Monday, November 30, 2009

Weekly Update from Puru

Global stock markets are selling off in a state of panic as jittery investors run for the hills. Yesterday, Dubai World, the government-owned investment company announced that it sought to delay repayments of its US$59 billion worth of debt. This development sent shock waves around the financial markets and once again, fear has gripped the investment community.

It is worth remembering that Dubai was one of the most leveraged states and its property market was hit especially hard during last year's financial crisis. So, is it really a surprise that it wants to delay its debt repayments? More importantly, should investors see this as an apocalyptic event? It is our contention that this senseless liquidation of assets is overdone and in the next few days, calm will return to the financial markets. After all, Dubai is not a dominant economy and Dubai World's debt burden of US$59 billion is pocket change when compared to the trillions of dollars of credit losses in the West. Therefore, we do not see this as a game changing event. In fact, we suggest that long-term investors seize this market correction as a buying opportunity. If our assessment is correct, this panic will subside in a few days time and that may be a good time to add to your long-term investment positions. We continue to like China, India and Vietnam as long-term investment destinations.

Over in the commodities markets, the price of crude oil has slipped to US$75 per barrel and this is in line with the ongoing 'risk aversion' play. It is possible that the price of oil will stay under pressure for as long as the stock market correction continues, however, the bull-market should resume thereafter. We are holding on to your positions in energy companies and have no intention of selling our holdings. Elsewhere in the energy patch, it seems as though the price of uranium is trying to find a floor and long-term investors should consider allocating capital to promising uranium mining stocks. Our homework suggests that the uranium market faces severe supply and demand imbalances and this should result in a multi-year bull-market (more on this subject in December's issue of Money Matters).

In the precious metals sector, both gold and silver are facing some selling pressure as investors dump 'risky' assets. This morning in Asia, the price of silver is down by roughly 4.5% and the price of gold has shed almost 2%. In our view, this sell-off will soon be over and long-term investors should ride out this pullback. Remember, precious metals are in a gigantic bull-market and the ongoing upleg should continue until spring next year. We suspect that within the next six months, the price of gold will climb to US$1,400-1,500 per ounce and the price of silver may climb to US$25-26 per ounce. Accordingly, we are holding on to our positions in gold and silver mining stocks and we suggest that you do the same.

Over in the currency markets, the US Dollar is benefiting from the 'risk aversion' trade. Now, unless Dubai defaults on its debt, we believe the US Dollar rally will be short lived. Therefore, we suggest that you keep your positions in the Australian and Canadian Dollars. In addition to the US Dollar, the Japanese Yen is also getting assistance from the 'flight to safety' trade, however Japan's economic fundamentals are awful, so we don't expect this rally to last either.

Finally, over in the fixed income markets, government bonds yields are declining as investors rush to the 'safety' of government debt. In our view, this flight towards 'safety' is ridiculous because various governments in the West are already bankrupt and we do not see the point in lending money to insolvent entities.

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

The Unemployment Rate Visualized

This is a cool visual. It looks like the country is being attacked by a plague of locusts or something from a science fiction movie...

Check it out here...

Monday, November 16, 2009

Grain Charts for the Iowa Farmer


Soy: Begin backward, it never had the May sell off that the other grains had and is in a firm uptrend. Some MACD downward divergence is showing up but hasn't hurt price to bad.


Wheat and Corn: Charts look the same. The Dark Blue=20EMA, Yellow=50EMA, Light Blue=100. The 20 EMA has crossed the 50EMA confirming the potential start of and uptrend. As more and more of these EMA cross the more the trend builds and runs from there. Plus there is MACD divergence. Most trend followers are in at this point and it looks as if the trend has some wind at its sails.

Friday, November 13, 2009

Weekly Update From Puru

Global stock markets are still in correction mode and the pullback/consolidation may continue for another week or two. Thereafter, we expect a strong year-end rally which will probably take stocks to a new recovery high by next spring. We are in a cyclical bull-market and with record-low interest rates in most nations, it isn't difficult to see why the financial markets are going up. Governments all over the world are creating money, taking on more debt and destroying the purchasing power of paper money. This is inflationary and supportive of asset prices. Now, if the governments continue to inflate, it is possible that many stock markets may climb to record-highs in nominal terms, but they may still do poorly in real terms. Given the technology called the printing press, we are inclined to think that new lows in nominal terms aren't likely, although the US stock market may make new inflation-adjusted lows before this secular bear-market is over. If our assessment is correct, this cyclical bull-market will end when short-term interest-rates have risen significantly and the yield-curve is inverted. At that point, we will start liquidating our holdings, however we don't expect this to happen for another two years or so. Accordingly, we are maintaining our country-specific exposure to China, India and Vietnam. Apart from these developing nations in Asia, we also like energy, materials, precious metals, industrial machinery, Asian retail and American healthcare stocks.

Over in the commodities complex, the price of crude oil is correcting due to the ongoing weakness in the stock markets. We expect the pullback to be short-lived and the price of oil is likely to rise significantly over the following years. We are firm believers in 'Peak Oil' and our largest exposure is to the energy complex - upstream companies, oil service stocks and plays on alternative energy. We have no intention of selling our positions and we suggest that you also allocate a large portion of your capital to energy. Supply and demand data doesn't lie and our solid research leads us to conclude that the supply of conventional crude oil is struggling at a time when demand is rising. This supply and demand imbalance should cause an energy crisis and the price of crude is likely to appreciate considerably. Any temporary pullbacks in the oil and gas patch are buying opportunities.

As far as precious metals are concerned, real money is coming back in fashion! Given the irresponsible monetary and fiscal policies, gold has resumed its role as a store of value; an anchor amidst the reckless money and debt creation. Despite the lengthy bull-market, gold seems to be undervalued and should rise over the following years. More importantly, gold is on the verge of an explosive rally which will probably end next spring. Silver is also benefiting from this flight towards hard assets and its price should appreciate until next spring. We have some exposure to precious metals mining stocks and we will look at booking our profits next spring. In the meantime however, we suggest that you hold on to your positions in this sector.

Finally, in the world of currencies, the US Dollar is desperately trying to rally. Even though a short-term counter-trend rally is possible, we don't expect the American currency to stage a sustainable advance. Remember, the US government's obligations are now worth US$115 TRILLION and the only way America can avoid default is by creating money and debasing its currency. Accordingly, we suggest that you keep your cash in Aussie and Canadian Dollars and if the US Dollar rallies, we suggest that you use that as a selling opportunity. If our world-view is correct, US Dollar cash and American government bonds will probably turn out to be the worst assets to own over the next decade.


Wednesday, November 4, 2009

Great interview with Karl Denninger



My Comments: In my opinion Karl does great analysis on whats wrong and how to fix it. He also has a good portfolio strategy to protect against either hyper deflation or hyperinflation. Five part interview. Well worth the time to sit down and listen.

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

How Goldman Conned Everyone

In 2006 and 2007, Goldman Sachs Group peddled more than $40 billion in securities backed by at least 200,000 risky home mortgages, but never told the buyers it was secretly betting that a sharp drop in U.S. housing prices would send the value of those securities plummeting.

Goldman's sales and its clandestine wagers, completed at the brink of the housing market meltdown, enabled the nation's premier investment bank to pass most of its potential losses to others before a flood of mortgage defaults staggered the U.S. and global economies.

Only later did investors discover that what Goldman had promoted as triple-A rated investments were closer to junk.

Now, pension funds, insurance companies, labor unions and foreign financial institutions that bought those dicey mortgage securities are facing large losses, and a five-month McClatchy investigation has found that Goldman's failure to disclose that it made secret, exotic bets on an imminent housing crash may have violated securities laws.

``The Securities and Exchange Commission should be very interested in any financial company that secretly decides a financial product is a loser and then goes out and actively markets that product or very similar products to unsuspecting customers without disclosing its true opinion,'' said Laurence Kotlikoff, a Boston University economics professor who has proposed a massive overhaul of the nation's banks. ``This is fraud and should be prosecuted.''


My Comments: This is old news for anyone reading my blog. Since Goldman has literally hired the government, (and I'm not being vague...they own everyone they need to) nothing will be done. The only surprise to me is why people are not rioting in the streets.


Full article here...