Forex Technical Analysis 17.01.2014 (EUR/USD, GBP/USD, USD/CHF, USD/JPY, AUD/USD, GOLD)

Article By RoboForex.com

Analysis for January 17th, 2014

EUR/USD

Euro is still forming consolidation channel. We think, today price may continue growing up to break level of 1.3700, consolidate for a while, and then move upwards to reach target at 1.3800.

GBP/USD

Pound is still falling down. We think, today price may reach level of 1.6300 and then start new ascending movement towards level of 1.6430.

USD/CHF

Franc is also falling down. We think, today pair may continue forming its descending wave with target at 0.8900. This wave may be considered as continuation of descending movement towards level of 0.8300.

USD/JPY

Yen is still consolidating near level of 104.35. Later, in our opinion, price may form new descending structure to reach level of 103.00.

AUD/USD

Australian Dollar continues moving inside descending structure with target at 0.8750. After reaching it, pair may consolidate near it for a while and then continue moving downwards to reach target at 0.8400.

GOLD

Gold is still moving below level of 1248.88. We think, today price may grow up to break this level and expand its trading range upwards. Later, in our opinion, instrument may continue its ascending movement towards target at 1277.

RoboForex Analytical Department

Article By RoboForex.com

Attention!
Forecasts presented in this section only reflect the author’s private opinion and should not be considered as guidance for trading. RoboForex LP bears no responsibility for trading results based on trading recommendations described in these analytical reviews.

 

 

Fibonacci Retracements Analysis 17.01.2014 (EUR/USD, USD/CHF)

Article By RoboForex.com

Analysis for January 17th, 2014

EUR/USD

Euro is still being corrected; earlier price rebounded from correctional level of 38.2%, which means that pair may start moving downwards again. I’ve got only one sell order so far; target is several fibo-levels near 1.3490.

As we can see at H1 chart, target of current correction is at level of 61.8%. According to analysis of temporary fibo-zones, this level may be reached on Friday. If later price rebounds from it, bears will return to the market.

USD/CHF

Franc is also being corrected; I’m in a drawdown with my sell order. Earlier this week price rebounded from correctional level of 38.2%. In the future, pair is expected to move upwards to reach several fibo-levels in upper part of the chart.

Correction may yet continue during the day, price may break local minimum. According to analysis of temporary fibo-zones, upper levels may be reached by next Tuesday. We should note that if later price rebounds from target area, pair may start new and deeper correction.

RoboForex Analytical Department

Article By RoboForex.com

Attention!
Forecasts presented in this section only reflect the author’s private opinion and should not be considered as guidance for trading. RoboForex LP bears no responsibility for trading results based on trading recommendations described in these analytical reviews.

 

 

 

Bill Gates Booted Off the Forbes 400 List?

By WallStreetDaily.com Bill Gates Booted Off the Forbes 400 List?

Were there any silver linings to last Friday’s terrible jobs report?

Is it finally time to stop envying the performance of hedge funds?

Should billionaire Bill Gates start worrying about being de-listed from the Forbes 400 list?

And does anyone really expect volatility to return with a vengeance in 2014?

We’re tackling all these questions (and a little more) in this week’s edition of Friday Charts.

Enjoy!

Need a Job? Head to Texas or North Dakota

Last week, the Bureau of Labor Statistics revealed that the economy only added 74,000 jobs in December.

Panic ensued. Why? Because it represented a big, Jesse Barfield-style swing and a miss. Economists expected close to 200,000 new jobs for the month.

But the report wasn’t a complete nightmare. And I’m not just saying that because I’m the “glass is half full” guy.

As I’ve shared before, boom times are here for one sector in the U.S. economy – energy. And the latest jobs report confirms it.


Total direct oil and gas industry employment reached 504 million jobs in December. That’s up 55% since 2007.

As Dr. Mark Perry of the American Enterprise Institute notes, the sector has been adding about one new job every four minutes – for the last two years.

Go ahead. Call it an energy revolution. Then start figuring out how to invest in it by following my colleague and friend, Karim Rahemtulla, over at Oil & Energy Daily.

I Pity the Hedge Fund Fool

For the fifth year in a row, the average hedge fund failed to outperform the S&P 500 Index. Not by a slim margin, either. But by 23 full percentage points.

The Bloomberg Hedge Fund Aggregate Index rose 7% in 2013, compared to a 30% rise for the S&P 500.

Yet a staggering $2.5 trillion – equal to the GDP of France – is invested in hedge funds. Yes, we should pity the fools!

The drubbing got so bad, in fact, that hedge fund managers apparently decided to admit defeat. Instead of trying to beat the market, their funds are “becoming” the market.

In the last year, the correlation between hedge funds and the S&P 500 hit nearly 90%.

Still got hedge fund envy? Save yourself the underperformance and expense by investing in a cheap, exchange-traded fund like the SPDR S&P 500 Fund (SPY). From an investment standpoint, the two are virtually identical.

No Resurrection Here

Bill Gates is the richest man in the world. No doubt, he’s a smart guy. But even if he returned to be the CEO of Microsoft (MSFT), I don’t think he could overcome this epic crash.

“Global PC shipments suffered the worst decline in PC market history [in 2013],” according to tech research firm, Gartner.

Total shipments dropped 10%.

That’s terrible news for computer companies like Microsoft – and, in turn, Mr. Gates. (He still owns a massive stake in the company.)

While he might never lose his billionaire status completely, a few demotions in the rankings might be on the horizon.

A Contrarian Take on Volatility

During the throes of the financial crisis, daily swings of 2% for the S&P 500 were the norm.

By comparison, 2013 was a ho-hum year for volatility, with the market swinging 0.55% higher or lower on any given day.

That volatility is going to return with a vengeance in 2014, though.

Open call options on the VIX Volatility Index (^VIX) stand at 7.4 million, according to a recent tweet from Ryan Detrick, Senior Technical Strategist at Schaeffer’s Investment Research.

(In case you didn’t get the memo, we’re on Twitter, too. Follow me @LouBasenese.)

The volume of bullish bets on volatility is a stone’s throw away from the record high hit last March. Translation: There’s a lot of groupthink going on.

In this situation, I can’t help but bring up Humphrey B. Neill’s famous line, “When everybody thinks alike, everyone is likely to be wrong.” We’ll find out soon enough.

That’s it for today. Before you go, though, let us know what you think about volatility, hedge fund envy and the boom times in the oil and gas sector here.

Ahead of the tape,

Louis Basenese

The post Bill Gates Booted Off the Forbes 400 List? appeared first on Wall Street Daily.

Article By WallStreetDaily.com

Original Article: Bill Gates Booted Off the Forbes 400 List?

GBP/USD Falling to 3-Week Low Shows Key Role of Economic Data

By HY Markets Forex Blog

Forex trading resulted in the GBP/USD pair falling to its lowest value in three weeks on Jan. 15, and this decline happened as global markets responded to key reports that provided insight into economic conditions in both the United States and the United Kingdom.

The GBP/USD declined to as little as 1.6323, Reuters reported. This represented the lowest value for the currency pair since Dec. 20. The exchange rate for the two later recovered, rising to 1.6351.

American Manufacturing Data Strong

The currency pair dropped to a three-week low after global market participants responded to the latest information pointing to strength in the U.S. economy, including a report which indicated that thus far in January, manufacturing activity in the New York region has been strong, according to Investing.com. In addition, the results exceeded the expectations of analysts.

While market experts had predicted that the general business conditions index would rise to 3.75, it ended up increasing to 12.51, the media outlet reported. This jump was significant, as the measure had a reading of 2.22 during the prior month.

While factory activity ticked higher, additional data revealed that in December, producer prices rose sharply, according to the news source. During the period, the measure of these expenses increased by 0.4 percent. After falling by 0.1 percent in November, producer price inflation experienced its sharpest monthly gain since June.

It is important to note that while data released for the U.S. indicated a strong increase in this particular measure of inflation, separate figures provided for the United Kingdom indicated that consumer prices rose rather slowly in December, increasing 2 percent from the same time in 2012, Reuters reported.

BOE Policy Speculation

As a result of this modest rise in the price level, the Bank of England has less incentive to increase its interest rates soon, according to the news source. It is important to note that the strength of the job market in the European nation has also been cited as being a crucial matter that has an impact on the policy decisions of the country’s central bank.

The BOE is expected to hold off on increasing its benchmark borrowing costs, as the recent data indicating that inflation is not a huge concern should give the financial institution greater flexibility in terms of harnessing policy to stimulate the economy, Exchange Rates reported.

In addition, there may be good reason for the country’s central bank to continue to keep its rates low, and possibly consider use of additional stimulus, since recent data has revealed that expansion in consumer credit has helped fueled the growth in gross domestic product in the United Kingdom, according to the news source.

Amid these concerns about the lackluster state of economic conditions in the European nation, the BOE has indicated that before it thinks about boosting interest rates, it has a goal of pushing unemployment to 7 percent, Reuters reported.

One person who is optimistic that this key level will be reached soon is Lee McDarby, who works for Nomura International as executive director, corporate FX sales, according to the news source. He predicted that halfway through this year, the nation’s jobless rate will fall below 7 percent. The market expert also noted the key impact that inflation has on the value of the GBP/USD.

“Sterling went a little soft after the recent CPI data,” he told the media outlet. “Given that U.K. data is now assumed to be solid, any blips could impact the pound. However, the CPI data does not fundamentally change the lie of the land.”

Bond Yields and GBP/USD

The currency pair could potentially rise in value in the near future, at least if the price of government bonds continues to increase, according to Exchange Rates. The yields on 10-year bonds released by the British government recently declined to their lowest since Dec. 3, and the financial instruments released by the nation’s government have been rising in value.

It is important to note that the strength of the GBP can frequently be inferred from the value of futures contracts related to these debt-based securities, the media outlet reported. Since bond yields have fallen lately, it makes it easier for the government to refinance debt. The expenses of the Treasury could be reduced in the long-term as a result of this development.

The BOE may soon have a greater wealth of economic information it can use to determine whether to make any changes to existing policy, as December retail sales data is scheduled to be released on Friday, Jan. 17, according to Reuters.

In addition to the impact that these economic figures could have on BOE policy, and therefore the GBP/USD, many economists have speculated that the financial institution might hold out before increasing interest rates by lowering the unemployment rate at which it is willing to increase these borrowing costs, the media outlet reported.

The post GBP/USD Falling to 3-Week Low Shows Key Role of Economic Data appeared first on | HY Markets Official blog.

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Biotech Watchlist 2014: Sound Science, Innovative Ideas and a Sprinkle of Pixie Dust

Source: Tracy Salcedo-Chourré of The Life Sciences Report  (1/15/15)

http://www.thelifesciencesreport.com/pub/na/biotech-watchlist-2014-sound-science-innovative-ideas-and-a-sprinkle-of-pixie-dust

2013 was a banner year for the life sciences sector, with biotech, pharmaceutical and medtech companies buoyed by advances in therapeutic techniques, a friendly regulatory environment, lucrative partnerships and the overall market upswing. The 2013 Biotech Watchlist reflected this robustness, boasting a year-to-date return that blew past those posted by the major indices. Credit the basket of stocks picked by industry experts, weighted heavily with winners. Can our panel of experts pick another winning portfolio in 2014? Find out which companies they’ve chosen for the 2014 Watchlist in this exclusive from The Life Sciences Report.

What Is the Biotech Watchlist?

The Life Sciences Report’s Biotech Watchlist is a portfolio of dynamic, innovative companies picked by industry experts based on a variety of factors, including sound science, good management, promising therapy areas and catalysts keyed to the drug development process. The companies are tracked over the course of a year: By checking the Portfolio Tracker, Watchlist watchers can follow stock price movements in real time, including changes associated with milestones in the regulatory process and clinical trial data releases.

The Watchlist selection process begins with Sagient Research Systems Inc., publisher of theBioMedTracker. Sagient crunches the data and comes up with a list of life sciences companies with catalysts on the calendar. Prospects on the Sagient list are sent to our panel of experts, each of whom picks a handful of stocks believed to possess the best chances for upward stock movement. This year’s experts are Mara Goldstein of Cantor Fitzgerald, John McCamant of the Medical Technology Stock Letter, George Zavoico of H.C. Wainwright & Co. and Mike King of JMP Securities. The experts joined us at the 2014 Biotech Showcase, held earlier this week in San Francisco, where the 2014 Biotech Watchlist was unveiled in a special presentation on Jan. 13.

The 2013 Watchlist

Karen Roche, Streetwise Reports’ president, noted that the 2013 Watchlist, with a return of 59% as of Jan. 8, 2014, exceeded the returns posted by the Dow Jones Industrial and Standard & Poor’s 500 indices, which returned more than 25% on the year, and the NASDAQ, which returned about 38%.

“What’s exciting is we’ve used the same process and the same panelists to generate the 2014 Watchlist,” she told event attendees. The 2013 Watchlist included 17 companies, with five posting increases of 100% or more, and five up 50% or more. The biggest winners included Celldex Therapeutics (CLDX:NASDAQ)(+219%), Celgene Corp. (CELG:NASDAQ) (+81%), Pharmacyclics Inc. (PCYC:NASDAQ) (+91%),Sangamo BioSciences Inc. (SGMO:NASDAQ) (+100%), and Prana Biotechnology Ltd. (PBT:ASX)(+177%). Some of these performers make encore appearances on the 2014 Watchlist.

Links to Previous Watchlist Updates and Stories

Biotech Watchlist Portfolio Tracker
The Approval Process in Action (infographic)
January 2013 Biotech Watchlist
January 2013 Biotech Watchlist (story)
PDUFA? What’s a PDUFA? Understanding the Drug Development Process Is Key to Biotech Investing

The moderator for this year’s panel discussion of the Watchlist was Cantor Fitzgerald’s Goldstein, who said that while 2013 was “a very strong year,” investors should bear in mind that biotech is “a very risky sector. It’s filled with binary events, so there is great upside but there can also be great downside.” She also noted that 2013 was very strong for financings. “More than $20 billion ($20B) of equity came into the biotech sector via initial public offerings (IPOs), follow-ons and other equity transactions,” she noted.

The headwinds that propelled stocks upward in 2013 fill the sails into 2014, Goldstein continued. “Even within the first few weeks of 2014, and even amid some pretty heavy profit-taking, we’re still seeing performance ahead of the broader market.” Another theme that will continue into the new year is that of catalyst-driven stock price movement. “We saw broad market valuation upgrades overall, but there were lots of different catalysts that played a big part in what was going on in the biotech sector. Many of us think that much of that will continue into 2014,” Goldstein said.

The 2014 Watchlist

The top picks for H.C. Wainwright & Co.’s George Zavoico are OncoGenex Pharmaceuticals Inc. (OGXI:NASDAQ)CytoSorbents Corp. (CTSO:OTCBB)Omeros Corp. (OMER:NASDAQ) and Cerus Corp. (CERS:NASDAQ)—choices he believes “highlight the diversity in the sector.”

First up: OncoGenex, “an oncology play out of Salem, Wash. It has a phase 3 milestone coming midyear in an important prostate cancer trial called SYNERGY,” Zavoico said.

Next is CytoSorbents, a smaller market cap company with a polymer bead technology that can be employed during dialysis to clear the blood of cytokines in patients who are septic and experiencing “cytokine storm.” This device company is “emerging with a new technology that represents out-of-the-box thinking in terms of trying to clear blood. . .it adds an option for patients who are very septic and have very few options left,” he explained.

“CytoSorbents is more of an organic growth play,” Zavoico went on. “It has CE mark approval for its product, CytoSorb, in Europe. It is selling in Europe. It is building up its sales force in Europe. It is working to get CytoSorb approved in the U.S. If sales grow quarter to quarter, hopefully you’ll see somewhat linear appreciation in value for this small company.”

His next selection, Omeros, is flying “under the radar.” The company’s lead compound, Omidria, could be used in “millions of intraocular lens surgeries” each year to reduce inflammation and associated complications. The company’s key milestone, due later in 2014, is potential U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval of Omidria.

In addition, Omeros has a number of “interesting products in its pipeline, including an antibody that could challenge Alexion Pharmaceuticals Inc.’s (ALXN:NASDAQ) Soliris, tapping into a $1.5B market, and a phosphodiesterase 10 inhibitor for schizophrenia, which is a first-in-class therapy in that space. Then it has a discovery platform for G protein-coupled receptors. Omeros has unlocked 50 or 60 orphan receptors, for which it also has lead compounds,” Zavoico said. Milestones for the company’s earlier-stage compounds will play out through the year, he added.

Zavoico’s last selection is Cerus, which has a blood pathogen inactivation technology and generates $40–43 million ($40–43M) in revenue in Europe. Its big 2014 milestone is approval for the platelet and plasma pathogen inactivation technology in the U.S.

“Approval should come sometime around Q3/14 and the product could launch sometime in Q4/14. That will be a big event for Cerus,” the analyst said. “Cerus is an operating company that has cash flow. It should be profitable in a year or two, especially when the FDA approves its product and it begins selling.”

While oncology has dominated the sector for several years, and “very interesting oncology plays” are ongoing, by selecting CytoSorbents, Cerus and Omeros, Zavoico wanted to spotlight the diversity in the sector. “It’s not just an oncology play. It’s not just a central nervous system play. There’s a lot of variety,” he observed.

 

Newsletter writer McCamant’s picks start with Pharmacyclics, “a leading cancer company” that was on the 2013 Biotech Watchlist.

McCamant thinks Pharmacyclics’ Imbruvica (ibrutinib), a once-a-day pill approved in 2013 for treatment of mantle cell lymphoma, is a drug that “patients could be taking for three, four or five years—or even longer. One of the keys is a pent-up demand in elderly patients who are too fragile to take any of the current oncology drugs. They will be taking a lot of Imbruvica. We expect prescriptions to ramp up very aggressively. In our view, that’s the key for biotech sector performance, having new drugs and exceeding analysts’ expectations.” Imbruvica is also in phase 3 trials in chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) and other blood cancers.

Imbruvica is “going to be an absolute cash cow,” McCamant said. “We believe that the Imbruvica launch could be the largest cancer launch in history, and will be probably the primary driver of biotech performance in 2014 if other things fall into place. This sector does not go up without the NASDAQ and some of the broad markets performing, but as we’ve seen throughout the last year or two, almost every day the NASDAQ is up, the Amex Biotechnology Index (BTK) and NASDAQ Biotechnology Index (NBI) outperform.”

Mike King of JMP Securities shares McCamant’s enthusiasm for Pharmacyclics, echoing the idea that Imbruvica “is going to be the biggest drug in hematologic malignancy, bigger than Celgene’s Revlimid (lenalidomide) potentially.”

“I personally believe that Imbruvica going to be a transformative therapy, because now you have an oral agent that appears to suppress CLL for long periods of time,” King said.

 

Anthera Pharmaceuticals Inc. (ANTH:NASDAQ), McCamant’s next pick, ” is a B-cell company [with] a couple of more orphan, or niche, indications. At present valuations, it’s only sold a little below cash most of the year. Anthera is one of the companies that investors need to buy a basket of, to diversify. There could be some very large upside, but it’s certainly not a company you would buy as a standalone investment.”

 

Incyte Corp. (INCY:NASDAQ) has been one of McCamant’s favorite companies. “I’d like to give a shout out to Incyte’s [former] CEO, Paul Friedman, who took a very mediocre genomics company in Palo Alto and turned it into a small molecule powerhouse with an approved cancer drug (Jakafi/ruxolitinib) and, in our view, one of the best small molecule pipelines in the industry.”

 

McCamant noted that, significantly, Jakafi has been shown to be efficacious in treating solid tumors, as well as myelofibrosis. “We think Jakafi is potentially going to be another blockbuster, instead of a niche oncology drug,” he said.

 

“The other thing we’re very excited about at Incyte are IDO (indoleamine 2, 3-dioxygenase) inhibitors,” as well as “some other follow-on JAK1 and JAK2 (Janus kinase) inhibitors. The pipeline has gotten very strong. . .this is a company that is an oncology powerhouse.”

 

McCamant’s fourth pick is a vaccine company, Novavax Inc. (NVAX:NASDAQ).

 

What sets Novavax apart is a “major differentiation that a lot of us in the industry don’t always fully appreciate,” McCamant said. “Vaccines don’t have to shrink tumors. They don’t have to have monster responses. They need antibody levels. If you can show you get protection, potentially vaccines are a very lucrative business.”

 

Novavax is addressing the seasonal flu, “a $3–4B business today,” as well as respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), “the crown jewel,” McCamant said. The RSV vaccine “can be a huge opportunity in pregnant women and also the elderly,” and if combined with a flu vaccine the combo could “significantly outcompete some of the other players. . .this really is potentially a game-changing vaccine with minimal competition.”

 

Novavax also has a huge contract from the government—the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA)—to develop seasonal and pandemic flu vaccines, the newsletter writer noted.

 

McCamant’s enthusiasm for Novavax was seconded by Zavoico, who noted, “We like Novavax a lot as well as a 2014 pick. . . .One of the key differentiators is that as a vaccine company, it doesn’t use eggs. It uses virus-like particles. It’s a new type of technology.” That technology, he and McCamant agreed, speeds up the development of vaccines.

 

Mike King of JMP Securities says his “large-cap/mega-cap favorite continues to be Celgene. . .It is a $75–80B market-cap company. We think that could be $150B in a three-year time frame.” Revlimid, which King says is a “great” drug, is a Celgene frontrunner.

 

Goldstein picked Celgene for the 2013 Watchlist, and continues to like the company. Revlimid continues to grow, but the Cantor Fitzgerald analyst points to the company’s early-stage pipeline, which “the market is not paying that much attention to.”

 

Goldstein also likes the “revenue diversification story [that is] starting to play out in additional indications for drugs like Abraxane (paclitaxel protein-bound particles for injectable suspension) and new products like apremilast, which will get the company into the autoimmune space and will be approved this year.” And Revlimid “continues to have new life” because data suggests that the drug should be more widely used.

 

“It’s scary to think about how big the [Celgene] story could get,” King said.

 

Sticking with oncology, BIND Therapeutics Inc. (BIND:NASDAQ) is also one of King’s favorites. BIND uses “nanotechnology to deliver docetaxel in both prostate cancer and lung cancer. It’s a little bit of a sleepy story right at the moment, but data from two randomized, phase 2 trials is expected later in 2014.”

 

The small company, with a $200M market cap, is run by “a team that has built and sold companies in specialty drug delivery in the past,” King explained. Both the CEO, Scott Minick, and the CFO, Andrew Hirsch, have been involved with companies that have been acquired by bigger fish. “The ultimate exit [may] be a trade sale, probably sometime in the 2015–2016 time frame,” King said.

 

King said he’d nominate BIND as his favorite for acquisition, but when asked to reflect on the “appetite for acquisition” going forward, he equivocated. “The way I look at mergers and acquisitions is that they are just part of the ecosystem. They happen.” He cited Alnylam Pharmaceuticals Inc. (ALNY:NASDAQ), which “just went into a whopper of a deal with Sanofi SA (SNY:NYSE)/Genzyme, with a $700M upfront payment for collaboration on the Alnylam pipeline in which Alnylam is going to have equal status in development, equal status in commercialization—at least in North America and Western Europe—and rest-of-world royalties that approximate a profit split. That’s unbelievable, and was unthinkable even 10 years ago in our space.”

 

Such partnerships are likely to continue, King asserted, citing a statement by Chris Viehbacher, the CEO of Sanofi. “He said something very insightful and wise, which is that you typically don’t get what you want from an acquisition, at least in an enabling technology company, because most of the people leave. It’s better for big pharma. . .to be collaborative, let the crazy-haired scientists do their best [work] and have a shared interest in the output. I think Celgene, again, has been a model of how to collaborate with kind of these best-in-breed science companies.”

 

McCamant agreed with King, and explained what he called the “halo effect” of large pharma collaborations with smaller, innovative biotechs. “One of the keys is that with these partnerships, you’re getting the validation.” He cited Sangamo BioSciences’ alliance with Biogen Idec Inc. (BIIB:NASDAQ) with respect to Sangamo’s gene editing technology. This “strong and powerful technology” now has Biogen’s stamp of approval on it, making it more attractive to investors. Other examples of the partnership magic were cited as well.

 

“Celgene has sprinkled its pixie dust on a lot of companies,” King noted, “and that’s the reason whyAcceleron Pharma Inc. (XLRN:NASDAQ)bluebird bio Inc. (BLUE:NASDAQ) and Agios Pharmaceuticals Inc. (AGIO:NASDAQ) have had such successful IPOs.”

 

Goldstein’s additions to the Watchlist were Celldex (on the 2013 Watchlist) and Verastem Inc. (VSTM:NASDAQ).

 

Celldex “has very, very good scientists, scientists with track records,” Goldstein said. “A cloud overhanging the company based on one product largely began to erode away as the rest of the products in its portfolio began to take on greater visibility through pipeline advancement.”

 

The company, she noted, went from a sub-$250M market cap in 2013 to $200B today—”a huge valuation increase. It brought in a whole group of new investors. The question I like to ask myself is: Is it just the fact that the stock has pulled back, or do I really think that there are more value creation opportunities?” In the case of Celldex, Goldstein believes there is more opportunity within the pipeline. The company will read out data on a drug for an ultraorphan indication, and “orphan drug indications, particularly [for] ultrarare diseases, do particularly well because there is a lot of pricing power in them.”

 

In addition, “the bread and butter pipeline of the later-stage products to me looks very compelling. A potentially transformative drug in breast cancer began enrolling this year in a phase 3 trial. . .as well as a therapeutic vaccine for glioblastoma and a very interesting new compound in phase 2 that looks to potentially be combined with checkpoint inhibitors.”

 

Verastem is a small-cap name working in the field of cancer stem cells, Goldstein explained.

 

“A lot of its technology comes from one of the leading minds in the field of oncology and cancer stem cells, a guy by the name of Dr. Robert Weinberg. . .He discovered not only the first oncogene but also the first tumor suppressor gene, so Verastem has a very, very good technology foundation,” she said.

 

But what intrigues Goldstein is Verastem’s clinical trial looking at a phase 2 product called afatinib in mesothelioma. “Verastem believes it has found a biomarker for the treatment of mesothelioma. It is going to take an interim look sometime toward the end of Q1/14, and that will tell the company if it can enrich its trial population based on this biomarker. I think that represents a real valuation inflection because if Verastem’s thesis is right, we are looking at the concept of this drug, as well as this biomarker—and, broadly speaking, cancer stem cells—in a whole new light.”

 

The panel concluded with discussion of biotech’s 2014 prospects for capital raising. “Given the universe and your collective wisdom,” Goldstein asked her fellow analysts where the most important drivers will come from: Industry, which was a big source in a capital-constrained environment? Could public markets be a source in the foreseeable future?

 

Industry is definitely going to drive M&A activity, McCamant replied. When companies are seen as good merger or acquisition prospects, “we’ll see a nice pop in the stock and the shorts will be driven out.” The environment is also very favorable for IPOs, which were plentiful in 2013. Partnerships and retail opportunities will also play into the mix. A “potential bugaboo” could be regulatory, “which always comes out of anywhere. It’s been very important to have the FDA working with companies” on accelerated approvals.

 

Zavoico prefers to see companies “raise after they deliver good data and really show that they’ve created value.”

 

“I will say, though, the FDA is as constructive as it’s ever been,” King observed. “I think that comes from companies improving the quality of their science.” He doesn’t believe the current biotech market is frothy “because froth implies that [the current market is] unsustainable and comes from speculation rather than solid fundamentals.” Instead, King believes companies have “figured out how to launch drugs and beat expectations.”

 

“Phase 3 trials don’t fail so much anymore,” he said. “Success rates have gone up because we, collectively as a scientific community, understand what’s going on better. . .Good science, good regulatory.”

 

In addition, Zavoico noted that drugs in phase 1 at a time when capital was scarce are now in phase 3, with companies having “scratched by,” to raise the funds they needed to keep their products moving forward. King concurred, noting that lot of companies have been “tempered by near-death experiences and learned to survive. . . .They’re smarter companies because of it.”

 

Mara Goldstein joined Cantor Fitzgerald & Co. from Thomson Reuters, where she served as director of research for Reuters Insight. Goldstein was initially responsible for the firm’s healthcare research practice, and later assumed responsibility for all research activities and sectors. Prior to that, Goldstein was an executive director and senior pharmaceutical analyst at CIBC World Markets. At Cantor, Goldstein covers the biotechnology sector. Goldstein also worked at Alex Brown & Sons and CS First Boston. She holds a bachelor’s degree in economics from Purdue University.

 

Michael G. King Jr. is a managing director and senior biotechnology analyst at JMP Securities. King comes to JMP from Rodman & Renshaw LLC, where he was managing director and senior biotechnology analyst. He has more than 17 years of experience as a leading biotechnology equity research analyst, consistently ranking at the top of Institutional Investor magazine’s annual sellside research survey, in addition to being named that publication’s “Home Run Hitter” in 2000. King also served as senior vice president of corporate development and communication at ZIOPHARM Oncology (ZIOP:NASDAQ). Prior to joining ZIOPHARM, King was a managing director and senior biotechnology snalyst at Wedbush Securities. He holds a bachelor’s degree in finance from Baruch College.

 

John McCamant is the editor of the Medical Technology Stock Letter, a leading investment newsletter. McCamant has spent 25 years on the frontlines of biotechnology investing. He has established an extensive network that includes contacts throughout the investment banking and venture capital communities. His expertise in biotechnology investments is a subject of media interest. He is frequently consulted and quoted by The Washington Post, Reuters, Bloomberg, CBS and Marketwatch.

 

Dr. George Zavoico joined H.C. Wainwright & Co. in January 2014 to focus on healthcare research. He has more than 10 years of experience as a life sciences equity analyst writing research on publicly traded equities. His principal focus is on biotechnology, biopharmaceutical, specialty pharmaceutical, and molecular diagnostics companies. He received The Financial Times Starmine Award two years in a row for being among the top-ranked earnings estimators in the biotechnology sector. Before joining HCW, Zavoico was managing director and senior equity analyst at MLV & Co., and helped establish the healthcare equity research platform there. Previously, Zavoico was an equity research analyst in the healthcare sector at Westport Capital Markets and Cantor Fitzgerald. Prior to working as an analyst, Zavoico established his own consulting company serving the biotech and pharmaceutical industries, providing competitive intelligence and marketing research, due diligence services and guidance in regulatory affairs. Zavoico began his career as a senior research scientist at Bristol-Myers Squibb Co., moving on to management positions at Alexion Pharmaceuticals Inc. and T Cell Sciences Inc. (now Celldex Therapeutics Inc.). Zavoico has a bachelor’s degree in biology from St. Lawrence University and a Ph.D. in physiology from the University of Virginia. He held post-doctoral fellowships at the University of Connecticut School of Medicine and Harvard Medical School/Brigham & Women’s Hospital. He has published more than 30 papers in peer-reviewed journals and has coauthored four book chapters.

 

Want to read more Life Sciences 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) Tracy Salcedo-Chourre composed this story for The Life Sciences Report and provides services to The Life Sciences Report as an employee. She or her family own shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: None.
2) The following companies mentioned in the interview are sponsors of Streetwise Reports: None. Streetwise Reports does not accept stock in exchange for its services.
3) Mara Goldstein: I own, or my family owns, 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: Celldex Therapeutics, Verastem Inc. 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.
4) Mike King: I own, or my family owns, 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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Chile holds rate, but may have to cut in coming months

By CentralBankNews.info
    Chile’s central bank held its policy rate steady at 4.50 percent, as expected, and said the country’s economy was continuing to lose strength and it “estimates that in the coming months it might be necessary to increase the monetary stimulus to ensure that projected inflation will stand at 3% in the policy horizon.”
     The Central Bank of Chile, which cut its rates by 50 basis points in October and November, added that “any future changes in the monetary policy rate will depend on the implications of domestic and external macroeconomic conditions on the inflationary outlook.”
    Chile’s inflation rate rose to 3.0 percent in December from 2.4 percent in November, hitting the bank’s target for the first time in 20 months.
    The bank said the rise was associated with food and energy prices, which is said were volatile, along with the “short-term incidence of the peso depreciation.”
     Inflation expectations remain around the bank’s target while the pace of nominal growth in wages has been moderating, the bank said.

     Chile’s peso fell sharply in May, along with many other emerging market currencies, then stabilized through mid-October, when it again fell as the central bank cut its rate. Earlier today the peso was trading at 533 to the U.S. dollar, down some 10 percent since the start of 2013 and 7.5 percent since mid-October.
     Output from Chile’s economy and demand have growth somewhat less than the central bank assumed in its latest policy report, particularly in investment-related sectors.
     Chile’s Gross Domestic Product expanded by 1.3 percent in the third quarter from the second for annual growth of 4.7 percent, up from 4.0 percent.    In its December monetary policy report, the central bank forecast 2014 growth of 3.75 – 4.75 percent while growth for 2013 was projected at 4.2 percent.
    The bank also forecast inflation hitting its 3.0 percent target by the fourth quarter of 2015.

    http://ift.tt/1iP0FNb

 

A Reasonable Way Investors Can Predict The Future

By MoneyMorning.com.au

The Federal Reserve Bank gets a lot of press. But Harry Dent has another idea about what investors should pay attention to.

What is more important than all the central banks of the world?‘ he asked the attendees at the Liberty Forum in sunny St. Kitts. The crowd, perhaps under the tranquilizing effect of the tropics, offered no guesses.

Babies,‘ Harry said.

There are many ways people make their guesses about what might happen in the world. Some people gaze at the stars. Some follow oddball theories of dead economists. Harry Dent – author, newsletter writer, forecaster of market trends – watches babies.

What I do is look at demographics,‘ Harry said, adding specifics, ‘and the predictable things people do as they age.

And that all starts with babies. On the next slide, Harry produced a picture of a cute little bundle in a blue blanket. ‘What’s going to happen to this baby? He’s going to grow up. He’s going to enter the workforce at age 20. He’s going to start earning money, spending money, borrowing money,‘ Harry said. ‘Does anyone know at what age you spend the most you’ll spend in your life?

That would be age 46. Here was something that I thought was interesting. Harry mapped out the typical life cycle of household spending in the chart below.

Childbirth comes at age 28. Maximum spending on groceries tends to hit at age 41, when that kid becomes a teen. ‘It’s a proven medical fact,‘ Harry said, ‘that the highest calorie intake happens during those teenage years.‘ (I can vouch for this. It seems all my wife and I do is go grocery shopping.)

Spending on furniture peaks at age 46. College tuition spending at age 51. And the most you’ll ever spend on a car is when you turn 53 (you finally get that Cadillac!). ‘This is usually the last major durable good purchase people make. After this, spending goes down much faster,‘ Harry said. ‘And so does borrowing. Old people don’t borrow money. They pay down debt.

Life insurance spending peaks at 58, travel expenses at 60 and cruise ship spending at age 70. ‘People finally say, ‘Put me on a cruise ship, stuff me with food and booze and I’m happy. No jet lag. No hassles,’‘ Harry says.

All of these things happen from cradle to grave, predictably,‘ Harry summed up. I’ve always had an armchair interest in these sorts of stats. Of all the things you could use to try to predict the future, the demographic trends seem to make sense. And they are hard to change.

From this kind of analysis, Harry teases out what might do well and what might not. Short auto stocks and buy RVs is one example Harry offered. Why? We’re past the peak on auto spending. But for RVs, the maximum spending happens between ages 53-60. We’re entering the sweet spot.

I’d be building nursing homes and assisted living facilities for decades,‘ Harry added. ‘That’s where I’d be investing.

Regards,
Chris Mayer,

Contributing Editor, Money Morning

Ed Note: A Reasonable Way to Predict the Future was originally published in The Daily Reckoning America.

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By MoneyMorning.com.au

Just Follow the (bubble) Money – Buy Small-Cap Stocks

By MoneyMorning.com.au

Those who have jumped up and down fretting about the possibility of rising Aussie interest rates must feel a little sheepish this morning.

Yesterday the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) released the latest unemployment and employment numbers.

The unemployment rate edged up from 5.7% to 5.8%.

The number of employed people fell by 22,600.

While the unemployment and employment rates aren’t the be all and end all, they are a key set of numbers analysts and economists like to watch. And they don’t like what they see.

The Aussie Dollar dropped more than a cent last night. The reason? Forecasters now see a higher chance of the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) cutting interest rates.

You know what that means…

If you’ve ever seen the movie All the President’s Men you’ll know that it’s a brilliant one.

It’s a docu-drama retelling the events of the Watergate scandal in 1972. The movie stars Robert Redford and Dustin Hoffman as legendary journalists Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein.

The movie also portrays the anonymous character known as ‘Deep Throat’. He was the inside man who led Woodward and Bernstein on the trail that ultimately led to the White House. It also led to the resignation of US president Richard M Nixon.

We mention this story because in one memorable scene in the movie, ‘Deep Throat’ tells Robert Redford’s character, Bob Woodward, to, ‘Just follow the money.‘ In other words, cases of corruption always involve money. If you follow the money you’ll find the culprit.

You can apply the same advice to financial markets – just follow the money. Only in this case, we’re not interested in where the money has come from; we want to know where it’s going.

Don’t be a Lemming

Despite claims that asset bubbles are about to pop, the market keeps fighting off the bad news and continues to rise.

Two days ago the mainstream press was screeching about a 1.5% fall for the Aussie stock market. Apparently that fall had wiped $24 billion in value from stocks.

Well, it didn’t take long for the market to recover from that supposed disaster. Thanks to yesterday’s 1.2% run-up, stocks are back above Monday’s close.

We can only hope you weren’t one of the lemmings who read the bad stock market news and followed most mainstream investors by selling stocks.

Because if you did you’ve missed out on an 80-point rally.

But don’t beat yourself up too much. If you haven’t bought back into the market, it’s not too late. All you have to do is follow the money and you’ll see exactly where it’s is flowing from, and where it’s flowing to.

That should help you realise that the worldwide asset bubble that started in 2009 is still in full effect. And if we’re right about its impact on stock markets, this bubble still has much further to go.

Where is the Money Going?

You’ve heard the story. You’ve probably heard it more than you care to. Central banks are creating asset bubbles left, right and centre.

It’s a great piece of information. It’s a useful piece of information. But without the natural follow-up it’s also completely useless.

It’s one thing to identify an asset bubble, but what’s really important is the ability to take advantage of that bubble to potentially build profits. That’s what we mean when we talk about following the money.

Everyone knows where the money is coming from. The next step is to find out where it’s going. The answer worldwide is clear. Low interest rates have forced and are forcing investors to buy stocks.

And now that will start to feed through to the Aussie market in the same way it fed through to overseas markets.

One reason is that yields on dividend-paying stocks are typically higher than the interest rate on bank deposits. Investors would rather take on the extra risk of owning stocks to get the higher yield rather than have inflation eat away at their cash.

Second, you can get capital growth from stocks. You can’t get that from cash. If a company can grow its business it should lead to higher revenues, higher profits, and hopefully higher dividends. That’s a story we’ve followed in Australian Small-Cap Investigator for the past 18 months.

Many people I speak to are amazed that so many small-cap stocks are profitable and pay an ongoing and reliable dividend. And because small-cap stocks start from a low base they typically (but not always) have much further to go.

Of course, they’re also generally riskier than large-cap stocks, but if you like speculating then the small-cap sector is just about the best place to do it.

Aussie Stocks Heading to 7,000

This isn’t to say the small-cap sector will be the only place to benefit from the money trail. If the Aussie market follows the same trend as overseas markets you can expect other stocks to benefit too.

Remember, the Aussie stock market lagged most overseas markets. Part of that was due to the higher Aussie dollar, worries about China, and falling commodity prices.

Our bet is that the market will worry less about these things this year…especially if interest rates fall further and the Aussie dollar edges closer to US$0.80.

This is why we continue to put money on the Aussie market hitting 7,000 points next year. That would be 32% above the current level. You may think that seems like a big move, but in the context of low interest rates it’s par for the course when you look at overseas markets.

Make no mistake, it’s a risky bet. If interest rates don’t fall then stock prices could. That may happen if company earnings and dividends don’t rise.

But for now, and for at least the next two years, our advice is to follow the money. Everyone can see where it’s coming from, but amazingly in Australia, despite what has happened overseas, few are prepared to admit where it’s going – and that’s straight into stocks.

Cheers,
Kris+

From the Port Phillip Publishing Library

Special Report: The ‘Wonder Weld’

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By MoneyMorning.com.au

Five Ways to Play the End of the Natural Gas Renaissance: Bill Powers

Source: Tom Armistead of The Energy Report  (1/16/14)

http://www.theenergyreport.com/pub/na/five-ways-to-play-the-end-of-the-natural-gas-renaissance-bill-powers

Shale gas is not the foundation of U.S. energy security that conventional wisdom claims, says Bill Powers in this interview with The Energy Report. But as shale gas peters out, the law of supply and demand will drive gas prices up. Powers, an independent analyst and author of “Cold, Hungry and in the Dark: Exploding the Natural Gas Supply Myth,” sees a good future for gas-leveraged junior companies, and shares his top ideas as demand and price skyrocket in tandem.

The Energy Report: Bill, you published a book six months ago, “Cold, Hungry and in the Dark: Exploding the Natural Gas Supply Myth,” questioning the conventional wisdom of shale gas. Have events supported your thesis?

Bill Powers: Yes, absolutely. Several of the predictions I made in the book have come true since the book hit the shelves in July. First, we’ve seen numerous shale plays head into decline. We’ve seen big declines from the Haynesville as well as the Barnett. The Fayetteville is in decline; there have been further declines in the Gulf of Mexico and Wyoming. But what has really changed is the North American natural gas market has become extremely unbalanced, which was what I had predicted would come to pass sometime in the 2013–2015 timeframe. The cold weather over the last six weeks has accelerated what I have been talking about in the book.

TER: How so?

BP: I predicted that gas prices would lead to layoffs and industry supply disruptions, and that’s already occurred. We’ve seen paper mills in New Hampshire lay people off because natural gas prices in New England were north of $50/million Btu ($50/MMBtu) for a period and remain very high. We’ve also seen incredibly high prices in New York, and this is a time of record production coming out of the Marcellus. These are really the first examples of the violent price spikes and industrial shutdowns we will see in other parts of the country.

Across the U.S. over the next several years, I predict we will see spikes of very high prices, which will fall back to higher levels than they previously reached. Then, as the next weather event comes, prices will spike to new highs. That has already happened in New England and other areas of the Northeast in part because those areas are supply-constrained due to limited pipeline availability, but also because of increased demand.

The Northeast has also had several nuclear power plants close. Just recently the Vermont Yankee closed. Nuclear power plants have closed over the last decade or so in Maine as well as Connecticut. Much of this capacity has been taken up by increased natural gas demand for electricity generation. So you’ve had constrained supply because of the limited pipeline capacity and increased demand. In addition to the new demand from electricity generation, significant new demand in the Northeast has come from people converting from heating oil to natural gas furnaces.

Also, there’s been a huge disappointment in supply coming from Canada into the Northeast U.S. because Sable Island production offshore Nova Scotia has been so low compared to some very lofty original expectations. We’ve just had Deep Panuke come on in late 2013 after several delays and many cost overruns, but the pipeline that services those offshore fields in Nova Scotia is not even close to full, and the fields will be depleted fairly rapidly over the next three to seven years. This will be a period of continued supply constraints for New England. The Marcellus and Eagle Ford are the only two fields that are still growing, and I expect the Marcellus to flatten out in 2014. Additionally, we are going to see supply constraints throughout much of the rest of the United States over the next several years.

TER: The pipeline companies have acknowledged that there’s a supply constraint. Haven’t any of them made plans to extend lines to the Northeast?

BP: Yes, that is happening, and some of them are probably going to increase throughput from the production growth in the Marcellus, but there will be significant calls on Marcellus production, which is probably going to peak this year.

The U.S. Energy Information Administration late last year put out a white paper that talked about how gas production is becoming more efficient. But this white paper did not include the Barnett Shale, which is in steep decline now. It’s true, efficiencies have been gained over the last several years, such as the way fracking has changed, and operators are becoming more efficient in fracking, with longer laterals. But what is really happening is the completion of the inventory of previously drilled wells.

When companies ramp up their drilling activity, they often will drill more wells than they actually complete due to lack of pipeline capacity. Just recently, there have been about 200 wells in the Marcellus that were waiting for pipeline connections or to be fracked. A lot of those wells have been fracked over the last six months and the inventory continues to go down. I believe that inventory will be depleted by Q1/14, and given the drilling activity, the very high decline rates of the wells and the number of rigs running in the Marcellus, further growth is not supported. The Marcellus is still a very significant field, the biggest in the United States. When it peaks out it will probably plateau for a while, depending on activity levels, but it still will not be able to make up for falling production in nearly every other region in the United States. When this happens, we will see price spikes more frequently.

A really good example of the damage high prices can cause outside of the Northeast is Mexico. In August 2012, landed LNG prices in Mexico were $3.17/MMBtu. In August 2013, Mexico had landed LNG prices over $16. Despite its increase in gas production, demand is outstripping supply. Mexico is having a gas crisis that has forced the closure of numerous cement, steel and glass plants. There have been thousands of layoffs in Mexico because of extremely high natural gas prices. There’s not yet the pipeline connectivity into the United States to alleviate this crisis. What we’re seeing is very high LNG prices, and as the U.S. needs to go back in to the world LNG market, this is going to impact U.S. consumers over the next several years. In my book I completely refute the notion that the U.S. will ever become a significant exporter of LNG and recent events in the Northeast show why.

TER: So, you’re still expecting the gas boom to peter out in the next five to seven years? Is that still the timeframe?

BP: I think it’s happening sooner than that. Production has been flat in the United States since early 2012. Canada soon will start to export gas to Asia through British Columbia, and the Marcellus is likely to peak in 2014, but despite gas prices that are now over $4/MMBtu, you are still seeing very limited activity for gas-directed drilling. Until that picks up, U.S. supply is going to go down; how far down is still open, but the market is becoming increasingly unbalanced. Shale gas focused companies still cannot generate free cash flow at today’s prices and many have severely damaged balance sheets due to the weak prices of recent years. For example, Chesapeake Energy Corp. (CHK:NYSE) just sold 130 million cubic feet per day of production, 40 uncompleted wells and 200,000 acres in the Marcellus, to Chief Oil & Gas (private) because Chesapeake is financially distressed. It still cannot make money at today’s prices and it had to sell very good acreage to Chief at a fire-sale price.

People might think this is a one-off or this is just one company, but Chesapeake is the second largest producer of natural gas in the United States. It’s the largest shale gas producer in the world. It has drilled more shale gas wells than anybody else. Its gas production declined 10% in 2013 according to its most recent investor presentation and it will fall again in 2014, simply because the company has completely given up drilling gas wells.

It’s not just Chesapeake who fired its CEO, replaced several members of its board, largely walked away from the shale gas business and fired 20% of its workforce. The same thing happened with Encana Corp. (ECA:TSX; ECA:NYSE). It fired 20% of its workforce along with its CEO. EOG Resources Inc. (EOG:NYSE) also has walked away from the shale gas business. In 2013 its natural gas production declined 15%. This is not a small company; it is a top-20 producer in the United States. This is very significant; you’re seeing the biggest producers largely turn their back on shale gas. Without these large producers accelerating drilling more wells, U.S. production will head into a significant decline.

Now that the inventory of wells in the Marcellus is largely depleted, there’s very little chance that U.S. production is going to remain flat in 2014. It will probably decline. This is really going to put upward pressure on prices. The spikes in New England and New York have been largely weather-related, but this is going to happen more and more often, and it will happen on less severe weather. It will happen in other areas of the country, such as California, where the San Onofre nuclear plant has shut down. This summer, when it gets hot in California, we may see spikes similar to what happened at the turn of the millennium.

Up to 50 gigawatts (50 GW) of U.S. coal-fired generation will be shut down in the next two years to comply with MATS, the Mercury and Air Toxics Standards that are being enforced by the EPA. That’s between 15% and 20% of U.S. coal-fired generation. There will be more demand for natural gas for electricity generation. Also in 2013, five nuclear plants have closed. These nuclear plants serve a big part of the electricity base load. A lot of that electricity generation is now being pushed toward natural gas. You’re seeing the market become more and more unbalanced. This is only going to be exacerbated as Canada diverts more of its gas exports to Asia through British Columbia than to the United States because the prices in Asia are well into the double digits. Even with the recent spike in U.S. gas prices, it’s still far more economic to send it to Asia. That will begin later in 2014 when the Kitimat LNG facility opens.

TER: Natural gas prices in Canada and the U.S. have been on a roll, but they had a good run above $4/MMBtu for a month last spring too. They have not been able to sustain above $4/MMBtu since August 2011. What’s your forecast for 2014?

 

BP: I expect prices to move between $5–7/MMBtu simply because we are seeing huge drawdowns in the storage. We had a record withdrawal in the United States for the month of November. We had the biggest withdrawal of all time—285 billion cubic feet (285 Bcf)—in December, which happened before winter even set in. In January, we expect to see another record draw. I believe by this spring we will see prices close to $5/MMBtu, and they will move higher later in the year because it’s going to be very difficult to refill storage.

 

We should see storage fall well below last year’s end-of-winter low. We are more than 500 Bcf below last year’s levels. This would put us at a very low level of storage at the end of the winter heating season. I believe this will push prices somewhere between $5–7/MMBtu later this year. Then we will see a consistent march higher over the next two to three years and we will see spikes, depending on the weather. How high prices go will depends on the severity of it.

 

Right now, there are very few companies that make money even at $4/MMBtu. We saw that from the financial statements of all the big shale gas players; even at today’s prices, it’s still not that economic, so we will not see increased natural gas-directed drilling until prices are closer to $6/MMBtu. This leads us to another issue that I think is not widely recognized: In 2008, the last time we saw a sustained spike in natural gas prices, we had 1,300 to 1,600 rigs drilling for natural gas and about 350 drilling for oil. Now that is completely reversed in the United States. For companies to drop oil-directed drilling rigs and move them to natural gas, we will need to see some significantly higher prices. I think that will lead to further imbalances.

 

TER: Baker Hughes Inc. (BHI:NYSE) has acknowledged that the number of gas and oil rigs is no longer the measure of production that it used to be because so many laterals are running off each pad now. Are you accounting for that?

 

BP: Yes, absolutely. While there is no doubt rigs have become more efficient and pad drilling has had a lot to do with that, a factor that is very difficult to quantify is the quality of rock into which these laterals are being drilled. Anyone who’s familiar with the oil and gas business can tell you that the best wells will be drilled first and that you will drill into progressively lower-quality rock. While you can drill numerous wells off one pad, you still are going to need more rigs as you drill into lower-quality rock. We’ve seen increases in production in areas like the Marcellus, but a lot of this has to do, as I said earlier, with the completion of inventoried wells—wells that were drilled but waiting on completion. We are going to need a lot more activity in natural gas-directed drilling to keep production flat. At today’s activity levels I don’t see it and due to the high decline rate of these horizontally drilled wells and the length of them, it’s going to require more and more activity. This will happen only at significantly higher prices.

 

TER: Canada’s gas exports are blocked to the south, east and west. What does that mean for the future of its gas producers?

 

BP: Blockage is not the problem. The U.S. has imported gas from Canada for over 35 years, but Canadian production had declined significantly over the past 12 years before flattening out in 2013 at around 13 Bcf. U.S. exports were down substantially over the last five years, so there’s plenty of Canadian export capacity into the United States; it’s just not being used because of low prices and the significant decline in Canadian production. There’s plenty of Canadian export capacity into the United States, whether it’s from the Alliance Pipeline or from Nova Scotia via the Maritimes Pipeline. That’s nowhere close to filling the hole due to very poor exploration results offshore Nova Scotia and resistance to the further exploration of shale in New Brunswick.

 

The reason Canada will greatly reduce its exports to the United States over the next five years is it’s building out an enormous capacity in British Columbia to export gas to Asia. Petronas bought Progress Energy Canada Ltd. for $5 billion ($5B) and is building an $11B facility in British Columbia to export gas to Asia. We’re going to see numerous applications for LNG export facilities approved in the next several years, and we’re going to see a huge buildout in British Columbia to export gas from the Horn River Basin and the Montney to Asia.

 

We’re also seeing booming demand for Canadian users. Demand for the oil sands has gone from about 1.5 Bcf per day (1.5 Bcf/d) toward 2 Bcf/d. We’ve seen fertilizer plants open in Canada due to the low natural gas prices and the high prices for fertilizer. Due to the decline in Canadian production over the last 12 years and increased demand in exports to Asia, the United States will be left with a very unbalanced market. It’s certainly going to lead to higher prices, because Canadian producers just now have been able to stabilize their production, but only after a significant fall and a pickup in activity.

 

TER: How will the opening of Mexico’s oil and gas industry to foreign investment affect this market balance and the companies you follow?

 

BP: The law has changed, but it’s still unclear what type of terms will be offered to foreign companies. Iraq offers a useful comparison. Iraq has had difficulty attracting large companies to invest because the terms are so difficult. It will be interesting to see whether the Mexican government will allow foreign companies to make money in Mexico. If the terms are very difficult, it will not be able to attract investment. But, if it allows reasonable terms, I think there are plenty of companies that would be able to help stabilize Mexico’s declining oil production and probably grow its natural gas production significantly, because the Eagle Ford Shale extends into northern Mexico. But as that is an area where there has not been any foreign investment, it will be interesting to see how that plays out.

 

TER: Do any of the companies that you follow look as if they might get involved in the Mexican industry?

 

BP: The service companies have already been active in Mexico for years under contracting. I think you will see companies such as Calfrac Well Services Ltd. (CFW:TSX) and Trican Well Service Ltd. (TCW:TSX) increase their Mexican business as overall activity levels increase in Mexico. It’s difficult to see at this early stage what independents would be active in Mexico. A lot of this will depend on what terms are being offered. The service companies will certainly move toward some of the more difficult basins, such as the Chicontepec, which has been very, very difficult. It’s a tight gas field. And as other fields similar to that, other tight gas plays and the Eagle Ford Shale in northern Mexico get developed, this is certainly going to help North American-based service companies such as Trican and Calfrac.

 

TER: Have any technological innovations in the last year or two improved the prospects of success for small E&P companies?

 

BP: What I think has helped, and one of the things we’re seeing, is the way the wells were fractured in the Bakken. Rather than fracking outward, away from the wellbore 1,000 feet (1,000 ft), Bakken fracks are now designed so there’s a larger perforation, but the fracks do not go as far out from the wellbore, only a few hundred feet. The idea is that there’s a lot of reservoir that can be drained that is very close to the wellbore.

 

This will help improve the economics of fracturing wells, because for smaller companies drilling $8-million ($8M) wells, these are expensive ventures. Things that can improve the recovery per well per frack stage certainly will help the smaller companies grow as the wells become more economic.

 

What is exciting for the smaller companies is that with oil prices $92–100/bbl, and gas as it moves above $5/MMBtu later this year, cash flows should improve significantly. I think this will lead to much more activity for the smaller companies and will definitely lead to some exciting developments and a lot more investor interest in the space.

 

TER: Can you name some of the companies that you’re excited about right now?

 

BP: Certainly. In Canada I have three names that are very exciting. Bellatrix Exploration Ltd. (BXE:TSX)has an excellent portfolio of assets. It has grown production. This is a company that will benefit from higher gas prices; it is very leveraged to gas prices. It’s continuing to develop its Duvernay Shale. It acquired a company last year that temporarily depressed its stock price. I think that this company should be able to grow its production significantly over the next several years and do it profitably.

 

A company that will probably sell itself over the next six months or so is Advantage Oil and Gas Ltd. (AAV:TSX; AAV:NYSE). It has really proven out its Glacier play in the Montney over the last several years. Through this winter’s drilling season it should be able to prove up quite a bit more acreage. This will really help it. The higher gas prices are certainly going to help Advantage. As prices move higher, this is a company that should have a very good year in 2014.

 

I’m a director and shareholder of Arsenal Energy Inc. (AEI:TSX). We’re active in the Bakken in North Dakota as well as the Deep Basin of Canada. I’m very excited about what I’m seeing going on there. I’m also excited about a couple companies in the United States. One is Southwestern Energy Co. (SWN:NYSE). It did take a write-down on its Fayetteville Shale assets last year. However, this is a very profitable business, especially with higher natural gas prices. It still has more than 3 trillion cubic feet (3 Tcf) of proven reserves in the Fayetteville and has had very good success in the Marcellus. This is a company that can make a great deal of money at today’s prices, and it’s big enough that I think institutional investors will be very attracted to Southwestern Energy due to its leverage to higher natural gas prices.

 

The other one in the United States that I really like is Denbury Resources Inc. (DNR:NYSE). It’s very leveraged to the price of oil. It has been growing its production and just initiated a dividend. It has also been actively buying back its own shares. It generates a significant amount of free cash flow. Over the next several years, that free cash flow is going to grow significantly, and there’s very little exploration risk for Denbury because it is buying depleted fields. It has been able to bring these fields back to life through CO2 injections. Those are five companies I think have a very bright 2014.

 

TER: You’ve been very forthcoming. Do you have some closing guidance or advice for investors?

 

BP: The resource sector is very difficult and requires quite a bit of research, but I think prices, depending on the company, are going to be very helpful. Some companies that have struggled over the last several years due to weak natural gas prices will have a very bright future. There are a lot of opportunities for companies to grow cash flow per share and production per share and do it without really increasing their capex. This is a very exciting time to be in the space. As always, I think for investors who can spend some time and get to know some of the companies I just mentioned and plenty of others, there are a lot of opportunities out there.

 

TER: Thank you very much. This has been a very interesting conversation.

 

BP: Thank you. It’s been great being here.

 

Bill Powers is an independent analyst, private investor and author of the book “Cold, Hungry and in the Dark: Exploding the Natural Gas Supply Myth.” Powers is the former editor of the Powers Energy Investor, Canadian Energy Viewpoint and U.S. Energy Investor. He has published investment research on the oil and gas industry since 2002 and sits on the Board of Directors of Calgary-based Arsenal Energy. An active investor for over 25 years, Powers has devoted the last 15 years to studying and analyzing the energy sector, driven by his desire to uncover superior investment opportunities. Follow him on Twitterfor ongoing updates.

 

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Egypt holds rate steady, sees limited inflation risks

By CentralBankNews.info
    Egypt’s central bank held its key interest steady, as expected, saying the current rates were appropriate “given the mixed balance of risks surrounding the inflation outlook and the GDP outlooks at this juncture.”
    The Central Bank of Egypt (CBE), which surprised economists by cutting its rate in December, also said it saw limited risks to inflation due to weak economic growth.
     “The pronounced downside risks to domestic GDP combined with the persistently negative output gap since 2011 will limit upside risks to the inflation outlook going forward.”
    The CBE, which cut rates by 100 basis points in 2013, underscored its determination to boost economic growth despite inflationary pressures with its December rate cut.
    Egypt’s inflation rate eased to 11.7 percent in December from an almost-four-year high of 12.97 percent in November. Core inflation was steady at 11.91 percent from 11.95 percent in November.