Founder: 1.30pm UK Time, January 29th

🚀 Future of Fintech in Latin America: 6pm UK Time, February 2nd

⚔️ Bitcoin vs. Ethereum: 7pm Paris Time, February 5th

📚 What we're reading

  • The Scots want in on trolling Trump (The Scotsman)
  • Who would’ve thought TikTok isn’t the place for financial advice? (Vox)
  • Seeing the world through a porthole (Outside Online)
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