Russia Eyes Crimea’s Oil and Gas Reserves

By OilPrice.com

According to Reuters , Crimea may nationalize oil and gas assets within its borders belonging to Ukraine, and sell them off to Russia. Crimea’s Deputy Prime Minister hinted at the possibility that it would take control of Chornomorneftegaz, a Ukrainian state-owned enterprise, and then “privatize” it by selling it to Gazprom. “After nationalisation of the company we would openly take a decision – if a large investor, like Gazprom or others emerges – to carry out (privatisation),” Deputy Prime Minister Rustam Temirgaliev said.

Crimea’s Russian-backed government has decided to hold a referendum on March 16 to secede from Ukraine. At the time of this writing, Russia’s heavy involvement in the drive for Crimean secession makes it hard to believe that Sunday’s result will be anything other than an overwhelming result in favor of breaking ties with Kiev (either greater autonomy or annexation by Russia). The next steps are much less clear, however. Secretary of State John Kerry is hoping Russia will hold off on fully annexing Crimea, leaving open the possibility of some diplomatic way of resolving the crisis.

The ongoing political standoff in Crimea has already halted Ukraine’s oil and gas ambitions. Ukraine came close to inking a deal with a consortium of international oil companies that would have led to an initial $735 million investment to drill two offshore wells. The consortium led by ExxonMobil – with stakes held by Shell, Romania’s OMV Petrom, and Ukraine’s Nadra Ukrainy – had been particularly interested in the Skifska field in the Black Sea, which holds an estimated 200 to 250 billion cubic meters of natural gas. If it can get the field up and running, Exxon hopes to eventually produce 5 billion cubic meters per year. Exxon’s consortium outbid Russian oil company Lukoil for the rights to the block.

Those plans were still in the early stages – the consortium and the Ukrainian government led by Viktor Yanukovych couldn’t agree on terms. Obviously, once Yanukovych was ousted, ExxonMobil had to put those plans on hold until further notice.

Exxon’s plans for Skifska may not have a future if Russia simply takes Ukraine’s assets. The speaker of Crimea’s parliament said on March 13 that its oilfields should be under the care of Moscow. “Russia, and Gazprom, should take care of the oil and gas production,” said Vladimir Konstantinov. The new Ukrainian government in Kiev may not have much control over the situation if Crimea’s government nationalizes Chornomorneftegaz and its assets. Ukraine had been optimistic about developing its offshore oil and gas reserves, but after Sunday’s referendum, those reserves may suddenly be in Crimean (or Russian) territory.

Exxon is in a bit of a pickle, as it has billions of dollars of investments in the Russia Arctic in a co-venture with Rosneft, its largest non-U.S. project. It is therefore staying pretty quiet about its position in Skifska, and will likely maintain a low-key position even after the referendum. Exxon likely doesn’t see much upside in getting into a tiff with Russia over the Black Sea, especially since it hadn’t even agreed on a production sharing agreement with Kiev yet. Exxon’s plans for the Russian Arctic are too important.

ExxonMobil aside, If Crimea and Russia move forward with the nationalization/privatization of Ukrainian oil and gas reserves, it will heighten the conflict between Russia on the one hand, and Ukraine and the West on the other. The U.S. has promised tougher sanctions over what it argues as an illegal annexation of Crimea. Russia’s annexation of Ukraine’s energy resources will only add fuel to the fire.

Source: http://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/Russia-Eyes-Crimeas-Oil-and-Gas-Reserves.html

By Nicholas Cunningham of Oilprice.com

 

 

 

 

Rick Rule: Which Companies Will Bring in the Green?

Source: Karen Roche of The Gold Report  (3/17/14)

http://www.theaureport.com/pub/na/rick-rule-which-companies-will-bring-in-the-green

Thoughts turn to green on St. Patrick’s Day. Rick Rule of Sprott US Holdings believes the resources bull market is about 18 months from arriving and there could be multiple promising entry points in the market this summer. But in this interview with The Gold Report, he says that this rebound may not look like the one investors are expecting and shares tips on how to spot companies that may have pots of gold at the end of the rainbow.

The Gold Report: In a call with Sprott clients last week, you said that the junior resource market is at an intermediate-term top right now and there will be good summer entry points. Why is the market at a top now instead of May, which is more typical? Should investors wait until the summer entry points to get into good juniors?

Rick Rule: The top could continue through mid-May. If investors have positions in their portfolios that they aren’t thrilled with, they should use this market to sell. One of the things I’ve noticed is that if an investor paid $1 for a stock and the stock is at $0.35—even if the stock was valueless—they are unwilling to sell it for $0.35. In many cases, the stocks that fell from $1 to $0.25 or $0.35 are now selling at $0.50 or $0.60. My suggestion is that this is a great time to take advantage of it.

I want to draw people’s attention to the fact that the market is up 40% in some cases from its bottom. Amazingly, people are more attracted to that than a market that exhibited bargain basement prices.

Although I believe that the market has bottomed, we’re going to be in an upward channel with higher highs and higher lows, but we are certainly going to exhibit the volatility that the market is famous for. It’s my suspicion that the summer doldrums will see lows that, while higher than last summer, are substantially lower than the prices that we’re enjoying today.

TGR: Gold has been above $1,300/ounce ($1,300/oz) for several weeks. Is that influencing the market?

RR: Gold certainly is a bellwether commodity for the junior resource sector. For 25 years, people have referred to junior mining in many circumstances as junior gold. That’s misinformation because the junior resource sector encompasses a variety of commodities. My suspicion is that we have put in lows in the precious metals and they will trade higher, but not straight up. The gains will need to be consolidated. It will be volatile on the way up.

TGR: If it’s a misconception that gold is the bellwether commodity, what key commodities do you look at to support the claim that we bottomed out in the summer of last year?

RR: Virtually the entire complex, with the exception of copper, which has stayed pretty weak. Zinc has begun to cooperate. While uranium hasn’t cooperated, the sentiment for uranium juniors and the premium associated with Uranium Participation Corp. (U:TSX) has certainly done better. The energy complex has seen oil up $10/barrel and natural gas doubled. Platinum and palladium are up substantially, although that may be a consequence of fears about an embargo against Russian palladium supplies and a response to labor unrest in South Africa. However, generally, the whole commodities complex, including the soft commodities, even in the face of bumper grain crops, is doing well since last summer.

TGR: What do you attribute that to?

RR: There are a couple of reasons. The whole sector was oversold. We’ve participated in a bit of a dead cat bounce. The long-term thesis has a lot to do with the increasing ability of the bottom of the demographic pyramid to increase its standard of living, which involves more commodities. I’d say that the great unsung hero of a rebound in the fortune of commodity producers has been the increasingly constrained supply of resources. The demand side on resources has been very slow because this recovery in the West has been a false, paper recovery. It hasn’t been accompanied by capital spending or jobs. It’s an interest rate-led recovery with flat auto sales and home starts.

What has kept commodity prices stronger than what some investors thought they would be has been the constrained supply growth in the face of constrained demand. In sectors that were regarded as horrifically oversupplied, like natural gas, two things have happened: Cheap natural gas prices have led to more utilization of gas for power generation at the same time that Mother Nature threw the polar vortex at us.

This sort of supply response isn’t limited to natural gas. On the precious metals side, the industry has spent tens of billions of dollars during the past 15 years on exploration, construction and production. The production numbers for precious metals have been going sideways for gold and silver and going down for platinum and palladium. Supply constraints on a global basis led to the bottoming and then the recovery of commodity pricing.

TGR: If we don’t have enough supply to meet demand, even if demand stays flat, we would see commodity prices going up. But aren’t we still seeing some growth in developing countries as the poor become richer and invest in commodity-intensive products?

 

RR: That will be evident in future years. This year is simply a recovery from the oversold conditions of 2013. That’s normally the way bear markets become bull markets; they normally are a reaction to oversold situations.

TGR: Are the capital markets coming back to the commodity groups now to finance them? Will that financing ultimately result in increased supply?

RR: There is an increasing amount of equity available for the better companies in the junior resource space. This is precisely the set of circumstances that we talked about in our interview last summer, which we referred to as bifurcation. The best 20% of the issuers have begun to find bids, not just in the junior capital markets, which is where the share prices are up, but also in financing markets. An increasing number of bought financings are getting done. For the bulk of the juniors, of course, that capital isn’t available—and good riddance. They’ll go away.

Probably a bigger question is going to be where the project and development financing will come from. The large private sector banks that used to fund construction and permanent finance for major resource projects have been less willing to take those loans onto their balance sheets, choosing instead to become financial arrangers. A situation where everybody’s a financial arranger and nobody’s a funder means that projects haven’t been getting funded.

We believe that the likely lenders going forward will be sovereign wealth funds and superannuation or pension funds with a long-term horizon. But that hasn’t worked itself out yet. While there is a refreshing ability for the better juniors to get stop-gap equity financing, what is still missing from this market is the senior project financing. That’s something that Sprott is working very hard to address.

TGR: What will be the catalyst that will move sovereign wealth funds, pension funds or Sprott into doing those large capital financings?

RR: The time horizons of 10–20 years that are required in project finance correspond well to the needs of pension, superannuation and sovereign wealth funds. Because they are already equity investors, the balance sheet risk with being a senior secured lender will fit well with their needs. It’s just something that they haven’t done before. This is a natural progression that hasn’t occurred yet, and we hope to facilitate it.

TGR: Why is there a natural progression of moving these large project capital financings to a pension or sovereign wealth fund?

RR: Legislation in place now on a global basis for large banks forces them to be providers of capital to sovereign governments. If JPMorgan Chase has a loan to Greece on its books that is selling at 70% of par, European Union rules allow JPMorgan to carry that bond at 100% of par if it says it intends to hold it to maturity. In other words, the rules allow the bank to mark the loan to myth as opposed to the market. If the same sort of loan was made by JPMorgan to a private party, even a solvent private party, unlike an insolvent sovereign, the carrying value on that loan would have to be reduced, which would reduce the capital base of the bank.

As a response, the banks have become conduits that accept deposits on a global basis and borrow very short-term money from sovereign lenders and then relend the money to sovereign borrowers on a longer-term basis. They profit from the same type of arbitrage—borrowing short and lending long—which was the demise of the U.S. savings and loan business. This may or may not be a great business strategy. It’s one they’ve been, in effect, forced into as a consequence of banking regulations that came about after the 2008 liquidity crisis.

TGR: How might that play out over the next decade?

RR: That’s a many headed question. If we have a situation where short-term interest rates go up—where central banks are less able to manipulate short-term interest rates—it will have an extremely unpleasant outcome for the large banks.

TGR: You mentioned earlier that Sprott was looking at playing a role in that natural progression from the large banks to other types of fundees. What specifically is the role for Sprott there?

RR: Sprott has had discussions with many of the largest sovereign and pension investors in the world, including the National Pension Service of Korea, for which we manage some money. We have begun the process of educating these very large investors about the nature of project finance and how project finance might solve some of their investment needs. It’s an area that these very large investors hadn’t had much experience or interest in.

TGR: We’ve been talking about major debt project funding. Might these also come up in private placement opportunities, or do private placements fund other types of resource opportunities?

RR: Private placements have traditionally been on the exploration, development or preconstruction side of junior natural resource companies. This range of companies enjoyed unprecedented access to capital in 2003–2011. The consequence of that access to capital was a spectacular bull market that gave way to a spectacular bear market where the excesses of that period had to be exorcised. The issuers confused the optimal conditions with normalized conditions. The consequence has been that companies believe that the pricing circumstance that they enjoyed in 2003–2011 was normal as opposed to optimal. Issuers will be forced to be rational in 2014 simply as a consequence of their need for capital.

TGR: Are the latest financings discriminating or financing broadly across the sector?

RR: It’s been very discriminating, and it has to be. The junior resource business taken as a whole is valueless. Almost three-quarters of the issues on the exchange have no net-present value (NPV). The arithmetic consequence of that is any financing these poor quality companies do takes place at sub-$0 cost of capital. The better companies have found a bid. The better companies have been able to attract the financing. We need to take the bottom half of this industry and we need to flush it so that more money is focused on better projects and better companies.

TGR: Are you feeling a bit cautious about the potential continuing upmarket?

RR: I feel great about it. My experience has been that bear markets are always the authors of bull markets. While history doesn’t repeat, it certainly rhymes. The severity of the decline that we have experienced was at once the consequence of the extraordinary bull market that preceded it, but it’s also indicative of the type of response that we’re going to enjoy.

Make no mistake, the magnitude of this decline was as spectacular as anything I’ve seen since the mid-1980s. I feel the bull market that we are going to come into sometime in the next 18 months to 2 years will probably be as good a bull market as any I’ve ever experienced, and I’ve experienced some spectacular ones.

TGR: I was looking at the performance of the Sprott funds. The energy fund returned 23.4% in Q3/13 and Q4/13 while the gold and precious metals fund had a return of -4.2%. If the resource market bottomed in the summer of last year, how do you explain the difference between these two funds?

RR: The uptick in oil and gas equities happened faster because free cash flows recovered more quickly and because these energy issuers are generally better companies. It was easy to measure the impact of higher natural gas prices on the oil and gas juniors because they were producing. When the natural gas price went off its $1.90 million British thermal units ($1.9 MMBtu) low up to $4 MMBtu, the impact on producers’ income statements on a quarterly basis was immediate and dramatic.

An increase in the gold price from $1,100/oz to $1,300/oz for a company that is not yet producing gold is one that has to be factored in an NPV calculation to future cash flows. It took longer to work its way through the system.

TGR: There have been some really dramatic turnarounds so far this year in the gold and precious metals fund: Tahoe Resources Inc. (THO:TSX; TAHO:NYSE) was down 9% in Q4/12 and is up 48% year to date (YTD); Guyana Goldfields Inc. (GUY:TSX) was down 36% in Q4/13 and is up 67% YTD; and Silver Standard Resources Inc. (SSO:TSX; SSRI:NASDAQ) was up 25% last year, and is up 44% this year. What do you attribute this dramatic turnaround to over the last few months?

RR: It’s a turnabout in market sentiment. The middle part of last year, the stock charts went sideways on no volume—exhausted sellers, exhausted buyers. At the end of last year, those stocks began to catch some bids. The people who had to sell, sold. We began to notice small inflows of cash at Sprott into our resource-oriented mutual funds at the end of last summer. We were no longer forced sellers, and we became nominal buyers.

I think our experience mirrored the experience of the rest of the institutional investing community. The consequence was fairly dramatic moves up on small volumes in some ludicrously oversold equities. We’ve come into a period where there’s a better balance between buyers and sellers.

TGR: Are you expecting to see modulation in increases in the fund because it had a dramatic turnaround?

RR: That’s the theme of this call. My suspicion is that we’ve been through the worst of the bear market, that the bear market bottom will not be a “V,” it will be saucer shaped, and it will take 12–18 months from now before we’re truly in a bull market. The gains that we’ve just enjoyed will need to consolidate. They may go a little higher before they go lower, but the truth is that a recovery will see higher highs and higher lows, and will also feature the volatility that this sector is so famous for. The recovery is in its very early stages.

TGR: Can you comment on some of these companies in the fund that have had large YTD performances?

RR: I think we have a combination of circumstance here. Tahoe is, if not the finest, then one of the finest silver deposits in the world. It answered the question of “could it overcome its social license issues and mine construction issues by getting into production.” It delivered value. The naysayers were proven wrong. The small increase in the silver price certainly helped it, too.

Similarly, Primero Mining Corp. (PPP:NYSE; P:TSX) outperformed production expectations and then announced an acquisition of a development project that allowed the market some visibility as to how it might grow going forward.

Guyana Goldfields simply was a recovery from a ridiculously oversold level.

Silver Standard delivered improved performance in Argentina. It added some meat to the bones. The market liked the fact that it, in the last six months of last year, seemed to get its hands on the production difficulties that it was having at the Pirquitas mine.

More recently, the company enjoyed a tremendous share price spurt as a consequence of its acquisition of the Marigold mine in Nevada from Goldcorp Inc. (G:TSX; GG:NYSE) that shows the way for it to increase cash flow and profits on an accretive, per-share basis. It might allow Silver Standard to develop the rest of its portfolio internally without external funding.

 

Bear Creek Mining Corp. (BCM:TSX.V) got social license in Peru. There had been questions as to whether either of the company’s development projects would be able to be developed given local opposition in Peru. Bear Creek got the backing of every prominent local group and a landmark agreement between the central government of Peru and the local government that would allow for more equitable distribution to the region of tax, royalties and the social rents from mining. Historically, in Peru, the regions have borne all the costs of mining while the center has collected all the social rent.

 

Fortuna Silver Mines Inc. (FSM:NYSE; FVI:TSX; FVI:BVL; F4S:FSE) continues to impress with its ability to operate midsize silver mines. Its two operations have consistently met its promises. That set it apart from an industry where probably 75% of the project news has been disappointing. Fortuna, as a consequence of meeting projections quarter after quarter, has begun to develop a loyal shareholder base among silver speculators.

 

TGR: With St. Patrick’s Day on the horizon, what company is really going to have the luck of the Irish and bring in the green?

 

RR: For your readers in the West and the Southwest, water will be a real important topic of discussion. We’ve had a situation in the West and the Southwest where water has been priced politically, which means it’s been delivered as a right irrespective of its supply and the cost of distributing it. The consequence of that has been gross misdistribution, which has worked as long as nature has cooperated. But nature this year has ceased to cooperate. We’re going to see tremendous distortions in water pricing across the West and the Southwest, and that will have spinoffs in areas like food cost. The very low cost of food that Americans have enjoyed in the last 40 years has had to do with the subsidies afforded to farmers for water supply.

 

Here in California, there are now several water districts whose allocation of water from the state and federal government is zero. Growing, as an example, almonds or pistachios or plums—pick a crop, really—in the summer in California with zero water allocation is very difficult. This is going to be a subject that is going to play very large among investors. It’s something that Sprott has been involved in through my own efforts for two decades. It’s something that we’re trying to get a lot more involved with in the next two or three years.

 

California had a pretty good drought in 1977 that caused us to do things like flush our toilets on alternative days and not wash our cars. It had much more profound economic consequences than that. The interesting thing for Californians to note is that since 1977, two important things have changed: There are 12 million more of us with our straws in the sponge, but the sponge hasn’t increased at all. At the same time, the safety valve Californians had from the Colorado River is gone. The consequences will be very dramatic.

 

Since 1977, people have moved to places like Phoenix, Tucson, Salt Lake City and Las Vegas. We don’t have the ability to overdraw our allotment anymore. The way that we got out of the predicament in 1977 is not a way out this time. It’s going to have profound consequences. I don’t know what they are, but it’s going to have profound consequences.

 

TGR: How do you play the water sector and this drought? You can’t get more rain. Are we looking at desalination? Are we looking at better water conservation?

 

RR: There is no play in the near term. The answer in the intermediate term is going to have to be more market pricing for water—and people are going to hate that. The way I’m playing it is to buy shares of companies that own water rights associated with their agricultural operations. My bet is that the California legislature does something that’s logical. I realize that’s a bet that plays against history. But my hope is that farmers are allowed to cease doing stupid things such as growing rice in the desert and are allowed to sell the water that they would have wasted growing rice in the desert to people who want to use it to flush toilets and brush teeth. If that takes place, there’s as much as a 90% arbitrage in the converting of agricultural water to urban and municipal use.

 

If we did that, by the way, we wouldn’t have a water crisis in California. We’d have a lot less agricultural production. But the truth is, if we had a market-clearing price for water in California, we wouldn’t be having this discussion at all.

 

TGR: But if we had a market-clearing price for water in California, what would happen to the agricultural component of the California economy? What would that mean overall for the state?

 

RR: Remember that California agriculture contributes less that 4% of state GDP and consumes 85% of the state’s water. I suspect that gross farm receipts would stay the same. We would have 25% or 30% of the farmland in California fallow, and we would have higher crop prices across lower production. That’s the inevitable consequence that we have to face. The idea that we take water and we irrigate a desert to cut eight crops of alfalfa and we export that alfalfa in bales to China for its dairy industry is the equivalent of us exporting water below our cost of production to subsidize the Chinese dairy industry. If you say to suburban homeowners, the Cadillac communists in West L.A. or Mill Valley, that they have to sacrifice $150,000 worth of landscaping at their houses, or be willing to pay 300% or 400% more for water so that they can subsidize the production of dairy in China, the political equation regarding water pricing in California could change. And that would confer enormous benefits on the people who understood the arbitrage of marking privately held agricultural water rights to market.

 

TGR: What’s to keep the California government from taking away those agricultural water rights or redefining them so that that arbitrage is minimized or eliminated?

 

RR: Zero. The People’s Republic of California will ultimately confiscate the product of intelligent savers but, mercifully, California is extremely inefficient, and it won’t get around to fashioning the political compromise necessary to steal that wealth for three or four years.

 

TGR: Can you share with us some of these companies that have water rights that can turn agricultural water into urban-use water to take advantage of this arbitrage situation?

 

RR: Sure, with a caveat that these are companies I own as opposed to companies that I recommend to your readership. I own J.G. Boswell Co. (BWEL:OTCPK), which is the largest of the California corporate farmers; Limoneira Co. (LMNR:NASDAQ), which is a grower and developer in Ventura, Calif.; and PICO Holdings Inc. (PICO:NASDAQ), which is the Physicians Insurance Company of Ohio, a water-rights owner in Nevada and Arizona.

 

TGR: That’s ironic. The Physicians Insurance Company of Ohio owns water rights in Arizona and Nevada?

 

RR: That’s a story for a different interview.

 

TGR: I appreciate your time, Rick.

 

RR: My pleasure. Thank you.

 

Rick Rule, CEO of Sprott US Holdings Inc., began his career in the securities business in 1974. He is a leading American retail broker specializing in mining, energy, water utilities, forest products and agriculture. His company has built a national reputation on taking advantage of global opportunities in the oil and gas, mining, alternative energy, agriculture, forestry and water industries. Rule writes a free, thrice-weekly e-letter, Sprott’s Thoughts.

 

Want to read more Gold 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) Karen Roche conducted this interview for The Gold Report and provides services to The Gold Reportas 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: Tahoe Resources Inc., Guyana Goldfields Inc., Primero Mining Corp. and Fortuna Silver Mines Inc. Goldcorp Inc. is not associated with Streetwise Reports. Streetwise Reports does not accept stock in exchange for its services or as sponsorship payment.
3) Rick Rule: I or my family own shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: Tahoe Resources Inc., J. G. Bozwell Co., Limoneira Co. and PICO Holdings Inc. 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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USD/JPY – Opportunity at Key Support from Japan Trade Balance

usd/jpy

Japanese trade balance scheduled for Tuesday, March 18. Coincident index and leading index scheduled for Wednesday, March 19. Better than expected data will likely fuel a break below key support at 101.25 in the USD/JPY. Disappointing data will likely reinforce support, and could help the USD regain some of the previous week’s losses. Should the trade balance come out worse than forecasted, expect the current support level to remain the same. The Initial target should be set at 102.50-102.64.

 

Written by Daniel Elo, www.EconomicCalendar.com

 

 

 

 

 

 

Investing Directly in Revolutionary Companies…

By MoneyMorning.com.au

We try not to do it.

But sometimes we can’t help it.

We get distracted.

But from time to time news stories flash before our eyes that remind us where we should focus our attention.

It’s not on Russia, or Ukraine, or central bank money printing. It’s on the latest discoveries that could actually mean something – such as research from the US that one cosmologist says could be ‘the Holy Grail of cosmology.

That’s big…

Our old buddy Dan Denning sent us a link to the news report yesterday. He included the simple comment that, ‘This looks like it could be huge news.

So, what was the news?

According to the Guardian:

There is intense speculation among cosmologist that a US team is on the verge of confirming they have detected “primordial gravitational waves” – an echo of the big bang in which the universe came into existence 14bn years ago.

Gravitational waves are the last untested prediction of Albert Einstein’s General Theory of Relativity. They are miniscule ripples in the fabric of the universe that carry energy across space, somewhat similar to waves crossing an ocean…

The discovery of gravitational waves from the big bang would offer scientists their first glimpse of how the universe was born.

Dan was right. That is big news. And yet most folks tend to ignore this type of news.

But not Sam Volkering. When he comes across ground-breaking and revolutionary news; there’s no stopping him. He’s always looking for any opportunity to showcase what’s going on the world of science and technology.

Forget Crimea, This Could Change Lives

But what do ‘primordial gravitational waves‘ have to do with stock markets?

Nothing really.

We’re simply making a point that however important things may seem on face value (Russia and Ukraine, or a Chinese solar power firm defaulting on debt repayments) they usually aren’t that important when you put it in perspective.

As the report from the Guardian shows, scientists could be another step closer to unravelling the mysteries of the universe.

But that’s not the only thing going on in the world of science. On any given day scientists and entrepreneurs are doing all manner of things to solve problems and improve people’s lives.

Take for instance the medical breakthrough Sam told Revolutionary Tech Investor readers about two weeks ago:

Multiple Sclerosis is a neurological disease, which affects the central nervous system. Approximately two million people worldwide have been diagnosed with MS.

As it stands there is no known cure, in part because of the complexity of the disease.

What happens in MS sufferers is the body’s own immune system begins to attack the central nervous system. In effect the body turns on itself. This in turn leads to inflammation of the brain, spinal cord and optic nerves.

The result from this self-attack is damaged nerves.

The good news is there’s a tiny biotech firm doing its darnedest to find a treatment and cure…and it may have found it in the most unlikely of places.

We don’t know about you. But in our view that’s important. That’s the kind of breakthrough that can change lives for the better. But it’s also the kind of information investors can use to make informed decisions on whether to support the company and its plans.

This is Speculating not Trading

We’ll make that clear.

When you invest in speculative and revolutionary stocks you’re actually investing in the company.

This isn’t like trading where you don’t care what the company does. Most traders couldn’t care less about the stock. All they care about is the three digit stock code and how the lines shape up on the chart.

Speculating on tiny revolutionary stocks is different. You’re investing in the company – financially and mentally. You can’t just throw a few bucks at these things based on the charts.

You need to understand what the company is doing and how it plans to do it. You need to have confidence in the company. And importantly, you need to have the stomach to back it with cash.

It’s a simple fact of this type of investing that small-cap revolutionary companies will need to raise extra capital from investors. Some investors don’t like them doing that.

To us that’s a crazy attitude. Companies at this end of the market need to raise capital in order to finance their projects. The beauty of it is that it gives you the opportunity to invest directly in the company.

Rather than just buying your shares from another investor, you get to write a cheque or transfer money straight to the company when it raises capital. In return you get extra shares in the company.

That’s an uplifting feeling. You know that your hundreds or thousands of dollars are going straight to the company so it can develop and potentially market its life-changing drug or treatment.

Not only that, but you get the potential to make big double-, triple-, or even quadruple-digit percentage gains.

For example, another one of the biotech stocks Sam recommended just seven months ago is up 422.9%. It trades on the ASX too.

Who says you can’t make money in this market? And to prove it this video -produced urgently – shows how to do it…

Cheers,
Kris+

PS: If you click on this link you’ll go through to Sam Volkering’s latest video feature, in which he lays out the high-tech opportunities available to investors today – Sam calls them ‘Moon-Shots’. To be honest, when I first saw the presentation I thought Sam must have shot it from the Moon, the audio quality was so bad! But soon enough I got used to the crackling and the other sound glitches, because the underlying message was so important. You can watch the film here…

Special Report: Mining Boom Act II

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By MoneyMorning.com.au

Electric Cars: When Did This ‘Old Rubbish’ Become Cool?

By MoneyMorning.com.au

Apple [NASDAQ:AAPL] might have officially gone bonkers. I get the feeling they’re trying too hard to be everything to everyone. I say this because in the last week there have been reports about Apple getting into making electric cars.

Now this wouldn’t be out of place for a company like Google [NASDAQ:GOOG]. Google is renowned as a ‘Moonshot’ company. They go with the out-there project like self-driving cars. Whether or not they turn out to be a success…who knows? But Moonshot projects are as important to Google as their search engine.

But at the core of Apple they make very pretty computers and smartphones. So why on earth would they be considering electric cars? Maybe things are worse at Apple than we realise?

Just the idea and rumour of Apple getting into electric cars is a revelation in itself. It means that a ‘cool’ company like Apple believes these kinds of cars are a fit for the brand.

Just a few short years ago hybrid and electric cars were very ‘uncool’. I’m sure every Toyota Prius came with an Al Gore poster and a ‘Welcome to the Club’ letter on hemp paper from Leonardo DiCaprio.

It’s not like there haven’t been attempts to bring the electric car industry to life. You can look back 100 years to find examples of battery powered electric cars. Yet until the last few years, most failed.

The most notorious example of failed electric cars was the GM EV1. Some believe an underhanded conspiracy by the major oil companies signed the death warrant for the EV1. But if you take it on face value, perhaps it failed because it was possibly the ugliest, most ‘uncool’, and rubbish looking car ever made.

Fast forward to 2013 and 2014 and it’s a whole different story. It’s simple…electric cars are back. And this time they’re here to stay.

The Big Car Makers Know the Time is Right

Anyone with an electric or hybrid car now is a trendsetter, a pioneer, a saviour of the earth. It’s about time too. I believe the auto industry needs to make electric power the standard when it comes to car making. And it looks like a few of them might just agree.

Electric charging infrastructure has been one of the car industry’s failures. But with the success of the Tesla Motors [NASDAQ:TSLA] supercharger network across North America, it’s clear to see this failure is about to be fixed.

Speaking of Tesla, you have to give a lot of credit in the resurgence of electric cars to Elon Musk. Tesla is the first car maker that makes electric cars people want to buy. Simply, it’s jam-packed full of tech, looks amazing and smashes other electric cars with its range.

And the fact Musk has built a $25 billion car company that only makes two models says something. There’s a huge market for electric cars with a genuine bit of sex appeal. And as Tesla release an SUV, and an ‘affordable’ electric car, this is going to be a hotly contested market.

Because of the increasing popularity of Tesla cars, other car makers have realised that the time is ripe to push this technology through to the masses. If they don’t they’re going to fall behind, fast.

BMW now has the i3. It too is an electric car (with an optional petrol range extender). The i3 is also full of new technology and looks like something you’d want to drive. Not to stop there, BMW also has the soon to be released i8 (a hybrid), which is even better looking and will be sold alongside Porsches, Ferraris and Lamborghinis. And BMW’s use of carbon fibre really has car makers talking.

More on carbon fibre shortly. But what’s clear is that car makers around the world know that hybrids and electric cars are inevitable. That’s why other electric cars you can already buy include the Fiat 500e, Renault Zoe, Chevrolet Spark, Volkswagen e-UP! and soon the Audi A3 e-tron.

If you have any doubt that the immediate future of cars is hybrid and electric, just look at those names. We’re talking the biggest car companies in the world. And they’ve all figured out that for EV’s and Hybrid to be a success they need the x-factor. A bit of sex appeal. They need to be ‘cool’.

To realise this you only need to look at a comparison of today’s tech-laden ‘green’ cars versus yesterday’s… It’s the modern day McLaren P1 versus yesterday’s GM EV1.


© Copyright McLaren Automotive Limited      Source: RightBrainPhotography (Rick Rowen)

It’s pretty easy to see which you could term ‘inspiration’ and which you could call ‘aberration’.

The McLaren P1 is more than just good looks though. It’s possibly the biggest leap forward in car making since the Model T Ford.

If you’ve never heard of the P1 here’s a brief explanation. It’s the future of cars. It’s the world’s most technologically advanced road car. Sure it’s got a 3.8 litre twin-turbo V8 petrol engine, but it’s also got a 176 horsepower electric motor. Its CO2 emissions are sub 200 g/km (about on par with a Ford Mondeo) and you can even switch it into full electric mode for pottering around short distances.

Now although the P1 might cost north of $1.5 million, it’s full of technology that’ll eventually find its way down into passenger cars over the next five to 10 years. One of the biggest advances you’ll see filter down is the P1′s full carbon fibre monocoque.

What that means is the car is basically all carbon fibre. McLaren’s Press Release explains it best,

On the McLaren P1™, the new carbon fibre MonoCage forms a complete structure, incorporating…the vehicle’s roof and distinctive snorkel air intake.

The release continues to explain,

At just 90kg, the McLaren P1™ has one of the lightest carbon fibre full-body structures used in any road car to date, and uses the most advanced carbon fibre technology. A combination of Formula 1 style pre-preg autoclave technology and precision resin transfer moulding (RTM) achieves a single piece.

From Le Mans and Monte Carlo to the Dealers of Melbourne

The use of carbon fibre composites in car making isn’t all that new. Motorsport championships like F1™ and Le Mans series have used carbon fibre monocoques for years. But what happens is the tech from F1™ and Le Mans finds its way into the workshops of car makers. Ferrari, Porsche, Mercedes, Audi and McLaren are a few car makers that benefit greatly from this process.

And as the technology improves over time it filters down from the supercar makers to the rest of the auto world.

Carbon fibre is crucial to the long term future of ‘green’ cars with low emissions. The big problem is it’s always been expensive to use in the car making process. However, one Aussie company, who I can’t name, thinks their proprietary carbon fibre composite system is the answer car makers have been looking for.

They’re currently in discussions with leading car makers about licensing out their system. The technology this Aussie minnow has could completely change the auto industry. Instead of carbon fibre being commonplace in cars that cost six figures and more, you could see carbon fibre on your next Corolla, Mazda 3 or Hyundai i30. It’s this kind of technological approach and innovation that’s going to drive the auto industry forward in the coming years.

Even when driverless cars are on the road, how car makers put them together will be crucial to a sustainable, ‘green’ world. Carbon fibre in cars makes them stronger, lighter and more fuel efficient. It improves safety, economy and makes the cars look cool. So you can see the potential this has in the modern, ‘green’ world.

The P1, i8, Model S and soon to be released Porsche 918 Spyder are the aspirational cars of the future. They combine pioneering technology with car making and motorsports. The sophistication and technology used is simply mind-blowing.

Thanks to these hybrids electric cars are finally cool. Although some of these ‘hero’ cars aren’t technically full electric, the fact they use electric motors and electric energy systems, is a huge step forwards.

Advanced technology companies like Tesla and McLaren just happen to also make cars for a living. And that’s a good thing. With these tech pioneers at the helm of car making, the future looks bright for hybrids and electric cars.

Sam Volkering+
Editor, Revolutionary Tech Investor

Ed note: The above article was originally published in Sam Volkering’s Tech Insider, the free daily eletter in which Sam Volkering gives his readers the inside scoop on the new technology and tech companies that are changing the world.

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By MoneyMorning.com.au

Get the Socionomic Edge

Find out how at the 4th Annual Social Mood Conference

By Elliott Wave International

Robert Prechter forecasted more than 10 years ago that the War on Drugs would become more violent, leading eventually to the decriminalization of the possession and sale of recreational drugs. The Socionomist followed up in 2009 with an in-depth story by Euan Wilson called “The Coming Collapse of a Modern Prohibition.” We published an update in November 2013, “Marijuana: The Mood Shifts, and Decades of Prohibition Go Up in Smoke,” that was a timely reminder just before marijuana stocks exploded in early 2014. The recent rush of new state laws to decriminalize pot bears out these forecasts.

Enter Alan Brochstein, a pioneer in the Green Rush by way of his groundbreaking website, 420 Investor, which provides investors information about how to invest in the nascent cannabis industry. He will be just one of the speakers from around the globe at the upcoming 4th Annual Social Mood Conference on April 5, 2014. Join the many people already scheduled to attend who are also interested in understanding how socionomics makes it possible to understand changes in the world — before they happen.

Here are the topics of five of the nine researchers and business people who will present their ideas in Atlanta.

* * * * * * * * * *
 

Alan Brochstein-75Capitalizing on Cannabis: The Transformation of an Industry and the Creation of a New Investment Bubble

Alan Brochstein, CFA, Founder of 420 Investor.com

Mr. Brochstein has seen the herding impulse up close on a consistent basis through his investing service. The rapidly changing landscape for legal and medical cannabis presents opportunities for many stakeholders, including patients, consumers, entrepreneurs and government entities. Investors, whether through publicly traded companies or privately, are poised to capitalize on cannabis as well.

He will discuss how the combination of a rapidly changing industry and a political dynamic that touches many investors on a deeply personal level is already attracting substantial capital that might even be characterized as a bubble in the publicly traded stocks. At the same time, a highly uncertain financial regulatory environment has left the cannabis industry without ample access to traditional funding sources. Mr. Brochstein will discuss the opportunities ahead for investors who can navigate what will likely be a volatile environment.

Suzy Moat-75Predicting Human Behavior with Internet Data

Suzy Moat, Assistant Professor of Behavioral Science at the Warwick Business School, UK

Our everyday Internet usage generates huge amounts of data on how humans collect and exchange information worldwide. Dr. Moat’s recent research asks whether this data can be used to measure and to even predict human behavior.

Her talk will aim to show how large-scale patterns of communication can indeed help us to understand large-scale patterns of behavior. Dr. Moat will describe a number of illuminating case studies that link data (from sources such as Google, Wikipedia and Twitter) to collective behavior in the economic domain and beyond. For example, her team tested a hypothetical investment strategy based on big data about Google searches for financial terms such as “debt,” “portfolio” and “stocks.” It earned a 326% theoretical profit from 2004 to 2011, compared with 16% if the model had simply purchased the same stocks in 2004 and sold them in 2011.

Thomas Brudermann -75From Individual Decision Making to Collective Dynamics

Thomas Brudermann, Ph.D., Researcher at the Institute for Systems Sciences, Innovation and Sustainability Research, University of Graz, Austria

How do ideas go viral on a large scale? Decades of research on human decision making have yielded rich insights on psychological biases. We are well aware of the power of social influence, conformity pressure and herding. At the same time, suitable methods have been developed to keep track of collective phenomena. To get an idea about ongoing processes in markets and society, we may analyze Twitter tweets, track Google search trends, observe sales figures of certain products or look at stock market indexes.

What is still missing is a comprehensive understanding of the underlying collective dynamics, that is, the missing link between decisions happening on the individual level and emergent phenomena occurring on a macro level scale. This talk will address prospects and challenges of this research as well as possible links to socionomics, and discuss under which circumstances thoughts, ideas and preferences might go viral on a large scale.

Atwater-75x75How to Use Socionomics in Real Time

Peter Atwater, President of Financial Insyghts, a U.S. consulting firm

Using examples from his own socionomic applications � ranging from huge unexpected wins to failed applications � Mr. Atwater will discuss the valuable lessons he has learned, some the hard way, in his years as a social mood researcher and finance professional.

He will share some of his real-life experiences with socionomics, such as what happens when he challenges money managers to view what is happening outside the markets as equally important as, if not more important than, what is happening inside the markets. He will also discuss how some pioneering business leaders have adopted socionomics as an indispensable tool for strategic planning.

Matt-Lampert-75The Socio Edge: Making Socionomically Informed Decisions in an Era of Dynamic Change

Matt Lampert, Ph.D. candidate at the University of Cambridge, UK

Despite the availability of information in the Age of Big Data, we are consistently blindsided by game-changing events. Mr. Lampert’s thesis is that, in a world marked by constant change and fluctuation, being able to see around the corner before others gives you the opportunity to prepare early. Socionomic analysis can cut through the noise to identify the signals that matter most. It can also generate a strategic advantage — from forecasting entirely new industries to recognizing the potential for swift trend changes. He will explore how the socio edge has allowed analysts to anticipate and adjust for changes in the social landscape that catch most of the world off guard.


Book Your Seat: The 2014 Social Mood Conference
Registration is now openJoin these five exciting speakers at the 2014 Social Mood Conference, April 5 in Atlanta, GA.

Learn more and reserve your seat now >>

If you would like to receive the free socionomics content each week, sign up here.


 

 

 

 

 

New Gold-Drilling Technology: Shale-Drilling Redux?

By WallStreetDaily.com New Gold-Drilling Technology: Shale-Drilling Redux?

Before the implementation of hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling technologies, the domestic energy industry was in a state of steady decline.

Well, the same can be said right now of the gold mining industry, particularly in South Africa.

South Africa was once the premier producer of the precious metal, yet it now ranks sixth – and is still dropping.

But hope is on the way…

A new drilling technology is being developed that promises a brighter future for gold miners – not only in South Africa, but anywhere around the globe that performs deep level mining.

Reef-Boring Technology

AngloGold Ashanti (AU) is behind this new technology, which is called reef boring.

The company’s CEO, Srinivasan Venkatakrishnan, said that it’s “a game changer, or a paradigm shift.”

Indeed, the current processes for gold mining involve drilling holes many feet below the surface and using explosives.

Reef boring, on the other hand, involves using smaller and more agile machines.

These vastly reconfigured tunnel-boring machines are used to drill parallel access tunnels into gold reef deposits quickly.

Then, between the tunnels, the company drills smaller interconnecting holes. It then fills these holes with a solution that turns rock-hard within three weeks. This keeps the entire mining area stable.

In the end, this allows the company to remove only gold-bearing ore – and then replace it with a rock-hard solution that stabilizes the mine.

This results in shorter drilling times and the ability to operate 24 hours a day.

In other words, much lower overhead.

To show how transformative this new reef-boring technology is, consider the following:

  • Drilling that used to take 30 days is now taking a mere three and a half days! And the company is aiming to lower that to just two.
  • The company also expects that the new technique could extend the life of mines to 30 years – or double the current age.

To date, AngloGold has been employing reef boring only in no-go areas of mines that are deemed too dangerous for human miners to go.

But the experiment is going well so far.

Reef-Boring Promise

On February 19, AngloGold reported that it had produced 40 kilograms of gold from ore at one site – with an average grade of 90 grams of gold per ton mined. This includes enormously valuable gold grades of more than 200 grams per ton.

That’s very good news, indeed, for South Africa, which faces the potential for massive mine shutdowns in the years ahead – due to a decline in grade ores and other factors.

In effect, gold that was previously inaccessible to AngloGold can now be mined using this new reef-boring technology.

The experiment was such a success that AngloGold Ashanti is now rolling it out at five other sites.

The latest machines are being made to work even in the thinnest of reefs – and in the narrow reef platinum mines of South Africa.

In a boost for South Africa, the company doesn’t plan to keep this technology proprietary. It’s willing to share the know-how with other mining firms.

If so, the gold mining industry in South Africa – along with other regions around the globe – may enjoy a new renaissance in the years ahead. And we’ll be tracking any potential opportunities to profit as the trend progresses.

And “the chase” continues,

Tim Maverick

The post New Gold-Drilling Technology: Shale-Drilling Redux? appeared first on Wall Street Daily.

Article By WallStreetDaily.com

Original Article: New Gold-Drilling Technology: Shale-Drilling Redux?

Gold And Silver Down But Not For Long

Capital Trust Markets – For twelve hours on Sunday, March 17, the Crimean parliament asked its residents to vote on the future of the region. Voters had two options. The first, to join Russia, the second, to remain a part of Ukraine but with increased autonomy. The former proved to attract the overwhelming majority, and on Monday morning, Russia named the Crimean peninsula as annexed to its Federation.

As the markets open on Monday, what impact might this decision have? The answer lies in sentiment. Europe, the U.S. and Asia have declared the referendum illegal, and in turn, vowed to impose economic sanctions on Russia. The geopolitical, and potentially military, tension such sanctions could create will likely turn traders and investors towards a risk-off sentiment, as they reduce their exposure to any assets that are vulnerable to devaluation.

Traditionally, the benefactor assets in such situations are the precious metals, gold and silver. Heading into the Monday morning session however, the markets seem to be overlooking the unrest; at least for now.

The Asian session saw gold and silver gain strength, as expected, but at Monday U.S. open, the precious metals start the day on a somewhat weaker footing. Gold futures (April 14 delivery) are down 0.04%, currently trading at 1,378.50. Silver futures (May 14 delivery) are down 0.58%, with the contracts currently trading at 21.28, just shy of key February resistance.

These small declines may simply be a correction of the action seen in the gold and silver markets towards the end of last week, as both assets gained strength heading into the weekend. Whatever the reason, expect a resurgence in the precious metals as the week plays out. The stock and currency markets look resilient at present, but any hint at escalation will likely have a domino effect on sentiment. The more risk averse operators are likely already reallocating capital, but there is undoubtedly a fringe group that are holding their exposure with one eye on the events as they unfold. Any suggestion of military mobilization will spur this fringe into action, which will likely drive a sell-off in the stock markets and a shift toward gold and silver. The more risk-prone investors will not react to events in Ukraine, but purely to market action as stocks decline and the precious metals appreciate.

Look for gold to test 1,420.00 resistance before the middle of the week, and silver to hit 22.00 within the same timeframe.

 

About the author

Written by Samuel Rae – Currency Strategist at Capital Trust Markets

 

 

 

 

 

Australia Looks To The RBA As The Economy Of China Wanes

Capital Trust Markets  – On Monday evening, the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) will release its latest monetary policy meeting minutes. The release comes after a spate of data that suggests the economy of China is slowing, and as such, traders are especially eager to gain insight into RBA monetary policy.

Last weekend, the National Bureau of Statistics of China (NBSC) reported Chinese consumer price index (CPI) at 0.5%, missing expectations of 0.8%. Shortly after, the Peoples Bank of China (PBC) reported disappointing new loans at 645B, and as the week came to a close, the NBSC reported slower than expected industrial production growth at 8.6%.

The data hints that, contrary to many analysts’ forecasts, the economy of China is bucking its long-term trend and losing steam. Australia’s dependence on the Asian superpower puts it as first in line to feel the impact of a waning Chinese economy.

Australia is the world’s leading coal producer, one of the top six copper producers and its mines contain nearly 25% of global proven uranium resources. The vast majority of its resource exports goes to China; a trade flow that was instrumental in helping Australia avoid the most recent economic downturn. This dependence however, may yet prove toxic if the economy of China wanes.

If the disappointing data from China filters through to Australian releases, the RBA may choose to exercise control through its main policy tool: the nation’s interest rate. Australia’s interest rate is already at an all-time low of 2.5%, but if Chinese demand for its exports falls, it could have a negative effect on employment, consumer spending, and in turn, economic output. In response, the RBA may choose to cut interest rates, to stimulate borrowing and maintain growth.

Forex traders will look to Monday evening’s minutes to serve up a bias. Dovish minutes hint at a future rate cut, and will likely fuel a downside revaluation of the Australian dollar (AUD), whereas hawkish minutes, hinting at a future rate hike, will have the opposite effect. During Monday’s trading, the AUDUSD has recouped the majority of last week’s economy of China-driven losses, but look to the minutes release as a determinant of short-medium term direction.

The pair has recently broken through key resistance at 0.9050, and a hawkish release will reinforce this level as medium term support. In this scenario, and assuming a Monday close above the aforementioned level, look for an initial target at previous resistance of 0.9150. A dovish release will likely cause a break below 0.9050, which would offer up an initial downside target of 0.8950 and suggest a resumption of the longer-term downtrend.

All said, the economy of China is not the only determinant in the success of the Australian economy, but it plays a vital role in sustaining the nation’s growth. The more risk averse traders will undoubtedly be quick to redirect capital away from the AUD, despite its attractive interest rate, if Australian data starts to mirror that of its Asian partner.

Written by Samuel Rae – Currency Strategist at Capital Trust Markets

Capital Trust Markets is a fully regulated and compliant online Forex Brokerage, offering a flawless trading environment to traders of all types. The world class trading infrastructure – backed up by advanced trading tools and cutting edge trading software and technology – is combined with award winning customer support to provide a highly successful blend of customized trading solutions.

 

 

 

 

Vietnam cuts rate 50 bps to boost growth as inflation falls

By CentralBankNews.info
    Vietnam’s central bank cut its main interest rates, including the benchmark refinancing rate by 50 basis points to 6.50 percent, to help strengthen economic activity while inflation is slowing.
    Nguyen Thi Hong, head of the State Bank of Vietnam’s monetary policy department, told a press conference that from early 2014 the central bank had been actively implementing measures to control inflation, stabilize the economy and “support economic growth at a reasonable level to ensure the liquidity of credit institutions and the economy.”
    She also said that the world economy continues to be positive, with the U.S. economy forecast to strengthen and become more resilient, according to a statement by the central bank.
    Vietnam’s central bank cut its refinancing rate by 200 basis points in 2013, with the last cut in May last year, after slashing rates by 600 basis points in 2012.
    Vietnam’s inflation rate fell to 4.65 percent in February, the lowest rate November 2009, and down from 5.45 percent in January. The government has targeted 7 percent inflation this year but Hong said it could be below 7 percent this year compared with 2013’s 6.6 percent.

    In addition to cutting the refinancing rate, the State Bank cut the rediscount rate to 4.5 percent from 5.0 percent and the overnight leading rate to 7.5 percent. The maximum rate on deposits from 1 to 6 months was cut to 6.0 percent from 7.0 percent, and deposits of 6 months of more was cut to 6.5 percent from 7.5 percent.
    The State Bank added that foreign exchange reserves were rising and the currency market stable.
    Last month the State Bank’s governor said he was continuing to ask commercial banks to cut their rates to businesses by 1-2 percent after last year’s cut to deposit and benchmark rates. The government wants to boost credit by 12-14 percent this year following 2013’s rise of 12.5 percent.
    Vietnam’s Gross Domestic Product expanded by an annual 6.04 percent in the fourth quarter of 2013, up from 5.54 percent in the third quarter.
    The economy expanded by 5.4 percent in 2013 and the government has targeted 5.8 percent growth this year.

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