How Exporting US Gas Will Transform Global Energy Markets: Sam Wahab

Source: Peter Byrne of The Energy Report (6/27/13)

http://www.theenergyreport.com/pub/na/15401

Here’s the situation: North America is swimming in cheap natural gas, whereas international markets are thirsty for it and paying a premium. Now that the DOE is beginning to approve LNG export permits, North American producers have major incentive to drill, baby, drill. To get an expert perspective on the coming LNG supply shift, The Energy Report turned to Cantor Fitzgerald Analyst Sam Wahab, who keeps tabs on global oil and gas developments from his base in London. This is a must-read interview for anyone who wants to profit from a potentially massive shift in natural gas fundamentals.

The Energy Report: Sam, how will an increase in the export of liquefied natural gas (LNG) from the U.S. affect the price of that increasingly abundant commodity?

Sam Wahab: LNG export potential is a very hot topic at the moment, given the significant disparity in gas prices in the U.S. and almost everywhere else in the world. Depressed U.S. gas prices provide an investment opportunity. Low prices have already contributed to a resurgence in the U.S. petrochemical industry. Utility companies are shifting away from coal to using natural gas for electricity generation. If the U.S. becomes a major exporter of LNG, there will be good opportunities for companies with expertise to make strategic acquisitions.

The push to export natural gas stems from the fact that the U.S. simply has too much of it. Thanks to the fracking-led energy boom, U.S. natural gas prices have collapsed. Many recently drilled wells have been shut down because pumping costs more than the gas can be sold for in the market. But gas prices in other parts of the world are not nearly so low. In Europe, gas prices are five times higher than in the U.S. That disparity offers an incredible incentive for energy companies to put their gas on a ship and send it abroad.

TER: Are there any other political and economic obstacles to ramping up U.S. exports?

SW: The Department of Energy has 20 export applications pending. Most of the applications are from smaller firms, but the facilities can be used to ship gas for big oil companies, including BP Plc (BP:NYSE; BP:LSE), Royal Dutch Shell Plc (RDS.A:NYSE; RDS.B:NYSE), Exxon Mobil Corp. (XOM:NYSE), or Chevron Corp. (CVX:NYSE). The government has been taking a cautious approach on exports. The Energy Information Administration reports that as natural gas exports increase, gas prices may rise between 3–9% which translates into a 1–3% increase in utility bills for residential consumers. Overall, manufacturing job losses due to increased exports should be minimal, and should be more than offset by the positive economic effects of increased drilling and greater export revenue.

American manufacturers remain concerned that too much export could drive up the price of natural gas, which is a key energy source for making plastics and polymers and industrial chemicals. But manufacturers have recently launched more than 100 new projects designed to take advantage of America’s low natural gas prices, and they have invested billions of dollars creating half a million new jobs. Going forward, manufacturers claim that 5 million jobs could be on the line if exports are not handled properly, although they are cautiously comfortable with the fairly slow pace of export approval. No one expects that all 20 permits will be approved.

TER: American consumers are used to cheap natural gas. Do you see a backlash if prices increase?

SW: I do not see prices increasing significantly unless exports are rolled out on a large scale. America is sitting on more gas than it is going to use domestically for quite an extended period of time. There will be a squeeze on the end-consumer if prices do rise, but I do not expect a huge backlash. The U.S. consumer has enjoyed an extended period of low gas prices following the U.S. shale boom: All things must come to an end.

TER: Is an increase in the possibility of massive U.S. exports of liquid natural gas a positive sign for junior explorers and producers in North America and Europe?

SW: Access to a large market with higher spot prices will always be positive for junior explorers in the U.S., as that will invariably increase the commerciality of exploration and development. This is especially important following the long period of consolidation in the U.S. market, and the dramatic fall in exploration for gas following the U.S. shale boom.

In Europe, the last few years have seen a significant, albeit unsuccessful drive to replicate the U.S. using the same fracking techniques employed in North America. Juniors, such as San Leon Energy Plc (SLE:LSE; SLGYY:OTCBB), Aurelian Oil & Gas (which recently merged into San Leon) and 3 Legs Resources (3LEG:LON) have all capitalized on the plethora of unconventional gas resources in Europe and the continent’s comparably high gas price environment.

In the U.K., the recent listing on the shale oil and gas exploration has brought renewed focus to exploration there. IGas Energy Plc (IGAS:LSE) has just announced that its licenses in Northwest England could hold between 15 and 172 trillion cubic feet (Tcf) of gas. Although that is a preliminary estimate, it is considerably higher than was previously contemplated.

Elsewhere around the globe, a very interesting company has caught my attention: Falcon Oil & Gas Ltd. (FO:TSX.V; FOG:AIM; FAC:ESM). It operates in Australia, South Africa and Hungary. It was recently admitted to London’s Alternative Investment Market. While geographical diversification is a core aspect of Falcon’s portfolio, the company has considerable conventional resource potential across all of its assets: The company holds 14.7 million acres in total.

Falcon benefits from relationships with well established partners, namely Hess Corp. (HES:NYSE) in Australia and Gazprom (OGZD:LSE; GAZ:FSE; GAZP:MCX; GAZP:RTS; OGZPY:OTC) in Hungary. Those alliances can help to carry the company through the initial phases and provide technical skills and financial resources. Falcon is embarking on an active work program through the end of 2014 alongside these strong industry partners. Additional transactions are expected to reduce the financial exposure of derisking its substantial portfolio. Considering our expectation that Falcon’s near-term shale gas drilling in Hungary will be followed by a decision to drill five carried wells in Australia, we feel that Falcon’s current share price undervalues its material potential within its asset base.

TER: When we talked last December, you were bullish on CBM Asia Development Corp. (TCF:TSX.V) —whose share price has fallen—and Tethys Petroleum Ltd. (TPL:TSX; TPL:LSE) —whose share price has risen. What is your current view on those two firms?

SW: I remain very bullish on both companies. CBM Asia has an active year ahead with a work program that is geared toward first-stage pilot production. The company is incorporating two pilot programs, one in the Barito Basin and the other in Central Sumatra, as well as dewatering activities at the Sekayu PSC and the Kutai West CBM PSC. Significantly, the production pilots are planned in areas where CBM Asia holds operatorship, thereby avoiding reliance on outside partners. In addition, the company’s recent joint venture agreement to farm into Exxon’s Barito Basin CBM blocks, as well as potential PSCs and joint studies in the Kutai Basin, is clearly significant. In our view, the deal offers a combination of technical and financial strength, as well as the operational efficiency that will be crucial in developing the basins. This deal unlocks the upside potential identified through initial data analysis. Our model calculates the potential for 9.7 Tcf net recoverable, which, if confirmed, could be transformational for CBM Asia.

Tethys Petroleum remains on track and the share price has performed in line with expectations following the company’s farm out of its Tajik assets to Total S.A. (TOT:NYSE) and China National Oil and Gas Exploration and Development Corporation (CNODC). Tajikistan represents an entirely different proposition to investors, in our view. Tethys has a 28% effective interest in the Bokhtar PSC following the completion of the farm-out negotiation, which represents a significant proportion of the externally validated 27.5 billion barrel (27.5 Bbbl) recoverable prospective resource base.

Full details of the 2013-2014 program will be announced very shortly; however, we would expect 2013 to consist of a seismic survey and subsequent data interpretation followed by a deep exploration well in 2014. We would also expect further exploration and development drilling in Kazakhstan as the company continues to target their 1.3 Bbbl gross mean recoverable prospective resource base.

TER: Moving back across the pond, how would an increase in U.S. exports increase junior action in the Gulf of Mexico?

SW: Any increase in demand and a resulting shift in prices will invariably attract junior exploration. Nevertheless, the sheer cost involved in mounting a pure-play exploration program in the Gulf of Mexico is a barrier to entry. One company of note that I cover in the Gulf is Energy XXI (EXXI:NASDAQ). It entered the region in 2005 and purchased key assets from Exxon in 2010. The potential of U.S. exports has pushed the company to invest in the Gulf even more this year. The company budgeted a capex program of $750 million ($750M). Approximately 75% of the firm’s fiscal 2013 budget targets development drilling, and 25% of the budget targets exploration drilling.

Energy XXI has a geographically focused portfolio with some of the largest margins in the industry. It is focused on developing acquired properties while ramping up a complementary exploration program designed to provide organic growth. Also, it has more than 120 million barrels oil equivalent (120 MMboe) in proved reserves. It is set to soon produce 50,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day, of which 70% is oil. The signs look good for this company.

TER: What is the international dynamic between the use of coal by utilities and the emergence of LNG as a cheap reliable energy source?

SW: The sudden abundance of cheap natural gas has dramatically changed the way that the U.S. produces and consumes energy. Modern natural gas-fired power plants produce much cheaper energy compared to coal plants. Burning natural gas, which is mainly methane, produces far less carbon dioxide than burning coal—a modern gas-fired power plant emits roughly two-fifths the carbon a modernized coal plant emits. Some economists say it’s hard to overstate the significance of the sudden availability of cheap natural gas. In my opinion, it is the largest change in our energy system since nuclear power became part of the electricity grid 50 years ago.

However, applying simple economics, utilities might return to using more coal in the future as increased demand makes natural gas more expensive. And the developing countries are behind the U.S. in terms of replacing coal with gas. But the replacement trend is growing. Over the next 20 years, global demand for natural gas is expected to rise dramatically, fueled by rapid economic growth in Asia. With the development of LNG, many companies are positioning to take advantage of that emerging market.

TER: How much would the price of natural gas have to rise to make coal more attractive in the United States?

SW: That is a difficult figure to calculate. There are a lot of social and economic forces in play, including carbon emissions and climate change protocols that the government is trying to put in place. Governments could even prohibit the use of coal. In my opinion, gas prices could rise dramatically in the U.S., and gas would still be the preferred option over coal.

TER: What advice do you have for investors looking to enter or stay the course in gas-oriented firms?

SW: While oil and gas prices rise and fall, there is an overall resurgence in regional and global energy markets being driven by increased demand from the Asian economies, including China, India and Korea. The investment needs that accompany resurgence should set the stage for sustained merger and acquisition activity over the long-term. As for LNG, investors must consider the likely movement of supply and demand over time.

TER: Thanks so much, Sam.

SW: Thank you.

Sam Wahab began his career at PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC), where he qualified as a prize-winning chartered accountant. On PwC’s energy team, he specialized in assurance and transaction advisory. His clients included Royal Dutch Shell and JKX Oil & Gas. Following a spell in the oil and gas research team at Arbuthnot Securities, Wahab joined Seymour Pierce in 2011. He now heads up oil and gas equity research at Cantor Fitzgerald. His coverage includes companies with global operations on multiple stock exchanges.

Want to read more Energy Report interviews like this? Sign up for our free e-newsletter, and you’ll learn when new articles have been published. To see a list of recent interviews with industry analysts and commentators, visit our Streetwise Interviews page.

DISCLOSURE:

1) Peter Byrne conducted this interview for The Energy Report and provides services to The Energy Report as an independent contractor. He or his family own shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: none.

2) The following companies mentioned in the interview are sponsors of The Energy Report: CBM Asia Development Corp., Tethys Petroleum Ltd., Royal Dutch Shell Plc and Energy XXI. Streetwise Reports does not accept stock in exchange for its services or as sponsorship payment.

3) Sam Wahab: I or my family own shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. I personally am or my family is paid by the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. My company has a financial relationship with the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. I was not paid by Streetwise Reports for participating in this interview. Comments and opinions expressed are my own comments and opinions. I had the opportunity to review the interview for accuracy as of the date of the interview and am responsible for the content of the interview.

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Central Bank News Link List – Jun 28, 2013: Czech, Fiji hold, Uruguay targets money, Fed officials intensity efforts

By www.CentralBankNews.info

Here’s today’s Central Bank News’ link list, click through if you missed the previous link list. The list comprises news about central banks that is not covered by Central Bank News. The list is updated during the day with the latest developments so readers don’t miss any important news.

Friday Charts: Bear Markets, Runaway Real Estate and the Latest Fed-Induced Implosion

By WallStreetDaily.com

Our 32nd President, Franklin D. Roosevelt, provided the best public speaking advice on record: “Be brief; be sincere; be seated.”

And that’s precisely what I aim to do today, as I usher in another set of charts.

For the newbies in our midst, each Friday I handpick a few graphics to convey the most important economic and investing insights for the week.

Today, I’m dishing on the specter of a bear market, runaway real estate prices and the most dangerous income investment in the world.

So let’s get to it…

No Bear Sightings Here…

Here’s more proof that we should shrug off the recent market volatility and just keep calm and carry on.

In each of the last four years, we’ve experienced momentary pullbacks. And each time, the market ultimately resumed its upward trajectory.

I expect this go-round to be the same.

In other words, it won’t be different this time. (Is it ever?)

The Roof, the Roof…

The roof is on fire!

On Tuesday, the latest reading of the S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Indices was released.

Year-over-year, home prices surged 12%. That’s the fastest growth witnessed in over seven years.

But we don’t need no stinking water to put out this blaze.

Like I’ve shared before, the rapid run-up in prices is a low-inventory phenomenon. And the market will naturally correct itself.

As home prices keep increasing, more homeowners will be convinced to put their houses on the market. Couple that with the almost-instantaneous 1% surge in borrowing costs we’ve witnessed, and voila!

More supply and less purchasing power will help keep a lid on prices – and, in turn, the recovery should continue unabated. Bet on it!

Junk in the Trunk

Back in October 2012, and then again in November 2012, I warned yield-hungry investors about the dangers lurking in high-yield bond funds.

In fact, I pegged them as “the most dangerous income investment in the world.”

I told you to specifically steer clear of the SPDR Barclays Capital High Yield Bond Fund (JNK) and the iShares iBoxx $ High Yield Corporate Bond Fund (HYG).

Well, I finally feel vindicated. Because the exodus has begun!

 

And all it took was the hint of an interest rate increase from the Fed.

Of course, the Fed’s comments also spooked bond investors of every stripe and color.

The latest mutual fund flow data reveals that investors yanked a record $61.7 billion out of bond funds this month. That’s almost $20 billion more than the previous record hit in October 2008.

Talk about a dramatic about-face. Before this month, bond funds posted inflows for 21 consecutive months, according to David Santschi, Chief Executive Officer of TrimTabs.

Even the world’s best (and biggest) bond fund manager, Pimco’s Bill Gross, suffered withdrawals. Investors withdrew just over $1.3 billion from his flagship Pimco Total Return Fund (PTTRX) in May.

Yet in his latest note to investors (see here), he’s urging them to stay the course.

“And not because we want to keep you on board [as clients],” says Gross.

Sure it’s not, Mr. Gross.

Add it all up, and at the very least, you need to get the junk out of your portfolio’s trunk if you haven’t done so already. And be very, very careful putting any new money to work in bonds right now. Stick to short-term maturities.

That’s it for this week. Let us know what you think about this column and all our work at Wall Street Daily. All you have to do is drop us an email at [email protected] or leave a comment on our website.

Ahead of the tape,

Louis Basenese

The post Friday Charts: Bear Markets, Runaway Real Estate and the Latest Fed-Induced Implosion appeared first on  | Wall Street Daily.

Article By WallStreetDaily.com

Original Article: Friday Charts: Bear Markets, Runaway Real Estate and the Latest Fed-Induced Implosion

Why Your Financial Advisor Won’t Like This Investment Advice…

By MoneyMorning.com.au

We won’t say we told you so…OK, yes we will: we told you so.

Over the past few weeks most of the talk around the financial markets has been how bad things are…how the sky is falling in.

‘The yield rally is over’, ‘Sell in May and go away’, ‘Stocks will never go up again’.

Yawn. Let’s get a few things straight: the yield rally isn’t over; buying in May over the long term is actually better than not buying stocks at all; and that’s right, stocks are going back up again.

Our old nemesis, Commonwealth Bank of Australia [ASX: CBA] is now only about 5% from its peak. Odds are investors will begin playing the relative value game again soon, so that the other banks and dividend payers will return to their May highs.

Look, we’re not saying investing is easy. It’s far from that. We’re just saying that the investing environment has changed in recent years. And if you don’t concede that and adapt to it, you’re heading for a world of missed opportunities that could make a big difference to your retirement…

But what exactly do we mean when we say investing has changed? The following illustrations should explain everything. This is how investing used to work:

Old Investing
Source: Port Phillip Publishing
OK. That’s a bit of a simplification. But that was pretty much everything in a nutshell.

Yes, you still had to consider interest rates. After all, the two things that move share prices are earnings and interest rates.

But the actions of the central bank really were a secondary thought. Over the past 15 years, and especially the past five years, that has changed.

Now investing looks more like this:
New Investing
Source: Port Phillip Publishing

Now it’s not just forecasting earnings, you need to think about the impact that will have on the market…and what impact that will have on the central banks…and what impact that will have on the market…and the impact that will have on earnings.

It’s a vicious circle and a huge bind for investors. The natural reaction is to think, ‘Why bother? It’s all too hard.’

But we take the opposite view. Rather than trying to make sense of the ridiculous, we’re simply turning back the investing clock. We know it’s impossible to guess exactly how the markets will react to a Fed statement or an economic release.

So instead, we’ve gone old school…we’ve bucked the trend by forgetting about central bankers and policy makers. We’ve gone back to analysing individual companies…

Going Old School With Your Investing

If you ask most financial advisors they’ll tell you the best place to put your money during market volatility is in the biggest and best blue-chip stocks.

To some extent we can’t argue with that. We’ve long said that you should have around 20% of your investments in dividend-paying stocks.

That’s great because it means the dividend stocks will pay you to hold them even if you don’t get capital growth. During the past few months we told you to buy more dividend stocks, even though most folks said dividend stocks were a bubble.

However, dividend stocks are the only blue-chip stocks we’d hold for the long-term during a volatile market. Because as the past year has shown you, blue-chip growth stocks aren’t immune from big falls.

It means that investors who invested for the perceived ‘safety’ of blue-chip stocks are nursing some big losses. The better approach is to look at the opposite end of the risk scale.

Doing the Opposite to What You’ve Always Thought

That means looking at speculative stocks. They could be small-cap, mid-cap or large-cap stocks, it doesn’t matter.

The idea is that you’re looking for the biggest bang for your buck. Think about it: what’s the best you can hope for with a blue-chip growth stock? 10%? 20%?

Look, it’s possible you could double your money with a blue-chip growth stock. But we’re prepared to bet against that in this environment.

That’s simply because big blue-chip stocks rely more on interest rates, central bank and government policies. They also have an established customer base they need to maintain. Even a slight economic downturn can turn a profit into a loss.

But at the other end of the scale, among the speculative stocks, it’s a different story. Most of these companies don’t have any revenue or profits to lose.

Or if they do they’re still at such an early stage of development that the growth potential far exceeds the risk of a loss.

We’re talking about companies working on a breakthrough in regenerative medicine that ‘turns back the clock’ on your body, or a company that could revolutionise the manufacturing sector and destroy China’s dominance.

Think about it this way. You could either have a bunch of your cash at risk by punting on a 20–30% gain on a blue-chip growth stock, or you could keep most of your cash (relatively) safe in the bank and just use a small part of it to punt on high-risk stocks that could bag you a gain of 100%, 200% or 500%.

Don’t Vegetate, Speculate

In short, it’s about risk versus reward and doing what you can to reduce your exposure to central bank influence.

The way we see it, if a medical or technology company breaks through with a revolutionary new idea it will have a big impact on the share price regardless of the broader macro-economic environment.

You can’t necessarily say the same thing about blue-chip growth stocks.

We admit this is a controversial view. Most financial advisors will disagree with this approach. But the reality is that investors can’t afford to invest in the conventional way in this volatile market. And neither can they afford to avoid the market completely.

The market volatility you see today will still be around in 10 years. Ask yourself, can you really afford to sit out of the stock market for that long? And as for the alternatives, a pile of cash or gold won’t build you a lasting retirement fortune.

As we’ve shown you before, the best way to build lasting wealth is to invest in businesses. The only point remaining is in which businesses should you invest?
We’ve stated our view. In a market dominated by central bankers and policy makers the best way to grow your wealth is to avoid the markets most influenced by them.

The best way we can put it is this: Don’t Vegetate, Speculate.

Cheers,
Kris
+

From the Port Phillip Publishing Library

Special Report: Panic of 2103

Daily Reckoning: The Best Way to Invest in a Volatile Market

Money Morning: Is This Your Last Chance to Sell Before the Stock Market Sinks?

Pursuit of Happiness: Is Technology the Most Exciting Industry in the World?

[Ed note: Not everyone agrees with my view that it’s a great time to buy stocks. But that doesn’t mean I’ll censor opposing views. All I ask from contributors to Money Morning is that they provide a well-thought out and well-argued view. It’s then up to you as a free-thinking adult to decide which view makes more sense and then to act accordingly. Today our new regular contributor and family wealth expert, Vern Gowdie, takes the floor with his thoughts on the market…]

Don’t Get Caught in the Market Crossfire

By MoneyMorning.com.au

Markets are all in a flurry – Dow down, gold down, AUD down, government bond interest rates up. The only safe place in the last month has been in cash, term deposits and USD.

But remember, it will not always be so. There will be a time to exit cash – that time isn’t just yet.

So what is causing the great sell off in non-cash investments?

  • Is it China’s central bank refusing to supply liquidity to its cash strapped shadow banking system?
  • Is it Bernanke hinting at merely tapering (not stopping) the Fed’s $85 billion per month bond and mortgage purchases?
  • Is it Japan’s print and be damned policy?
  • Is it rising unemployment in Europe?
  • Is it social unrest in Turkey, Brazil and Syria?

Certainly one or more of the above global issues are having a negative impact on market sentiment.

But let’s step back a few paces and ask why they are happening. These events are not the cause; rather they are symptoms.

The Great Credit Contraction thesis that determines our asset allocation model is the cause. The events outlined above are merely the consequences of a global economy no longer supported by the debt drug.

The Squeeze is On

Markets have enjoyed a free ride on the coat tails of the central banks printing presses. History has shown us time and time again that artificial wealth creation has a limited shelf life. The volatility in markets is an indication the use-by date on this strategy is fast approaching.

The talking heads (the share brokers with their paid for comment spots on TV) make me chuckle every time they utter their nonsense on why the market has moved up or down.

Bad job data, good job data, lower than expected PMI in China, better unemployment in the US – pick any reason to validate the daily gyration. Day to day, week to week, month-to-month the market will respond to various influences. However over-arching all of this is why these influences occur.

For nearly thirty years the global economy recorded GDP growth due to the massive injection of private sector debt – baby boomer consumers living beyond their means.

Those glory days are now behind us. The baby boomer is mentally preparing for retirement. Clearing the decks of debt and trying to build a retirement portfolio.

Hundreds of millions of baby boomers in the developed world are changing their spending and savings pattern. Less spending and more saving by this demographic powerhouse equals lower growth.

This is lousy timing for governments who (for political reasons) have cultivated a big brother welfare dependency culture.

A slowing economy does not generate higher tax revenues (ask Swannie, sorry, Bowenie about this). So how does government pay for their welfare promises?

  1. Increase taxes – not a good option. Numerous studies have shown that increased tax rates actually generate less tax revenue. People become dis-incentivised.
  2. Larger budget deficits this can happen for a while but even governments cannot borrow to infinity. Japan is rapidly approaching the end of their debt rope.
  3. Reduce government expenditure in the absence of a brave political leader, this will not happen until the ‘brick wall’ is plainly evident to everyone. By then it will be too late to take corrective action. Just ask the citizens of southern Europe. In the not too distant future France will also face this reality.

So the Great Credit Contraction will do the job the political and banking leaders will not do.

It Will Correct the Excesses in the Financial System

In the days before central bankers – the 1800′s and early 1900′s – depressions were reasonably frequent and relatively short lived. People behaved recklessly and the market dealt them a quick and brutal punishment. They took their medicine, licked their wounds and started again.

These days every kid gets a prize, no one gets hurt in the playground, sadistic criminals have rights, and the government is the solution to all our problems. Personal responsibility is determined by the courts, not our consciences.

Little wonder we have a financial system that reflects this culture. Policy makers cannot regulate out of existence the laws of economics, as much as the policymakers wish it were so. In the same way they can’t get rid of the laws of gravity.

The Great Credit Contraction has been slowed by the central bankers’ determination to alter the laws of economics. The events of the past month demonstrate the formidable power that is unleashed when hundreds of millions of people alter their consumption habits.

Bernanke will not taper, the Chinese authorities will change their mind and start printing, the Japanese will continue speeding towards the brick wall, Europe will also join the printing party.

These are the only actions this bunch of desperados have left.

The tanks of the Great Credit Contraction keep rolling forward. The central bankers have fired their best shots and delayed, but not stopped the advancement. The only artillery they have left in their arsenal is reams of worthless paper.

The recent volatility is a dress rehearsal for what awaits investors. When The Great Credit Contraction rolls into town, it will not take any prisoners.

All markets – except cash and term deposits – will get caught in the crossfire. Shares, property, precious metals and fixed interest will be casualties.

Baby boomer retirees with balanced portfolios will suffer such losses they are going to re-consider their retirement plans.

The policy making morons that deliver this Armageddon to our doorstep will have all wandered off on tax payer funded pensions, leaving unprotected investors to pick up the pieces.

Forewarned is forearmed – take precautions now to make your portfolio bulletproof.

Vern Gowdie
Contributing Editor, Money Morning

Join Money Morning on Google+

From the Archives…

The 12 Most Important Rules Every Investor Must Know
21-06-2013 – Vern Gowdie

The US Economy Butterfly Effect
20-06-2013 – Murray Dawes

Beware The Federal Reserve’s Deadly Game of Poker
19-06-2013 – Dr Alex Cowie

Why Thursday Could Be a Key Day for Silver…
18-06-2013 – Dr Alex Cowie

The Single Biggest Mistake a Technology Investor Can Make
17-06-2013 – Sam Volkering

USDCAD remains in uptrend from 1.0137

USDCAD remains in uptrend from 1.0137, the fall from 1.0556 is likely consolidation of the uptrend. Another rise towards 1.0600 is still possible after consolidation, and a break above 1.0556 resistance could signal resumption of the uptrend. Key support is now at 1.0424, only break below this level could indicate that the upward movement from 1.0137 is complete, then the following downward movement could bring price back to 1.0200 zone.

usdcad

Daily Forex Forecast

End of the Road for Pfizer’s Key Drug Patent

By WallStreetDaily.com

End of the Road for Pfizer’s Key Drug Patent

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Pfizer (PFE) lucked out when its patent for the mega popular drug, Viagra, was extended to 2020.

But now that the company has lost its patent in Europe, it opens the door for the 20 generic drugmakers that are already lined up with their own copies of the drug. Once the generic versions hit the market, it will drop the price of Viagra significantly for consumers.

As Paul Fleming, Technical Director of the British Generic Manufacturers Association, says, “Certainly we’re aware that there are a lot of companies with regulatory approval already in place… At least a dozen or so will actually launch a product later this month. So we do expect the price decline to be very rapid and very steep. So in fact we’d expect the price to go down by 90% very quickly.”

This has some investors wondering how it’s going to impact the company’s profits. With good reason, considering that half of the company’s Viagra sales come from overseas.

What’s worse for Pfizer is that most patients won’t even have to make the decision to switch to the generic version. Since doctors already write prescriptions using the generic name of the drug (most of the time).

As Paul Fleming says, “The great majority of prescriptions are already written with the generic name. So they’re not written with the name Viagra. And because of that, once the patent expires, the great majority of patients will immediately be switched to one of these many generic formulations that will be available. So Pfizer will [immediately] be competing amongst that field of double-digit competitors.”

Pfizer will certainly feel at least some pain losing the European patent. According to The Telegraph, “Viagra was Pfizer’s sixth best-selling drug last year, generating $2.05 billion in global revenue.”

Plus, consider that Pfizer got slammed after its $10-billion cholesterol fighting drug, Lipitor, lost its patent protection in the fall of 2011.

The post End of the Road for Pfizer’s Key Drug Patent appeared first on  | Wall Street Daily.

Article By WallStreetDaily.com

Original Article: End of the Road for Pfizer’s Key Drug Patent

Energy Companies Pull a Blackwater

By OilPrice.com

Norwegian energy company Statoil said last week it was forming a special operations division to handle emergency operations in response to a terrorist attack on a natural gas facility in Algeria. The company said it would double the amount of employees it had designated for existing security operations after reviewing the measures in place at the In Amenas gas facility. A January attack there left employees with Statoil and BP dead in what al-Qaida said was a response to French intervention in Mali. With the economy just as much a viable target as any, counter-terrorism may becoming more than just the military’s game.

A January attack by a division of al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb left several energy company employees and foreign fighters dead. The Algerian attack had the logistical support of Islamic fighters who traveled across the western border from Libya, still unsettled nearly two years after the revolution.

Statoil said last week it was forming a special unit in response to the attack as part of a comprehensive response to the tragedy. Operations at In Amenas resumed at a limited capacity after the attack for owners Statoil, BP and Algeria’s state energy company Sonatrach. French supermajor said it too was spending more on industry-wide security operations since the January attack. Natural gas production has declined more or less since 2005 for Algeria and lingering instability in the region suggests a turnaround isn’t likely in the medium term.

BP said it had its own concerns, noting it was holding back on natural gas projects in the country because of the security situation there. Algerian Energy Minister Youcef Yousfi told a Houston energy conference in March the country “remains a stable country” despite the terrorist attack. He said the country wasn’t discouraged by the incident and remained committed to developing its natural gas sector. Algeria has enacted policies that would give foreign investors an incentive to take a closer look at unexplored fields in the country. Algeria in 2011 produced around 2.9 trillion cubic feet of gas and has since worked to return to its previous glory.

Statoil said it would appoint an official to lead security operations by July. The security team is part of what Statoil said was a “broader response” to the tragedy in Algeria. British Foreign Secretary William Hague said Friday the attack in Algeria shows that al-Qaida may be weakened, but it’s not yet out of the picture. He complained some members of the international community aren’t willing to take on the responsibility to tackle the threat themselves, however. With the international economy depending on a reliable source of energy to keep churning, Statoil’s actions suggest the energy sector may start to take on some of that burden itself.

Source: http://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/Energy-Companies-Entering-War-on-Terror.html

By. Daniel J. Graeber of Oilprice.com

 

“Sour” Investment Sentiment Sees Gold Head for Biggest Quarterly Drop on Record

London Gold Market Report
from Ben Traynor
BullionVault
Thursday 27 June 2013, 08:00 EDT

WHOLESALE gold bullion prices fell back towards $1230 an ounce Thursday morning in London, having ticked higher in earlier Asian trading, as stocks and commodities were little changed on the day and the Dollar was also flat after showing little reaction to yesterday’s downward revision for US economic growth.

 Gold in Euros traded as low as €940 an ounce this morning, with gold in Sterling dipping as low as £802 an ounce.

 Silver meantime was trading around $18.71 an ounce by lunchtime in London.

 “[Bullion] markets are still susceptible to the downside, but all in all, I feel that for the moment we have done enough,” says David Govett, head of precious metals at broker Marex Spectron.

 Gold in Dollars has lost 23% during the current quarter, which ends tomorrow. Going by London Fix prices, gold is on course for the biggest quarterly loss since at least 1968, the year that the London Gold Pool collapsed.

 “For investors to come back in droves, we will need to see some consolidation in prices and a return to an upward trending market,” one Hong Kong-based trader told newswire Reuters this morning.

 “Investor sentiment is still quite sour right now.”

 Dutch bank ABN Amro cut its year end gold price forecast to $1100 an ounce Thursday, a cut of 15%.

 “There is no reason to hold precious metals,” reckons the bank’s FX and commodity analyst Georgette Boele.

 “The outlook for capital gains [is] dim and they pay no income.”

 Over in India, the biggest source of private gold demand worldwide, premiums on physical gold – calculated as the amount buyers pay over and above the spot price – jumped Wednesday as the gold price fell, local dealers report.

 “We are unable to supply, though there is demand,” says Harshad Ajmera at wholesaler JJ Gold House in Kolkata.

 Other Asian dealers however report that the recent price drop has not been met with the kind of surge in physical demand that was seen in April.

 The US economy meantime grew at an estimated 1.8% annualized rate in the first three months of 2013, official figures published Wednesday show. US gross domestic product growth was revised lower from the previous estimate of 2.4%.

 “The revision should imply that the Federal Reserve will likely delay the rollback of its bond buying program, a variable that should be theoretically bullish for gold,” says INTL FCStone metals analyst Ed Meir.

 “Instead, the release fell flat in terms of impact [on the gold price].”

 In contrast with gold, US stock markets rallied yesterday following the downward revision.

 “Whenever there is good news out of the US it will cause selling because people see it as a confirmation for Fed tapering [i.e. slowing the pace of asset purchases],” says Daiwa Securities economist Tobias Blattner.

 “If we have something more disappointing like yesterday people will say, ‘Well OK, it won’t happen yet’…that, unfortunately, is the kind of volatility that is going to continue for the next couple of months.”

 Across the Atlantic, the estimate for annualized UK GDP growth for the first quarter was also revised lower, figures published Thursday by the Office for National Statistics show.

 Sterling fell to a three-week low against the Dollar following the announcement, dropping below $1.53.

 “Some people were expecting an upward revision and that didn’t happen,” says Jane Foley, senior currency strategist at Rabobank in London.

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. Ben can be found on Google+

 

(c) BullionVault 2013

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.

 

 

Taiwan holds rate, global outlook moved by market turmoil

By www.CentralBankNews.info     Taiwan’s central bank held its key interest rates steady, including the benchmark discount rate at 1.875 percent, in light of global economic uncertainty, modest domestic economic recovery and reduced inflationary pressures.
    The Central Bank of the Republic of China (Taiwan), which has held the discount rate steady since June 2011, said it expected the rate decision to “help prices and overall economic stability” and the global economy was recovering at different speeds.
    The central bank added the global economic outlook was being affected by the turmoil in global financial markets from the U.S. preparing to exit quantitative easing, liquidity issues on the Chinese mainland “together with a large number of international short-term capital movement.”
    The domestic economy contracted by 0.69 percent in the first quarter from the fourth, for annual growth of only 1.67 percent due to weak external demand and conservative private consumption with the comptroller head office forecasting growth of 2.40 percent this year, down from the bank’s December forecast of 3.15 percent.
    Taiwan’s inflation rate eased to 0.74 percent in May from 1.05 percent due to stable raw materials and weak consumption with the comptroller forecasting inflation of 1.14 percent in the second half of the year, down from 1.23 percent.

    www.CentralBankNews.info