Crisis Investing in Argentina

Article by Investment U

You probably agree that nothing gets the blood pumping like making a lot of money in a relatively short time. But to do this you need to think differently than the herd and see a crisis as an opportunity.

While you’ll find the best values in the midst of, or following, a crisis, you need to approach the crisis in the right way.

Let me share with you my three crisis investing rules as applied to Argentina.

  • Avoid the temptation to invest in the vortex of the crisis; wait for the dust to settle and the story to fade from the front page.
  • Identify and monitor a target company (or group of companies) and confirm value and prospects going forward.
  • Put in place a sell stop just in case you’re wrong.

Argentine Gambit #1

This brings me to Argentina, where pessimism is in the water and a crisis is usually just around the corner.

In late May of 2010, I noticed that an avalanche of bad news had beaten down the Argentine market and that the market was getting zero attention from financial media and gurus.

So I put together and recommended to members a diversified basket of seven Argentine stocks trading on the NYSE. You might call this a custom Argentine ETF.

This strategy was based on a belief that that most of the downside risk had been wrung out of the market and that the probabilities of a rebound were in my favor.

The results were well beyond my expectations.

By October 2010, this basket had rocketed almost 70% and then fell through my 15% sell stop for a neat 55% gain in less than five months.

Crisis Investing in Argentina

You can also see that since late 2010, this market has been through a disappointing and choppy decline. This dismal performance has tracked a sad series of anti-market policy blunders by the Argentine government.

The latest crushing blow to investor confidence was nationalizing Repsol’s equity stake in Argentina’s YPF. This sent my Argentina ETF to a level 25% below where it was in May 2010.

It seems that everyone hit the panic button, selling all of their Argentine stocks.

As Spain’s prime minister put it last month, “You would have to be crazy to invest in Argentina right now.”

Argentine Gambit #2

Call me crazy, but I see an opportunity.

This story faded from the front pages and nobody is pitching Argentine stocks that have been, drip by drip, driven to bargain-basement prices.

Next, I selected and have been watching my value target, Argentina farming giant Cresud (Nasdaq: CRESY). Cresud is one of the largest farming companies in Latin America.

Cresud (Nasdaq: CRESY)

The company produces agricultural commodities like corn, wheat, soybeans, sunflower, sorghum, milk and beef cattle on about half a million hectares of land. In addition to Argentina, Cresud owns significant farmland in Brazil as well as other South American countries.

Cresud, which has a great balance sheet, is largely an asset play as quality farmland is becoming more and more difficult to find in the world.

The stock is trading at about 20% below book value, but represents an even bigger value since land bought many years ago by the company is carried on the balance sheet at cost rather than current market value. As a bonus, Cresud owns 55% of Argentinean real estate developer IRSA (NYSE:IRS).

Some of you may wish to track CRESY for a while to get more comfortable with the situation. Others may wish to take action, but don’t confuse crisis investing with reckless investing. This is truly an aggressive value pick in the midst of max pessimism.

So always take a small position before rushing in. If it’s truly great bargain, there’s no need to hurry.

Put in place a 15% trailing stop loss in case the market moves against us and to lock in profits if we get it right.

Good Investing,

Carl Delfeld

Article by Investment U

Warren Buffett’s Big Bet on the U.S. Housing Recovery

Article by Investment U

Warren Buffett's Big Bet on the U.S. Housing Recovery

Warren Buffett's predictions last year were premature. But this year, his premonitions just may be spot on. And there are five little-talked-about reasons why…

Several years ago, Warren Buffett was asked how he and his partners managed to make so much money investing in the markets.

Buffett confidently answered, “We simply attempt to be fearful when others are greedy and to be greedy only when others are fearful.”

At Investment U, our readers hear a lot about this type of investing. It’s better known as “contrarian investing.”

And on Monday, Buffett proved once again that he’s one of the biggest contrarians in the world.

That’s because Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE: BRK-A) put in a $3.85-billion bid to buy a mortgage business and loan portfolio from now bankrupt Residential Capital LLC.

There’s no doubt the housing market in America is still in a very shaky state. As The Wall Street Journal reports, “Pessimists insist that… prices will continue falling – perhaps as much as 20% or more.”

Plus, it’s not even the first time Buffett placed a bet on the U.S. housing recovery and lost. His predictions early last year were premature.

But this year, his premonitions just may be spot on. And there are five little-talked-about reasons why…

  • Housing Recovery Fact #1: In May, more permits to build homes and apartments in the United States were requested than in the past three and a half years. And the U.S. Commerce Department also confessed that April was much better for housing starts than first thought – increasing figures to 744,000 from 717,000.
  • Housing Recovery Fact #2: Earlier this week, the Joint Center for Housing Studies at Harvard University released a report revealing new home inventories are at record lows. This is important for housing’s rebound because declines in listed inventory lead to less pressure on falling home prices. In fact, it’s a big reason why average U.S. home prices actually edged higher the last two months.
  • Housing Recovery Fact #3: So far, in 2012, U.S. employers added over one million jobs. As a result, the unemployment rate has dropped a full percentage point since August, from 9.1% to 8.2% today. And as this number heads lower, you can be sure the housing recovery will gain momentum.
  • Housing Recovery Fact #4: Last week, mortgage rates hit their lowest number since offering long-term mortgages began in the 1950s. For potential homebuyers, figures like these are simply impossible to ignore. Plus, in many places paying a mortgage today is even cheaper than renting a home of the same size. (Although, always remember, you have to pay for everything that happens to your home when you own it.)
  • Housing Recovery Fact #5: Peruse online and chat with industry professionals and you’ll see sentiment about the housing market is changing. Today major media outlets like MSN, The Economic Times and The Wall Street Journal are all reporting that right now is the time to buy a home. And it helps that investors like Buffett are backing them.

As the economy improves, bargain home prices and record-low mortgage rates will bring consumers back into the market and help home prices jump higher sooner than most people think.

This scenario is also set to benefit housing stocks, as well, many of which are down over 50% from their pre-crisis highs.

Of course, you probably aren’t in the position Buffett is to just buy assets outright from a bankrupt housing company.

So here are some other options to consider.

Three Ways to Play the Recovery

Real estate investment trusts, better known as REITs, are just one way to play the housing rebound. Last September, our colleague Jason Jenkins suggested taking a look at Vanguard REIT Index (NYSE: VGSIX). In addition to yielding 3.14%, VGSIX is up 26% to date.

Another option you should look into is investing in mortgage and title insurance companies like Fidelity National Financial (NYSE: FNF), MGIC Investment Corp. (NYSE: MTG) and even American International Group (NYSE: AIG).

Don’t take it from me, though. Go see for yourself that a number of housing stocks are on the rise right now.

And if the stock market is any indicator of things to come for the broader economy, I’d say a full-on U.S. housing recovery is just around the corner.

Good Investing,

Mike Kapsch

P.S. Not convinced yet? Take a look at our new Investment U whitepaper report on why the housing market has bottomed, and how to invest without leaving your home.

To access our free real estate investing whitepaper, click here.

Article by Investment U

Monetary Policy Week in Review – June 23, 2012

By Central Bank News

    The past week in monetary policy saw interest rate decisions by six central banks around the world, with all banks keeping rates unchanged, citing strains in global financial markets from 
the euro area’s debt crises.
    Although the banks affirmed their readiness to respond in the event of a shock to the global financial system, monetary policy worldwide is currently in a wait-and-see mode as Europe’s politicians try to dig their way out of the debt and institutional crises.
    
    The six banks that kept rates unchanged were:
    India – 8.0%, CRR at 4.75%
    Morocco – 3.0%
    United States – 0-0.25%
    Norway – 1.5%
    Turkey – 5.75%
    Taiwan – 1.875%

    NEXT WEEK:

    Looking at the central bank calendar for next week, monetary policy will be quiet, with only Israel and Hungary set to take decisions. 
    Israel kept its interest rate unchanged at 2.5 percent last month, citing inflation in the middle of its target range, but noting that uncertainty about Europe’s economy had intensified.
    The focus in Hungary is on the law governing the central bank. A law passed last year was criticized for threatening the central bank’s independence, but a revision, which could be approved early next month, is expected to open the way for fresh loan talks with the International Monetary Fund and the European Union.
    At its last rate-setting meeting, the Hungarian central bank left the base rate unchanged at 7 percent due to inflation above target. But the economy is contracting and the bank first expects growth to return in 2013.
    The focus will return to the euro area on Thursday and Friday when European Union heads of state meet in Brussels for a summit that will be dominated by efforts to transform the monetary union into some form of banking and fiscal union.

   
 MEETINGS:
Jun-25
ILS
Israel
Bank of Israel
Jun-26
HUF
Hungary
The Magyar Nemzeti Bank

www.CentralBankNews.info


The Big Investment Pay Off Worth Waiting For

By MoneyMorning.com.au

Amidst this very dark outlook for Europe, markets oscillate daily. Big rallies follow big sell-offs. Hope follows fear as faith in the ‘bailout’, the ‘rescue’ and the ‘stimulus package’ trumps all other logic.

That’s where you are today. Hope and fear are the two dominant market characteristics. They are also the enemy of the rational investor. So try to put the large daily moves into perspective. It’s what happens when risk and uncertainty are on the rise.

A good illustration of this is the VIX indicator – commonly referred to as the fear gauge. The VIX is a measure of volatility. A spike in the VIX correlates to a drop in equity markets. The chart below shows the VIX over the past 5 years.

Back in 2007 and early 2008, the VIX indicator displayed increased volatility and traded at a relatively high level, before blasting higher as the 2008 credit crisis hit. It then spiked to an index level of just over 45 in 2010 and 2011. This was in response to the end of the US Fed’s monetary stimulus measures.

As you can see, the recent increase in the VIX is not as severe as past spikes, suggesting market-wide ‘fear’ is still in its formative stages. Given Spanish and Italian bond yields are well over 6% (suggesting the market’s concern over their debt-dynamics) it appears investor faith in policymakers is alive and well.

The VIX – Not Very Scared…Yet

Source: StockCharts

To me, that remains a dangerous sign. It points to a mentality of ‘bad news is good news’. In other words, bad news on the economic front means good news on the government stimulus front. That doesn’t sound like a very good investment strategy to me. In fact, putting your faith (and your wealth) in the hands of those that ultimately destroy it seems like lunacy.

But such has the investment landscape become. We constantly need to weigh up the economic with the political/policymaking landscape.

Economics – which is simply a reflection of human action and the laws of nature – will trump policymaking every day of the week. But it will do so slowly and imperceptibly. Look at what’s happening in Europe now…as the true nature of debt overwhelms governments, investors still cling to the hope that policymakers can do something.

They can’t…they are simply pawns in the game masquerading as kings.

The Aim of Investing

With this continuing all-pervading noise dominating markets, it’s important to refocus on what the whole point of investing is about. It’s to compound your wealth.

That’s a very difficult thing to do in a bear market. In fact, in a bear market you’ll find it very difficult to compound your wealth at all. That’s why a bear market should be all about wealth preservation. The bull will inevitably follow the bear. Years of 5%, 0% or -20% returns will fade away, replaced by consistent 10-20% returns.

That’s when you make your money. Wealth preservation is the most important thing to think about in this market. If you can survive the bear and get to the start of the next bull with your wealth intact you will be miles ahead of most other investors.

Think about it.

Bear markets wear investors down psychologically. People spend years moving money around, trying to find a winner. The market chips away at their capital year after year. It’s only after the majority of investors feel the greatest amount of pain and get out of the market – for good – that a new bull market gets underway.

That’s what I want you to think about amongst all this gibberish about bailouts and government stimulus. You’re here for the long haul. You’re here to outlast the bear and be ready for the bull.

Waiting For The Bull

Government meddling will only make the bear worse, so the arrival date of the next bull market is anyone’s guess. Lower share prices are a good sign, as it will indicate a loss of government control of markets.

However, governments don’t like to lose control. Printing money will allow them to maintain the fa鏰de that they are in control. That being the case, I think the next step will be to think about at what point government printing tips the bond market over and forces a rush of capital from bonds into equities.

My guess is that point is still a year or two away. Asset price deflation awaits us first. But it’s worth starting to think about a shift in sentiment (and capital) well before that happens.

For now, the key is to continue with the wealth preservation and compounding theme. A bear market won’t reward compounding very much, but your patience should pay off in a big way when the bull returns.

Greg Canavan
Editor, Sound Money. Sound Investments.

From the Archives…

The Problem With the Spanish Bailout
2012-06-15 – Keith Fitz-Gerald

Australian Housing – How to Avoid This Pauper’s Retirement Trap
2012-06-14 – Kris Sayce

Why Warren Buffett is Loading Up on Tungsten
2012-06-13 – Don Miller

China’s Economic Data Statistics: Just Add Salt
2012-06-12 – Dr. Alex Cowie

Why Graphite is One of the Few Places For Savvy Investors to Make Money
2012-06-11 – Dr. Alex Cowie


The Big Investment Pay Off Worth Waiting For

Moving Averages: A Simple Guide to Charting Winning Stocks

By MoneyMorning.com.au

Often, when people first became interested in the stock market, they develop an interest in technical analysis. But sometimes, after reading a book or two on the subject, they find they know no more than before they read the book. Discouraged, many people give up.

But there’s no need to. When something looks complicated the best place to start is with something simple. And in technical analysis that means starting with moving averages.


Even though they’re simple and easy to understand, moving averages can be an important tool in a trader’s toolbox. Let’s have a quick look at how they work…

A moving average is simply a rolling indicator many traders use. It can help eliminate some of the market noise. And it’s helpful to detect ‘trends’ arising in a stock.

So for example, a 10-day moving average (MA) is the average price for the past ten days. Or, a 200-day MA is the average price for the past 200 days. See, simple. Generally, a trader will use two or three moving averages of different durations to define a trend.

How does that work? Again, it’s simple. When these indicators cross over, it’s often a signal of a change in market direction.

Look at the example below:

Source: Slipstream Trader

Here, it’s showing a 15-day MA crossing through a 50-day MA. A trader might interpret that as ‘upward momentum’.

Simply put, it’s showing you this stock is moving higher.

Using a Moving Average In A Real Trade

Our own Murray Dawes, editor of Slipstream Trader, uses these simple indicators to track trends and changes in shares. In fact, he says it plays a key role in determining his stock picks for

Slipstream Trader subscribers.

Normally we would show you an example of a past trade, but today we wanted to show you how Murray applied his analysis to a live trade in the Slipstream Trader portfolio. Of course, we can’t reveal the name of the stock, so we’ll have to call it ‘Stock A’.

What we can tell you though, are the reasons behind the trade, and the outcome he’s expecting.

In the middle of May (the month of market carnage) Murray was sure there was still, ‘plenty of downside to come.’ Essentially he felt the markets had further to fall.

Since Murray opened the ‘Stock A’ trade, the ASX200 has fallen 5.5%.

So what made Murray want to short sell this share?

‘ XXXXX retested the 35-day Moving Average’, Murray tells me, ‘and then it headed back down below the 10 day MA which places it in an intermediate downtrend.’

Have a look at the chart below…

Source: Slipstream Trader

When Murray says the stock retested the 35-day MA (red line), he means ‘Stock A’ didn’t go above this price level. And because the 10-day MA (blue line) remained below the 35-day MA, this suggested the stock price was set to fall.

And fall it did! In less than a week, Murray told his subscribers to take what he calls a ‘Phase 1 profit’. That means they should close a portion of the trade to take a profit.

It’s part of Murray’s risk management strategy. Lock in profits where you can. He suggests doing this in case the share price changes direction. It eliminates some of the risk when trading.

As Murray tells me:

‘There is a reason I took profit initially. Since XXXXX fell over that first week, we’ve had to wear a month of nowhere trading. XXXXX rallied very close to our entry price. If we didn’t take profit we would have felt under pressure on the trade and may have made a risky decision to close out the trade early.

‘Because we took some early profits, we could ride out the past few weeks of XXXXX going nowhere. Now the price is falling again.

‘What I’m looking for now is a failure below that 200-day MA. Should fall below this level we could see a new low. This is good for us. We are not under pressure right now, which means we can sit back watch this trade evolve.’

Trading Stock A

Source: Slipstream Trader


This is only a small part of Murray’s technical analysis. Murray actually uses his own proprietary technique. But when the moving averages confirm other technical set up he uses, his conviction increases.

And after the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 250 points on Thursday night, we asked Murray if the market was set to drop further.

He said, ‘Thursday night was just a tip-toe through the tulips.’

We think he means you should prepare for more market mayhem!

Look out for more analysis in your inbox from Murray over the next few days.

Shae Smith
Editor, Money Weekend

The Most Important Story This Week…

One of the biggest trends forming in the energy market is the gradual shift away from coal and oil to natural gas. Total world energy consumption is rising as Asian economies industrialise and their standard of living rises. Estimates place natural gas as the number one source of global energy within three decades.

Oil is one of the few major resources that Australia does not have substantial known reserves. But Australia is rich in natural gas. This is great news for Australia and Aussie investors. Billions worth of natural gas will be converted to LNG for export. This sector could drive huge gains even if the overall economy stays flat. Big oil majors are banking on it. See for yourself in Why Liquefied Natural Gas Makes Australia The Next Energy Hotbed

Other Recent Highlights…

Kris Sayce on Small-Cap Stocks – A Thrilling Risk: “The opposite of cash investing is small-cap investing. You can rack up gains of 50%, 100% or even 300% in a matter of months. That’s the reward. The risk is the price can zip all over the place – up 10% one day, down 5% another. If you can handle that kind of action, then small-cap investing is for you.”

Murray Dawes on An Addicted Stock Market About to Suffer Withdrawals: “Bernanke must know that he only has so many rolls of the dice before his game of smoke and mirrors is shown for what it is. Is the situation really so dire right now that he is willing to give up one of those throws? I don’t think so. And if he doesn’t then the stock market is going to spit the dummy.”

Dr. Alex Cowie on Why Greece is Just a Side-Show to the Economies of Spain and Italy: “But it’s not just the bond yield telling us Italy is up the creek without a paddle…Italy gobbled up all it could get, totaling more than 270 billion euros in total. Is that the action of a confident banking sector…?”

Matthew Partridge on The Clipped Wings Economy: How The German Eagle is Grounded With Debt: “The new fear is that Germany and other northern European countries will be made liable for the debts of their insolvent neighbours – the ‘periphery’ countries. This would come about either through more Spanish-style deals, or through ‘Eurobonds’…Both of these schemes would increase German exposure to troubled sovereigns.”


Moving Averages: A Simple Guide to Charting Winning Stocks

Why I Don’t Watch CNBC

Article by Investment U

Why I Don’t Watch CNBC

Don’t get bullied by the media into changing your well thought out plans. Once you have a plan, stick to it, until your needs change, not the market or economy.

At a recent Oxford Club gathering in New York, Alexander Green told a crowd of investors that they shouldn’t watch CNBC.

I couldn’t agree more.

As Alex put it, “CNBC’s goal is not to make you money, but to sell advertising.” While I believe that most of the reporters are committed to doing their best on a story, the structure of CNBC is to keep you on the edge of your seat, depending on them for information on what to do next.

For instance:

The jobless numbers were higher than expected – what do you need to know to keep your portfolio safe?

Inflation ticked higher – can your portfolio withstand a higher inflation environment?

How should you get your portfolio positioned before the Fed meeting next week?

It reminds me of an old bit by comedian Tom Kenny (who went on to fame and fortune as the voice of SpongeBob SquarePants). Kenny talked about how sensationalized the commercials are for your local news. No matter what the story was, the voice-over would say, “Would you survive? Would your family survive?”

And then the scenarios became even more ridiculous. “What if you were in an earthquake, trapped in a store that sold nothing but knives, propped up on flimsy shelves made of jagged glass? Would you survive? Would your family survive?”

CNBC Wants a Reaction to Every Market Hiccup

That’s essentially what CNBC is trying to do. They want you to live in fear and react to every little hiccup in the market so that you’re glued to their network in order to receive the investment advice from their guests and anchors.

But if you make just one move to improve your portfolio’s performance this year, it should be turning off CNBC.

In fact, you should tune out most of the financial media.

If you’re invested for the long haul, it really doesn’t matter…

  • If inflation is up two-tenths of a percentage point this year.
  • Or if the Consumer Confidence Index dips 3%.
  • Or if the Bull-Bear Sentiment Indicator switches from bullish to bearish.

Your portfolio should be positioned to withstand good times and bad. You shouldn’t be jumping in and out of the market or sectors based on news, politics, the economy, or any other event.

Why Market Timing and Portfolio Repositioning Don’t Work

That kind of constant repositioning virtually guarantees that you’ll miss some of the biggest up moves in the market and be in the wrong place at the wrong time.

In 2009, Invesco conducted a study showing the effects of missing the 10 best days of market performance over the past 81 years.

If you invested $1 in the S&P 500 in 1928 and held it, in 2009 it would have been worth $45.18.

However, if you missed the 10 best days during those 81 years (all of which came during the Great Depression and Great Recession), you’d have just $14.99, two-thirds less.

It would have been easy to miss those 10 days if you were spooked out of the market during those turbulent times. Of course, you likely would’ve missed the 10 worst, as well.

If you missed the 10 best and 10 worst, you would’ve ended up with $47.59, a tiny bit more than the buy-and-hold strategy.

However, market timing is nearly impossible. If it was easy, everyone would do it. In my 20 years following the market, I’ve never come across anyone who could do it well consistently.

You shouldn’t try, either.

Stop Depending on the Financial Media and Allocate Your Assets Intelligently

For your long-term funds, be sure the assets are allocated in an intelligent way. I recommend The Investment U Asset Allocation Model or The Gone Fishin’ Portfolio, which consists of inexpensive Vanguard index funds.

I don’t mean to pick on just CNBC. Much of online financial media is designed to generate page views, not make you money. There’s a proliferation of websites that throw every ticker symbol they can into a story so that it shows up in as many places as possible – all designed so you click through to see what the news is – increasing page views.

I’ve lost count of how many times I clicked on a story involving one of the stocks in my portfolio, only to read the “news” item that had absolutely nothing to do with my stock.

The lesson here: Don’t get bullied by the media into changing your well thought out plans. Once you have a plan, stick to it, until your needs change, not the market or economy.

I haven’t had CNBC on in my office in four years. It’s wonderful.

Good Investing,

Marc Lichtenfeld

Article by Investment U

Volkswagen (VLKAY) – A No-Brainer Contrarian Investment

Article by Investment U

Investors can’t turn on the television, jump online, or open a newspaper today without being pounded with headlines about the Eurozone Crisis. Greece’s unmanageable debt, Spain’s unbelievably high unemployment, Ireland’s banking woes – the list goes on.

The crisis created extremely volatile market conditions the individual investor is having a hard time stomaching. The media paints a gloomy future, and it’s no surprise that billions of dollars have moved out of equities. Investors are losing their confidence.

But contrarian investors like myself will tell you this is the perfect time to going shopping for discounts in the market, especially strong businesses located inside the Eurozone. And I’ve found one German automaker that fits the bill.

“Das Auto”

Headquartered in Wolfsburg, Germany, and founded in 1937, Volkswagen (OTC: VLKAY.PK) provides automobiles to drivers around the world.

You’re probably familiar with Volkswagen’s popular models such as the Jetta, Beetle and Passat. But the company also provides vehicles under Bentley, Audi, Bugatti and Lamborghini, to name a few.

So why is Volkswagen showing up on the value stock radar?

In large part, because investors don’t want to touch European companies with a 20-foot poll. Even the financially fit businesses operating in Europe’s strongest economy, Germany.

Trading At a Discount

In general, a company with a low price-to-book ratio signals a stock is undervalued. Of course, things are never that simple. If they were, all investors would need to do is buy any stock trading below its book value and call it a day.

Currently, Volkswagen’s price-to-book is 0.90, meaning the company is trading at a 10% discount.

Volkswagen shares currently trade around $30. The current book value per share is $32.28.

This means if the company was liquidated today, each shareholder would, in theory, get $32.28 per share for their ownership of the company’s hard assets. (And this doesn’t include the separate value of patents, etc. that could further boost book value.)

Who wouldn’t want to buy a stock today, have the company (worst-case scenario) fail tomorrow and still make over a $2 per share profit the next day? Like I said before, it’s not that simple.

Many stocks that start trading below book value hint that there might be something fundamentally wrong with the company. So let’s break down some of Volkswagen’s financials to ensure this isn’t the case.

Fundamental Breakdown

Investors should check the return on equity (ROE) and return on assets (ROA) for any stock trading at a discount.

ROE measures how well a company is using reinvested earnings to produce additional earnings for shareholders. Currently Volkswagen’s ROE is a healthy 30.84%, which is well above the industry average that sits at 21.81%.

ROA indicates how efficient management is at using the company’s assets to generate earnings. And many stocks begin to trade at a discount because investors believe the company’s assets are overstated. Looking at ROA can help you determine if a company is properly converting money it has invested into profits.

Volkswagen ROA is 7.10% – more than double the industry average of 3.17%.

Comparison is always key when analyzing a company’s metrics, so let’s see how Volkswagen stacks up against an American competitor like Ford Motor (NYSE: F).

Volkswagen (VLKAY)

As you can see in the chart above, Volkswagen dominated every category. Value investors should be salivating right now. Ford’s price to book is currently 2.39, close to three times higher than Volkswagen.

Now let’s look at some more industry averages the company is torching.

Volkswagen’s current P/E is an attractive 3.23; the industry average is over six times higher at 22.37.

The company’s recent quarterly operating margins are well above the industry average of 4.52%, sitting at 6.78%. And their 6.69% quarterly profit margins more than doubled the industry average of 2.81%.

And their revenue growth over the past few quarters has been excellent.

A No-Brainer Contrarian Investment

The company’s most recent quarter saw sales grow 26.30% compared to the same period last year. In comparison, the industry average was 18.81%. And Ford had negative sales growth of -2.02% in their most recent quarter.

The only metric you could be nervous about is Volkswagen’s 152.3% debt to equity. But don’t worry too much…

Auto manufacturing is capital-intensive industry and always carries a high debt-to-equity ratio.

Currently the industry average is 153.31%, so Volkswagen is right on par here. I would be more worried about Ford’s 603.54% debt to equity that’s almost four times higher.

Volkswagen’s dividend yield of 2.70% is just icing on the cake; the industry average is only 1.73%.

Going Against the Crowd

When investors are fleeing a particular sector or economy out of fear, contrarian investors stand by ready to put their money to work.

The fact that Volkswagen has exposure to markets outside the Eurozone, including North America, South America and the Asia-Pacific, gives the company an advantage over other European businesses that are less fortunate in global reach.

Over 54% of Volkswagen’s cars are sold outside the Eurozone. And Germany makes up 44% of vehicles sold inside Europe.

Better to have almost half your European sales inside the country with the strongest economy in the region. Not to mention, Germany is the one most likely to be left standing should the Eurozone completely fall apart.

Investors should consider Volkswagen as a true value play right now. Fundamentals are strong and the stock is trading at a nice discount. Though, if you’re still wary about the Eurozone crisis, you might consider waiting a bit for Greece to possibly exit. A Greek exit could send prices down even further, giving an even better discount on shares.

Good Investing,

Ryan Fitzwater

Article by Investment U

Liquidation “Could Send Silver Down to $18”, Euro Weakness “Contributing to Gold’s Fall”, Lagarde “Throws the Gauntlet Down” to Merkel

London Gold Market Report
from Ben Traynor
BullionVault
Friday 22 June 2012, 09:00 EDT

WHOLESALE MARKET gold prices traded as low as $1560 an ounce Friday morning, before recovering some ground by lunchtime in London, while European stock markets were also down and commodities were broadly flat.

Silver prices meantime sank to a 2012 low at $26.64 an ounce – a 7.2% drop on last week’s close.
“We believe a break of $26.00 has the ability to trigger liquidation of silver with it looking for $18.00,” says the latest technical analysis note from bullion bank Scotia Mocatta.

Heading into the weekend, gold prices by Friday lunchtime looked set for their biggest weekly fall since the first week of March, having fallen 3.7% since the start of Monday’s trading.

On the currency markets, the Euro ticked lower against the Dollar, hitting its lowest level this week.
“A decline in the Euro may have contributed to a drop in gold prices,” says HSBC precious metals analyst James Steel.

“Near- term momentum may take prices lower, but we believe it may create an attractive point of entry for gold.”

The Dollar held onto yesterday’s gains made following Wednesday’s Federal Reserve decision not to launch another round of quantitative easing.

The Fed opted to extend Operation Twist, the maturity extension program whereby it aims to lower longer-term interest rates by selling shorter-dated government bonds and buying longer-dated ones.

The extension to Operation Twist could reduce liquidity in the short-term funding market, traders have told the Financial Times, since the Fed’s System Open Market Account will have sold most of its short-dated Treasury debt by the end of this year. The Fed, they argue, will be less able to lend out short-dated securities at times of high demand, which have often coincided with periods of heightened market stress.

“[It is] a little unsettling for the repo market to no longer have SOMA lending as a backstop,” says Michael Cloherty, head of US interest rate strategy at RBC Capital Markets.

“We do not believe that [the] extension of Operation Twist is sufficient, and expect further action from the Fed later this year” says a note on asset allocation from analysts at HSBC, who add that they “retain a very conservative strategic portfolio with a focus on US Treasuries and gold.”

Here in in Europe meantime, stock markets extended losses into a second day this morning, after ratings agency Moody’s last night announced it was downgrading 15 major global investment banks.

Moody’s noted in a statement that “government support [for banks] is likely to become less certain and predictable over time”.

Spain’s banks meantime could face capital shortfalls of up to €62 billion in the event of adverse economic conditions, according to the results of stress tests published Thursday. The figure is based on potential losses of up to €274 billion, offset against expected earnings and provisions already made for losses.

The €62 billion potential shortfall is less than the €100 billion credit line Eurozone leaders have agreed to offer Spain to finance banking sector restricting.

The stress tests however did not consider the impact of losses on Spanish banks’ government bond holdings, newswire Bloomberg reports.

Benchmark yields on Spanish government bonds, which set Euro-era highs earlier this week, ticked lower this morning, ahead of a meeting of a meeting between the leaders of the four biggest economies in the Eurozone.

German chancellor Angela Merkel headed to Rome Friday for talks with Italian prime minister Mario Monti, French president Francois Holland, and Spanish prime minister Mariano Rajoy.

Earlier this week, at the G20 summit, Monti suggested Eurozone rescue funds should be used to buy government bonds on the open market – a proposal supported by Hollande but rejected by Merkel.

Rajoy meantime said last week that he is “waging a battle” to persuade the European Central Bank to buy debt from Eurozone countries facing high borrowing costs.

“The viability of the European monetary system is [being] questioned,” said International Monetary Fund head Christine Lagarde last night.

“A determined and forceful move towards complete European monetary union should be reaffirmed in order to restore faith.”

Lagarde also called for recapitalization of weak banks, “with preferably a direct link between [bailout funds] and the banks, without going through the sovereign, in order to break the negative feedback loop that we have between banks and sovereigns.”

“Christine Lagarde is throwing down the gauntlet,” says one Eurozone official quoted by the New York Times.

If European leaders fail to agree measures at next week’s European Union summit that calm the markets, “there would be progressively greater speculative attacks on individual countries, with harassment of the weaker countries,” argues Monti in an interview carried by several European newspapers this morning.

“A large part of Europe would find itself having to continue to put up with very high interest rates…this is the direct opposite of what is needed for economic growth.”

“Monti knows he has to get his ducks in a row on the European side,” says James Walston, professor of politics at the American University in Rome, citing pressure on the prime minister from those parties that have so far backed him.

“Friday’s summit is important for Monti in symbolic terms because it shows Italians that he is center-stage.”

The Italian government agreed this week to move forward Friday’s meeting, to enable Merkel to attend a soccer match at the  European Championships in Poland – where Germany play Greece tonight.

Over in India, traditionally the world’s biggest gold bullion market, the postal service today offered a 6.5% special discount on gold coins to mark the festival of Pushya Nakshtrey.

Indian Gold Dealers have reported slow demand this week, with currency weakness contributing to record Rupee gold prices in recent days. Traders on Friday said the Reserve Bank of India stepped in to prevent the Rupee falling further, after it sank to a record low against the Dollar.

“For a while already we’ve seen weak Indian buying owing to a weaker Rupee and the usual seasonal decline we observe over this period,” says Friday’s note from commodities strategists at Standard Bank.

“South East Asian players have been doing well at picking up the slack but of late they have not.”

Ben Traynor
BullionVault

Gold value calculator   |   Buy gold online at live prices

Editor of Gold News, the analysis and investment research site from world-leading gold ownership service BullionVault, Ben Traynor was formerly editor of the Fleet Street Letter, the UK’s longest-running investment letter. A Cambridge economics graduate, he is a professional writer and editor with a specialist interest in monetary economics.

(c) BullionVault 2011

Please Note: This article is to inform your thinking, not lead it. Only you can decide the best place for your money, and any decision you make will put your money at risk. Information or data included here may have already been overtaken by events – and must be verified elsewhere – should you choose to act on it.

 

The Increasing Threats to Global Energy Supplies – An Interview with Jellyfish

By OilPrice.com

As global energy supplies come under increasing attack by non-state actors and private energy holdings become key targets of political maneuverings and criminal activities, Oilprice.com discusses the nature of the growing threat and how to reverse the risk with “smart power.”

To help us look at these issues we got together with Corporate intelligence specialists Jellyfish Operations and security expert Jennifer Giroux.

Michael Bagley is the president of Jellyfish, a global boutique intelligence firm that combines on-the-ground intelligence collection and analytics with an unprecedented country-to-country economic diplomacy program that helps governments, corporations, institutions and private individuals forge secure partnerships, discover new opportunities and mitigate operational risks.

Jennifer Giroux is a global security expert who specializes in emerging threats to energy infrastructure in conflict-affected regions.

In the Interview Michael & Jennifer talk about the following:

  • Why the risk to global energy supplies is increasing
  • Violent entrepreneurialism: Why piracy is on the rise
  • The most immediate threats to global energy security
  • Which countries are most likely to see attacks in the future
  • Why Saudi Arabia could be the next country to have its energy infrastructure come under attack
  • Why energy companies assets are becoming key targets.
  • How energy companies can create opportunities in Conflict-Affected Regions
  • Why companies need more than just intelligence to operate in hostile environments

 

Interview conducted by Jen Alic of oilprice.com

Oilprice.com: Energy supplies have always been at risk, particularly due to geopolitical maneuverings, transit through countries in conflict and those suffering from ongoing political instability, as well as piracy on the high seas. You have both mentioned that the risk to global energy supplies is increasing. How do you support that claim?

Jennifer Giroux: There is a plethora of energy location and armed conflict data that shows a correlation between conflict or conflict prone regions and oil and gas producing and/or transit states, both onshore and offshore.

While developing the Energy Infrastructure Attack Database (EIAD), we have seen a general rise in attacks on energy assets. In the last decade there has been an average of 327 reported attacks on energy infrastructure globally, and this figure is likely higher due to the fact that not all attacks are reported through open sources.

Pooled together, the data reveals that not only are energy companies increasingly operating in risky, volatile environments and conflict zones, but their assets are becoming key targets for political and criminal reasons.

Michael Bagley: More specifically, non-state actors from Mexico to Colombia, to Nigeria, Iraq, Pakistan and beyond are leveraging their terrain in dynamic ways. They are using energy infrastructure targeting as a tool to air political grievances in a calculated manner. For example, to garner illicit funds by stealing oil products and kidnapping energy sector employees, but also to generate global media attention that not only provides a springboard for groups to publicly challenge a state but also to inspire similar targeting behaviors in other regions.

Jennifer Giroux: Another interesting insight from EIAD shows that while energy attacks are dispersed they tend to have a contagion or clustering effect in certain countries. In such cases, we find that energy infrastructure is targeted on a monthly, weekly, and at times daily basis – leading to broad disruptions that have national and international effects. This has been the case in Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula, where natural gas infrastructure has been targeted on a monthly basis since February 2011 and disrupted energy supplies for Israel and Jordan. Yemen, too, has seen persistent attacks on the Marib-Ras Isa oil pipeline, for instance, that has led to a several-month shutdown that cost the country billions in revenue and shorted global supplies.

Michael Bagley: While those cases represent politically motivated attacks, in Nigeria the oil theft and sabotage business has resulted in Shell declaring force majeure on Nigerian Bonny Light crude oil and shut down 60,000 barrels per day of oil. Offshore, energy carriers are being targeted throughout the Gulf of Guinea, making this the new maritime piracy hotspot. Overall, this is a highly complex issue that makes it increasingly difficult for energy companies to navigate and operate in such spaces.

Oilprice.com: Geographically, what are the most immediate threats to global energy security?

Giroux: Of course with the effects of the Arab spring still percolating, the Middle East and North Africa region will continue to go through a tested and difficult time. With that, the urgent security consideration is Saudi Arabia as attacks or even threats to their installations have the most potential to disrupt supplies and the market. Though there have been some bright spots in Iraq’s oil production, the country still have significant challenges that threaten stability on a near daily basis. I would not be surprised if we see another flashpoint of energy infrastructure attacks in this country.

Bagley: One can also not count on Libya to be a reliable production space given the turmoil and political transitions underway. Another region is Gulf of Guinea where international oil companies are incredibly important for production and exploration activities. Nigeria, and the Niger Delta in particular, produces light sweet crude that is incredibly important for the global market. No doubt that when these supplies are disrupted the market reflects that insecurity with price volatility.

Oilprice.com: While most are aware of the rising incidence of piracy off the Somali coast and the threat to oil transit, how great is the threat now emanating from the Gulf of Guinea as an offshoot in part of the conflicts in Nigeria and unrest in Mali, for instance?

Giroux: Well, as it’s been reported – maritime piracy is on the rise in the Gulf of Guinea. Furthermore, attacks in this region are not confined to the coastal region near Nigeria (where they have been historically) but are not spreading to the shores of Togo, Ghana, Cote d’Ivoire, etc. This reveals not only the security gaps in this region but also the violent entrepreneurialism that is spreading across the states. Offshore attacks in this year are executed by gangs that use brute force to attack ships, steal contents including petrol products, and then release the ship have a few days or weeks.

Bagley: Also, oil theft gangs are multi-national. For example, in a recent arrest of 27 people accused of stealing oil, 5 of them were Nigerians while the remainder were Ghanaians. The key take-away is that this is spreading and will thus become more complex and challenging to untangle the more sophisticated these oil theft gangs become. What’s more is that we cannot forget the regional context – the high unemployment, growing illicit drug trade (transiting drugs from South America via Africa and onto markets in Europe), and weak governance issues. This makes it a high opportunity space for criminal groups to flourish and recruit.

Oilprice.com: How does the nature of the threat provide us with a framework for dealing with the threat?

Giroux: In these volatile regions, multinational energy companies are embedded in host communities that have legitimate grievances related to the lack of public goods and services such as clean water, decent roads, and electricity. These grievances tend to fuel tensions and hostilities with the state that can then ripple over to hostilities with the energy companies in that area.

Bagley: In such cases, the balance of power — and the impact should they turn their aggression to targeting the country’s energy assets — is in many cases on the side of the communities. Federal governments and institutions are weak, and responses tend to be military, which generally only exacerbates and escalates conflict. Yet, multinationals have incredible power in these countries and, indeed regions and thus need to re-conceptualize how they operate and do business in such spaces.

Giroux: I would argue that this begins by re-thinking what corporate responsibility means in these zones. Building a school in one community and passing out generators does not address the deep underdevelopment issues and, in fact, can exacerbate grievances. Rather what is needed are better community relations and a development of a more holistic approach that includes not only working with local stakeholders such as community members, local businesses, and NGOs, but also coordinating the delivery of local development needs with other energy companies operating in the same challenging region.

Bagley: Of course, the conventional understanding of states argues that state actors are responsible for the provision of public services like electricity and roads, but in such environments the states are oftentimes too weak and too corrupt for such measures to ever be achieved in a timely and effective manner. This actually creates a great opportunity for the strong multinationals to be better partners with the local community and facilitate the building of roads and other public infrastructure to help develop the local economy – a more sustainable approach that will provide host communities with other opportunities in the formal or licit economy.

Oilprice.com: Are you proposing that multinational companies step in where governments fail to provide? Is this feasible? How would host governments respond and how can this be achieved without serious implications both in terms of cost and relations?

Giroux: As I mentioned, certain activities like buying generators and building schools, etc., are less likely to be considered “strategic” – rather they are piecemeal, CSR-type of activities that create mixed expectations and imbalances in zones where the discrepancies are so great. In my own research, I find that what many multinationals do not realize is that their sheer presence brings with it a whole host of expectations for a community about what is to come. In this respect I am referring to visions of large-scale development, growth, and jobs. I have had countless conversations with people in energy producing regions and a common thread in such conversations is that they see political elites get rich while energy companies can quickly build pipelines, complex facilities, and have large compounds for their employees and yet roads are not built, electricity is scarce or inconsistent, schools are underfunded and overwhelmed, etc. In other words, community members see a mixed picture: they recognize that the money and capacity is there but yet see none of the benefits.

Bagley: The idea then is how can large multi-national companies — mining, energy, transportation, for example – work together to operate differently in these environments? A shifting of the dynamics involves a more radical way of thinking in a way that produces more sustainable communities where small and medium enterprises (SMEs) can flourish and really develop the economy in tandem with the multi-nationals.

Giroux: A paradigm shift might include thinking differently about the costs of production in such environments – in other words, not only factoring in things like procuring helicopters, materials for building energy infrastructure, paying employees, etc., but also contracting out the development of roads and clean water pipelines that could provide benefits for the community as a whole. Essentially, transforming the local community from simply ‘hosts’ to ‘partners.’

Bagley: I totally agree. The bridge to peace and stability in many countries, particularly conflict-affected regions, requires a delicate but dedicated mix of diplomacy and security by all involved: the local population, the host country government, and the economic partners and investors. Certain countries have a military aspect to factor in as well so integrating these very different communities is how Jellyfish creates “smart power” for our corporate clients.

Oilprice.com: Can you give us some specific recommendations and how this works in certain countries?

Giroux: Well, I think there are some very interesting things happening in the Niger Delta at the moment that I think could be extracted and applied in other areas. For example, Chevron Nigeria Ltd. Created the Foundation for Partnership Initiatives in the Niger Delta, PIND – a $50 million fund that seeks to provide support for socio-economic development in the region. This might be an interesting approach to examine more closely to see who they are working with, what are their concrete goals, and assess what type of impact they might be able to have. Overall, I would recommend that there needs to be a deeper debate about what CSR looks like in underdeveloped, energy producing regions. With that, companies should make assessments when working in such regions that not only take into account the challenges of the operating environment but also illustrate how they can partner with the community to inspire and produce bottom-up driven development initiatives that have local buy-in. I would not get too complicated with this but rather participate and support initiatives that have shared value – like roads linking cities and town, power/electricity infrastructure, sponsoring apprenticeship programs at local schools to meet local business needs, etc.

Bagley: Based on data and trends, as Jennifer points out in her research is that security situations in many countries are getting worse, not necessarily better. This has to do with a variety of geopolitical, military and economic reasons, too, of course, but the current frameworks and approaches are not working as best as they could. Companies can collect intelligence all day long to be aware of or get ahead of certain threats but it still does not always fundamentally change the operating environment. The question then becomes how do certain economic partners such as extractive companies, multinationals and other institutional investors think and perform differently (yet productively) in such environments? The real potential for leadership here is to get the extractive multinational companies to think differently in volatile environments and to change the balance of power in a way that is beneficial for both their ongoing operations and to the communities in which they operate. Jellyfish arranges partnership in over 80 countries where we offer a unique platform for clients to engage the host country governments and the local populations along with the diplomatic and military stakeholders in the country and the region. This use of the “smart power” paradigm by each of the players affects positive change for all involved from an economic, diplomatic and security aspect.

We would like to thank the staff at Jellyfish Operations for their time. For those of you interested in learning more about how Jellyfish can help your business with their cross border intelligence networks and advanced technological capabilities please visit www.jellyfishoperations.com

Source: http://oilprice.com/Interviews/The-Most-Immediate-Threats-to-Global-Energy-Security-Jellyfish-Interview.html

By. Jen Alic of Oilprice.com

 

European Debt Crisis: “Imagine the Worst and Double It”

Just how will the sovereign debt crisis end?

By Elliott Wave International

We’ve all heard the line: Let me give it to you straight.

And in speaking to his counterparts in Spain, an Irish economist did just that.

Ireland has this banking advice for Spain: imagine the worst and double it. [emphasis added]

Like Ireland, Spain sought a bank bailout after being felled by a real-estate crash. Now, just as the Irish did, the Spanish are awaiting the results of outside stress tests gauging the size of the hole in the banking system.

Bloomberg, June 14

Stress test or no, EWI’s Global Market Perspective has known that Spain’s banking system is frail. In May, the publication gave its subscribers this chart-supported insight:

A 17-year high in the percentage of non-performing Spanish loans is merely one illustration of the Continent’s illness. After falling to a four-decade low of less than 1% in 2007, delinquencies have spiked eightfold in the past five years. The percentage stands at its highest level since 1994.

Global Market Perspective, May 2012

By itself, a subsidiary of Spain’s largest bank, Banco Santander, absorbed Q1 bad loan losses of 475-million euros.

Italy is in the same sinking economic boat. The June Global Market Perspective showed how much the eurozone’s third largest economy is also drowning in bad debt.

The Italian and Spanish economies are in shambles as borrowing costs have skyrocketed for both countries.

But the recent spotlight has been on Greece. Now that the Greek election is over and voters appear ready to embrace austerity, should we be optimistic about the future of the euro zone?

You owe it to yourself and your investments to find out. Remember, even if you believe you’re not directly invested in Europe, there’s a very good chance that some of the companies in your portfolio are.

 

Get Ahead of What Is Still to Come in This FREE Report from Elliott Wave InternationalThe debt crisis in Europe continues to play out in the political, social and financial worlds. What will be next? With commentary and analysis from February 2010 through today, this timely report gives you an important perspective on the European debt crisis and what it could mean for your portfolio.

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This article was syndicated by Elliott Wave International and was originally published under the headline European Debt Crisis: “Imagine the Worst and Double It”. EWI is the world’s largest market forecasting firm. Its staff of full-time analysts led by Chartered Market Technician Robert Prechter provides 24-hour-a-day market analysis to institutional and private investors around the world.