Wednesday, April 23, 2014

The School holiday effect: Consistant January drop in Female Part Time Work

Just been looking at one of my favourite ABS releases, the detailed Labour force stats...a veritable treasure trove of info on Australian work habits and demographics.

One thing I have been looking at is Part Time workers between 15-64. I notice a very strong seasonal signal in the Female Part time stats as a percentage of the civilan population. In January of most years, it appears there is a drop of around 1.5-2% consistantly. See the graph below


The same signal is not as apparent in Male Part time work (or if it is, it is too small to be detectable)

So what would make women drop part time work so consistently over January?

It's either school kids or the beach in my opinion.

Friday, April 11, 2014

Budget Emergency! Maybe this is what Joe Hockey has nightmares about

Loss of Male Power and Identity - the decline of Male Full time work.

I'm always interested in gender politics and the like, and I wonder what the affect of the reduction in Full time work is having on the male population. Because the drop is dire.

Looking at the ABS figures on the Labor force, I note that the percentage of the male civilian population (15-64) that is employed full time is at all time lows...in fact August 2013 was the lowest ever recorded at 64.66%; the second lowest in Jan 2014.

This is in comparison to the all time high of 79.4% which was recorded in December 1980.

Now when you think the male identity is traditionally defined by being a provider, especially in a family situation, this has to have an impact on the male psych.

I'm sure the feminists out there will be talking about how the female full time employment to population ratio is still low at 36%, well, to that I say, at least it is on the climb (it was at 30% in 1978). Also women traditionally have other sources of power and identity that remain undiminished; the primary one being that of a mother, which does not require the full time job to self actualise.

Something to think on when the feminists are calling for total equality. See the graph below for the full details

Wednesday, April 9, 2014

Market risk Premium of ASX200 March 2014....Now at 12.5%!!!!!!!

Wow is all I can say.

Calculated the Market Risk premium of March 2014 and we are looking at a risk premium of 12.5% Getting pretty crazy out there.

ASX200 market return (Capital) over the last 2.5 years is sitting at 11.61% a year. Average dividends of 4.57%. Meaning the Market has returned a very nice 16.18% a year. Not bad going.

Risk free rate is now sitting at around 3.67% so that leaves us a Market Risk Premium of 12.5%! That is the highest it has been since I started recording them back in 2011.

For mine, that is getting a bit unsustainable. You would have to start thinking a big correction is coming as there is no way companies out there can have their equity cost of capital at those sort of levels. They can't have a ROE of over that consistently in the current conditions.