Want to know the best way to play the coming recovery in oil, commodities, precious metals, and emerging markets?
Buy the railroads. At least if you are early, you still have a functioning, cash flow positive business, unlike the rest of the above.
Since they peaked in early 2015, railroad stocks have been beaten like the proverbial red-headed stepchild, trading with the collapse in oil and coal tick for tick. Lead stock Union Pacific (UNP) has seen its share price crater by 36% since then before recently recovering half of that.
What follows a global synchronized slowdown, led by China and emerging markets? A global synchronized recovery, led by China and emerging markets.
I love railroads because they used to belch smoke and steam and have these incredibly loud, romantic, wailing whistles.
In fact, my first career goal in life (when I was 5) was to become a train engineer. By the time I was old enough to know better, American railroads almost no longer existed.
It turns out that the railroads today are a great proxy for the health of the entire global economy. They are, in effect, our canary in the coalmine.
If oil prices stay low enough for long enough, it will boost demand for everything else that Union Pacific ships, including houses, furniture, cars, and every other sweet spot for their franchise.
Union Pacific (UNP), in effect, has a great internal hedge for its many businesses. When one product line weakens, another strengthens. This has been going on since the 19th century.
The industry is carefully watching the construction of a second Panama Canal across Nicaragua (click here for ?Who the Grand Nicaragua Canal Has Worried?).
If completed by its Chinese promoters within the next decade, it could bring an incremental shift of traffic from the US West Coast to the Gulf Ports.
Even this is a mixed bag, as this will move some business away from strike-plagued ports that are currently causing so much trouble.
When I rode Amtrak?s California Zephyr from Chicago to San Francisco in 2014, I passed countless trains heading west hauling hoppers full of coal for shipment to China.
Last year? I took the same trip. The coal trains were gone. Instead I saw 100 car long tanker trains transporting crude oil from North Dakota south to the Gulf Coast. I thought, ?There?s got to be a trade here.? It turns out I was right.
Take a look at the charts below, and you will see that the shares of virtually the entire railroad industry are breaking out to the upside.
In two short years, the big railroads have completely changed their spots, magically morphing from fading coal plays to emerging oil ones.
You?ve heard of ?fast fashion?? This is ?fast railroading?.
Today the big business is coming from the fracking boom, shipping oil from North Dakota?s Bakken field to destinations south. In fact, the first trainload of Texas tea arrived here in the San Francisco Bay area only a couple of years ago, displacing crude that formerly came from Alaska.
There are a wealth of interesting companies in the railroad sector now. You could almost pick any one.
These include Union Pacific (UNP), CSX Corp (CSX), Norfolk Southern (NSC), Kansas City Southern (KSU) and Canadian Pacific (CP).
Those of a certain age, such as myself, remember railroads as one of the great black holes of American industry. During the sixties, they were constantly on strike, always late, and delivered terrible service.
A friend of mine, taking a passenger train from New Mexico to Los Angeles, found his car abandoned on a siding for 24 hours where he froze and starved until he was discovered.
New airlines and the trucking industry were eating their lunch. They also hemorrhaged money like crazy.
The industry finally hit bottom in 1970, when the then dominant Penn Central Railroad went bankrupt, freight was spun off, and the government-owned Amtrak passenger service was created out of the ashes.
I know all of this because my late uncle was the treasurer of Penn Central.
Fast forward nearly half a century, and what you find is not your father?s railroad.
While no one was looking, they quietly became one of the best run and most efficient industries in America. Unions were tamed, costs slashed, and lines were reorganized and consolidated.
The government provided a major assist with sweeping deregulation. It became tremendously concentrated, with just four companies dominating the country, down from hundreds a century ago, giving you a great oligopoly play.
The quality of management improved dramatically.
Then the business started to catch a few lucky breaks from globalization. The China boom that started in the nineties created enormous demand for shipment inland of manufactured goods from West Coast Ports.
A huge trade also developed moving western coal back out to the Middle Kingdom, which now accounts for 70% of all traffic. The ?fracking? boom is having the same impact on the North/South oil by rail business.
All of this has ushered in a second ?golden age? for the railroad industry. This year, the industry is expected to pour $14 billion into new capital investment.
The US Department of Transportation expects gross revenues to rise by 50% to $27.5 billion by 2040. The net net of all of this is that freight rates are rising right when costs are falling, sending railroad profitability through the roof.
Union Pacific is investing a breathtaking $3.6 billion to build a gigantic transnational freight terminal in Santa Teresa, NM. It is also spending $500 million building a new bridge across the Mississippi River at Canton, Iowa.
Lines everywhere are getting double tracked or upgraded. Mountain tunnels are getting rebored to accommodate double stacked sea containers.
Indeed, the lines have become so efficient, that overnight couriers, like FedEx (FDX) and UPS (UPS), are diverting a growing share of their own traffic.
Their on time record is better than that of competing truckers, who face delays from traffic jams and crumbling roads, and are still hobbled by antiquated regulation.
I have some firsthand knowledge of this expansion. Every October 1st, I volunteer as a docent at the Truckee, California Historical Society on the anniversary of the fateful day in 1846 when the ill-fated Donner Party was snowed in.
There, I guide groups of tourists over the same pass my ancestors crossed during the 1849 gold rush. The scars on enormous ancient pines made by passing wagon wheels are still visible.
During 1866-1869, thousands of Chinese laborers blasted a tunnel through a mile of solid granite to complete the Transcontinental Railroad.
I can guide my guests through that tunnel today with flashlights because Union Pacific (UNP) moved the line to a new tunnel a mile south to improve the grade. The ceiling is still covered with soot from the old wood and coal-fired engines.
While the rebirth of this industry has been impressive, conditions look like they will get better still. Massive international investment in Mexico (low end manufacturing and another energy renaissance) and Canada (natural resources) promise to boost rail traffic with the US.
The rapidly accelerating ?onshoring? trend, whereby American companies relocate manufacturing facilities from overseas back home, creates new rail traffic as well. It turns out that factories that produce the biggest and heaviest products are coming home first, providing all great cargo for railroads.
And who knew?
Railroads are also a ?green? play. As Burlington Northern Railroad owner, Warren Buffett, never tires of pointing out, it requires only one gallon of diesel fuel to move a ton of freight 500 miles. That makes it four time
s more energy efficient than competing trucks.
In fact, many companies are now looking to railroads to reduce their overall carbon footprint. Warren doesn?t need any convincing himself. The $34 billion he invested in the Burlington Northern Railroad six years ago has probably doubled in value since then.
You have probably all figured out by now that I am a serious train nut, beyond the industry?s investment possibilities.
My past letters have chronicled adventures riding the Orient Express from London to Venice and Amtrak from New York to San Francisco.
I even once considered buying my own steam railroad, the fabled ?Skunk? train in Mendocino, California, until I figured out it was a bottomless money pit. Some 50 years of deferred maintenance is not a pretty sight.
It gets worse.
Union Pacific still maintains in running condition some of the largest steam engines every built, for historical and public relations purposes. One, the ?Old 844? once steamed its way over the High Sierras to San Francisco on a nostalgia tour.
The 120-ton behemoth was built during WWII to haul heavy loads of steel, ammunition, and armaments to California ports to fight the war against Japan. The 4-8-4-class engine could pull 26 passenger cars at 100 mph.
When the engine passed, I felt the blast of heat of the boiler singe my face. No wonder people love these things! To watch the video, click hereand hit the ?PLAY? arrow in the lower left hand corner.
Please excuse the shaky picture. I shot this with one hand, while using my other hand to keep my over- excited kids from running onto the tracks to touch the laboring beast.
Railroads all look like ripe, ?buy on dips? low-hanging fruit to me.
00Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2016-09-16 01:06:582016-09-16 01:06:58The Big Comeback in Railroads
As a potentially profitable opportunity presents itself, John will send you an alert with specific trade information as to what should be bought, when to buy it, and at what price. This is your chance to ?look over? John Thomas? shoulder as he gives you unparalleled insight on major world financial trends BEFORE they happen.Read more
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While the Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader focuses on investment over a one week to six-month time frame, Mad Day Trader, provided by Bill Davis, will exploit money-making opportunities over a brief ten minute to three day window. It is ideally suited for day traders, but can also be used by long-term investors to improve market timing for entry and exit points. Read more
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Global Market Comments September 15, 2016 Fiat Lux
Featured Trade: (OCTOBER 7TH INCLINE VILLAGE, NV GLOBAL STRATEGY LUNCHEON), (DON?T TOUCH THE COAL BUBBLE), (KOL), (BHP), (TCK), (TEN TIPS FOR SURVIVING A DAY OFF WITH ME)
What has been the top performing asset class so far in 2016?
Is it gold (GLD), oil (USO), or collectable French postage stamps?
If you said ?coal,? you win the kewpie doll. In fact, the 19th century energy source is the best performing commodity of the year by a large margin.
Indeed, the Van Eck Coal ETF (KOL) has picked up an eye popping 130% since it printed its $5 low in the first week of? January.
As a result, I have recently been deluged by readers asking if it is time to buy this prehistoric energy source.
My answer is no, not ever, and not even with Donald Trump?s money.
However, my answer relies more on basic market dynamics, rather than any environmental sympathies I might have.
It all has to do with China.
The Beijing government is manipulating its domestic coal industry to prevent it from defaulting on hundreds of billions of dollars worth of loans to local banks.
So it has cut back the number of days the industry can operate from 330 to 276 days a year.
Then the Chinese economy started to improve.
What happens when you restrict supply and increase demand? Prices go through the roof, as they have done smartly.
It gets better.
In August, the Middle Kingdom was hit with rainstorms of biblical proportions, flooding many mines and forcing them to close. The sushi hit the fan.
That forced major consumers, the big steel producers and electric power plants, to resort to the international spot market, or the ?seaborne market? to cover shortages to avoid shutting down themselves.
Who is the world?s largest supplier to the seaborne market?
That would be BHP Billiton (BHP), the largest capitalized company in Australia, which has seen its shares appreciate by 65% since January.
I have been following coal for 45 years, ever since I was the coal correspondent for the Australian Financial Review (AFR) during the 1970s.
I had to write a mind-numbing five pieces a week on coal (the AFR was a daily). So it?s safe to say that I know which end of a lump of coal to hold upward.
For a start, you never want to invest in an asset that is dependent on government fiat for rising prices. They can change their minds at any time. The loans in question could get paid off.
And you can count on the world market to suddenly find new supplies whenever of commodity price doubles.
Remember the Rare Earths' bubble, where we were active players? After a hyperbolic bubble, prices fell by 90%. Rare earths turned out to be not so rare. Only the cheap labor to extract them was exempt from environmental regulation.
So you can count on the current coal bubble to deflate fairly quickly. The perfect storm is about to run in reverse.
That leaves us with the long term fundamentals of coal which are bleak, to say the least.
China is far and away the world?s largest coal consumer at 49%, followed by the US at 11%.
China is making every effort to reduce reliance on this cheapest form of energy, thanks to the blinding, choking smog alerts besetting its largest cities.
It is only still using coal because with an economy growing at 6% a year plus, it has to rely on every energy form just to keep the lights only. Power brownouts can lead to political instability.
Coal consumption in the US has been in a death spiral for years, falling from 50% to 33% of electric power generation over the past decade. That led to the bankruptcy of several of its largest players such as Arch Coal (ACI) and Peabody Energy (BTU).
The collapse of natural gas prices to $2/btu made a cleaner burning alternative cost competitive. And gas lacks the nitrous and sulfur oxides and particulate pollution prevalent in coal.
Read the prospectus of any electric power company and you will find them besieged by lawsuits from consumers claiming that the coal they burned caused their cancers. Utility companies would love to be rid of it.
Any reluctance by US companies to dispense with coal were blown away last year when the Environmental Protection Agency classified carbon dioxide as toxic waste. That put a big fat bulls eye on the remaining coal companies.
If Hillary Clinton wins the presidency, you can expect restrictions to worsen. She hates coal and makes no bones about it. She has told me so personally.
And then there?s solar energy. This week, California Governor Jerry Brown signed the nation?s toughest climate legislation mandating a cut in the state's greenhouse gas emissions to 40% below 1990 levels by 2030.
While ambitious, the target is viewed as doable. Solar energy, which now accounts for 5% of the state?s power output, will do the heavy lifting.
Many other states are expected to follow suit. No coal here.
The United Kingdom has already taken this path. It says a lot that a country that ran a coal-based economy for 300 years announced the closing of its last mine which it did a few months ago. It will replace the power output with alternatives.
Having lived in England during the violent miner?s strikes during the early 1980?s, it was quite a revelation.
So the writing is on the wall. Another major producer, Anglo American (NGLB.BE), is now in contract to sell two major mines in Australia.
Coal is an energy source whose time has clearly come and gone. So will the price of coal.
Looks Like a Short To Me
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/Man-Shovelling-Coal-e1473903273291.jpg224400DougDhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngDougD2016-09-15 01:07:322016-09-15 01:07:32Don?t Touch the Coal Bubble
As a potentially profitable opportunity presents itself, John will send you an alert with specific trade information as to what should be bought, when to buy it, and at what price.Read more
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/Alert-e1457452190575.jpg135150Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2016-09-14 11:03:192016-09-14 11:03:19Trade Alert - (FB) September 14, 2016
While the Diary of a Mad Hedge Fund Trader focuses on investment over a one week to six-month time frame, Mad Day Trader, provided by Bill Davis, will exploit money-making opportunities over a brief ten minute to three day window. It is ideally suited for day traders, but can also be used by long-term investors to improve market timing for entry and exit points. Read more
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Global Market Comments September 14, 2016 Fiat Lux
Featured Trade: (LAST CHANCE TO ATTEND THE SEPTEMBER 16TH PORTLAND, OR GLOBAL STRATEGY LUNCHEON), (10 REASONS WHY JANET YELLEN WON?T RAISE RATES), (UUP), (LAUNCHING ?TRADING OPTIONS FOR BEGINNERS?)
Come join me for lunch at the Mad Hedge Fund Trader?s Global Strategy Update, which I will be conducting in Portland, OR at 12:00 PM on Friday, September 16, 2016.
A three-course lunch will be followed by an extended question and answer period.
I?ll be giving you my up to date view on stocks, bonds, currencies, commodities, precious metals, and real estate. And to keep you in suspense, I?ll be throwing a few surprises out there too.
Enough charts, tables, graphs, and statistics will be thrown at you to keep your ears ringing for a week. Tickets are available for $208.
I?ll be arriving early and leaving late in case anyone wants to have a one on one discussion, or just sit around and chew the fat about the financial markets. I expect a small group, so there will be plenty of opportunities to exchange ideas.
The lunch will be held at five star downtown Portland hotel, the exact location of which will be emailed to you with your confirmation.?
I look forward to meeting you, and thank you for supporting my research.
To purchase tickets for the luncheon, pleaseclick here.
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