Byron King: Forget OPEC. North American Energy Plays Bring Profits Home

Source: JT Long of The Energy Report (6/11/13)http://www.theenergyreport.com/pub/na/15358

Looking for profits in the oil and natural gas space? Look no further than shale plays, energy service companies and offshore oil drilling opportunities in the U.S., says Byron King of Agora Financial LLC. In this interview with The Energy Report, King discusses how dwindling exports to the U.S. from Latin America, Africa and the Middle East are shifting the supply and demand equation across the world. King also names companies in the service space with solid prospects for investors.

The Energy Report: Byron, welcome. You recently attended the Platts Conference in London, which addressed shifting energy trade patterns in light of growing U.S. export prospects and dwindling exports from South America and Africa. Has OPEC’s role diminished?

Byron King: The short answer is yes. OPEC is struggling right now. The Middle East, the West African producers and Venezuela are struggling. The West African players and Venezuela have seen exports to the U.S. decline dramatically. In countries like Algeria, oil exports to the U.S. are essentially zero, while Nigeria’s exports to the U.S. are way down. The oil these countries export tends to be the lighter, sweeter crude, which happens to be the product that is increasing in production in the U.S. through fracking.

The east-to-west trade pattern for oil imports to the U.S. has essentially gone away. This does not mean that the oil goes away. It means these countries have to find new markets for their oil—which they are doing, in India and the Far East. But that disrupts trade patterns as well. Imports from the Middle East to the U.S. are falling as well. These barrels tend to be the heavier, sourer crude that U.S. refineries are geared to process.

As the U.S. imports less oil, our balance of trade gets better. The recent strengthening of the dollar has a lot to do with importing less oil. Strengthening the dollar decreases gold and silver prices, so there is some monetary blowback from the good news out of the oil patch. Strengthening the dollar increases the broad stock market for the non-resource, non-commodity and non-energy plays. There’s an astonishing dynamic at work.

TER: When it comes to countries like Venezuela, part of the reason for the decrease in exports is because it has not invested its profits in infrastructure.

BK: Good point. In Venezuela, the government has taken so much money out of the oil industry to use for social spending, military spending and government overhead that the sustaining capital is not there. Even with Hugo Chavez’s death and new leadership in Venezuela, it will require years of sustained and increased investment to get Venezuela’s output up. After 10 years of dramatically bad underinvestment, the infrastructure is worn out. It will take a lot of time, money and some seriously hard political decisions to redeploy capital inside a country like Venezuela.

TER: If OPEC can no longer control the price of oil through supply because it does not have as much control of supply, what is keeping it from flooding the market with oil to get more revenue?

BK: That would work both ways. If OPEC floods the market with more oil, it will drive the price of oil down. Then OPEC nations would get fewer dollars for each barrel. All of that extra output, if sold at a lower price, might still yield less money, which is not a good thing if you are an oil exporter and need the funds.

The big swing producer is still Saudi Arabia. Saudi has spare capacity, but I suspect not as much as it wants people to believe. It gets back to that idea of peak oil. We’ve discussed it before, and yes, I know—fracking is changing the game to some extent. But you still need to keep all the books about peak oil on your shelf. Fracking is what happens on the back side of the peak oil curve, when you need barrels, are willing to pay high prices and throw lots of capital and labor at the problem.

A country like Saudi Arabia could increase its output, but not for long and not in a heavily sustainable way. It would damage its oil fields. Beyond that, the trick for OPEC is going to be getting several countries to agree to cut output to make up for the extra output from North America, in the hope of keeping prices where they are right now.

Brent crude—which is what the posting is for much of the OPEC contracts—is about $103/barrel ($103/bbl). If OPEC wants to keep that number—or not let it fall too much further—it has to cut output, not increase output. That is a very difficult and politically charged issue within OPEC. The Middle Eastern countries can afford a minor amount of financial turmoil right now. The other OPEC countries absolutely cannot afford financial problems stemming from low oil prices.

TER: Is there informal price control going on in the shale oil fields? As the price of natural gas has dropped, the oil rig count has dropped—and once the price goes up, those oil rigs could start up again. Could there be an OPEC of North America?

BK: I do not see an organized North American OPEC because there are too many companies in the mix. Too many people have a bite at the apple for anybody to control things. It is more like a tangle of accidental circumstances driving production levels. We are seeing a slight drop in the oil rig count in the U.S. right now. Part of that has to do with the natural gas cutback, but part also has to do with the efficiency of the fracking model. Fracking can be energy inefficient, but also can be industrially efficient.

Five years ago and earlier, the idea of drilling wells was to look for oil fields. You were drilling into specific regions enriched with hydrocarbons that could flow into a well under reservoir energy or with just modest amounts of pumping or pressurization.

Today, with fracking, you are not really looking at oil fields. You are drilling into an entire formation. You are drilling into a large-scale resource and introducing energy into a formation to break up the rock and get the oil or natural gas out. To do that successfully is much more a manufacturing model than the traditional oil drilling model. This is why you see drilling pads that have room for 10 or 12 wells. You drill the wells directionally outward.

In western Pennsylvania I have seen some of the drilling maps for companies like Range Resources Corp. (RRC:NYSE). These companies have very efficient ways of corkscrewing pipe into the sweet spots of the formations with multistage fracks. They are draining the formations very efficiently. You see fewer rigs because each rig is being used in a manufacturing-type of process, as opposed to the olden days when drilling was similar to craftwork.

Modern drilling and fracking, at least in North America, is much more of an assembly line process. Companies are using the same drill pits over and over again. They are using the same drilling mud and the same fracking water. Much of the same equipment gets used multiple times on several different wells. In the olden days, each well was its own special unique construction. Of course, every oil or gas well is different, and the results depend on how you drill it.

TER: Which companies are doing this the best and are they actually making money?

BK: Five years ago, people would talk about how this well made money or how that well does not make money anymore. That’s harder to do today. The economics of the current fracking world are still up in the air.

The jury is out on many of these fracking plays. Companies are drilling a lot of wells and they are expensive. They are fracking the wells and that is very expensive. At a recent conference, a gentleman from Halliburton Co. (HAL:NYSE) said up to 50% of the different fracking stages on wells do not work. They either fail at the beginning or soon after they go into production due to many reasons—geotechnical failure; equipment failure; blockages in the holes, in the pipe, in the perforations; things like that. Once a company has put the steel in the ground, done its fracking and inserted its equipment, it is very difficult to get down there and fix what is broken.

Right now natural gas prices are so low that if a company is drilling for dry gas, it is almost a given that it is not making any money. If the company is drilling for wet gas and is producing, the gas helps pay for the investment. When you get into some of the oil plays in the Bakken formation in North Dakota, or the Eagle Ford down in Texas, you are starting to get a midcontinent price—or even better—for the gas plus associated oil or liquids. When I say midcontinent, I mean West Texas Intermediate; the WTI price as opposed to the Brent price.

Regarding the pricing structure within North America, the oil sands coming out of Alberta are selling at the low end of the market scale. If West Texas Intermediate is about $90/bbl, the Canadian sand oil might be $60/bbl. That is a one-third differential. Is that because the quality is so different? Not necessarily. The oil sand product quality is slightly lower than the WTI, but it is not a one-third difference in terms of molecules or energy content or refinability. The difference is in stranded infrastructure. The cheaper oil is geographically stranded up in the frozen north of Canada, and you have to get it out through pipelines and railcars. You cannot get it over the Rocky Mountains to the Pacific Coast. There are only a few places for that oil to go, so it comes south. In its first stop across the U.S. border, in North Dakota, it competes with the Bakken plays.

The great mover of midcontinent oil today is the North American rail system—the tanker cars. Back in the days of John D. Rockefeller, he could control oil markets with access to rails, rail shipping and tankers cars. Now you have to look at the cost of moving oil from midcontinent to another destination. If you are in North Dakota, you can move oil west to Washington or California, where there are refineries. Or you could move it to Chicago or farther east, to the refineries there. Or you could move it south, where you compete with imported oil at the Houston refineries. It is a very complex arrangement. And you must deal with the usual suspects—BNSF Railway Company and Union Pacific—the two biggies of hauling oil.

We’re seeing some truly astonishing developments here. Look at Delta Air Lines Inc. (DAL:NYSE), which spent $300 million buying the old Trainer refinery in Philadelphia. Actually, less than that when you take in the subsidy from the state of Pennsylvania. So now, Delta is importing oil from the Bakken to Trainer on railroad cars. Delta feeds its East Coast operations with jet fuel coming out of the Trainer refinery, including planes flying out of John F. Kennedy International Airport, which gives it a price advantage in the North Atlantic market. The price differential of just a few pennies a gallon on jet fuel is the difference between making or losing money on the North Atlantic routes.

Then, Delta can go to other airports where it operates, and beat up on the fuel supplier by threatening to bring in its own fuel. So Delta is extracting price concessions from vendors. It’s sort of an old-fashioned “gas war,” like when service stations used to see who could sell fuel the cheapest.

Midcontinent oil, midcontinent economics and transport by rail have completely altered the economics of other industries, including the rail and airline industries. North American shale oil plays have had an extensive ripple effect through the U.S. economy.

TER: Could building more pipelines to export facilities in the U.S. shrink those differentials?

BK: More pipelines will shrink the differential, but pipelines take time. In the environmentalist political world we live in today, it takes years to do all the permitting, and pretty much nobody wants to have a pipeline running through the backyard. Existing pipelines are golden because they are already there. Maybe they can be expanded, the pumps improved; we can tweak them or put additives in the fluid to make the product move faster. There are all sorts of possibilities with existing pipelines.

For the pipelines that are not built yet, you have the whole NIMBY (Not In My Backyard) issue. The railroad lobby and the lobbies of companies that build railroad cars also do not want to see new pipelines because these companies are more than happy to ship oil on railcars, even though in terms of energy efficiency safety and spillage, rail is less efficient overall.

TER: Based on this reality, how are you investing in shale space—or are you?

BK: Right now, I am investing in the shale space at the very fundamentals. It is a pick-and-shovel approach to investing. I focus on what I call the big three of the services companies—Halliburton,Schlumberger Ltd. (SLB:NYSE) and Baker Hughes Inc. (BHI:NYSE)—because these companies have people are out there in the fields with the trucks and equipment, doing the work and getting paid for it. Another company that I really like is Tenaris (TS:NYSE), one of the best makers of steel drill pipe. You could buy U.S. Steel Corp. (X:NYSE), for example, which is doing very well in tubular goods, but it is a big, integrated steel company with iron mines and coal mines. It owns railroads, and sells steel to the auto industry, the appliance industry and the construction industry. Tubular and oilfield goods are just a part of U.S. Steel. With a company like Tenaris, it is more of a pure play on the oilfield development.

TER: Are you are a fan of oil services companies at this point in time?

BK: Yes. In terms of a company that is actually out there doing the work, I have great admiration for Range Resources. Its share price seems bid up pretty high. In terms of the large caps, I am looking at global integrated players: BP Plc (BP:NYSE; BP:LSE), Royal Dutch Shell Plc (RDS.A:NYSE; RDS.B:NYSE),Statoil ASA (STO:NYSE; STL:OSE) and Total S.A. (TOT:NYSE), the French company. They are big, global and pay nice dividends. Even BP, for all of its troubles, is still paying a respectable dividend.

TER: Those are companies that also have exposure to the offshore oil area. Is that a growth area?

BK: Offshore is booming. Some companies are very good at what they do, and when you look at the pick-and-shovel plays, that would be companies like Halliburton, Schlumberger and Baker Hughes, among others. Transocean Ltd. (RIG:NYSE; RIGN:SIX), the big offshore drilling company, is making a nice comeback, as is Cameron International Corp. (CAM:NYSE), which is in wellhead machinery, blowout preventers and things like that. FMC Technologies (FTI:NYSE) is a fabulous subsea equipment builder, and Oceaneering International (OII:NYSE), which makes remote operating vehicles (ROVs), has done great the last couple of years and is still growing.

A couple of points about offshore. In the U.S. offshore space, in March and April 2010, right after the BP blowout, the U.S. government basically shut it down. The offshore space was utter road kill. By the second half of 2010, it was dead. It went from being a $20 billion ($20B)/year industry to about a $3B/year industry. Here we are, three years later, and the offshore industry in the U.S. is recovering. There is still growth.

If you look at the rest of the world’s coastlines, you see an increasing amount of concessions, leasing and acreage—whether it is in the Russian Arctic or the North Sea or off the coast of Africa. There are booming areas offshore of West Africa and East African plays, with companies like Anadarko Petroleum Corp. (APC:NYSE) and its huge natural gas discovery off of Mozambique. In the Far East, off of Australia, there is a whole liquefied natural gas (LNG) boom. Much of the Australia hydrocarbon story is in offshore LNG. These are huge plays involving great big companies, a lot of money, steel in the ground and lots of equipment that either floats on the water or sits on the seafloor. It is all good for the offshore space.

TER: Are there any particular projects that a BP or Shell is doing right now that you are excited about?

BK: Shell has a big play onshore in the U.S., part of the whole shale gale. Shell is a big global integrated explorer, but is backing away from the offshore East African plays because they are a little too expensive for the company’s taste. Shell has made investments in West Africa, off of Gabon, and also in South Africa, in the Orange Basin. I think Shell envisions itself as a future key player in South Africa, which is good because South Africa is a big, industrially developed country with a large population and big markets. South Africa has ongoing social problems, but it needs energy. So if Shell is successful in offshore South Africa, there’s a built-in market. Shell doesn’t have to tanker oil in or pipe it in or somehow move it halfway across the world.

TER: In light of what happened with BP, are these offshore oil plays riskier, since one accident can shut everything down. Or are large companies like Shell diversified enough that it doesn’t matter?

BK: I will never say that accidents do not matter. As we learned from the Gulf of Mexico, an offshore accident can be a company killer. BP literally went through a near-death experience. In the minds of some people, BP is still not out of the woods. The company has made settlement after settlement and it is still not done paying. It has divested itself of many attractive assets over the past couple of years to raise enough cash to pay settlements, fees and fines.

The good news about the aftermath of the accident is that, globally, there is a heightened sense of safety awareness in the oil industry. Companies have watched the BP issues very closely and learned every lesson they possibly can. All of the solid operators are hypersensitive and hypercautious toward offshore operations.

It all comes back to benefit some of the service players I mentioned earlier. The fact that many offshore drilling platforms had to upgrade blowout preventers to a much higher specification benefited the likes of Cameron and FMC Technologies. In the new environment, your subsea equipment must be built to a higher specification. So say thank you to FMC Technologies—which will gladly build it to that higher spec and charge you a higher price.

The numbers of inspections that companies must do when they work at the surface of the ocean are enormous. If a company has to inspect every 48 hours, it needs more ROVs. Who makes ROVs? That would be Oceaneering. There are other opportunities in other spaces, such as dealing with existing offshore platforms, existing offshore pipelines and existing offshore rig populations. One company that has done very well in our portfolio in the last couple of years is Helix Energy Solutions Group Inc. (HLX:NYSE). It deals with offshore repairs and servicing issues, and offers decommissioning services.

Individuals who go into these kinds of investments want to become educated about them. We are in these investments with a long-term, multiyear horizon because that is the investment cycle. From prospect to producing platform, these kinds of investments can take 10–15 years to play out. It’s like an oil company annuity for the well-run oil service guys.

The good news is that there is long-term reward, because large volumes of oil come from offshore. When looking at the shale gale, on the best day of the year in the Eagle Ford or the Bakken onshore, a really good well can produce 1,000 barrels per day (1 Mbbl/d). Six months from now that well could produce 400 (400 bbl/d), and a year from now it might produce 200 bbl/d. The decline rates are really steep. On some of the offshore wells, we are talking 15–20 Mbbl/d, which can be sustained for several years. The economics of a good well and a good play offshore are for the long term.

TER: It sounds like your advice is for people to do their homework and be in it for the long term.

BK: Yes. My newsletter, Outstanding Investments, talks about oil and oil investments all the time; subscribers receive my views over the long term. As an investor, you want to educate yourself about different companies in the space, what equipment is used in the space and what the processes are. You do not have to be a geologist or an engineer to invest, but you need to be willing to learn. There is an entire offshore vocabulary that you need to understand to appreciate the investment opportunities. You also need to be able to keep your sanity during times of tumult, when the rest of the market might be losing its grip. And you need to understand why you went into a certain investment in the first place and when it is time to get out.

TER: That is great advice. Thank you so much for taking the time to talk with me today.

BK: You are very welcome.

Byron King writes for Agora Financial’s Daily Resource Hunter and also edits two newsletters: Energy & Scarcity Investor and Outstanding Investments. He studied geology and graduated with honors from Harvard University, and holds advanced degrees from the University of Pittsburgh School of Law and the U.S. Naval War College. He has advised the U.S. Department of Defense on national energy policy.

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Some Like It Hot: Lisa Morrison on the Outlook for Industrial Metals

Source: Brian Sylvester of The Metals Report (6/11/13)

Commodities may have broken out of a commodity supercycle and could be hitting a cyclical trough. Lisa Morrison, the principal consultant of CRU Group in Philadelphia, analyzes the price outlook for 26 commodities over the next four years and gives them a temperature rating from hot to freezing. In this interview with The Metals Report, Morrison, using this rating methodology, details which commodities she expects to offer the best upside for investors and which to avoid.

The Metals Report: Lisa, CRU recently published a report, “CRU Commodity Heat,” which measures the near- and medium-term outlook for 26 different commodities, most of which are mined. How does CRU measure the market heat of these commodities?

Lisa Morrison: We start with the average for each commodity price in the first quarter of 2013 and then we compile CRU’s view of the change in price between the first quarter and the annual average for 2013 and then each year through 2017. We do this analysis every quarter.

We categorize commodities according to their anticipated price movements. A hot commodity has an anticipated price increase of 15% or greater, warm is 5% to 15%; mild is 0% to 5%, cool is 0% to -5%, cold is -5% to -15% and freezing is greater than -15%.

TMR: Are there any hot commodities right now?

LM: Looking at the 2013 annual average, we don’t see any hot commodities. That’s because most commodities have come off of some very high points. The end of last year saw a bit of a crash. The strongest increase that we see between Q1/13 and the 2013 annual average is cobalt.

But looking further out into the forecast to 2017, we see some commodities that could move into the very hot region.

 

TMR: With so many commodities in the mild, cool, cold and freezing zones currently and in the future, does that mean we could see mines being shut down?

LM: A steep drop in the commodity price certainly could indicate that we have a period coming where strong oversupply means that producers may need to shut down, especially the higher cost ones. If a commodity has been very expensive in the past, meaning its price has been much higher than its cost of production, a steep drop in price doesn’t necessarily mean output would be curtailed. It just means that the market is returning to some sense of normalcy. Copper is a good example of that.

Gold is a case where prices have come down quite a bit too, but because of lack of investor interest rather than needing to shut down gold mines. Aluminum is a case where the market is much oversupplied and the commodity is under some cost pressure. We’ve seen prices come off quite a bit in aluminum, but our heat chart doesn’t show prices are going to decrease much further, simply because prices can’t fall much more. They’ve gotten to the point where producers have to start shutting down because of overcapacity.

TMR: Has the lack of heat in your forecast led you to conclude that the market for these metals has hit a cyclical trough?

LM: That is our view on 2013, but by 2017, we’re looking at markets that are sending a signal to producers to cut back or maybe not ramp up capacity quite so quickly.

The macroeconomic environment is uncertain. Is China going to pick up? Is the U.S. going to pick up? Is Europe ever going to come out of recession? With so many questions on the demand side, producers are being very, very cautious.

We’re probably in the cyclical trough now and I would point to October 2012 as an inflection point. At least in exchange-traded commodities, investors were selling off because they realized that Chinese economic growth was not going to be 9% anymore. It was going to be something more like 7% or 7.5%. There also was a recognition that the U.S. wasn’t going to be picking up and that Europe wasn’t going to do very well in the coming year. Then, of course, we had another selloff in the spring, in March–April, because, again, the economic growth prospects weren’t very good. We’re probably in the low period right now. It’s hard to say how long cyclical troughs last because they vary by commodity.

Depending on the commodity it takes a longer time or a shorter time to shut a mine or shut an operation. A lot of commodities are sold on contract basis, on a one-year contract or six-month, nine-month, etc. Production happens and continues to happen because an agreed-upon arrangement exists. It takes more than six months for commodities to really respond to lower prices. As for the 2017 outlook, today’s lower prices are causing producers to ramp up much more slowly or even cancel new projects. But by the time we get through 2014 and into 2015, we may be back in the situation where we really need more capacity in these commodities.

TMR: What’s CRU’s outlook on China?

LM: It’s easy to feel depressed about China because we’ve been accustomed to such a fast growing economy, with double-digit industrial production growth. You can’t sustain that kind of growth for long. The economy now is going through a transition. If you think about Korea in 2000 versus where it was in 1980, it’s a similar situation, but China is a much, much bigger economy. Our view is that China will still achieve strong GDP growth in the 7–8% range over the next couple of years. Industrial production growth won’t probably be double-digits except in a very good month or a quarter here and there, but something in the 7–9% range. China still has a lot of infrastructure to build. People will get wealthier and will need and want more and better food. They are going to need more oil and more cars; they are going to want homes and washing machines. Even though the super fast growing commodity story in China may be over, it isn’t as if we’re getting to a point where China is not going to need commodities anymore.

TMR: Does your view of China lead you to conclude that the commodity supercyle is over?

LM: The commodity supercycle is probably over, but I don’t think it’s the death of commodities. The supercycle was after all driven by the unexpected strong growth in China and expected weakness of the U.S. dollar. At the same time, the metals and mining industries had gone through a period cost cutting, so there had been no investment in capacity or exploration. As a result, the mining industry was completely unprepared for the large surge in demand from China starting in 1995 and picking up again after the Asian financial crisis, in 1997, 1998, 1999 and the end of 2000, which was a peak period for commodities in general. That was very attractive for investors and that is what promoted the supercycle. Now we are going to see that back off. China’s commodity growth isn’t going to be 10% year-on-year; it’s going to be much smaller. But don’t forget that economies with large populations in Asia and in Africa are eventually going to be transitioning as well.

TMR: Do precious metals prices tend to be a leading indicator of a cyclical trough or are they more likely to be some of the last commodities to fall?

LM: Precious metals often function as a safe haven in times of high uncertainty. After the financial crash we didn’t know if the economy was going to survive or how we were going to get economic growth. We saw investors very interested in gold and silver at those times. Of course, prices remain very elevated compared to prior to the crash. Precious metals prices certainly seem to be countercyclical and have high demand, both financial and physical, during periods of high uncertainty.

We have witnessed a certain amount of selling in gold and silver since the middle of last year. That’s because the worst-case scenarios, such as a Eurozone breakup or China sliding into recession, didn’t come about. Even President Obama and Congress managed to get past the fiscal cliff. Investors began telling themselves that because the worst didn’t happen, they didn’t need to be invested in safe havens anymore. That caused a selloff in gold and silver that turned out to be a precursor to selloffs in the rest of the metals space. In that respect they were a lead indicator that the worst of the uncertainty had passed. I don’t think you could look at precious metals demand as necessarily a lead indicator for an economic cycle per se. I think they definitely have a role to play during a cycle and may play a leading role again with consumers when things are looking better.

The U.S. economy is on a much stronger footing than it has been since 2006. The U.S. economy has been a nonentity in the story for the last seven years. Our view is that this year we’re likely to get 2.5–3% GDP growth, moving to the 3–3.5% range for the next two years. That is even slightly above trend compared to what demographics would give you. The U.S. economy is really looking in much, much better shape than it has been for quite some time.

Don’t forget that Japan is going to emerge as well. It’s also been an absent actor on the global economic stage. It’s a big economy and it’s going to emerge from this sleepwalking stage in the next year or so. I think that’s very exciting. It’s hard for me to be very negative about what I see over the next two years. Maybe the next six months aren’t that great for commodities, but over the medium to longer term the outlook is very positive.

TMR: What is your outlook for gold, silver, platinum and palladium?

LM: Our forecast is that the gold price peaked in 2012 and that the good times for gold are pretty much over. We expect prices to come down through 2017. In silver that is also the case. If the interest in gold has peaked, the interest in silver is gone and that price is going to come down a lot faster. I certainly would not want to be holding either one of those for any length of time.

Platinum and palladium are a bit different because they are much more industrial type metals. They are produced in very small quantities in markets with supply constraints. Particularly in palladium, we also have had inventories that were coming out of the former Soviet Union and those Russian stockpiles and shipments are ending. There’s no more left there, so we are coming back to the actual private market.

This means producers of palladium now have to increase capacity to meet demand. We’re looking for pretty strong price increases—extremely strong in palladium. That’s one of the super hot commodities. Going out through 2017, platinum would also fall into that super hot period because it’s expected to increase well over 15% over the next five years. We’ve got lower prices now, but new capacity is going to be needed, so prices will pick-up after 2015.

TMR: What other commodities do you expect will move from neutral into the hot category over the next few years?

LM: We’re looking at cobalt, which has had the strongest price increase this year. The best of the price increases are going to be in the very near term and things will slide off after about 2015–2016. Tin also has had some supply constraint problems, so that’s going to move into the hot category next year.

Zinc, which is much oversupplied at the moment, is quite likely to move into the hottest commodity category five years from now because the new mines that we are going to need can’t be financed at today’s prices. With financing as tight as it is, those zinc mines are not going to be started for the next couple of years. It takes quite a few years to bring a zinc mine into production, so we could be looking at a late decade squeeze in zinc.

TMR: What about copper?

LM: Copper prices have been well over $7,000/tonne and have found it quite difficult to break below $6,800/tonne. Copper is likely to be better supplied than it has been for 10 years, so a major shortage going forward is unlikely. Of course, that assumes that the mine supply comes on the way it is supposed to. The mines are coming on in places that traditionally have had some difficulties such as Peru and Africa.

We will probably still see relatively high copper prices, meaning something in the $6,500–7,500/tonne range, to bring on these new mines needed in the next five to seven years to meet demand. Everything in copper hinges on whether or not mine supply comes on as expected.

TMR: Nickel prices have been very weak over the past four or five years; why are you predicting a 41% increase between now and 2017?

LM: Nickel has been punished because it’s in oversupply. Supply came on at the wrong time, just when demand was coming off. Demand hasn’t really picked up terribly well. In China nickel pig iron is used as a cheaper alternative to pure nickel. This was how China dealt with its shortage of nickel resources and its need for more nickel for stainless steel. Stainless steel is a higher-end commodity. China is shifting from heavy industrial or heavy infrastructure to something that’s more consumer oriented and more high-value added. Although the demand for steel and iron ore may go down and those prices may fall, that shift to something consumer oriented is going to support nickel prices going forward. It’s really a China story in nickel again.

TMR: How are gold and silver likely to react to the unwinding of quantitative easing in the U.S., Japan and Europe?

LM: If we get a lot of inflation because of the unwinding of quantitative easing, we may not see the drop off in prices that we’ve forecasted. Our view is that quantitative easing in the U.S. isn’t going to start to get unwound probably until the end of next year to any significant extent. It will be done in a relatively gradual way. Unwinding in Japan probably won’t happen until well after that because its central bank has institutionalized yet another round of it. It’s going to be a gradual process. The winding down will be difficult to time because we can’t even get that information out of the Federal Reserve Board at the moment.

As those uncertainties are reduced and things become clearer, then what we do at CRU is look at sentiment in the next year or two and try to figure out how that affects the price forecast. Then, as we move away from year two, we really should revert to the fundamentals of supply and demand in those markets.

We can’t really see how the current price of silver is justified given that the lack of massive investor influx to support the price. That’s why we expect the price to come down. Gold is a little a bit different, but similar. We look at supply and demand. We look at what investors are doing. Investors have really sold off. The question that you need to ask with gold is what’s going to make investors buy again? Or will they keep unwinding at opportunistic times?

TMR: Do you have an answer to your own question?

LM: The only thing I think that would cause people to buy more gold again and to go through another cycle of this massive investor buying would be if it became a commonly held perception that quantitative easing was going to be unwound in a way that was going to cause very high levels of inflation. In that case, all commodity prices would go up, but certainly with gold and silver as safe havens, the demand for them would be even stronger.

TMR: Where should investors be long with mined commodities?

LM: The best prospects for being long over the next year in exchange-traded type commodities are probably tin and palladium. Looking at 2017, economic growth picks up after 2015. We hope that market conditions are more normalized. We should be getting finished with quantitative easing. We should have better market signals. In those cases probably the really good prospects there for exchange-traded commodities are zinc and nickel.

TMR: Thanks, Lisa, for your insights.

Lisa Morrison was a speaker at the Society for Mining, Metallurgy and Exploration “Current Trends in Mining Finance—An Executive’s Guide” conference.

Lisa Morrison is an industry analyst in the copper and aluminum markets with the CRU Group, a business intelligence company. She specializes in assessing risks to the short-term outlook and is currently building a research platform to help CRU better predict and model investor behavior in the metals market. She has worked at CRU since 1995 and spent 12 years in the firm’s management consulting division working on projects in aluminum, steel and base metals. Prior to CRU, she spent five years at Haver Analytics and before that more than one year at the Korea Trade Promotion Center. Morrison holds a masters degree in economics from New York University and a bachelors in economics from Drew University.

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German final CPI increases by 1.5% in May

By HY Markets Forex Blog

The German’s closing Consumer Price Index (CPI) rose by 1.5% in May year-on-year, according to reports from the German statistical body Destatis released on Wednesday.

Economists and analysts forecasts no changed would be made, indicated from the previous month’s preliminary reading. The German’s CPI increased in May, after dropping by 0.5% last month.

Germany’s Gross domestic product (GDP) aligned with the market forecast by an increase of 0.1 percent quarter-on-quarter in the first three months of the year, compared to the fall of 0.7 percent last year.

Following the sluggish growth in the country’s economic activities in the second and third quarter last year, the restraining growth were not enough to balance the high drop in exports and equipment investment, according to reports released.

Reports indicate that the slowdown was temporary and that there was stabilization in the first quarter of this year.

According to EC, the GDP is expected to advance by 0.4 this year and by 1.8% in the following year 2014. “Export expectations have brightened noticeably, although external orders for industrial goods have dropped back down again,” EC said.

Germany’s economy growth is projected to toughen and grow stronger gradually this year and increase by 2 percent by 2014, according to the organization for economic cooperation and development (OECD).

“While subdued activity in the euro area will hold back the recovery, the pickup of world trade is projected to increase export growth. Wage and employment gains as well as low interest rates will support domestic demand, narrowing the current account surplus to 6% of GDP. The unemployment rates is expected to fall somewhat further, while consumer price inflation may rise to 2% in 2014”, the OECD said.

The post German final CPI increases by 1.5% in May appeared first on | HY Markets Official blog.

Article provided by HY Markets Forex Blog

WTI declines as API reports increase supplies

By HY Markets Forex Blog

The West Texas Intermediate oil futures dropped for the third day in a row, after the U.S crude stockpiles increased and the API reports indicated that inventories rose at its most in over four years.

WTI slid by 1 percent in New York after crude supplies increased by 8.97 million barrels last week, according to reports by the American Petroleum Institute.

Investors are awaiting reports by the Energy Information Administration (EIA) which is expected to show an increase by 550,000 barrels last week.

WTI crude traded at a low 0.97% to $94.46 a barrel, while Brent Oil traded at 0.70% to $102.24 a barrel, both as of 5:29am GMT.

According to reports released from API, last week crude oil supplies increased by 8.97 million barrels, the biggest increase since 2009. Distillate-fuel stockpiles also increased by 199,000 barrels last week, the API said.

The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) reserved its forecast for the year unchanged. According to reports released by OPEC, the global oil demand is expected to increase by 780,000 barrels a day to 89.7 million a day.

OPEC has boosted production by 106,000 barrels a day to 30.57 million a day last month.

WTI crude futures for July dropped to a low 92 cents to $94.46 a barrel in electronic trading .The European benchmark rate was at $7.57 to WTI futures.

With the high US oil production, the global demand for oil continues to remain weak in the market.

The post WTI declines as API reports increase supplies appeared first on | HY Markets Official blog.

Article provided by HY Markets Forex Blog

Breakdown: U.S. Economy and Its Cycles in 18 Brief Points

By Profit Confidential

Breakdown: U.S. Economy and Its Cycles in 18 Brief PointsIn a fascinating work on long-run economic cycles, J. Anthony Boeckh’s book The Great Reflation offers up some poignant research on the U.S. economy and its cycles.

The Great Reflation is a non-political, historical breakdown of inflation, monetary and fiscal policies, interest rates, and long-wave economic theory. It was completed in 2010 and made several predictions on the U.S. economy that have turned out to be correct so far.

Boeckh, former publisher of the Bank Credit Analyst, delves into past financial manias, asset inflation bubbles, asset allocation for the aftermath, the U.S. dollar decline, commodities, and the monetary future of the stock market and the U.S. economy.

Here is a summation of Boeckh’s observations:

1. The global financial system will always remain flawed and subject to price inflation and bubbles, so long as it is based on fiat paper money.

2. Before 1914, most Western countries had a monetary regime that legally restricted central bank money creation based on its holdings of gold.

3. Average interest rates fell throughout the 100 years leading up to 1914.

4. In the absence of a financial system based on discipline and restraint, all anchorless fiat money systems (especially the U.S. economy) are destined to suffer inflation and instability.

5. Investors will be playing cat-and-mouse with the Federal Reserve for years to come—a problem caused by excessive private and public debt.

6. Deleveraging of the private sector bodes well for the transition process to the next long-wave cycle (2015+).

7. If the U.S. economy can’t help reduce the debt-to-gross domestic product (GDP) ratio in a timely manner, investors will face a public-sector debt supercycle larger than the post-1982 private-sector supercycle.

8. In the short term, deficits and extreme monetary expansion help the private sector repair balance sheets, but they cannot raise the standard of living for the average person.

9. The real total return of the S&P 500, deflated for inflation, is remarkably consistent over a long period of time.

10. Tactical asset allocation is the key to wealth creation and capital preservation.

11. In a world of economic fragility, investors want stability in the U.S. dollar, but the long-term outlook is bearish.

12. Gold is a crowded trade, but it’s useful as an insurance/inflation hedge in portfolios. Gold is an emotional purchase. Financial/investment demand for gold differs greatly from consumption.

13. Long-term returns from commodities as an asset class are unreliable and they trade in manias.

14. Historically, rising fiscal burdens hasten the demise of empires. The U.S. economy can chart a positive new path, but only with the removal of the political stalemate of vested interests.

15. There will likely not be any effective reform of the global monetary system anytime soon. Greater price inflation is coming.

16. The stock market has proven it does well following long-wave troughs after major financial crises.

17. The long run in this investment world no longer exists. Wealth preservation and portfolio safety are critical.

18. The music has started playing again, but there aren’t enough chairs for when it stops.

The Great Reflation is a very thoughtful historical look at the long-run economic cycles experienced by the U.S. economy. (See “Equity Flux, The Stock Market’s Latest Problem.”)

The U.S. economy has been consistently swept away by asset bubbles and financial crises, and Boeckh clearly demonstrates how monetary policy so powerfully influences cycles with changes in interest rates and price inflation.

Looking at the data and tables presented, the inflation-adjusted long-term uptrend in the stock market (since 1929, including dividends) averages just under seven percent annually. This is littered with long periods of extreme undervaluation and overvaluation.

Boeckh’s best advice is to employ “tactical stock market reallocation” to continually adjust your exposure to equities as monetary policy perpetually changes the inflation/deflation cycles experienced by the U.S. economy.

Article by profitconfidential.com

Buying High the New Winning Investment Strategy?

By Profit Confidential

Buying High the New Winning Investment StrategyWhen I evaluate potential stocks to trade, not only do I examine how well the company has done and delivered, but I also look at the stock’s chart potential and technical analysis.

In fact, I often will screen stocks based on my technical analysis system, and from there, I’ll take a closer look at the company’s underlying fundamentals. But the strategy I use for day trading and swing trading differ from the process I employ for longer-term buys.

For trading, I tend to rely on technical analysis more than I do for longer-term investments.

Stocks that I really like to look at are those trading at their 52-week highs. (Read “Denny’s Serves Up Grand-Slam Returns.”) Some of you might ask why I would bother to look at stocks that have already eclipsed their 52-week highs. The reason is that these stocks are trading at their highs, because they are delivering results to Wall Street. As a side note, I also look at stocks near their lows, but these are predominately viewed as contrarian picks.

An excellent example of a stock at a 52-week high that I suggested readers keep on their watch lists recently was Mannkind Corporation (NASDAQ/MNKD), a biopharmaceutical company that is making some great strides in developing therapeutic products for several diseases, including diabetes, cancer, and inflammatory and autoimmune diseases.

On the chart, Mannkind has made 26 new highs this year and has shot up 213% in that time, according to data from Barchart.com. Over the past year, the stock made 32 new highs and is up a sizzling 341%, based on my technical analysis.

Examining Mannkind’s stock chart through technical analysis, the company is excellent, showing successive highs this year, as indicated by the purple circle in the chart below.

The stock is pausing now, down eight percent from its high, so it may be taking a break. I would not be chasing the stock as the easy money has been made for now, based on my technical analysis.

MannKind Corporation Chart

Chart courtesy of www.StockCharts.com

In addition to Mannkind, there is always a good buying opportunity to make money when examining stocks trading at their 52-week highs through technical analysis.

I look for high volume stocks trading above their 50- and 200-day moving averages (MAs). You want to look for a possible “golden cross” pattern, in which the 50-day MA is above the 200-day MA, as shown in the chart of Mannkind below. You also want to see strong or rising relative strength and a bullish moving average convergence/divergence (MACD).

MannKind Corp Chart

Chart courtesy of www.StockCharts.com

Another stock on the rise is Novatel Wireless, Inc. (NASDAQ/NVTL), which jumped 7.71% on June 7 and is edging higher on the chart.

Novatel Wireless Inc Chart

Chart courtesy of www.StockCharts.com

Other potential candidates include MicroVision, Inc (NASDAQ/MVIS), Pacific Sunwear of California, Inc. (NASDAQ/PSUN), Flamel Technologies S.A. (NASDAQ/FLML), and TearLab Corporation (NASDAQ/TEAR).

Article by profitconfidential.com

What China’s Economic Slowdown Means for the S&P 500

By Profit Confidential

What China’s Economic Slowdown Means for the S&P 500In 2012, the Chinese economy grew at the slowest pace in 13 years. This year the country is expected to grow only 7.5%. (Source: Reuters, June 9, 2013.) Sadly, I believe this growth projection is still too optimistic a prediction.

The second-biggest economy in the world is sending out warning signals, but no one seems to care.

Statistics clearly show the Chinese economy is witnessing an economic slowdown. I warn you that its implications will be massive for the global economy and the U.S. economy.

Last month, exports from the Chinese economy increased only one percent from a year ago, while economists were predicting an increase of seven percent—very disappointing for the Chinese economy. (Source: New York Times, June 8, 2013.)

Adding to the misery, it wasn’t too long ago when the credit rating of the Chinese economy was downgraded by Fitch Rating Services from AA- to A+ (investment grade with some risk). At the time, Fitch said that the Chinese economy had “underlying structural weaknesses.” Credit in the country has reached 198% of gross domestic product (GDP). Back in 2008, it stood at 125%. (Source: “Fitch Downgrades China’s Credit Rating,” Financial Times, April 9, 2013.)

Bringing all of this into perspective, if the economic slowdown in the Chinese economy persists, we will see commodities prices decline further, because Chinese companies are such big consumers of commodities. For example, copper prices are already down more than 10% since the beginning of the year. As a result, companies in the basic material, industrial, and energy sectors will see their profitability decline.

It’s common sense: if an industrial metal company is able to take copper out of the ground for $3.00 per pound, and sells it for $3.60, then it will be able to reap rewards of more than 20%. But if copper prices go down to $3.30 (or about 10%), the company’s profitability declines by half!

Combined, companies in the energy, industrial, and material sectors make up little more than 24% of the S&P 500. (Source: Standard and Poor’s web site, last accessed June 10, 2013.) The economic slowdown in the Chinese economy can make one-quarter of the S&P 500 companies vulnerable, impacting the stock market.

As it stands, stock market euphoria is rampant—the key stock indices are moving ahead of reality. But the panic will strike once again, and the wealth of those who are extensively buying stock today will suffer. Be careful, dear reader. The economic slowdown in the Chinese economy will eventually take its toll on many American multinational companies and their stock prices.

Article by profitconfidential.com

Why Supply and Demand Doesn’t Matter for U.S. Oil

By Profit Confidential

Incredible Oil Production Growth Isn’t Helping PricesThere is now pressure on oil prices.

West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude is getting awfully close to the $100.00-per-barrel level again. Futures traders are interpreting economic news, including last Friday’s employment report, as strength in the U.S economy.

Resource stocks have generally been trending lower, particularly in precious metals. But this hasn’t been the case with the oil stocks, especially large-cap integrated oil companies. They continue to do relatively well on the stock market even though the spot price of oil has been mostly flat until just recently.

From a business perspective, virtually any equity market portfolio is well served by having some exposure to oil stocks (environmentalists may disagree).

The last time we considered Chevron Corporation (NYSE/CVX), the position was trading around $117.00 a share. It’s currently around $121.00, having pulled back from a new stock market high of $127.40. The stock is currently yielding 3.3%.

Stock market strength among big oil stocks is pretty impressive with oil prices just under $100.00 a barrel and natural gas prices still in a long consolidation.

ConocoPhillips (NYSE/COP) is holding up extremely well, especially after spinning off Phillips 66 (NYSE/PSX), which has been an outstanding oil stock since the divestiture. Adjusted first-quarter earnings for ConocoPhillips were basically flat comparatively. The stock is currently yielding 4.3%.

Crude oil inventories in the U.S. market recently hit an 82-year high (due to all the new production). Data shows that inventories have been drawn down over the last couple of weeks.

In many ways, oil prices are also trading off the Federal Reserve.

Right now, Chevron is toying with its 50-day moving average (MA). The stock broke its 50-day MA back in the middle of April, then reaccelerated. The company’s long-term stock chart is featured below:

Chevron Corporation Chart

Chart courtesy of www.StockCharts.com

The equity market experiences waves of enthusiasm from different places, and for quite some time, it was trading off the action in oil prices. The fact that oil prices are now close to $100.00 a barrel again in the face of escalating domestic production is telling of the willingness of traders to bid this market. (See “The Only Way to Beat Rising Gasoline Prices.”)

The recent spike in oil prices seems to be a spin-off itself of the stock market’s enthusiasm of late. Actual supply and demand figures on oil are being attributed less weight by traders in this monetary expansion.

Second-quarter earnings estimates for big oil have been going up on presumed margin improvement.

Chevron’s 2013 first-quarter earnings were $6.2 billion, down from $6.5 billion comparatively. Revenues last quarter were $54.0 billion, down from $59.0 billion comparatively, mostly due to lower oil prices.

Chevron advanced a good $10.00 a share in the first quarter. The effects of the monetary expansion are now—without question—cajoling oil prices.

Article by profitconfidential.com

Why There May Be an Insatiable Appetite for Chinese IPOs

By Profit Confidential

Insatiable Appetite for Chinese IPOsThe Chinese are coming! Well, not really, but we did see the first Chinese initial public offering (IPO) of the year list on an U.S. exchange yesterday and only the third Chinese IPO since 2011. The pipeline has dried up from the 60 or so Chinese IPOs listing in the U.S. from 2008 to 2011. And whether the flow will start again is questionable, as I doubt it will happen.

China-based shopping center LightInTheBox Holding Co., Ltd. (NASDAQ/LITB), an online seller of apparel and other household goods to the world market, is the top Chinese online retailer as far as sales to customers outside of its country’s borders. The company, sometimes seen as the little “Amazon.com” of China, was started by Alan Guo, who was previously an executive at Google China. The company priced 8.3 million shares at $9.50 (the mid-point). The deal was hot due to the absence of IPOs coming from China. The stock surged 34% to an intraday high of $12.69 prior to settling at $11.61 for a market cap of about $470 million.

The strong buying in LightInTheBox indicates the demand for Chinese IPOs that are deemed to be trustworthy. The other two Chinese IPOs that debuted in 2012 have done well—online discount retailer Vipshop Holdings Limited (NYSE/VIPS) and social media company YY Inc. (NASDAQ/YY) are up a whopping 340% and 150%, respectively, from their IPO debuts.

At issue have been the numerous cases of fraudulent financial reporting by Chinese companies listing in the U.S., since these companies were not subject to U.S. reporting requirements with many listing on the bulletin board and pink sheets.

The Securities Exchange Commission (SEC) finally had enough and decided to demand more detailed and audited reporting by Chinese companies seeking to list in the U.S.

We all know what happened after; whether the flow of Chinese IPOs will begin again for the U.S. capital markets is doubtful at this time, as there’s tons of money available in Asia. (Read “Chinese Economy Finally Slowing; What It Means for Its Stocks.”)

Goldman Sachs suggests the major market for Chinese IPOs will be at home in China, where there could be as many as 349 IPOs this year. (Source: “China: A-share Portfolio Strategy, IPO deep dive: The Sword of Damocles or Paper Tiger?,” China First Capital web site, January 23, 2013, last accessed June 10, 2013.)

Of course, the U.S. capital markets are favored by Chinese companies that want more exposure and possible access to the U.S. and other global markets for their products.

Yet based on what the SEC has said, any Chinese company looking at listing here will be subjected to stringent reporting requirements, including all of the approved U.S. “Big Four” auditors. I’m all for the move, as it will give me more confidence in buying Chinese stocks.

Based on what happened to LightInTheBox, the demand for Chinese IPOs appears to be hot. The problem will be to convince the Chinese to adhere to U.S. demands.

With over 1.3 billion people and a massive middle class, you know there are many Chinese companies that would find a nice home here.

Article by profitconfidential.com

Indian Government to Banks: Stop Telling People to Buy Gold

By Profit Confidential

Stop Telling People to Buy GoldIndia, the biggest consumer of gold bullion, is witnessing over-the-top demand—to the point where the government is trying to curb demand.

The Finance Minister of India said last week, “Banks have a role to play in dampening the enthusiasm for gold. I think the RBI [Reserve Bank of India] has advised banks that they should not sell gold coins.” He added, “I would urge all banks to please advise their branches that they should not encourage their customers to invest in or buy gold.” (Source: “P. Chidambaram hints banks likely to stop gold coin sales to curb demand,” The Indian Express, June 7, 2013.)

The appetite for gold bullion by Indian consumers has forced its government to increase the import tax on the yellow metal to eight percent—it has increased this tax rate twice in the past six months!

But the Indian economy isn’t the only one experiencing a surge in gold demand.

The acting director of the U.S. Mint, Richard Peterson, was quoted last week saying, “Demand [for gold bullion] right now is unprecedented…” (Source: “US bullion coin demand still at unprecedented levels-US Mint Chief,” Reuters, June 5, 2013.)

Looking at the sales of gold bullion coins from the U.S. Mint, demand has more than doubled. In the first five months of this year ending in May, the U.S. Mint sold 572,000 ounces of gold bullion in coins. In the same period a year ago, the Mint sold only 283,500 ounces of gold bullion. (Source: The United States Mint web site, last accessed June 7, 2013.)

Dear reader, the numbers are speaking louder than the words. Even when there’s a significant amount of downward price pressure toward gold bullion, demand is doing the opposite and increasing sharply.

Aside from what I have written above, I still believe central banks will eventually be the major force driving gold bullion prices. Countries like Russia, Turkey, and Kazakhstan continue to add gold bullion to their reserves.

Central banks want stability in their reserves and gold bullion does the job perfectly. Just look at the chart below of the U.S. Dollar Index (which measures the value of the dollar compared to other major currencies):

USD US Dollar Cash Settle Chart

Chart courtesy of www.StockCharts.com

Now ask this question: as the most conservative investors, why would central banks be willing to hold the U.S. dollar in their reserves when the Federal Reserve just keeps printing more of them? Central banks are worried about paper currencies, thus, they are looking at gold bullion again as the alternative to reserve stability.

Michael’s Personal Notes:

The Japanese economy is a prime example of what happens when central bank–infused “economic growth” crumbles.

Quantitative easing may have been needed in the U.S. economy when the financial system was on the verge of collapse, but artificially low interest rates and vast amounts of paper money printing could be creating major troubles for our future, just like it did in the Japanese economy.

The Bank of Japan and the Japanese government have taken a strong stance on bringing economic growth to the Japanese economy. The Bank of Japan has taken the concept of quantitative easing to a new level, and it plans to continue increasing the country’s money supply. Similar to what’s happening here in America, the Bank of Japan is printing new money to buy government bonds. Japan’s central bank has become heavily involved in the stock market of the Japanese economy by buying units in exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and real estate investment trusts (REITs).

Sadly, the outcomes of this rigorous quantitative easing are dismal. The Japanese economy isn’t improving. Rather, the currency of the country has become a major victim, and the stock market in the Japanese economy is bursting.

Take a look at the chart below, which shows the value of the Japanese yen (black line) declining continuously, while the stock market is rising and bursting (red/black line).

 NIKK Tokyo Nikkei Average Chart

Chart courtesy of www.StockCharts.com

On May 23, the stock market in the Japanese economy took a turn downward; since then, it has been declining quickly.

When I look at this, it makes me question the stability of the key stock indices here in the U.S. economy. The Federal Reserve is still going ahead with its quantitative easing and printing $85.0 billion a month to spur economic growth. As a result of this, the stock market has risen significantly, giving investors a false idea about prosperity here in the U.S.

I still continue to be skeptical about the rise of the stock markets in the U.S. economy. Many are questioning whether the rise in American stock markets is a direct result of the Fed’s quantitative easing program.

The stock market in the Japanese economy tumbled more than 3,000 points in a matter of weeks as its bubble burst; it wouldn’t be a surprise for me to see the Dow Jones Industrial Average do the same.

What He Said:

“Consumer confidence does not change overnight. In the U.S., 70% of GDP is based on consumer spending. And in my life, all the recessions I have seen or studied have only come to an end when consumers started spending. With consumer sentiment getting worse, and with the U.S. personal savings rate at near record lows, it may take two or three years for consumers to start spending again.” Michael Lombardi in Profit Confidential, February 25, 2008. By the end of 2008, the rest of the world was realizing the recession would be much longer and deeper than most had realized.

Article by profitconfidential.com