Stupid Income Investment of the Week, Courtesy of Bloomberg

By WallStreetDaily.com

Speak up!

Apparently that’s all it takes to thwart cyber attacks.

Based on reports from multiple news agencies, the U.S. Government’s decision to finally start calling out China for cyber attacks in November 2011 might actually be bringing about positive change.

So maybe speaking up can keep us from following stupid investment ideas, too.

Let’s give it a try…

A Trap to Avoid At All Costs

Earlier this week, a Bloomberg article didn’t leave any room for misinterpretation, saying, “The largest exchange-traded fund tracking the U.S. municipal [bond] market is selling at its biggest discount to its underlying assets in almost two years. If history is any guide, that signals a buying opportunity.”

The fund in question? The $3.6-billion iShares S&P National AMT-Free Municipal Bond Fund (MUB).

It’s a diversified fund that holds 2,381 municipal bonds. And after a recent selloff to $107.60, it’s trading at its lowest level in over a year.

What’s more, as Bloomberg points out, the fund is selling at a 1.4% discount to its net asset value (NAV). Since its inception in 2007, it’s almost always traded at a premium.

How could we possibly resist such a temptation, right?

All sarcasm aside, I get that traditional safe havens like Treasury bonds and money market funds still yield a pittance. Accordingly, investors can’t help “reaching for yield,” as Brian Jacobson of Wells Fargo Funds Management says.

But come on, Bloomberg!

Muni bonds – heck, any bonds for that matter – aren’t meant to be day traded by retail investors. They’re supposed to be held for the long haul – ideally until maturity – to deliver above-average and tax-free income.

Yet we have one of the world’s most respected financial news sites (or at least its reporter, Michelle Kaske) out telling investors to jump at the bargain.

A Train Wreck Waiting to Happen

Now, ignore for a moment the fundamental problems facing municipal bond investors. Instead, let’s simply focus on the “upside” potential here.

If the fund snaps back to its average price in 2013 of $111.13, we’re talking about a 3.3% profit potential. For every month it takes to do so, of course, we’ll pocket a dividend of about $0.25, too. That bumps up the potential profit about 0.23% for each payment.

However, if interest rates start to rise, the fund is going to start trading down toward $100 (or lower), which represents a potential “downside” of at least 7%.

I’m sorry. But in my world, particularly when it comes to capital earmarked for conservative investments, it doesn’t make any sense to risk twice as much as I could possibly gain.

Even more so in this case, since we’re talking about municipal bonds. Much like the Federal Government, state finances remain in shambles.

What’s more, as Fortune’s Allan Sloan points out, high-grade municipal bonds “have become insanely popular.” And as we know, the way to make money isn’t by following the crowd.

As a result, the muni bond market is “a train wreck waiting to happen,” says Sloan.

I tend to agree, which might be a shocker…

You’ll recall, I originally snubbed Meredith Whitney for making such a dire prediction back in 2011. But she was just early. Not wrong.

In fact, her most recent comments to Steve Forbes are spot on: “There’s so much excess money in the system that everybody’s just chasing yield and sort of thumbing their nose at any type of real risk.”

Indeed.

Bottom line: Don’t be so desperate for yield that you blindly accept investment ideas. No matter how reputable the source appears to be. (Present company included.)

In other words, think for yourself before you invest. Once you do, I’m sure you’ll agree that MUB is anything but an irresistible bargain.

Ahead of the tape,

Louis Basenese

Article By WallStreetDaily.com

Original Article: Stupid Income Investment of the Week, Courtesy of Bloomberg

AUDUSD breaks below 0.9528 support

AUDUSD breaks below 0.9528 support, and continues its downward movement from 1.0582 (Apr 11 high), and the fall has extended to as low as 0.9448. Further decline could be expected, and next target would be at 0.9400 area. Key resistance is now located at 0.9791, only break above this level could signal completion of the downtrend from 1.0582.

audusd

Daily Forex Analysis

Signs of Stress in the US Bond Markets

By MoneyMorning.com.au

We’re starting to see some real signs of stress in the US bond markets.

Perhaps this is just some short term repositioning in case the US Federal Reserve actually follows through with its threats to lower the size of QE purchases.

Or insiders have been given word that it’s going to happen and they’re front running the crowd.

But one thing is certain. The US bond market and the spreads between US bonds and underlying corporate bonds are starting to widen. Volumes have exploded and there are some big moves…

On 16 May (the day after the high) I included this chart showing you my prediction for the ASX 200:


Click to enlarge

I said at the time that ‘The first thing I need to see is a close under the 15th March high of 5,163. From there we should see a retest of 5,025-5,040. If the market can’t hold above that level then we’ll be re-entering the major long term range and we could expect to see a pretty quick trip to 4,700.

Three weeks later and the market is trading at 4842, down 7%.

Now it’s the US stock market’s turn. As I wrote in last Friday’s weekly update to Slipstream Trader members:

If we were to see a weak night in the States tonight with a close under last week’s low of 1635 that would create a weekly sell pivot and could signal more downside next week.

But to understand why US stocks could fall further, you need to look at the US corporate bond market and the spreads between corporate bonds and government bonds.

The chart below is the iShares High Yield Corporate Bond ETF [NYSE: HYG].

HYG Weekly Chart


Click to enlarge

It’s quite clear from the above chart that we have seen an amazing rally in junk bonds since the lows in 2009.

In the last five weeks we have seen a sharp sell-off in HYG with a fall from a high of $96.30 to a low of $91.80. That’s a 4.6% fall. Volume has increased steadily, with the volume traded on 3 June of 14.3 million the highest volume since inception of the ETF in 2007.

In other words some big players are heading for the exits.

Have another look at the chart and you can see the horizontal blue line that corresponds to the high from mid-2011. I would see a failure below that level as a false break of the high on a monthly chart. The huge increase in volume of late increases my conviction that you could see further big falls from here.

The fact is the spread of junk bonds over Treasuries is now an absolute joke. I think it’s one of the pressure points within the financial market that has the US Federal Reserve quaking in its boots as it dawns on them that they’ve created a monster.

Junk bonds will traditionally trade at up to 10% over US Treasuries due to the high risk of default. Lately junk bonds have been trading under a 5% total yield! The lowest on record.

This at a time when half of Europe is in a depression, Chinese manufacturing is barely growing and the US is not far away from stall speed.

An article on CFO.com states that:

The trailing 12-month default rate on U.S. high-yield debt is very low – 1.8 percent as of April, according to Fitch Ratings, “extending a three-year run” of being well below the historical annual average of 4.6 percent.

Institutional “covenant-lite” loan volume was near $80 billion in the first quarter, according to Moody’s Investors Service. That’s equal to the total for all of 2012. Covenant-lite debt comes with fewer or no restrictions on things like collateral, payment terms and earnings performance. Similarly, high-yield bond issuance is up 16 percent in 2013.

Of course it should be pretty obvious that the risk of losses increases dramatically with the lessening of covenants. We’ve seen this play out before in 2000-2001 and in 2007 when a surge in asset values due to easy Fed money fostered a low default rate environment.

According to the Fitch report cited in the article above, ‘The low default rate perpetuated the cycle of aggressive transactions and was in the end a red flag of systemic risk rising rather than shrinking.

An article in the Wall Street Journal on 8 May pointed out that ‘the default rate on junk bonds is ticking up. It was 3.1% in the U.S. in April, from 3% at the end of April last year, according to Moody’s Investors Service. The default rate hit 14.6% in November 2009, Moody’s said.

So how can investors play a market such as the high yield corporate bond market in the US?  Well it sounds daunting but it’s actually fairly easy. Once you have set up an account with a broker enabling you to trade US stocks you could buy an ETF such as the ProShares ‘short high yield’ ETF with a code of SJB.

SJB Short High Yield ETF


Click to enlarge

This ETF goes up in price as the high yield bond market goes down in price. You can see from the chart that the price has fallen steadily for the past year but has turned a corner in the last month with prices rising from around USD$30.22 to USD$31.40 on big volume. If some real cracks start appearing in the credit markets then this ETF should skyrocket.

Where Bonds Go Stocks Follow

The stock market should be eyeing off what’s happening in the bond market closely. Where the bond market goes stocks will follow.

One measure to watch is the high yield spread over Treasuries versus the S+P 500. While investors are embracing risk the spread will fall and stocks will rise.


Source: Seeking Alpha

The high yield spread is inverted in the chart above so you can see the relationship between a falling spread and a rising stock market.

As you saw above the high yield spread is now rising sharply but the stock market is still flirting with the all-time highs. Something has to give.

Either the high yield bonds will have to start rallying again or the US stock market is on the edge of a big sell-off.

Even Investment Grade (IG) credit spreads are starting to widen. 

As noted on ZeroHedge after the large move in IG credit spreads on Tuesday ‘this is the biggest range in IG credit since Nov 2011. The last time we were at these levels was early 2011 and the rise in range then signaled the start of an extreme correction (from 80bps to over 150bps).

So the warning bells are clanging loud and clear at the moment that a correction in US stocks is in the wings. Last night’s 1.4% move could be just the beginning.

Murray Dawes
Editor, Slipstream Trader

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From the Port Phillip Publishing Library

Special Report: How to Buy Better Stocks

Daily Reckoning: Why it’s Going to Get Ugly When Interest Rates Rise Again

Money Morning: The Incredible World of Graphene

Pursuit of Happiness: Improving Your Life Through New Technology

Six Revolutionary Technology Trends for the Next 20 Years

By MoneyMorning.com.au

In our world technological advances open many opportunities, including investment opportunities and the potential to improve your lifestyle.

That means it’s the most exciting time to be alive as new technology hits the market and finds its way into your hands.

Below I identify (after extensive research) the six key technology trends that are happening right now in the world and which are set to shape our future…

Technology Trend #1: The Key to Everlasting Life?

Imagine a world where you’ll always be fit and healthy.

Picture new medical technologies that mean you can regrow and replace failing organs later in life…medical procedures that allow the repair of damage to your body with a simple injection.

In a world of regenerative medicine the potential is for new technologies to eradicate disease and put an end to aging.

Right now there are many different trials based on regenerative medicine from brain cell regeneration to bone fractures and heart failure. These trials are on the verge of solving some of the most puzzling diseases and illnesses.

The potential of regenerative medicine is enormous. It will fight diseases like diabetes, organ failure, muscle and bone injuries, and the effects of ageing. It’s even showing potential to grow fully functioning, transplantable human organs.

That means in the future regenerative medicine could be used to replace a kidney with a tailor made one. Or maybe it could replace a hip. But I’m not talking about titanium replacements. I’m talking about human bone grown specifically for the purpose. In theory you could simply replace all your broken parts and replace them with bones that are just as strong as when you were a teenager.

These medical breakthroughs are happening now. It’s the beginning of a future that has a different attitude and approach to medicine. What might seem crazy today could save your life tomorrow. It’s a revolution in the practice of medicine. (More coming soon.)

Technology Trend #2: If You Had the Power to Change

Your Future, Would You Use it?

Regenerative medicine holds the key to fixing problems with the body. But Personalised Medicine has the potential for you to never get sick to begin with. Personalised Medicine looks deep into the human body on a Nano-scale.

It’s a personal medical crystal ball.

Your DNA and genome is the blueprint for how you become you. The mind-blowing part is how a single zygote becomes a fully functional complex human being. That process is truly amazing. As your cells multiply and change into different cells, your genome and DNA dictate how it all comes together.

But aside from determining what colour hair you have, your skin type and eye colour, what if your DNA could also tell you what diseases you might be at risk from, or what could make you sick in the future?

If you knew you had a 95% chance of cancer in your life, would you put preventative measures into place now? What if your DNA shows a rare illness is likely to strike you down?  But taking action now will change that future. What would you do?

The Personalised Medicine trend is underway. It started when the Human Genome Project completed. And there are some billion dollar companies already now well-established in this space. As technology advances, new companies are getting involved as the demand for DNA and genetic therapies grow.

Understanding your body at the Nano scale might be the best thing you do. If the technology means as humans we are happier and healthier, then who are we to stand in the way?

Personalised Medicine and DNA technology is becoming more affordable and accessible. And to show that I’m walking the walk, I recently got my DNA sampled. I believe the more information I have about my health the more educated I become on how to manage it. (More coming soon.)

Technology Trend #3: Uncovering the Secrets of the Most

Complex Machine Known to Man

The most complex machine on earth is still relatively unknown to scientists and researchers. And if we are able to replicate it, and understand it, it will open a world of opportunity in computing and medicine.

It’s the human brain.

But there’s action underway to map out the brain. That’s thanks in part to two major projects. The first is the Brain Research through Advancing Innovative Neurotechnologies (BRAIN) project led by the U.S. And the second is the Human Brain Project (HBP) led by a number of scientists from across the EU.

Both of these projects are trying to understand the brain and all its complexities. The HBP is the more promising of the two. Its vision is to simulate a complete human brain in a supercomputer.

The outcome will be the most accurate model of the human brain ever produced. In effect this means they can run simulations and tests on this brain to understand how it works and use it to advance technology and science.

With the success of these brain projects the door is ajar for development of new technology. In particular, computing technology. It could even be the beginning of true Artificial Intelligence (AI), a ‘conscious’ computer.

But whether true AI arrives or not, there will be an abundance of companies developing technology based on the discoveries of the brain. The Neurone Revolution is the next major trend that will impact the world. From it there will be new technology, new science, and new industry. And a lot of opportunities. (More coming soon…)

Technology Trend #4: The Device That Knows

You’re Sick Before You Do…

On average most people carry around about 11 different sensors. Most of these are in your phone or tablet. And with every new generation of devices comes more sensors, more ways to read and process data.

Picture waking up in the morning and stepping into the bathroom. As you look at the mirror it displays your daily body diagnostics.

On display are your temperature, heart rate, and other vital signs. What then happens is the data from the sensors on you process all this information. Algorithms have now determined you’re in the early contagious stage of the flu.

Immediately it decides the best option for you is to stay at home, rest up and not go to work. With that, it sends a legitimate doctors certificate to your HR department notifying them of your illness.

This might sound a little far-fetched but everything mentioned is available tech today. The next few years will be a revolution in the way we monitor and manage our personal wellbeing. With the use of tech and mobile devices we’ll record more data about ourselves than ever in the history of man.

You might have heard of devices like FitBit, Nike Fuel, and Jawbone Up. But more complex health monitoring systems are on the way. And there are companies with these technologies almost ready to launch.

The Quantified Self movement is about collecting your own personal information and data. And the desired outcome is to use that data to better understand yourself and to enhance your everyday life. (More coming soon…)

Trend #5: Harnessing Power from the ‘Sun on Earth’

Solar, wind, thermal and tidal energy. These aren’t new concepts. They’re all potential energy sources that should lead to new energy abundance.

The tech is advancing at a rate of knots as we try to halt our fossil fuel dependence. Over the next 10 to 15 years, there will be opportunities in these alternative energies. I have no doubt about that.

The development of energy tech will never stop. With every new energy discovery we look for other ways to make it better, more efficient and affordable. There is more research being done in alternative energies now than ever before in history.

However it’s hard to go past the potential of the Sun. There’s no doubt that if we harness the full power and efficiency of the Sun we’ll be on the path to completely free and abundant energy.

But what if the real answer isn’t the Sun that sits 150 million kilometres away from us? What if the long term potential for energy is the Sun that we create here on Earth?

There are machines under construction that replicate the might and power of the Sun here on Earth. They create the same levels of heat and atomic reactions that make the Sun so powerful. These machines then use this energy to create more energy. The process is Nuclear Fusion.

And in the next 20 years it could be the best and most abundant source of energy the world has. It’s the one technology in development I believe to be bigger and potentially more world changing than any other technology at the moment. It’s truly revolutionary. (More coming soon…)

Trend #6: Can Australia Exploit This Mining Boom?

Today Mars is what the moon was to the human race in the 1960′s. It’s the next great leap in space. And if you think a Mars expedition would be a government funded project, you’d be wrong.

The most prominent program so far is from a group of Dutch entrepreneurs. They plan to rocket eight humans on a one-way mission to Mars. This typifies the trend in space exploration: the commercialisation of space.

But it’s not just an expedition to Mars that’s got us excited. There is another planned orbit and landing on Mars; a hotel to be built just outside the Earth’s atmosphere; a manned trip to the Moon; the paying public flying into space; and asteroid mining.

By the end of the year, one company will have sent tourists into space. Next year at least one other company will have joined that league. By 2018 one (very rich) man plans to go to Mars – he’ll use current rocket technology from one of the leaders in space technology. And by 2025 the lucky eight will be on their one-way mission to Mars.

With all of these new space exploration opportunities are opening up, companies that build rockets and satellites are getting more business, hence revenue. And the potential for asteroid mining is also starting to look more of a reality than a crazy idea.

The next big mining boom might not even be on this planet.

Space technology and rocket systems are improving at a rapid pace. The exploration of space is only just beginning.

With corporate competition (and dollars) involved, the exploration and commercialisation of space is well underway and only getting bigger in the immediate future. (More coming soon…)

Sam volkering.
Editor, Money Morning

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From the Archives…

Keep One Eye on Resource Stocks and the Other on the NASDAQ
31-05-2013 – Kris Sayce

Getting in on the ’99 Cent Craze’ with Crowdfunding
30-05-2013 – Sam Volkering

Buyer Beware: Japanese Government Bonds are Moving
29-05-2013 – Murray Dawes

The Best Contrarian Play on Gold I’ve Ever Seen…
28-05-2013 – Dr Alex Cowie

A Revolution in the Share Market is Coming…
27-05-2013 – Kris Sayce

Will Saudi Arabia Allow the U.S. Oil Boom? Interview with Chris Faulkner

By OilPrice.com

Technology, technology, and more technology—this is what has driven the American oil and gas boom starting in the Bakken and now being played out in the Gulf of Mexico revival, and new advances are coming online constantly. It’s enough to rival the Saudis, if the Kingdom allows it to happen. Along with this boom come both promise and fear and a fast-paced regulatory environment that still needs to find the proper balance.

In an exclusive interview with Oilprice.com, Chris Faulkner, CEO of Breitling Energy Companies—a key player in Bakken with a penchant for leading the new technology charge—discusses:

  • How Bakken has turned the US into an economic powerhouse
  • What the next milestone is for Three Forks
  • What Wall Street thinks of the key Bakken companies
  • Where the next Bakken could be
  • What to expect from the next Gulf of Mexico lease auction
  • What the intriguing new 4D seismic possibilities will unleash
  • What the linchpin new technology is for explorers
  • How the US can compete with Saudi Arabia
  • Why fossil fuel subsidies aren’t subsidies
  • How natural gas is the bridge to US energy independence
  • Why fossil fuels shouldn’t foot the bill for renewable energy
  • Why Keystone XL is important
  • Why the US WILL become a net natural gas exporter

James Stafford: How important are Bakken and Three Forks to US energy in the big picture?

Chris Faulkner: The Bakken Shale has been the biggest driver in America’s reversal of decades of decline in oil production. It has transformed North Dakota into an economic powerhouse with the nation’s lowest unemployment rate and fastest-growing GDP—and an oil production level surpassing that of some OPEC nations. An added increment of almost 800,000 barrels per day of oil output, built in less than a decade, has helped the US reduce its dependency on oil imports from often hostile countries by 22% since peaking in the mid-2000s.

US oil production is at its highest level since 1992, and in another 5 years, it is projected to reach its highest level since 1972. More importantly, the US oil production surge will help tamp down the possibility of chronically recurring oil supply shortages and help keep a lid on oil price spikes for the foreseeable future. Additionally, the Bakken surge is helping to narrow the spread between WTI and Brent, providing even more economic incentive to develop the costly unconventional resource plays.

James Stafford: The US government recently more than doubled its estimates for Bakken and Three Forks to 7.4 billion barrels of undiscovered and technically recoverable oil and 6.7 trillion cubic feet of natural gas. How is the industry responding to this? How are investors responding?

Chris Faulkner: Some operators had already been developing the Three Forks formation ahead of the USGS revised estimate for the Greater Bakken play. That drilling in fact provided much of the knowledge about the Three Forks that led to the USGS upgrade. We’re already seeing stepped-up drilling in the Three Forks, and some of that will entail dual horizontal laterals, a real milestone that could yield spectacular IP rates. Accordingly, Wall Street analysts are upgrading their guidance on companies such as Continental Resources that are leading the Bakken charge.

James Stafford: What’s the next Bakken?

Chris Faulkner: That’s a tough one. In a sense, we’ve already seen it with the Three Forks reappraisal. But it would be exceedingly difficult to replicate the Bakken, with its vast areal extent and thick pays. Progress is being made with a modest level of drilling in the Tuscaloosa Marine Shale of southern Louisiana and Smackover Brown Dense Shale in southern Arkansas/northern Louisiana, but results have been somewhat spotty to date. Perhaps the best prospective candidate is the Cline Shale in the Texas Permian Basin. This shale covers a vast area, has very thick pay zones, and there is established infrastructure. Some estimates have put its technically recoverable resources at 30 billion barrels of oil. But it’s very early days in that play. Devon Energy is moving aggressively there, and we should get some hints of its true potential before too long.

James Stafford: How excited should investors be about the Monterrey Shale?

Chris Faulkner: Some restraint is in order. While preliminary estimates put potential Monterey Shale technically recoverable resources at more than 15 billion barrels, it’s hardly a slam dunk. There has been a flurry of leasing and some drilling to date, but as of yet no operator has “cracked the code” for the Monterey. Even apart from the substantial technical challenges and complicated geology and petrophysics, a bigger hurdle would be the widespread and entrenched anti-oil development attitudes industry faces in California, which already has the most stringent regulatory regime in the nation. Furthermore, that anti-oil stance will just gain momentum with the anti-frac campaign that the environmental pressure groups are pushing now.

James Stafford: The US government’s next auction of Gulf of Mexico acreage is expecting a bigger turnout than previous auctions. How is the bidding environment shaping up ahead of this sale?

Chris Faulkner: Excellent. Even with the near tripling of minimum bid requirements in deepwater areas, I expect brisk bidding. Operators are fine-tuning their exploration strategies in the deepwater areas, and some recent significant discoveries, such as ConocoPhillips’s huge Shenandoah find, will only stoke that enthusiasm. I think we’re also seeing the beginnings of a revival in shallow Gulf waters, judging from the high number of bids there in the last sale. Expectations of a gas price rebound were underpinned by the latest approval of another LNG export terminal—both positive for shallow-water drilling.

James Stafford: How important are Brazil’s pre-salt finds to a revival in the US Gulf of Mexico?

Chris Faulkner: The Gulf revival is proceeding quite nicely as it is with the string of big discoveries in the Inbound Lower Tertiary. However, the knowledge and best practices being accumulated in the pre-salt play off Brazil probably benefits the pre-salt plays emerging off West Africa more so than in the US Gulf, where success has been concentrated more in the subsalt. In fact, the advances gained in probing the Gulf subsalt—particular in seismic technology—laid much of the groundwork for decoding Brazil’s pre-salt. I think you’ll see the Gulf operators focus more on the Lower Tertiary as the flavor of the day.

James Stafford: How are drilling advancements contributing to a re-evaluation of old data and the collection of new data?

Chris Faulkner: There’s no doubt that MWD and LWD [Measurements-while-Drilling/Logging-while-Drilling] have helped operators gain a better perspective on old well logs. As accumulation of drilling data in real time makes even more technical advances, progress will continue. This may be the biggest contributing factor for the dramatic reductions in spud-to-release times that we’ve seen in the major unconventional plays.

James Stafford: What are the most recent major advancements in seismic imaging and data processing that are changing the way companies decide where to explore and where to drill next?

Chris Faulkner: 3D seismic is firmly established as a valuable exploration tool, especially for delineating reservoirs that have already been identified, and there are intriguing new possibilities for 4D seismic (essentially 3D seismic phases over time), especially for enhanced oil recovery and carbon sequestration applications. But in terms of pure exploration, the linchpin technology has been reverse time migration, which really got the ball rolling for subsalt and pre-salt plays in the Gulf and off Brazil and West Africa. Then explorers started using pre-stack depth migration to ultimately arrive at a fully defined 3D salt geometry, which has fueled much of the success in the Gulf.

James Stafford: What can we expect both from drilling technology and supercomputer data collection and processing over the next 5-10 years?

Chris Faulkner: We’ll probably see a growing convergence of microseismic data gathering and processing in real time and real-time drilling data gathering to enhance mapping of natural fractures in tight reservoirs that may help drillers better steer the well so as to optimize subsequent placement of frac stages.

James Stafford: Can the US really compete with Saudi Arabia in terms of production?

Chris Faulkner: Sure, just as long as the Saudis will allow it. Don’t forget the Kingdom is still the world’s swing supplier, a role it’s held since the late 1970s. It’s important to remember that the Saudis not only have the largest proved reserves of oil, it’s also the largest repository—by far—of low-cost oil reserves. Much of Canada’s oil sands and US tight oil requires $75 per barrel or more to be economically viable. Saudi Arabia also needs $75 per barrel, but that’s to support its current domestic budget. The Kingdom’s lifting costs are somewhere around $5 at last report. So Saudi Arabia could easily flood the market, as it did in the early ‘80s, if it lost too much market share, dropping oil prices to $50 or less, and US drilling and production would collapse. Ideally, growing demand from China and other Asian markets will help sustain Saudi production levels and oil prices even as the Americas become self-sufficient in oil.

James Stafford: Can we expect to see a gradual end to fossil fuel subsidies in the near or medium-term?

Chris Faulkner: Depends on what you mean by subsidy. Anti-oil factions erroneously claim that the standard tax incentives that the US oil and gas industry shares with most other American businesses are subsidies. But while these incentives are the target of some heated rhetoric, there are enough red-state Democrats in Congress to prevent them from being stripped away, especially for the independent oil companies that rely most heavily on them. A more likely development in the US would be incremental attempts to impose a “back door” carbon tax by proxy–essentially the Obama administration resorting to regulatory overreach to add to the costs of fossil fuel development, production, and consumption. This kind of disincentive essentially creates a subsidy-in-reverse.

James Stafford: Who benefits most from these subsidies and how?

Chris Faulkner: Again, if you mean standard industry tax breaks such as expensing of intangible drilling costs, expanded amortization for G&G costs, repealing the percentage depletion allowance benefit, pure-play E&P independents rely on them more heavily than integrated firms such as the majors or hybrid midstream/upstream firms. I’ve seen estimates that eliminating these incentives could slash as much as 15–20% of US drilling. But if you mean true subsidies such as those in Iran or Venezuela aimed at keeping gasoline and other fuel costs to consumers below their real costs, then the primary beneficiaries are the autocrats and dictators who might get ousted without them.

James Stafford: Is natural gas a feasible bridge to the US’ renewable energy future, and will the Obama administration’s plan to fund clean energy projects with oil and gas revenues work?

Chris Faulkner: Absolutely yes and absolutely no, respectively. The fact that US greenhouse emissions have fallen in recent years owing mainly to power plants switching from coal to low-cost natural gas illustrates the first point quite clearly. The fact that US LNG export projects are moving ahead underscores the point that there are abundant gas resources to support that bridge.

As to the second point, one word: Solyndra. How do you think Americans will react to their energy bills spiking so that more of their tax dollars can be flung down that rat hole? How reticent do you think the Republicans will be about pointing that out?

James Stafford: How important is Keystone XL to the US’ energy future?

Chris Faulkner: Keystone XL is important for several reasons. First, blocking the project will alienate our most important energy trading partner, Canada. Some folks talk about US energy self-sufficiency, but for oil that is a much taller hurdle; however, North American oil self-sufficiency could be achieved in less than a decade. Who knows how Canada will react to such a snub and an apparent violation of NAFTA? Retaliatory measures in energy trade are not out of the realm of possibility. The irony is that Canadian oil sands syncrude, bitumen, and heavy oil will continue to move south irrespective of Keystone XL’s fate, so any purported environmental benefits from stopping the project are a wash. And Gulf Coast refiners are eager to replace declining supplies of heavy crude from Mexico and Venezuela (not to mention the reliability of the latter’s supplies) with low-gravity feedstock from a friendly North American supplier whose supply will only increase.

Perhaps the most important impact of blocking Keystone XL is symbolic. If the administration caves to the environmental pressure lobby, it sends an unmistakable message to both sides; the result will be a perception of significantly heightened investment risk in the US oil sector and an emboldened opposition that will use the momentum of this “victory” (certainly a pyrrhic one for America) to step up opposition to oil and gas development everywhere in North America. Don’t forget: A hostile administration beset by a sluggish economy imposed the windfall profits tax that resulted in the migration of hundreds of billions of dollars of US oil and gas company E&P capex overseas; this was the single biggest factor in the US oil production decline of the past several decades. A regulatory stranglehold can have the same effect.

James Stafford: What can we expect in the next 1-2 years in terms of advanced fracking technology that could help remove some of the opposition to the process?

Chris Faulkner: The use of benign frac fluid constituents taken from food sources is certainly a significant advance and at least shows industry is trying to address the public’s concerns. Breitling Oil and Gas’ EnviroFrac™ program was founded in February 2010 to evaluate the types of additives typically used in the process of hydraulic fracturing to determine their environmental friendliness. After evaluations are completed, EnviroFrac™ calls for the elimination of any additive not critical to the successful completion of the well and determines if greener alternatives are available for all essential additives. EnviroFrac™ is a decisive move toward an even greener fluid system. By reviewing all of the ingredients used in each frac, the program identifies chemicals that can be removed and tests alternatives for remaining additives. To date, the company has eliminated 25% of the additives used in frac fluids in most of its shale plays.

But the truth of the matter is that the science and data have always been on industry’s side in this debate. So technology is less of a consideration in removing opposition than are efforts to educate the public about the science and data.

James Stafford: How important is technology versus acreage to a company’s success? How does this balance work out for Breitling?

Chris Faulkner: Given our size, Breitling’s focus on technology actually provides leverage for our investors against the huge scale of effort and capex that larger companies employ in amassing vast leaseholds in today’s resource plays. We rely on advanced exploration technology to help us find prospects others might have overlooked and help us be more selective in high-grading the best opportunities. For example, 3D seismic surveys—and earlier 3D surveys in particular—often contain information that is beyond visual resolution and thus escapes the interpreter. Signal processing on the workstation using what might be termed “geologically based seismic deconvolution” has the potential to enhance the resolution to the point that this hidden information can be made visible and incorporated into the interpretation. Breitling’s patent-pending Geo3D Seismic Filtering technology takes existing 3D seismic data and enhances it so that it is noise-free with a broad enough “zero phase” spectrum to represent fractional match points that could lead to oil and gas discovery. Within the limitations of the seismic data we can use this synthetic data to optimize our 3D data set and locate oil and gas reservoirs that were missing in previous low resolution interpretation.

James Stafford: There have been a number of hints by the Obama administration that the US could become a net gas exporter, with potential exporters eyeing lucrative Asian markets. What will this mean for gas prices at home? What will it mean for the US economy?

Chris Faulkner: I think this has gone beyond the “hints” stage with the administration recently approving a second LNG export terminal, although I expect more of that LNG will go to Europe than to Asian markets. The US would experience a net economic benefit occurring with unrestrained exports. Certainly US gas prices would increase but not nearly as much as EIA’s earlier study concluded, because global competition among established LNG suppliers would put a cap on US LNG exports at a certain price point. The US trade balance will improve. All energy-intensive industries combined would see a loss of jobs or output no greater than 1% in any year. If anything, putting a cap on LNG export volumes would probably push gas prices higher because it lessens that competition emerging in an increasingly global LNG trade.

James Stafford: Chris, thanks for taking the time to speak with us – hopefully we will get a chance to speak later in the year. For those of you looking to find out more about Chris and Breitlings operations please visit: http://www.breitlingenergy.com

 

Source: http://oilprice.com/Interviews/Will-Saudi-Arabia-Allow-the-U.S.-Oil-Boom-Interview-with-Chris-Faulkner.html

Interview by. James Stafford of Oilprice.com

 

The Secret Behind 12% of Ohio’s Oil Production

By Investment U

A Forbes 2011 cover story described him as “America’s Most Reckless Billionaire.” Conversely, former Houston mayor Bill White spoke of him as being “at the forefront of those heroes” of America’s natural gas exploration companies.

During his tenure, his company bought land in the nation’s largest shale gas plays. But this controversial CEO was hot on one shale gas play in particular. When he spoke of it, he compared it to the Eagle Ford in Texas and the Bakken in North Dakota.

“It’s the biggest thing to hit [this state] since the plow,” he said of the play a couple of years ago.

At the time, his company had leases on 1.3 million acres in this shale play. He claimed the stake held $20 billion of hydrocarbons. And projections showed the shale play held as much as $500 billion worth of oil.

Regardless of his stormy reign as CEO of Chesapeake Energy Corporation (NYSE:CHK), Aubrey McClendon made some great calls regarding natural gas.

But I’m not here to talk about Chesapeake. I’m here to introduce you to the proverbial sweet spot of this shale play. Few folks have any idea what’s going on… or how lucrative this opportunity could be.

The Secret Is Out

Texas is usually the first state an investor thinks of when it comes to oil production. But these days it’s all about shale plays in Ohio. It’s the region’s Utica formation that McClendon was so excited about.

The Utica lies directly under the Marcellus formation throughout much of its region. But it comes closest to the surface in eastern Ohio.

After several years of secretive test drilling, the reality of the Utica is finally surfacing. In an article in Bloomberg, Argus Research analyst Philip Weiss had this to say about early Utica drilling data: “The results were somewhat disappointing. It’s not as good as we thought it was going to be.”

The acreage-buying boom has turned into an acreage-selling boom.

Wood Mackenzie analyst Jonathan Garrett has also studied the Utica. In the same Bloomberg article, he added his comments on the Utica: “People started to realize that, you know what, maybe the oil window of the play is not all it’s cracked up to be.”

The big problem isn’t that the Utica doesn’t contain the hydrocarbon riches once envisioned. In many cases, the rock formation is too dense. In other areas, there are insufficient underground pressures to allow the oil to flow.

Still, 11 companies are actively drilling in the Utica Shale.

What do they know that the analysts mentioned in the Bloomberg article don’t? A lot more than they’re willing to admit.

Take a look at the map below…

The area where the Utica begins to emerge from under the Marcellus formation represents the liquids-rich sweet spot of the Utica. That’s where most of the drilling took place in 2012. According to the Ohio Department of Natural Resources (ODNR), there were 87 producing wells drilled in the Utica Shale last year.

Hitting the Sweet Spot

Those wells produced 636,000 barrels of oil and 12.8 billion cubic feet of natural gas. And not one of the wells was in production for the entire year.

Of the 87 wells drilled, 76 produced oil and 63 are in commercial production.

But here is the figure that is turning heads…

Those 63 horizontal wells accounted for 12% of all the oil produced in Ohio in 2012. That’s a huge amount of oil from just 63 wells, especially considering the state has more than 60,000 conventional (vertical) operating oil wells.

Clearly, something big is going on in the Utica.

The numbers are fresh, which makes investing in the Utica formation riskier than buying into proven shale plays. But that’s what makes the opportunity so exciting. We’re witnessing the birth of what could be a huge moneymaker.

If this hotspot continues to pump out big numbers… somebody is going to get rich.

Good investing,
Dave

Article By Investment U

Original Article: The Secret Behind 12% of Ohio’s Oil Production

West African States keeps rate, growth trending up

By www.CentralBankNews.info     The Central Bank of West African States (BCEAO) held its benchmark marginal lending rate steady at 3.75 percent, saying inflation remains moderate and economic growth is continuing its upward trend toward this year’s target of 6.5 percent in the eight-nation West African Monetary Union (WAMU).
    The central bank’s monetary policy committee, which met in Dakar on June 3, said in a statement that inflation eased to 2.3 percent at the end of April from 2.8 percent end-December due to a sharp drop in the price of local food and a small rise in petroleum product prices.
    “The medium-term outlook remains consistent with the objective of price stability in the EU. At the 24-month horizon, the inflation rate would be at 2.5% yoy,” the central bank said.
   Interest rates in the money market have also eased, with the weighted average call rate on liquidity offers for one-week down to 2.81 percent in April from 3.07 percent in December.
    Economic growth last year was better than expected, the central bank said, with Gross Domestic Product volume expanding by 6.4 percent due to higher public investment, with spillover effects on private investment, and dynamic activity in the extraction industry.
    To strengthen growth, the central bank urged members of the union to increase investment in agriculture and basic infrastructure along with maintaining economic stability.
    At its previous meeting in March, when BCEAO cut its rate by 25 basis points, the central bank also forecast growth of 6.5 percent this year.
    In April, BCEAO Governor Tiemoko Meyliet Kone told Reuters that he expected growth of 7 percent in 2014.
    Growth has strengthened due to a recovery in the Ivory Coast and strong commodities demand from emerging economies such as China and India, help the currency bloc shrug off effects of the slowdown in Europe.
    BCEAO comprises the central banks of Benin, Burkina Faso, Ivory Coast, Mali, Niger, Senegal, Togo and Guinea-Bissau.

    www.CentralBankNews.info

The Worst Is Yet to Come

By Investment U

For months, I’ve forecasted that interest rates would rise and, consequently, bond prices would fall. Now it’s happening…

In May, the Barclay’s U.S. Aggregate Bond Index – one of the most widely watched benchmarks for the fixed-income market – fell 1.62%. But many investors fared far worse.

For instance, the $292.9 billion Pimco Total Return Fund, the world’s largest bond fund, fell 2%. And many leveraged fixed-income funds got hammered.

Take the Nuveen Insured Municipal Opportunity Fund (NYSE: NIO), for instance. This leveraged tax-free bond fund is an excellent vehicle in a rising bond market. The majority of its holdings are AAA-rated and insured… yet this is the last sort of thing you want to hold in a bond market rout.

From a high of over $16 just four months ago, the fund has plunged to just over $14, a 13% drop. And that’s just with a tiny jump in interest rates. Wait until rates start moving up in earnest.

That’s when things will really get interesting.

“Expert” Opinions

The bond market reversal took many so-called experts by surprise. Bill Gross, the manager of the Pimco Total Return Fund, is still heavily invested in Treasurys, which are highly sensitive to rising rates.

Another pundit on the wrong side of the bond market is Nobel laureate and New York Times columnist Paul Krugman, who has made a career of atrocious calls. (You need only go back and read his books over the last two decades.)

If you need a reason to believe interest rates are headed higher, just listen to Krugman’s smug assurance that it won’t happen.

After all, this is the same man who believes a) the federal government is far too frugal (I’m not kidding) and b) demanded in 2009 that Uncle Sam nationalize the money-center banks. Not only was it unnecessary, his plan would have wiped out shareholders entirely.

Fed’s Folly

So why should you expect interest rates to rise and bond markets to sell off further?

It’s not because the dollar is weak. Indeed, the dollar is in an uptrend and rose 2.5% in the last month.

And it’s not due to inflation. Wages are stagnant. Commodity prices are falling. And traditional inflation hedges like gold and Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities are dropping.

No, it’s much simpler than that.

It’s because Bernanke & Co. have been not only following a zero-interest-rate policy on the short end, but holding longer-term interest rates down with a massive bond buying program meant to stimulate the economy, revive the housing market and strengthen the banks.

The Fed has not said when it will end its quantitative easing program. But the market has gotten a whiff that it’s a matter of time, which was enough to send fixed-income investors to the exits.

What should you do as an investor?

Reduce your investment-grade bond holdings to just 10% of your asset allocation. Stick with short-term, high-grade corporate bonds, low-cost, short-term fixed-income funds, and defined-maturity ETFs.

The 30+-year bull market in bonds is over. And the worst is yet to come…

Good investing,

Alex

Article By Investment U

Original Article: The Worst Is Yet to Come

What’s Next for the Chinese Renminbi…and What Does it Mean for Investors

By The Sizemore Letter

If you are to believe U.S. politicians and talk radio hosts, China’s renminbi is managed by a sinister cabal of James Bond villains who intentionally suppress the value of the currency to give their manufacturers an advantage and to hollow-out U.S. manufacturing.

 US Dollar – Chinese Renminbi Exchange Rate

While that view of China’s ruling Communist Party isn’t completely fantastical, the truth is a little more complicated. When China’s leaders decided in the 1980s that “to get rich is glorious,” they decided that a weak currency was a convenient way to make that happen.  From a value of 1.50 yuan per dollar in 1980, the renminbi fell to nearly 9 yuan per dollar before China instituted a peg at 8.27.  The renminbi was pegged at that level from 1997 until 2005, when—pressured by the United States and other trading partners—China opted for a managed float that would allow for a gradual rise.

The precise rules that control the float have changed multiple times as China has become more lenient, and currently the price of the renminbi is allowed to fluctuate within a daily 1% band against a basket of major world currencies.

(Note: I’m often asked why China’s currency has two names: the renminbi and the yuan.  “Renminbi” is the currency’s official name.  “Yuan” is a unit of renminbi.  The price you see quoted in a Chinese store would be, say, 5 yuan.  You would never see a price quoted as 5 renminbi.  This is not too different than the British pound sterling.  “Pound sterling” is the currency’s name, but prices in the UK are quoted in pounds, not sterling.)

As a country with a massive export economy and the largest current account surplus in the world—$214 billion as of 2012—China’s currency should naturally appreciate in value due to market forces (all else equal, a large trade surplus leads to a rising currency as it, in effect, involves selling the currency of the importing country to buy the currency of the exporting country).

And indeed, the renminbi has been gaining on the dollar since it was de-pegged.

Not entirely coincidentally, China has also become less competitive as a manufacturer.  In fact, just this week one of China’s leading shoemakers moved part of its manufacturing base to Africa to take advantage of the lower costs!

The rising value of China’s currency is certainly part of the reason for China’s loss of competitiveness.  A bigger issue—and one for which there is no easy solution—is the rising cost of Chinese labor, which is growing at a double-digit clip.

China’s manufacturing model assumes an inexhaustible supply of cheap migrant labor from the countryside.  But after 30 years of growth—and over 30 years of the One Child Policy—the pool of labor is simply no longer there to exploit.  This means that China will have to invest more in capital in order to boost competitiveness…or simply massively devalue its currency again.

There is a big problem with that second option.  China’s leaders are already worried about inflation, and they are reluctant to do anything that will fan those flames.  And China’s middle classes—which become more assertive every day—are less likely to tolerate high inflation or higher prices for imported goods.

If the Chinese Communist Party wants to keep its grip on power, it has to keep its restive masses happy.  And this means that any devaluation of the renminbi will be gradual, if it happens at all.

What does any of this mean for investors?

If you are going to invest in China, invest in companies that benefit from rising living standards among Chinese workers.  Go for consumer goods and services rather than industrial companies and exporters.

China Mobile ($CHL) is a fine example. China Mobile is the largest mobile phone operator in the world by subscribers, and as Chinese consumers trade up from feature phones to smart phones, the company is well positioned to benefit.  It also trades for just 10 times earnings and yields 4% in dividends.

China will eventually “blow up,” as its aging demographics and persistent asset bubbles virtually guarantee a Japanese-style malaise.  But in the meantime, there is still money to be made investing in the Chinese consumer.

Sizemore Capital is long CHL. This article first appeared on InvestorPlace.

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Poland says weak euro area could dent growth further

By www.CentralBankNews.info     Poland’s central bank cut its reference rate for the second month in a row due to weaker than expected economic growth, a stronger than expected decline in inflation and continued uncertainty over the scale and timing of the expected economic recovery in the euro area that could adversely affect economic activity in Poland.
    The National Bank of Poland (NBP), which has cut rates by 150 basis points this year, did not give a specific guidance for future decisions, but said easier monetary policy since November 2012 “supports economic recovery and limits the risk of inflation running below the NBP target in the medium term.”
    Earlier today the NBP cut its benchmark reference rate by 25 basis points to 2.75 percent.
    Poland’s inflation rate fell again in April to 0.8 percent from 1.0 percent in March due to lower growth in energy prices, including fuel, markedly lower than the NBP’s target of 2.5 percent within a one percentage point range.
    “At the same time, low level of core inflation, as well as a stronger decline in producer prices, confirm persistently low demand and cost pressure in the economy,” the central bank said, adding that households’ expectation of inflation has also declined further.

    Economic growth in Poland was weaker than expected in the first quarter of 2013 and the NBP said April data and business climate indicators “show that weak economic growth continued at the beginning of Q2.”
    In the first quarter, Poland’s Gross Domestic Product rose by an annual 0.5 percent, down from 0.7 percent in the fourth quarter, due to lower exports and a persistent decline in domestic demand that was driven by falling investment, the central bank said.
    Lower demand has lead to higher unemployment and April data also point to continued decline in employment, which is supporting low wage growth, along with low growth in loans to households and businesses, the NBP said.
    “Weak global activity growth, and the previous fall in commodity prices, has supported further decline in inflation in many countries,” the central bank said, adding that “despite signs of some improvement, recent data on business conditions in the euro area point to persistently negative trends in that economy at the beginning of Q2.”
    Poland’s economy slowed to 1.9 percent growth in 2012, from 4.5 percent in 2011, and the central bank has forecast growth of 1.3 percent this year.
     The central bank started cutting rates in November 2012 – a move that was criticized as being too late to cushion the impact from recession in the euro area – reducing the reference rate by 150 basis points from 4.75 percent to to 3.25 percent.
    The central bank then froze rates in April to review the impact of its easing but as the economy continued to slow down, the NBP started cutting rates again in May.

    www.CentralBankNews.info