Featured Trades: (ARE THE EQUITY MARKETS HEADED FOR A FALL?)
1) Are the Equity Markets Headed For a Fall? On this two year anniversary of the great bull market, one has to ask if it is about to die of old age. Take a look at the chart below showing investor sentiment. The last time it was this high was the end of 2007, not exactly a great time to load the boat with equities.
I suspect that if you are not at a top in the market now, the end is not far off. Not only is the bull market two years old, the current leg is rapidly approaching six months. That means that we have not pierced the 50 day moving average in the S&P 500 in any meaningful way since August.
The rumbling that not all is well in River City is getting louder by the day. We are now seeing much more volume on down days than up days in the stock market, a reliable indicator that the smart money is departing for sunnier climes. Commodities look like they are giving up the ghost for the time being, with lead metal copper down by 8.5% in a month. They don't say that the red metal has a PhD in economics for nothing.
Even more concerning is the recent strength in the long bond that could be the beginning of a head and shoulders bottom in that market. Is this the warm up for a flight to safety bid? Is it relieved that PIMCO's Bill Gross has finally completed his gargantuan sales of bonds? Is the European debt crisis about to rear its ugly head once again? Is the dead hand of high oil prices finally being felt by the market? Only time will tell.
I think the only thing that could rescue the global equity markets at this point is to sudden demise of one Colonel Muammar Khadafy. The disappearance of the Libyan dictator would drop oil prices by $20 in a heartbeat, and send equities soaring, at least for a little while. Remember, he is only president for life. Maybe someone should lend him one of those Toyota's with the sticky floor mats?
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Don't Sell This Guy a Life Insurance Policy
Featured Trades: (A TOUCHDOWN FOR USC)
3) A Touchdown for USC. My alma mater, the University of Southern California (one of my several alma maters) announced in a full page ad in the New York Times today that they had received their largest private donation in their history. As a third generation alumni of this fanatical football factory (I went to school with Mark Harmon, Lynn Swan, and OJ Simpson), I still receive their alumni newsletter, where I learned the news.
David and Dana Dornsife gave $200 million to the downtown Los Angeles home of the Trojans. The money will be used to fund the College of Letters, Arts, and Sciences, which will be renamed after them. Dornsife made his fortune as the owner of Herrick Corp., a Stockton based maker of the prefabricated steel that was used to build many of the skyscrapers in the center of Los Angeles.
The gift tops the university's previous largest gift from George Lucas, of Star Wars fame, who in 2006 contributed $175 million to USC's film school, which he once attended with film legend, Steven Spielberg. For the record, the largest charitable contribution to a university in history was the $600 million that Gordon Moore gave Caltech in nearby Pasadena, where as a teenager I used to sit in on the math classes.
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I Certainly Could Use More Money for a Uniform
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'I think you would see a 25% reduction in the standard of living in this country if the dollar were no longer the world's reserve currency,' said real estate mogul, Sam Zell.
Featured Trades: (WHY OIL WILL PEAK ON FRIDAY)
1) Why Oil Will Peak on Friday.? Texas tea has undergone the perfect storm over the past month, with the Middle Eastern dominoes falling one by one. It was the worst case scenario times five, and all of a sudden my once outrageous claim that crude would hit $100/barrel by the end of first quarter seemed positively conservative. On Friday, we face a 'Day of Rage' that threatens to topple the Saudi regime, a 12 million barrel a day exporter.
Don't kid yourself. The real price of crude oil now is $120/barrel. That is where both Brent and Louisiana sweet are trading when you adjust for the term structures in the futures market. The $107 you see trading on your screen on NYMEX is for delivery in Cushing, Oklahoma, where prices have been driven artificially low by a glut of crude coming down from Canada and North Dakota being dumped in a market where there is no storage. According to the CFTC, the net long of 268,000 oil futures contracts in the market would fill all the storage in Cushing six times over.
But Saudi Arabia is not Tunisia, Algeria, Egypt, or Libya. The latter countries had shaky regimes that were established during the postwar era that were built on sand. Saudi Arabia has been around a lot longer. It is based on a series of inter-tribal marriages between tribes that took place during the early 1920's that remain rock solid today. Being the wealthiest country in the region, the Saudi's had a lot more money to spread around to keep everyone loyal. This is why Al Qaida has made absolutely no inroads there for the past 20 years.
This is all a long way of saying that Friday's event in Saudi Arabia will amount to a big nothing. In fact, I don't think we are going to get much more out of the entire Middle Eastern crisis. The Libyan civil war seems to have quickly stalemated. The military there is actually quite small, as Khadafi sought to minimize the threat to his own regime by a coup'?d etat. After all, that's how the young colonel gained power himself in 1968. And no one on either side has any experience fighting, or organizing a military campaign of any kind.
There are other factors to consider. Even a token release of oil from the strategic petroleum reserve, which the administration seems to be considering, could be a real price killer. This is how the last two great price oil price spikes ended. Ben Bernanke's QE2 ends on June 30, which has poured hundreds of billions of dollars into gold, silver, agricultural commodities, and yes, oil. The end of this program could cool the hugely inflationary pressures on all 'hard' assets.
So I think that oil is peaking here for the time being. All of the $23, or 27% increase in the price of oil in the last four weeks has been about fear. Only 1 million barrels a day, or 1.2% of daily global consumption has actually been disrupted, and that can easily be made up by boosting Saudi production, which they have already generously offered to do. Anyone in the oil industry will tell you that, considering only the true supply and demand for oil, the price should be about $70/barrel.
Mind you, I am still a card carrying 'peak oiler.' I think it is just a matter of time before we hit $150/barrel, and then $200. But we have covered an awful lot of ground on the upside in a very short time, so it is time for a rest. I think we are going to see $90/barrel before we see $150.
There may be a trade here for the nimble. You can look at the inverse oil ETF (DNO). You can buy out of the money puts on the oil futures. I think $100 out three months would be a nice cheap strike. My favorite would be to buy puts on the Oil ETF (USO). Here the ETF with the world's worst tracking error will work to your advantage to the downside.
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Featured Trades: (NEXT STOP $50 FOR SILVER), (CDE), (SLV), (AGQ), (SLW)
2) Next Stop $50 for Silver. Last week, I saw silver rise $1 in one day. I remember when the white metal's total cost was $1! When I urged readers three years ago to load up on silver at $10 because it was headed to $50, peopled insisted that I was insane. Now that we are ticking at $36, it doesn't look so crazy after all.
Investment demand is overwhelming industrial demand by a large margin. The world produces about 1 billion ounces of silver a year to meet 1 billion ounces a demand for jewelry and industrial process. But over the past year, an additional 300 million ounces of investment demand has piled on top of that, creating the parabolic moves in prices that we have seen this year. The total demand for silver today is the same as it was in 1980, when a corning operation by the Hunt brothers drove it to $50/ounce.
Geologically, silver is 17 times more common than the yellow metal. All of the gold ever mined is still around, from King Solomon's mine, to Nazi gold bars in Swiss bank vaults, and would fill two and a half Olympic sized swimming pools. But most of the silver mined has been consumed in various industrial processes, and is sitting at the bottom of toxic waste dumps.
Silver did take a multiyear hit when the world shifted from silver based films to digital photography during the nineties. Now rising standards of living in emerging countries are increasing the demand for silver, especially in areas where there is a strong cultural preference for the jewelry, as in Latin America. That means we are setting up for a classic supply demand squeeze.
Whatever you do, don't buy silver right here. Wait for a more substantial dip. When you do decide to take the plunge, take a look at top producers Silver Wheaton (SLW) and Coeur D Alene Mines (CDE), the ETF (SLV), and the leveraged ETF (AGQ). The big question is now, should I let target creep take hold and raise my long term forecast to $100? That might be really insane!
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Buy Silver at $10? You must be Crazy!
Featured Trades: (BETTING ON A MIDDLE EAST WAR)
3) The Bookie's View on War in the Middle East. I have written in the past about the online betting site, Intrade (click here for their site), which will take wagers on anything under the sun, including a range of economic and political probabilities (click here for 'Here's the Winner of the November Election').
The current betting is that there is a 76.5% chance that Muammar Khadafi will be gone by the end of the year. There is only a 6.2% chance that the US will launch an air strike against Iran this year. But there is a 32.4% chance that a weapon of mass destruction will be used somewhere in the world by the end of 2013.
Of greater foreboding for stock traders is that the likelihood of the US going into recession in 2012 has risen from 15.1% to 19.9% just in the last two weeks.
After watching this site with some amusement for years, I should caution potential traders that these prices are subject to huge swings, are often wrong, and come with hefty dealing spreads. Expectation often meets a tragic end at the hands of reality. They can also be very contradictory. While predicting a Democratic slaughter in the last election, they also anticipate that Obama has a 61.1% chance of winning the 2012 presidential election.
The Bookies Give it 5 to 1 Odds
'A girl in the convertible is worth five in the phone book,' said 'Oracle of Omaha', Warren Buffet, CEO and the largest shareholder in Berkshire Hathaway.
Featured Trades: (MY ALL ELECTRIC BOOBY PRIZE), (NSANY), (TM), (BYDDF)
2) China's BYD Promises to Take Over the US Car Market. For years now, I have been chronicling in exacting detail my quest to buy an all-electric Nissan Leaf automobile as the ultimate hedge against rising oil prices (click here for 'Getting Something for Nothing'). The crude price spike arrived right on schedule, with gasoline prices topping $4/gallon in San Francisco last week. My local Nissan dealer assures me that the car I ordered a year ago, along with my substantial $75 deposit, will be delivered in May.
Then I received a scratchy, badly echoing telephone call from the Southern Chinese manufacturing mega city of Shensen.? My friend had just driven BYD's (Build Your Dreams) (BYDDF) new E6 all-electric sedan, and he could not sing its praises loudly enough (click here for their website). The car has a 200 mile range, versus the 100 miles for the Leaf. That is made possible by a 60 KwH battery, compared to the 24 KwH battery in the Leaf. Yet the E6 will be offered in the US for $40,000, close to the non-subsidized price for Nissan's new vehicle.
The great barrier to competitiveness for electric cars has always been the cost of the batteries, which now run at $1,000/KwH. So $24,000 of the cost of the $38,000 fully loaded Nissan Leaf is just to cover the 600 pound lithium ion battery. However, by executing a globally integrated manufacturing model, BYD has been able to lower its costs to $500/KwH. This involves making its own chips, directly owning lithium mines, and operating in low wage countries like China and Eastern Europe. I guess this is what happens when a battery company builds a new car from the ground up, instead of a traditional car manufacturer.
BYD plans to launch mass marketing of the roomy, five passenger E6 in the US by the end of 2012. Safety specifications have already been satisfactorily upgraded to meet rigorous American standards. BYD is quietly setting up its own US dealer network. The cars will initially be offered to fleet users, and then the consumer market. It also will roll out a range of all-electric buses, which no one is currently producing here. The company's goals are anything but modest. It plans to become the largest car maker in China by 2015, and the largest in the world by 2020, surpassing the behemoth Toyota Motors (TM).
I rode Warren Buffett's coattails into this stock in 2008, taking a position after he bought 10% of the company for $230 million (click here for the piece). Buffett's partner, Charlie Munger, describes CEO Wang Chuan-Fu as a combination of General Electric's (GE) legendary manager, Jack Welch, and inventor Thomas Edison. After that, the stock rose tenfold.
It has since given up half the gains. The stock has suffered from the general malaise towards Chinese stocks since the government began its war against inflation a year ago, raising interest rates and tightening bank reserve requirements no less than eight times. Investors are also concerned that BYD's rumored secondary share issue, needed to finance its massive expansion plans, could weigh heavily on the stock.
Shares with such enormous earnings potential at this price look like a bargain to me. If I had to name one company that could appreciate 1,000% in the future, this is it. But I don't know when. So this would make it a candidate for burying it in a long term portfolio, rather than a short term trading vehicle.
And what of my Nissan Leaf? What happens to its value if BYD delivers on the E6? How about knocking it down by more than half? I'm starting to wonder if instead of getting the lead on cutting edge technology of the century, I got the booby prize.
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Will BYD's E6 Beat Nissan's Leaf Before the Race Has Started?
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'You know you're no longer CEO when you get into the back of your car and it doesn't move,' ' said 'Oracle of Omaha', Warren Buffet, CEO and the largest shareholder in Berkshire Hathaway.
Featured Trades: (THOUGHTS ON OIL AND THE ECONOMY)
1) Thoughts on Oil and the Economy. If at the beginning of the year I had told you that oil would go well above $100/barrel within two months, there would be a civil war in Libya, and the stock market would hit a new three year high, you would have immediately canceled your subscription to this newsletter and initiated proceedings to have me committed to an insane asylum. Except in Texas, where I would have been taken out and summarily shot, and rightfully so. Not in a vindictive way, but in a humanitarian attempt to put me out of my misery, like a thoroughbred race horse with a broken leg.
Yet, here we are. Go figure. The transportation index, that prodigious user of all types of fuel, is getting slaughtered. Both sides in the Libyan civil war are threatening to attack the other's oil supplies. The rebels say they have sold a supertanker worth of crude. To whom? How did they accept payment? Where is the contract? Who would you contract with? If true, why doesn't Khadafi sink it? It's not like it is a small target. While all western companies have eased oil shipments from Libya, Chinese and Indian companies are picking up the slack on the spot market.
In the meantime, US naval ships are steaming through the Suez Canal in a show of force, and we are days away from Saudi Arabia's 'Day of Rage.' If you think this is just talk, see what the Arab cable news network, Aljazeera, has to say about it by clicking here . I can easily see a carrier group sitting in the Gulf of Sidra, declaring a 'No Fly Zone', and then shooting down any plane that leaves the ground. Remember, our air-to-air missiles have a 100 mile range, and we know that the Libyans don't know how to use theirs. Hey, if you can't win two Middle Eastern wars, maybe the third time is the charm? It couldn't happen to a nicer guy.
If oil stays at the current triple digit altitude, some $70 billion gets lifted out of consumers' pockets, knocking 0.5% off of US GDP this year. Keep in mind that there is absolutely no dearth of oil in the US. Private storage facilities at the Cushing, Oklahoma hub are bulging, and the government's strategic petroleum reserve is chock full. It is fear and speculative buying by hedge funds that is driving prices up, not physical shortages.
Former Chairman of the Federal Reserve, Alan Greenspan, made some interesting comments this morning as to why dear oil wasn't having a bigger impact on the financial markets. Energy conservation has become far more pervasive than any of us realize. All of those subsidized solar panels and hybrid cars are starting to have a major impact on our energy consumption.
Also, thanks to the Great Recession, companies held back investment in productivity increases and cost cutting that have only recently been unleashed. What is one of the biggest of these investments? Spending on energy conservation measures across a vast array of industries.
Remember that busted home heater that I told you about yesterday? I had the engineer take apart both the outgoing and incoming units, and I couldn't believe what I saw. The 20 year old one was a simple gas fired affair. The new one included a built in radiator that sucked every bit of heat out of the apparatus, greatly improving its efficiency. These tiny, incremental sorts of savings are going on in a million imperceptible ways around the world every day, all adding up into something really big.
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Khadafi's New Negotiating Strategy?