Featured Trades: (EUROYEN), (HEDGE FUNDS), (CANADIAN DOLLAR)
1) Hedge fund longs have been bunching up in the Canadian dollar for the past two months. Canada makes what everyone wants and doesn?t have enough people to consume it, making them a major exporter of everything hot. I bet you didn?t know that the frozen wasteland to the North is our largest foreign oil supplier. Most people guess Saudi Arabia. The Canadian supply is slated to double over the next 20 years, thanks to the environmental atrocity of oil sands. The land of Mike Myers, Jim Carey, and Pamela Anderson (note gratuitous photo below) is also a big supplier of gold, silver, lead, grain, uranium, wood, and other hard things. As for mosquitoes, they?ve got a lock on the market. Use dip to accumulate the loony. If you catch me singing ?O Canada? in the shower, you?ll understand why.
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2) The euroyen cross has served as my faithful lapdog for 20 years, accurately forecasting the global risk appetite, rising when hedge funds were eager to roll the dice, and retreating when they went into hiding (see my earlier work by clicking here ). But lately this pet has forgotten its house training, much to the delight of my dry cleaner, delivering an unpleasant stream of false signals. When Japanese overnight rates were at zero, and the rest of the world was at 5%, it was easy to let Japan be your piggy bank and finance everything for free by denominating your debt in yen. This carry trade of choice became a strategy on its own. Leverage it ten to one and you earned a handy 50% annual return, and more, if the yen then depreciated. The problem is that the rest of the world has become Japan, with overnight rates everywhere at, or converging on zero, sending the predictive value of euroyen down the toilet. Thus, it joins the dustbin of history with other indicators that drew our collective gazes, like the money supply, the trade deficit, and rail car loadings. If I find a new one, I?ll let you know. Does anyone out there have any suggestions?
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3) There is no doubt that hedge funds have been the chief whipping boy for the financial crisis. Fear of rumor mongers and unnamed conspiracies abounded, leading to measures like short selling restrictions, stock lending bans, and punitive new taxes that only caused more damage. The industry even suffered a close call by almost being villainized in Oliver Stone?s upcoming sequel to his landmark film Wall Street. Industry veteran Jim Chanos talked him out of it. The industry is now at last organizing, creating its own Washington lobby group, the Coalition of Private Investment Companies (CPIC), with Chanos as the chairman. They have put up a polished website that provides some basic stats about the business, and seeks to shoot down some of the more egregious urban legends. To access their site at http://www.hedgefundfacts.org.
QUOTE OF THE DAY
?A statistical model build around a normal distribution when applied to markets can be a very dangerous thing,? said David Kelly of JP Morgan.
Global Market Comments September 10, 2009 Featured Trades: (GOLD), (ABX), (GLD), (MCO)
1) The precious metals markets were stunned with Barrick Gold?s (ABX) announcement that it will float a $3 billion public offering to retire its gold hedges in the futures markets. This means that the world?s largest producer is cashing in its downside protection and gearing itself for a ballistic move up in the price of the barbaric relic. The timing of the announcement, the day that the yellow metal broke $1,000 for the first time since February, couldn?t have been more auspicious. I have been a huge fan of Peter Munk?s ABX all year, cajoling readers into the stock at $27 in January before its 56% run (click here for report ) . South Africa?s largest gold miner, AngloGold Ashanti?s CEO Mark Cutifani says his company put its money where its mouth is, taking off its hedges some time ago. ?People are doing what they have been doing for 5,000 years, and that is buying gold as the only hard currency,? opines Cutifani. In the meantime, the Street Tracks gold ETF (GLD) announced that it has $34 billion of gold holdings, making it the largest ETF of all, and the fifth largest owner of gold in the world after four central banks. If you want to buy gold bullion or coins for the tightest spread over spot, check out http://www.millenniummetals.net.
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2) The case against the Big Three rating agencies took another step forward when a New York judge threw out the freedom of speech defense for one of the complaints. Terry McGraw, CEO of McGraw Hill, and owner of defendant Standard & Poor?s, says that at the peak in 2006, the industry was prepared for a worst case scenario of a 15% draw down in real estate prices over 18 months on the local level. Instead, it got a 50% national plunge that is now two years old and aging. It didn?t help that a Moody?s analyst wrote an e-mail saying he would rate paper issues by ?cows.? In the race for market share, Moody?s, S & P, and Fitches? competitively devalued the meaning of ?AAA? so that even the most toxic subprime sludge came out highly rated. With their seals of approvals, the agencies became the facilitators-in-chief of the over lending and over borrowing that made the crash a mathematical certainty. The hedge funds that made billions wisely ran their own in-house ratings departments which thought otherwise. They fell down on their knees, thanking God that inflated ?independent? ratings led to wild over valuation of debt securities and set up some of the greatest shorts of the century. There is no Hell hot enough to make ratings agencies adequately pay for their deliberate misdirection of trusting investors. As for the hedge funds, their new short play is the one rating agency that is still publicly traded, Moody?s (MCO).
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3) Consumer credit plunged by $21 billion in July, taking it down to the lowest level since WWII. The last time it was this low wartime rationing was in effect and a lot of individual purchases ended up in a booming black market. Instead of buying that new Cadillac Escalade with the chrome wheels, they are paring down debt. Gun shy credit card companies are happy to take the money, and American express has been cutting back limits in zip codes with the weakest housing like California and Florida, even for current accounts. Banks have gone back to lending only to people who don?t need the money. The savings rate has gone from zero to 7%, on its way to 10%,?? not exactly a great springboard for an economic boom. The catatonic consumer is the main reason why I have not played equities from the long side since May, preferring instead to dabble in commodities. With 70% of GDP in shrink mode, any move up in the indexes is just fluff. For more reasons on why you should break into an ugly rash before buying stocks at these levels, look at Martin Hutchinson?s piece by clicking here
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QUOTE OF THE DAY
?Beware of Wall Street geeks bearing formulas,? said Vince Farrell, CIO of Soliel Securities.
Global Market Comments September 9, 2009 Featured Trades: (COPPER), (TBT), (FCX), (EUROPE), (DOLLAR)
1) Well, you certainly don?t need my help anymore. With everything in the world going up but the greenback, you certainly don?t need the advice of financial advisors, brokers, pundits, or sadly, even this humble online columnist. I never thought I?d see the day when stocks, bonds, gold, silver, oil, natural gas, copper and collectable beany babies were all up in unison. Not only is the punchbowl ubiquitous, but the Kool-Aide is spiked with ecstasy, and it is so large, that there is a risk we might fall in and drown. Industry analysts are now putting out forecasts for their individual companies implying a 5% GDP growth rate next year, but macroeconomists at those very same houses see 2% as a stretch. All of this in the face of a catatonic consumer, $3.40/ gallon gasoline, and banks maintaining a death grip on lending to any but the primest of borrowers. I guess this is what happens when the Fed is determined to keep interest rates at zero, for as far as the eye can see, and the printing presses in Washington DC are running so fast that I can hear them here in San Francisco. With $4 trillion in cash sitting on the sidelines there is a risk that the faith based rally will continue. Is the Fed trying to cure a burst bubble with a profusion of? bubbles?
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2) It?s time to take another look at the short US Treasury bond ETF (TBT). I first recommended this 200% leveraged bet that long dated bonds were going down big time in January at $35, catching a near double to $60 (click here for report) . We have now retrenched back to $45, and it?s time to reload the boat. The US government has now committed to $9.1 trillion in debt issuance over the next ten years. Foreign governments will need to borrow as much to fund their own bail out/stimulus programs. Did I mention inflation? There is absolutely no way the ten year can maintain a 3.40% yield in the face of this onslaught.?? It is clear that zero short rates are driving investors, many of whom will only buy Treasuries, into making terrible investments. This is what the awesome bid to cover ratio of 3.2X for today?s three year auction is telling you. The dollar clearly sees this and is hitting a new one year low. It?s just a matter of time before bond investors put on their bifocals and see the locomotive that is about to run over them.
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3) Lack of a pure copper ETF is stampeding hedge funds into the shares of Freeport McMoRan (FCX), the world?s largest copper and gold producer, no doubt spurred by the red metal?s recent run at a new 2009 high.?? FCX is one of my favorite stocks, and one of the great ?tells? on the state of the global economy.?? CEO, Richard Adkerson, says it?s all about ?China, China, China?, which has been frenetically stimulating its economy with a $586 billion reflationary package, and rebuilding stockpiles of the copper at a furious pace. The ongoing lifestyle upgrade in other emerging markets is adding to demand, as is the switch to hybrid cars in industrialized countries, which use two to three times more copper than conventional cars. Last year, FCX mined 102 billion pounds of copper, 40 million ounces of gold, and 266 million ounces of silver. Talk about being in the sweet spot. A doubling of copper prices since January enabled FCX to announce blowout earnings. The stock has more than quadrupled since my New Year recommendation . Did you know that this is the number two performing stock in the S&P 500 this year? If you want a core holding that is in many right places at the right time, use dips to back up the truck for FCX. If you need any help on how to building a position in physical copper, please e-mail me at madhedgefundtrader@yahoo.com
4) The US is turning into Europe. Think high taxes, chronic high unemployment, more government involvement in everything, less innovation, and much lower growth, in exchange for a social safety net and better coffee. That is the message the markets told us by retreating to the 6,000 handle in March, levels not seen since 1996, and down 54% from the 2007 peak. Equity prices will shrink to multiples, in line with permanently lower long term growth rates of maybe 1%-2%, a shadow of the 5% rate seen for much of this decade. Hint: that?s a lot lower than here. Perhaps this is what mature economies are supposed to look like. If someone is holding a gun to your head and you must buy American stocks, only select names that get the bulk of their earnings from overseas. Microsoft (MSFT), Intel (INTC), Oracle, (ORCL), Cisco (CSCO) all get 60%-70% of their profits from overseas, where up to 90% of the real economic growth will come from for the next decade. Commodity, agricultural companies,?? and their ETF?s also fit this picture. As for me, I think I?ll move to Tahiti and live off of coconuts and freshly speared fish, wearing only a loin cloth. Anything is better than becoming French.
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QUOTE OF THE DAY
?When the fools are dancing, the greater fools are watching,? according to an old Japanese proverb.
Global Market Comments September 8, 2009Featured Trades: (NATURAL GAS), (UNG), (EL NINO), (AGU), (MON), (MOO), (WHEAT), (WZ09)
1)Everyday, I make an effort to speak to a maker, miner, driller, or provider of a service in the real economy. If you keep your head in the financial markets too long, it is easy to lose touch with reality. Yesterday, I spoke to a friend whose company produces large format copies of blue prints, making him a great leading indicator of building trends. His fall in sales has leveled off 40% down from the peak, and layoffs at client developers and architects seem to have dried up. There are some signs of life in shovel ready city and state projects directly benefiting from the stimulus package. A few small private remodels and additions are coming through, but there are absolutely no big projects on the horizon. He is hoping that his business will maintain this low level at least until the first few quarters of 2010. The scary thing is that I get exactly the same answer from everyone I talk to in every industry, be they the butcher, the baker, or the candlestick maker. This is not the stuff that economic recoveries or bull markets are made of. Perhaps this explains why the recent stock market rally has been absolutely devoid of insider buying, unlike previous upturns, as the two year daily chart below attests. When corporate managers and owners don?t want to eat their own cooking, neither do you.
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2) Just when I get comfortable with my view on Natural Gas, I get a scratchy, reverberating cell phone call from one of the major formations telling me that I?m being way too bullish. Gas won?t bottom at $2. The free fall will continue until it hits $1. National storage will be completely full imminently top out, and when it does, the producers will have to shut down completely. Since these guys are leveraged up the wazoo, this will trigger a string of bankruptcies, and the majors will fall like dominoes. A hedge fund bust won?t define this bottom, as these guys are all playing from the short side. UNG can?t step in as a buyer of last resort, as the SEC won?t let it issue more stock, and the current shares are trading at a ridiculous 20% premium. One thing we do agree on is that the bottom will look ugly, whatever the spark is. You often get Armageddon type views near market bottoms, but this guy has been dead on right until now. Well, it takes two to make a market. Conclusion: keep NG nailed to your screen, as the widow maker is where the volatility lives.
3)? I stopped by to visit some old friends at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) in Tiburon, California, located at the abandoned Navy base that was home to the Golden Gate Bridge?s antisubmarine net during WWII.? They warned me that we could be headed for an El Ni??o winter (check their site ).So named because all of the fish disappeared off the coast of Chile one Christmas, El Ni??o?s are caused by a sudden warming of ocean temperatures in the Central and Eastern Pacific, which lead to unusual weather patterns. During the last El Ni??o in 1998, the rainfall in San Francisco soared from 20 inches to 100 inches, the American River dykes broke, railroads were destroyed beyond repair, the Sierras got 40 feet of snow, and species of fish like mahi mahi normally found in Hawaii suddenly hit the hooks of happy fishermen in San Francisco Bay. Australia endured a terrible drought. This could all be great for wheat prices and bad for insurance companies, and no doubt many will claim it is all caused by global warming.
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4) Fortune magazine ran an excellent article about the flood of institutional money pouring into agricultural land, a sector I have been harping on for some time (see earlier piece ).The amount of arable land per person has fallen precipitously since1960, from 1.1 acres to 0.6 acres, and that could halve again by 2050.Water is about to become even more scarce than land. Productivity gains from new seed types are hitting a wall. Rising incomes in emerging markets is producing more meat eaters, another huge call on grain and water supplies. To produce one pound of beef, you need 16 pounds of grain and over 2,000 gallons of water. China, especially, is in a pickle because it has 20% of the world?s population, but only 7% of the arable land, and it has committed $5 billion to agricultural land in Africa. Similarly, South Korea has leased half the arable land in Madagascar to insure their food supplies. George Soros has snatched up 650,000 acres of land in Argentina and Brazil on the cheap, an area half the size of Rhode Island, and has become the largest shareholder in Potash (POT). Even hedge funds are getting into the game, quietly building portfolios of farms in the Midwest and the South.?? Time to take another look at Agrium (AGU), Monsanto (MON), Wheat (WZ09) and the ag ETF (MOO). Email me at madhedgefundtrader@yahoo.com if you need to know how to execute on any of these.
JOKE OF THE DAY
On Martha?s Vineyard, where President Obama is vacationing, they?ve introduced a new drink, the ?Obamarita.? After knocking down three Obamaritas, the $12 trillion deficit doesn?t look so bad.
Featured Trades: (CRUDE), ($WTIC),(DXO) (GOLD), (GLD), (KGC), (JAG), (RGLD)
1) So who was the dummy that waited until August to lay off their workers? Fire the bastard! Apparently, there are a large number of managers out there who don't read newspapers, watch TV, or talk to anyone, and waited until the Great Depression was nearly two years old to cut costs. That is one of many conclusions I am forced to draw on the news that the August non-farm payroll showed a further hemorrhage of 216,000 jobs, better than the 230,000 consensus, and a big improvement over the 273,000 July figure. But it included downward revisions of 50,000 in June and July, not good. The unemployment rate came in at 9.7%, continuing its relentless march towards double digits. The net net is that the economy has jumped off the top of the Empire State Building, but is now plummeting towards 5th Avenue and the meat wagon at a slower rate. The usual culprits were there; 65,000 jobs lost in construction, 63,000 in manufacturing, and 27,000 in finance. What was truly amazing to me was to see losses in education at the start of the school season. And what is going to happen to the 1.5 million who will exhaust their unemployment benefits by year end? The figures are all proof that there will be no economic recovery without bank lending. Running a business without credit is like trying to complete a marathon while holding your breath. Bring on the 'L.' My many US Navy readers should seriously consider re-upping, as the economy will not see net hiring for a very long time. Just hope we don't invade anyone new.
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2) Crude has been trading like a 3X short dollar ETF. If you look at pure supply/demand considerations, oil should be trading in the $40-$50 range, not the $65-$75 range that we have seen. That means that a $25 speculative premium can be laid purely at the door of the big hedge funds. The big oil producing countries, seeing Obama's policies leading to a weak dollar for as far as the eye can see, are also ditching their bucks as fast as they get their hands on them. That is why the Gulf sheikdoms were one of the biggest buyers of crude near last year's $148 peak. This leaves industry insiders clueless about the price direction of their products, not an easy way to run a business. They understand rig counts, tanker deliveries, and depletion rates, not commitment of traders reports, Bollinger bands, and Fibonaccis. No doubt it was their carping that brought regulators to pressure Deutsche Bank to shut down its double long oil ETN (DXO). Of course, this all means the consumer is getting shafted, paying $3.39/gallon at the pump, instead of $2. This premium is causing a drag on the economic recovery as well. Europeans and Japanese who are paying up to $10/gallon are wondering what we are bitching about. Bring on a 'W' recession and poof!, that premium disappears, as it did last year.
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3) Just as it is prudent to top up your flood insurance ahead of the hurricane season, investors are loading up on gold ahead of the treacherous September-October stock trading period. Yesterday's $22 move up shows that attempt number six to run the yellow metal up to a new high has begun. Silver happily tagged along for the ride, tacking on 70 cents to $15.49. Historically, September is the best month of the year to own the barbaric relic, showing an average 3.5% gain over the last 20 years. The onset of the Indian wedding season, Ramadan, and the run up to the Christmas and the Chinese New Year jewelry buying binge are all conspiring to give gold a boost.?? A tip off this was coming was the big put selling seen for the shares of the gold ETF (GLD), and Kinross (KGC). One good way to play gold at this late stage might be the shares of highly leveraged unhedged producers like Rangold resources (GOLD), Jaguar Mining (JAG), and royal Gold (RGLD). Confirmation that the markets are moving towards risk aversion can be found in the euroyen chart, which hit a one month low at 131, after double topping at 140.50. If gold does break, it could tack on 20% very quickly to $1,200. Load up on those American gold eagles. If you want to know where to find them in size, check with the experts at http://www.millenniummetals.net by clicking here.
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QUOTE OF THE DAY
'Making money on a trade is like getting applause, but you are the only one who hears it,' said Jon Najarian, an ex Chicago bears linebacker who now runs optionmonster.com.
Global Market Comments September 3, 2009 Featured Trades: (FNM), (FRE), (UNP)
1) The hedge fund industry is emerging from the ashes of 2008, and will inevitably grab a larger share of the investing public?s assets. Low interest rates and hero status made it way too easy for inexperienced, untested, and sometimes unscrupulous managers to raise new funds that charged management fees as high as 3% with a 50% performance bonus. Behind every ?liar loan? was a bond manager happy to soak it up through securitized Fannie Mae (FNM), Freddie Mac (FRE), or bank debt, shorting Treasuries against them, and then leveraging the 40 basis point spread by 50 times to generate a highly marketable 20% gross return. Never minds the risks. It was easy money, as long as there were lots of liars, which mortgage brokers herded in by droves, and as long as spreads narrowed, which they did for most of the 21st century. By the beginning of 2008, assets under management soared to $2 trillion. The melt down that followed wiped out large numbers of funds, and raised gates for the survivors, making investors wonder if they would ever get their money back. Total assets plunged to $1 trillion in the blink of an eye through a combination of redemptions and market losses. The new era that is emerging will be populated with humbled and chastened managers offering more disclosure, lower fees, no gates, and thanks to Madoff, oodles of third party oversight. Their portfolios will have less leverage, be invested in more liquid securities, and bring in lower returns. But the new generation will also offer investors battle tested strategies that survived the 100 year flood. Bridgewater, with $37 billion in assets, is now the largest hedge fund, followed by JP Morgan with $36 billion, Paulson & Co. at $27 billion, DE Shaw showing $26 billion, and Soros still at a hefty $24 billion. Long track records and a Gucci cachet will assure that these will prosper. Fees settling down to the 1%/20% range. For the rest of us this means more capital bunching up in the most successful trades, as we have already seen this year in financials, China, oil, and copper. It is also going to be much harder to get new funds off the ground.
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2) While the month of October has the reputation as the neighborhood slut, it is in fact September that does the real damage to your pocketbook. Yes, that September, the one that started yesterday. Since 1929, the average September has dropped by 1.3%, compared to an average rise of all months of 0.5%. Remember, Lehman went bust in that month last year, and with lead market Shanghai suffering a diabolical August, you have to wonder if history will repeat itself once again. For a more comprehensive analysis of calendar stock market trends, please read William Patalon III?s piece by clicking here
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3) I took some time off yesterday to watch a piece of economic history roll through town. The Union Pacific Railway?s (UNP) engine no. 844 roared past, hauling a trainload of retired union members and railroad buffs in its trademark yellow observation cars. The 4-8-4 steam engine was built in 1944 to haul the massive freight trains demanded by a wartime economy. The company has since spent a fortune maintaining the crown jewel of the great age of steam in perfect operating condition. Normally based in Cheyenne, Wyoming, it hurtled over the Rockies and the Sierras to visit us on a heritage tour. Progress of the belching 500 ton behemoth was updated every ten minutes through Twitter?s tweets, which garnered 481 followers by the time it made it to the San Francisco Bay Area. It barreled through the station like a freight train, blasting its whistle, and singing with heat the faces of the enthralled kids. For video of this piece of romantic transportation history, play the video above, or visit my website by clicking here . Sure, I know the train was videoed every 100 feet all the way from Wyoming to here, including by the four guys standing next to me who posted their work on YouTube. Some even chased the train over the Sierras to get multiple shots and put up montages. This is a community of over the top fanatics. But what the hell, it was fun anyway. By the way, UNP shares nearly doubled off the lows this year as it discounted a full blown recovery of the US economy.
QUOTE OF THE DAY
?It?s only the stock market that believes laying off 500,000 people in a reporting period is good news,? said Wilber Ross, CEO of Wilber Ross and Co., a distressed asset investor.
1) US stocks are now the most expensive they have been in seven years, and never really got cheap during the March low, just fairly valued. At least I have some good company in my views, which are also shared by David Rosenberg of Gluskin Sheff, the former economist at the late Merrill Lynch. The 'faith based' rally is now discounting a GDP growth rate of 4.0%, which has a snowball's chance in Hell of actually occurring. This is up dramatically from the 2.5% growth rate the S&P 500 was discounting when the index was at 667. The best stock market rally since 1933 added an unprecedented eight PE multiple points to stocks, and there is now more risk in the market than the 2007 peak. Underweight portfolio managers and momentum driven day traders are to blame. It's what happened after the 1933 rally that scares me. Needless to say, stocks offer no value here. You can sign up for David's well thought out research for free by going to his website at http://www.gluskinsheff.com/.
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2) There's nowhere I won't go to make a buck, so I had to sit up and pay attention when friends in Tokyo told me that the next big Asian equity play will be in Mongolia. Genghis Khan's ancestral land has enormous mineral resources which make it a natural commodity play (did he know?), and it has one of the world's most GDP friendly population pyramids. But incompetent government administrators with antiquated Soviet era sentiments managed to kill every nascent development opportunity in the crib with onerous windfall taxes and harsh joint venture restrictions. The resources stayed in the ground. National elections finally turned over the regressive administration in 2008, and the anti growth tax regime was dumped last week. Mongolia is now close to inking a deal with Ivanhoe Mines (IVN) and Rio Tinto (RTP) to develop the massive Oyu Tolgoi gold and copper mine, which could lead to a doubling of the GDP in five years. We're talking a gigantic 450,000 tons of copper and 330,000 ounces of gold a year. Also on tap is the development of huge coking coal and uranium deposits. The spillover benefits for the rest of the economy would be substantial.?? Mongolia's Lilliputian stock market offers few opportunities for foreign investors. So unless you want to get a job there or invest directly in a local company, you'll have to wait for the ETF to come out, and then the dip to get in. This is exactly what unfolded in Vietnam. Now that visas are no longer impossible to get, as they were in my day, my Japanese and Chinese speaking son tells me that Ulan Bator has become the trendy place for American college grads fleeing unemployment at home. Who knows? Give me a low enough PE multiple and I might even develop a taste for sheep brains and fermented mare's milk.
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3) The solar industry is suffering some 19th century Darwinian style competition, with Chinese manufacturers Suntech (STP) and Yingli Green Energy Holding (YGE) clearly dumping panels below cost to gain market share. You may laugh, but I watched the Japanese pursue the same strategy in the seventies and eighties to devastating success. They now control half the US automobile market, and the most profitable half at that. As a solar consumer I shouldn't care, as the 50% price drop has, with Obama's generous tax subsidies, made new installations cheaper than obtaining electricity from my local power company (PGE) at 12 cents a kilowatt. It's just a matter of booking the profit in China instead of Phoenix. But the predatory pricing has also kicked my beloved First Solar (FSLR) in the shins, which has dropped from 44% from $205 to $115 since May. Use the move to pick up FSLR on the cheap. The company is using advanced cadmium telluride based thin film semiconductor technology, which has enabled it to match the Chinese price cuts dollar for dollar, and the engineering will allow them to continue to do so. The Chinese, wedded to an older polysilicon product, can't keep playing this game, unless they want to hemorrhage cash, or face US anti-dumping enforcement. To see more on the current fundamentals of solar, please click here.
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4) Don't kid yourself into thinking that the real estate collapse is over. Yes, you can be forgiven for thinking so with July new home sales up 10%, the Case-Shiller home price index up two consecutive months, and homebuilder stocks like Toll Brothers (TOL),?? D.R. Horton (DHI), and Lennar (LEN) through the roof. Nationally, home prices have fallen back to their historic average of 3.2 times earnings. The problem with all of this is that crashes don't end at the averages, they overshoot. Some cities like Los Angeles, New York, and Washington DC are still historically expensive. Take away the life support of ultra low interest rates, the $8,000 first time buyer tax credit, the $6,000 California tax credit, $1 trillion in Fed purchases of securitized debt, and toss in another five million expected new foreclosures, and that might give you your final bottom. But that isn't happening this year. Rent, don't buy. For more on this, look at Martin Hutchinson's excellent work by clicking here
QUOTE OF THE DAY
'The total breakdown of the system is ahead of us. It may come in four, five, or ten years, and it will devastate the world economy. By bailing out the issuers of derivatives, the Fed actions have only postponed the day of reckoning,' said Marc Faber, publisher of the Gloom, Doom & Boom Report.
1) I attended the Woodstock of investment conferences last week, the San Francisco Money Show, as a correspondent for financial blog aggregator and research provider www.seekingalpha.com. The cavernous Marriot convention center was absolutely bubbling with new ideas, where you couldn't walk five feet without tripping over a great idea, and where information overload was the problem of the day. The show is one facet of a marketing empire assembled by Charles and Kim Githler over the last three decades, which includes traders, forex, and options expos, newsletters, cruises, video broadcasts, and an exponentially growing website. There really is no corner of the financial markets that were not well represented my market makers, analysts, technology providers, and investors? lots of them. With the soaring level of US government debt scaring the daylights out of everyone, the precious metals dealers were there in force, led by the pros at Millennium Metal (see www.millenniummetals.net ).?? I was pleasantly surprised by the diversity of major corporate sponsors there to promote their own shares, like Darden Restaurants, Proctor and Gamble, Roche, Deutche Telecom, and Nidec, several of which are great investments. New to the venue was a 'green' section well represented by wind, solar, and geothermal energy provides. I took the opportunity to talk with companies about everything from the latest drilling costs, long term food prices, and the true cost of geothermal, to the clever play in gold coins. After I make my fortune, there was even a booth extolling the virtues of retiring on the beach in Costa Rica. It was also a great opportunity to chat with the end investors who ultimately drive all these markets. All in all, it was a weekend well invested. For a calendar of future events, go to www.MoneyShow.com.
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2) I sat down with Forbes magazine publisher and former Republican presidential candidate, Steve Forbes, whose father, Malcolm, I knew from my journalism days in the seventies. He was there formally to promote his new book, Power Ambition Glory, but I couldn't help but sense his loftier goals. The crash was a failure of government. It was caused by the Fed, which pursued a weak dollar policy, kept interest rates too low for too long, and printed too much money. Our central bank should pursue a strong dollar policy which will bring a revival of the credit markets. We have the most hard left president and congress in history, and they are on the cusp of getting what they want. Lifting the rules on upticks and naked shorting threw gasoline on the fire. The rating agencies are a cartel we should get rid of. Let the free markets work. The market turn in March came with the modification of mark to market rules which never should have been in force. George Bush betrayed the party by abandoning its principals. Steve has always championed the libertarian wing of his party, and has been the leading proponent of the flat income tax. Did I just hear the first speech of the 2012 presidential election?
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QUOTE OF THE DAY
'Blaming greed for the Wall Street crash is like blaming gravity for an airplane crash,' said Steve Forbes, publisher of Forbes magazine.
Global Market Comments August 31, 2009 SPECIAL ??CHEAP THINGS TO BUY? ISSUE
Featured Trades: (CHK), (XTO), (SWN), (HK), (WHEAT), (WZ09)
1) Note to self. Don?t do your midnight pee next to the bear box. They?re called that for a reason. And I?m sorry that my shouting at the hungry, six foot tall black bear standing in front of me, no doubt more attracted by my Cheetos, hot dogs, and marshmallows than my Manhood, woke up the campers at the 57 surrounding sites. Of course it was too dark to find my bear spray. My ursine challenger eventually saw my logic that the neighbor?s ice chest was more appealing than I, and lumbered off into the darkness. I have successfully avoided bears of a different sort this summer, those of the stock market kind (see my July 15 warning not to sell to soon by clicking here). Never have I seen such a disconnect between the markets and the real economy. All of a sudden the world has gotten expensive. Stock prices have been levitated by vapor. The bulk of the trading volume is now accounted for by worthless zombie stocks like Citibank (C), (AIG), Fannie Mae (FNM), and Freddie Mac (FRE). Cost cutting, not sales growth, has artificially boosted earnings above subterranean forecasts. Commodity prices have soared because of stockpiling and not consumption. Puzzled CEO?s of every stripe are seeing no recovery in their businesses whatsoever. But bears who have sold into the summer rally have gotten a severe spanking. We are left with momentum players and chartists to grind out ever diminishing returns.? I have used the big up days to sell short dated out of the money calls in small size which, mercifully, expired worthless, sometimes just by pennies. That?s because I keep my favorite quote from John Maynard Keynes pasted to my monitor; ?Markets can remain irrational longer than you can remain liquid.? Better to wait for a more convincing break on the charts before piling on those shorts again.
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2) ?When do I buy natural gas? is the most frequent question I am getting from clients these days. I can?t blame them, after watching CH4 dive from $13.50/MCF last year to a September contract low of $2.72. Massive new discoveries and an unusually cool summer is causing a looming storage shortage that has hammered longs. Those who dove in early have been punished, with stop outs followed by stop outs. The bizarre thing is that gas went up in flames while crude more than doubled, from $32 to $77, leaving pros stunned and speechless.?? The crude/gas ratio has soared to an unimaginable 27 times, up from a mere four times in the last decade. On a BTU basis, gas is now only 25% the cost of oil, it burns cleaner, with only half the carbon dioxide output, and is cheaper than high grade coal. Natural gas at these prices is another way of buying oil at $18 a barrel, with less pollution. Industry insiders don?t see it falling below $2/MCF, the breakeven cost of the longest term producers, where the shut off valves will start creaking en masse. Existing gas fields deplete at 25% a year, and the 60% cut in new drilling this year will deliver a rebound in prices by next winter. Longer term, the Pickens plan and the conversion of a large part of our national power generation to natural gas will drive prices higher. In the end, I think the final low will be defined by another Amaranth type disaster, where a super leveraged long hedge fund gets wiped out and is then liquidated under the worst conditions imaginable. In 2007, the Amaranth debacle took gas from $17 to $4 in the blink of an eye. Where Amaranth 2.0 will take us is anyone?s guess. But when it happens, possibly as early as September, other big hedge funds will stampede in like feral cats lapping up spilled milk. If I lived over a giant salt cavern, I would be pumping it full of natural gas now. But since these formations don?t exist in Northern California, I shall have to content myself with the futures markets, where longer dated contracts are selling at big premiums. Email me at madhedgefundtrader@yahoo.com if you need help getting set up on the futures. For those not looking for an ?E? ticket ride, it may now be time to Hoover up the leveraged natural gas equity plays like Chesapeake (CHK), XTO Energy (XTO), Southwestern (SWN), and Petrohawk Energy (HK), which appear to have already bottomed.
3) I drove over the Benicia Bridge yesterday, and saw ships lined up at the silos, sitting high in the water, waiting for transport our record wheat surplus to hungry China. After looking at barge schedules for the Columbia River, weather forecasts for Australia, and planting schedules for Texas and Kansas, I am getting more excited about buying December Wheat under $5 (click here for more background). The Southern planting schedule starts on September 1, and the financially weakest farmers will have to sell whatever they have in storage to pay for the new season?s seed and chemicals. This will give us the inventory clear out we need to allow prices to work higher by year end. The greatest growing conditions in living memory have driven prices for this basic foodstuff from last year?s spot high of $13 to the current low of $4.90. Philosophically, the cynic in me loves shorting ?Perfect,? like the ?Perfect? growth in Japanese bank earnings?? in 1989 (remember Japan as Number One?) and the ?Perfect? business models I saw in dotcoms in 2000 (remember the ?infinite revenues, zero cost? pitch?). You might get a buck out of wheat by year end, and more if conditions become less than perfect. Aren?t we supposed to see an El Nino winter (click here for details)? And you never know when the long term food shortage is going to kick in, where the sky will be the limit for prices (click here for details). View the recent spike in sugar prices as an appetizer, not a dessert. Remember, the Fed can print money, but not calories.
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JOKE OF THE DAY
Purse snatchers stole the credit card belonging to Ben Bernanke?s wife. Their credit card company became suspicious when they saw multiple purchases of bankrupt car companies hit his card.
Featured Trades: (NATURAL GAS), (UNG), (LITHIUM), (OPTT), (HANG SENG), ($HSI)
1) Many traders are staring at their screens with rapt attention to see if natural gas can hold the new seven year low of $3. If it does, you can expect an explosive rally back to $3.50. If it doesn?t, the mother of all stop loss selling will ensue, as day traders and chartists, ignorant of the fundamentals of CH4, bail on positions that technically looked sooooo attractive. Seeing this terrible price action with a hurricane barreling in on the East coast is nothing less than amazing. NG owners have to be thinking that if you throw good news on a market, and it can?t go up, then get the Hell out of there. You could see $2/MCF in a heartbeat, and the washout could set up one of the great long plays of the decade. Buying on the back of others? distress is always a great play. Please see my call on June 2 to sell NG at $4.30 by clicking here . Remember the $13.50 we saw last year, or better, the $17 that printed after hurricane Katrina? They don?t call this contract the widow maker for nothing. For an excellent update on this clean burning fuel, go to the opinion page of the August 17 issue of the Wall Street Journal and read the piece entitled ?New Priorities for Our Energy Future,? written by none other than two sons of the South, T. Boone Pickens and Ted Turner. (To read the full article, click here). They argue that the gigantic pool of NG recently discovered under the US exceeds the energy reserves of Saudi Arabia and should be used to transform our economy. But that isn?t going to help nervous traders decide if they should puke their long NG positions first thing tomorrow morning.
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2) If we do move from a carbon to a lithium based economy, what are the implications? Will we all become mellow? Politicians, industrialists, and environmentalists who see battery powered vehicles as the wave of the future are overlooking the fact that 50% of the world reserves of lithium are found in impoverished, landlocked Bolivia. This is a country that, until now, was best known for killing off famous foreigners (Che Guevara, Butch Cassidy, and the Sundance Kid), and being the source of a new form of venereal disease. Lithium ion batteries are four times more efficient than the current generation of nickel cadmium ones, and are essential for electric cars to finally become economically viable. But now that the country finally has something the world wants, nationalism is rearing its ugly head. Local politicians see their country as the Saudi Arabia of the highly corrosive, toxic, reactive metal, and are already discussing ways to restrict access. Will La Paz become the headquarters of OLEC, the Organization of Lithium Exporting Countries? The only other supplies are to be found in Chile, Argentina, Australia, China, and Nevada. Should the US invade to insure supplies? Iraq worked didn?t it? The safer way for opportunistic investors to play this is to look at Sociedad Quimica Y Minera (SQM), Chile?s largest producer of lithium, which has already seen its shares nearly triple this year.
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3) Wave power has been the orphan of the alternative energy world, the allure of infinite supplies of energy offset by the highest cost of extraction. Every time it looks like someone has cracked this nut, a storm comes along and washes away all of their high tech buoys. However, we may finally be seeing this technology come to fruition. New Jersey based Ocean Power Technologies (OPTT) has been working on the problem since 1994, went public in 2007, and seeks to convert the mechanical motion of ocean waves into electricity with their PowerBuoys. Their engineers have created a 150 KW buoy that generates power at a relatively rich ten cents per KW. The energy available in waves is truly immense. A small harbor of these could generate enough electricity to power a medium sized city. The Navy has been their biggest customer until now, accounting for 58% of sales, driven by a directive to obtain half of their renewable energy generation from renewable sources. Commercial projects are operating or under consideration for the Jersey shore, Spain, Scotland, Western Australia, Hawaii, and Oregon, where local utilities are operating under similar mandates. The cash rich, well funded company says if they can mass produce their next generation 500 KW PowerBuoy, which will be operable in 2010, the cost of electricity will drop from 10 cents to 5 cents per kilowatt, making it cost competitive with fossil fuels, wind, and solar. Throw government subsidies into the mix and this could be an interesting play. The stock cratered with those of other green companies, dropping from $20 to $4. With crude now having moved from $32 to $75 on its way back up to $150 this could become an interesting cheap call on energy prices. Check out their website at http://www.oceanpowertechnologies.com/
4) All eyes are riveted on Shanghai, where the index has gone from up 110% on the year to only 53% in less than three weeks. Talk about taking the rice wine away from the party! I know from my own hard earned trading experience that the Middle Kingdom is the home of the one way move, a tendency exacerbated by the 53% retail participation in the daily trading volume. Analysts are looking for the 150 day moving average to hold at 2,700, which could set up a range of 2,700 to 3,500 for the rest of the year. Use the sell off to get a position in an economy that will see growth accelerate from the current 9% rate to possibly 12% by next year. With Shanghai closed to foreign direct investors, the best way to do this with decent leverage is through the Hong Kong based Hang Seng futures. The mini contract has only recently been cleared by US regulators, and is now available to US based traders. One contract? gives you an exposure of? US$26,000, with a margin requirement of?? US$2,000, giving you leverage of 13 times. Catch a 10% move and you earn a handy 130% return. The only drawback is you have to stay up from 9:45 pm to 4:30 am New York time to watch the intraday moves, which can be utterly breathtaking. If you don?t mind the No Doze and want to know how to get set up on this, email me at madhedgefundtrader@yahoo.com.
5) Note to subscribers: I will be off for a week, first to attend the San Francisco Money show, then to drink the pristine, ultra pure waters of Lake Tahoe. Great news for the kids, bad news for the fish. It?s time to accumulate some grit on my teeth instead of stock positions, and watch burning marshmallows drip from my coat hanger into the fire instead of diminishing investment opportunities. Paid subscribers will have these days added to the end of their run. Thanks for all of the wonderful suggestions for poison oak remedies after my last trip. Does anyone know any good tricks to keep the mosquitoes at bay?
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QUOTE OF THE DAY
?Recession-Plagued Nation Demands New Bubble to Invest In,? says a headline in The Onion, a satirical publication.
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