Euro Weakens on Draghi’s Comments

By HY Markets Forex Blog

European Central Bank (ECB) President Mario Draghi said on Thursday his forward guidance may help to drag the 18-bloc euro currency lower and reduce interest rates, which could help inflation return to the goal set by policymakers.

“Our forward guidance … creates a de facto loosening of policy stance, as real interest rates are set to fall over the projection horizon,” Draghi said in Vienna yesterday. “At the same time, the real interest-rate spread between the euro area and the rest of the world will probably fall, thus putting downward pressure on the exchange rate, everything else being equal.”

The comments made by the ECB President dragged the euro lower from its two-year high against the greenback. The euro edged 0.02% lower trading at $1.3864 at the time of writing; the currency reached $1.3967 earlier in the day, the highest since October 2011.

Draghi stated at the last ECB monetary policy press conference, that the  ”strengthening of the effective euro exchange rate…has had a significant impact on our low rate of inflation and, given current levels of inflation, is therefore becoming increasingly relevant in our assessment of price stability.”

“Given that the ECB’s staffs’ average forecast for inflation in 2016 is already low at 1.5%, it clearly signals that a further significant strengthening of the euro would likely trigger additional ECB easing by increasing the likelihood that inflation undershoots their target,” Lee Hardman, a currency analyst at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi wrote in a note on Friday.

Hardman added “The EUR/USD rate may be able to rise towards the 1.45-level before triggering further ECB easing which would weigh more heavily upon the euro. ECB President Draghi remains optimistic that the ECB’s forward guidance will over time place downward pressure upon the euro as the real interest rate spread between the euro area and the rest of the world will probably fall. However, in the near-term the ongoing shrinking of the ECB’s balance sheet continues to support a stronger euro making ECB monetary policy appear relatively tight.”

 

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Article provided by HY Markets Forex Blog

Gold Trades Higher Ahead Crimea Vote

By HY Markets Forex Blog

Gold prices traded higher on the last day of the trading week, climbing to its highest in six months as the tension in Ukraine escalates, while Crimea prepares to vote on March 16 on splitting from Ukraine and joining Russia.

The yellow metal for immediate delivery climbed 0.5% higher to $1,376.64 an ounce, the highest level in six-months. The bullion is trading towards its sixth-weekly high, the longest since August 2011.While silver gained 0.2% to $21.2241 an ounce.

Gold have gained  14% on demand for a haven as the tension in Ukraine continues to weigh on the market which have already been weaken by the US central bank’s cuts.

In China, growth in the world largest consumer slowed down, while data released earlier in the week showed that China’s retail sales and industrial output came in lower than expected.

Gold – Fed Meeting

The upcoming fed meeting is in focus as members of the Federal Reserve would gather for its next meeting scheduled for March 18-19. The Fed has announced a $10 billion reduction from its $85 billion monthly bond purchase at each of its past two meeting, currently leaving purchase at $65 billion.

Holdings at the world’s largest gold-backed exchange-traded fund, SPDR Gold Trust; came in at 813.3 metric tons on Thursday, the highest since December 20.

Gold – Crimea Referendum

As the crisis in Ukraine escalates, the country’s region Crimea will vote in a referendum on Sunday over splitting from Ukraine and joining Russia. The Western nations have warned that the ballot and annexation of Crimea is a violation of international law.

Ukraine’s Prime Minister spoke in front of the United Nations, requesting Russia for talks to put an end to the crisis between the two countries.

 

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Tom Varesh: If Canada Opens the Spigot on Drilling, These Oil Services Companies Could Climb

Source: Peter Byrne of The Energy Report (3/13/14)

http://www.theenergyreport.com/pub/na/tom-varesh-if-canada-opens-the-spigot-on-drilling-these-oil-services-companies-could-climb

One of Canada’s top-ranked industrial investment analysts, Tom Varesh of M Partners, tells The Energy Report where to find the best-positioned oil services companies in the oil fields of western Canada. With many pipeline and E&P projects approved and still more seeking approval, western Canada looks primed for an energy renaissance. At this point, it’s a case of “if you build it, they will come.” Find out about the companies doing the building, and get exposure before share prices start sprinting.
The Energy Report: Tom, are you positive about oil and gas?

Tom Varesh: Our focus at M Partners is on North America. We are specifically bullish on the oil and gas sector in western Canada. Many of its pipeline projects, oil sands projects and natural gas projects are now approved, and many other projects are in various stages of being green-lighted. We predict that 2014 is going to be a better year for the oil and gas sector than last year, and ’15, ’16, ’17 are set up to experience significant growth in this region because a wide range of projects are attracting a lot of capital investment.

TER: Are there impediments to ramping up this growth during the next two or three years?

TV: At a macro level, regulatory approvals have to be obtained for many of these projects to go ahead. At the micro level, the larger oil and gas companies have to decide on a timeline for pushing significant amounts of capex into the projects. The base price of the oil and gas commodities has to make sense to warrant large capex, but the discount that western Canadian producers get should shrink as a result of building out the pipelines and related infrastructural themes.

I cover infrastructure niche plays and construction dealership companies in the oilfield infrastructure segment in western Canada. Services are seeing a significant pick up in activity—it is basically all hands on deck for the booming economy in Alberta and other provinces in western Canada.

TER: Within this space, are there dominant firms that are making acquisitions and driving up the potential value of energy service juniors?

TV: The rollup theme is very prevalent. WesternOne Inc. (WEQ:TSX) and Enterprise Group Inc. (E:TSX.V) both have the currency to roll up private enterprises working in the service sectors in western Canada. Other acquisitive firms include Entrec Corp. (ENT:TSX.V) , McCoy Corp. (MCB:TSX),Petrowest Corp. (PRW:TSX) and Macro Enterprises Inc. (MCR:TSX.V), just to name a few. These are publically traded companies with access to the capital markets—with access to equity, debt or bank financing. And they are actively and steadily rolling up the smaller private companies.

TER: Why is there an influx of acquisition capital into this space?

TV: With more and more investors looking for alternative investment options that are not based in metals, capital is generally gravitating toward the oil and gas infrastructure sector. WesternOne and Enterprise Group have already benefited from recent successful capital raises and it’s full steam ahead for both of them.

These companies not only have the cash to make acquisitions, but they also have the ability to immediately invest in the operations of the acquired companies and grow their organic lines of business. Private companies are often starved for capital—and therein lies the opportunity. The acquisition strategy keeps picking up, and we expect to see double-digit organic growth from the acquiring firms during the next five years.

TER: Do you have a top pick?

TV: Enterprise Group is a great infrastructure play—it is very acquisitive. In 2012, it bought a heating business called Artic Therm. It also owns TC Backhoe, which does a lot of pipelining and cable laying for utility companies in Alberta. And it acquired Calgary Tunneling last summer. At the start of this year, Enterprise closed on Hart Oilfield Rentals. This group of service-related companies can cross-sell their services to their major oil field clients in western Canada.

TER: In terms of blending these acquisitions into the corporate structure, is Enterprise functioning as a holding company, or is it doing hands-on management with daily operations at its new acquisitions?

TV: I characterize Enterprise as a hands-on management entity. In the not-too-distant future, we will likely see a rebranding of this corporation and each of its businesses. The reason that Enterprise will rebrand is to demonstrate that it is very active in each of the business segments. Each of the managers or previous owners of those various businesses is still running operations under the Enterprise umbrella. The executive management team at Enterprise is making the capital allocation and the growth strategy decisions in concert with the managers running each business unit. It is a very collaborative effort intended to grow each business and to cross-sell the services.

TER: How has the Enterprise Group’s stock been performing over the past period?

TV: When we launched on Enterprise a year ago, the stock was at $0.35. It is now in the $1.10 range. That is great performance, and there is more to realize in the stock as it proves out the earnings potential of its recent acquisitions. Our current target price for Enterprise is $2.25—and it is our top pick!

TER: What other service juniors do you like here?

TV: WesternOne is an oil and gas infrastructure play with two distinct business lines. About 55% of its revenue is driven by its manufacturing business, Britco. Britco builds out modular work camps and offices for mining and oil and gas companies. One of its biggest repeat clients is Devon Energy Corp. (DVN:NYSE). And Britco is working on another contract for Devon in northwestern Canada. The other side of its business model caters to rentals and propane sales. It has a large heater rental business, which competes with Enterprise’s Artic Therm. But WesternOne provides the propane to run the heaters, unlike Artic Therm. It has a well-integrated business and it has been performing quite well since it did its initial public offering in 2006.

TER: WesternOne’s stock has fallen a bit over the last year. Why?

TV: WesternOne expanded into Australia at the start of 2013. It acquired a company similar to Britco that makes modular workforce camps. With the general downturn in mining, that business underperformed and dragged down the earnings. Management has taken steps to rationalize this business line, and it is on track to exit 2014 as a profitable entity. While the WesternOne stock went sideways during the last 12 months, we expect it to firm up as it becomes clear that the Australian business unit is turning around.

The neat thing about the WesternOne story is its high dividend, which currently yields 8%. This is a story where investors are paid to wait and the dividend has been stable since 2007. Indeed, the dividend has increased twice since the firm went public and it is now steady at $0.60 per year. The payout ratio is expected to be 60% this year—which is up from 41% last year (due to the losses in Australia). We fully expect the payout ratio to fall back into the low 40% range in 2014. Our target price for WesternOne is $9.35.

TER: What other firms do you favor in the energy services space?

TV: The two names we’ve touched on thus far are $100–$200 million ($100–$200M) market cap companies with high growth profiles. If an investor is looking for something in the large-cap space, we really like Finning International Inc. (FTT:TSX). Finning is strictly a dealership business model. It sells Caterpillar construction and mining equipment in western Canada, South America, the U.K. and Ireland.

TER: What are the fundamentals for success in the heavy equipment dealership business?

TV: Finning’s success is largely tied to what is going on at a macro level in the Canadian oil and gas sector. About 55–60% of its revenue is from western Canada, selling into the oil sands industry and the construction industry. Alberta and western Canada—the prairies—are going to lead Canada in terms of GDP growth. That dovetails nicely into the Finning story because growth is accompanied by infrastructure spending and buildouts. That means there are steady sales of construction and mining equipment in the oil sands and also in the conventional gas sector in Alberta.

In South America, Finning’s equipment is used to mine copper and gold. While metal prices have come off and that sector is facing a reduction in capital expenditures, we continue to like Finning because of its recurring revenue theme. During the last half-decade, Finning has sold so much equipment in Canada and South America that iron in the field has risen by nearly 40%. And that equipment generates recurring revenue for Finning’s parts and maintenance services, which generate high margins. Finning is on track to ramp up its product support revenue to 50% of its overall revenue. It ended 2013 with product support at 46% of revenue—which was up from the prior year’s 42%. Finning’s product support revenue will continue to grow so long as metal mines and oil sands keep producing. Finning is expected to generate significant free cash flow in 2014; I believe the company will increase its dividend this year. A solid investment, we say.

TER: Are the share prices of the three firms that we have talked about today tied to the volatility of the oil and coal and fossil fuel investment markets?

TV: These share values are tied indirectly to oil prices and, in the case of Finning, to copper and gold prices as well. To the extent that commodity prices remain strong, share price activity will remain strong.

TER: Thank you for your time. Tom.

TV: You’re welcome.

Tom Varesh was rated the #1 Ranked Industrials Analyst by Bloomberg in 2010 and 2011, and he is consistently ranked in the Top 3. He was the #1 Ranked Canadian Industrials analyst in 2010 by First Coverage Equity Research Analyst and has worked as an analyst for over 10 years at two different investment banks, Canaccord Capital (now called Canaccord Genuity) and M Partners. Varesh covers equipment dealership companies (infrastructure and agriculture), infrastructure services companies and equipment rental companies. He is often interviewed by and quoted in the National Post, The Globe & Mail, Bloomberg, BNN, CNBC and other media outlets. He was previously an investment advisor for four years at a Big Five Canadian Bank for retail, commercial and corporate clients.

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DISCLOSURE:

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

2) The following companies mentioned in the interview are sponsors of The Energy Report: Enterprise Group Inc. Streetwise Reports does not accept stock in exchange for its services or as sponsorship payment.

3) Tom Varesh: I or my family own shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. I personally am or my family is paid by the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. My company has a financial relationship with the following companies mentioned in this interview: Enterprise Group 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.

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GBPUSD: Reverses Recovery, Weakens

GBPUSD: With GBP taking back its intra day gains to close flat on Thursday, risk of further weakness remains. Support lies at the 1.6567 level where a break will aim at the 1.6500 level. Further down, support comes in at 1.6550 level where a break will aim at the 1.6450 level and then the 1.6400 level. Resistance comes in at the 1.6718 level with break targeting further gain towards the 1.6785 level. A violation will push the pair further higher towards the 1.6822 level. A turn above here will open the door for a run at the 1.6850 level and then the 1.6900 level. On the whole, GBP continues to retain its medium term upside but faces bear threats.

Article by www.fxtechstrategy.com

 

 

 

 

 

Wave Analysis 14.03.2014 (DJIA Index, Crude Oil)

Article By RoboForex.com

Analysis for March 14th, 2014

DJIA Index

It looks like Index formed diagonal triangle pattern inside wave (5) and right now price is being corrected. Most likely, instrument will continue forming bearish impulse inside wave (A) during the next several days.

As we can see at the H1 chart, yesterday Index finished the third wave and right now is being corrected inside the fourth one. It looks like instrument is going to continue forming flat pattern during Friday, but later it may start falling down inside the fifth wave.

Crude Oil

Oil is still falling down inside the third wave. Right now, market is consolidating, but later it is expected to start falling down. Possibly, instrument may reach new minimum during Friday.

As we can see at the H1 chart, Oil is about to complete the fourth wave inside wave [3]. I’ve got two sell orders; stop is already in the black. In the near term, instrument is expected to start moving downwards inside wave (5) of [3].

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 14.03.2014 (EUR/USD, USD/CHF)

Article By RoboForex.com

Analysis for March 14th, 2014

EUR USD, “Euro vs US Dollar”

Eurodollar rebounded from several upper fibo-levels and started new correction. First target for bears is at level of 50%: if they break it, market will continue falling down. During correction, I opened sell order.

As we can see at H1 chart, price rebounded from target levels right inside temporary fibo-zone. Possibly, pair may break yesterday’s minimum until the end of today’s trading session. Instrument may reach level of 50% on Monday.

USD CHF, “US Dollar vs Swiss Franc”

After rebounding from several lower fibo-levels, Franc started local correction. I’ve got one short-term buy order with stop placed at minimum. Target is at level of 50%.

At H1 chart we can see, that bears reached their predicted targets right inside temporary fibo-zone. Most likely, pair will complete current local correction in the nearest future and bulls will start moving towards level of 50%. If later price breaks it, market will continue growing up.

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.

 

 

 

 

 

 

China’s Premier Cuts Off His Own Head

By WallStreetDaily.com China's Premier Cuts Off His Own Head

Words mean little on Fridays in the Wall Street Daily Nation.

Instead, we let pretty pictures do most of the talking for us. Each week, I select a handful of graphics to put important economic and investing news into perspective for you.

So I’ll try to shut up now…

Confirmed: China is Crumbling

That didn’t take long. Hours after I issued a warning about slowing economic growth in China, officials and new data validated it.

Speaking at a news conference on the final day of China’s yearly parliament, Premier Li Keqiang warned that the economy faces “severe challenges” in 2014.

Shortly after, three economic data releases provided proof of a slowdown in the world’s third-largest economy.

Fixed-asset investment, industrial production and retail sales figures all dropped in February compared to January.

 

Coincidental timing? I think not. Sounds more like an attempt to soften the blow ahead of the weak data. Especially since analysts expected all three economic measures to be in line with – or slightly above – January’s levels.

Either way, the implication is clear: “A storm is coming,” as Gao Yuan, an analyst at Haitong Securities in Shanghai, put it.

Indeed! Get out before it’s too late.

Speaking of warnings…

Retail Thaw?

Earlier in the week, I told you to keep an eye out for Thursday’s retail sales report.

The blame-it-all-on-the-weather crowd needed sales to rebound to validate their existence. Color me surprised, because, well… they got it.

Headline sales increased 0.3% in February versus expectations of 0.2%.

However, the previous two months’ figures were revised downward significantly. So consumer consumption remains suppressed.

As we know, everyday Americans aren’t the only ones pinching pennies. So are businesses. Capital expenditure levels remain depressed, as well.

At some point, though, companies need to replace aging equipment, which promises to provide a bullish economic force. And we may be at that point now.

 

As Gluskin Sheff’s David Rosenberg reveals, when manufacturing capacity breaches 77%, which it just did, a “moderate capex growth cycle” follows.

Based on his estimates, it could be enough to boost GDP growth by 60 basis points.

Although that might not sound like a lot, it would represent a 23% improvement to current forecasts for U.S. GDP growth in 2014.

Clearly, this is a trend worth following. Closely.

A capital expenditure boom could lead to a profit boost for the companies on the receiving end of the spending. Needless to say, investors in those companies stand to benefit, too.

Rest assured, we’ll be hunting down specific opportunities as this situation unfolds.

Choose Wisely

March madness is about to get underway.

Here are some fun stats to keep in mind as you try to construct the perfect NCAA Tournament bracket for your office pool.

Newsflash: It ain’t going to happen. Unless you believe you’re the lucky 1 in 9,223,372,036,854,775,808 people.


Good luck trying, though.

That’s it for this week. Before you go, though, let us know what you think of this weekly column – or any of our recent work at Wall Street Daily – by going here.

Ahead of the tape,

Louis Basenese

The post China’s Premier Cuts Off His Own Head appeared first on Wall Street Daily.

Article By WallStreetDaily.com

Original Article: China’s Premier Cuts Off His Own Head

EUR/USD Price Action For March 14

Article by Investazor.com

The Euro dropped suddenly yesterday, mainly because the risk aversion triggered by the problems in Ukraine. A second reason would be the fact that Draghi suggested the euro is getting too strong and will hurt the economic recovery of the Euro Area. These combined with some good economic indicators from the US triggered a big drop for the EURUSD. My expectations are of a throwback to 1.3900 before hitting new lows around 1.3800, where it will also find the main trend’s line.

The post EUR/USD Price Action For March 14 appeared first on investazor.com.

Australian Stocks Are Down Today…But We’re Buying

By MoneyMorning.com.au

Two more bits of evidence confirm our stock market view.

Our view is that Australian stocks will more than triple over the next five years.

That may seem an odd comment, seeing as this morning the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 1.4%. The index is now down 2.4% for the year.

The NASDAQ index fell 1.5% this morning. But for the year-to-date it’s actually up 2.6%.

It goes to show that technology has been a smart place to put your money so far this year. And despite the good run for tech stocks, there could be more good news to come, as this data shows…

So, what were the two bits of data that caught our eye?

Well, remember how the mainstream portrays the current market. The general gist is that markets are in a credit-fuelled bubble, and that China is about to crash.

Now, we won’t argue with the credit-fuelled part of the argument. Central banks have poured trillions of dollars into the financial system. Of course this will drive up stock prices.

At the same time, central banks have held interest rates at record lows. This has forced investors to abandon safer cash-based assets and opt for riskier share investments instead.

However, the point we make is that just because share prices in the US have gone up, don’t assume everyone has taken part in these gains, and don’t assume they’ve gone up everywhere. Also don’t assume that they can’t keep going up if (as we expect) interest rates stay at records lows for decades to come.

‘Mums and dads’ miss out on big stock market gains

It’s an old but true story. Most ‘mum and dad’ investors don’t buy into a stock bull market until the rally is well and truly underway.

That’s because most investors, especially the casual investors, only have a passing interest in the stock market and investing.

They don’t spend 20 minutes a day reading Money Morning. And they most certainly don’t read any of our comprehensive monthly research that delves into the world of small-cap, resource, and technology investing.

Their only source of information on the economy and markets is what they watch on Channel 7 news or what they pick up in the Herald Sun or Sydney Morning Herald.

In each of those they’ll only get what’s already happened. And most likely they’ll only read about lost jobs at Qantas, Ford, Holden, and Toyota.

So you can’t blame them when they say they wouldn’t touch stocks with a barge pole.

What they won’t read or even bother to consider, is how the economy could shape up over the next five years. They’ll just sit on the sidelines and wait for the newspaper headlines to become positive.

That explains this report in Bloomberg:

More than three-quarters of Americans say the five-year bull market in U.S. stocks has had little or no effect on their financial well-being, according to a Bloomberg National Poll.

Seventy-seven percent of respondents dismissed the 176 percent rise in the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index (SPX) since its March 9, 2009 financial crisis low, according to the poll, taken March 7-10. Barely one in five – 21 percent – said the market’s gains have made them “feel more financially” secure.

It beggars belief. The US market has almost tripled in five years and yet 77% of Americans haven’t taken part in the rally.

The report sums up the feeling of many investors when it notes:

“I don’t think there’s anything real behind it,” said David Skelly, 47, a policeman in Kankakee, Illinois. “It’s just an artificial boom.”

David Skelly sounds like how we felt about three years ago. It was an artificial boom, but we had a choice. We could either sit on the sidelines and moan about the terrible consequences of money printing, or we could try to beat the central bankers at their own game and go along for the ride…and the stock market gains.

As you can tell, we opted for the latter. And we’re glad we did.

The crash that’s already happened

The Aussie market may not have put in the same gains as the US market over the past three years, but putting cash in stocks has been much better than the alternative.

That’s especially so if you managed to catch the ‘dividend rally’ in 2012 and 2013, and if you caught the mini tech boom from mid last year.

And if Revolutionary Tech Investor analyst Sam Volkering is right, after the recent pullback in tech stocks, it’s a great time to back some great stories at a discount to where they were trading just a few weeks ago.

But that’s not the only reason to like this market today. Another report from Bloomberg highlights the crazy talk about a potential China market crash. As we’ve repeatedly pointed out, China’s market has already crashed:

The world’s most-profitable banks have never been so unloved by stock investors.
China’s four-biggest lenders, which reported $126 billion of earnings in the 12 months through September, sank to the lowest valuations on record in Hong Kong trading yesterday. The MSCI China Financials Index dropped to an almost decade low versus the global industry benchmark while the market value of Industrial & Commercial Bank of China Ltd., the nation’s largest lender, fell below net assets for the first time on March 12.

You can see how three of China’s biggest banks have fared in the chart below:


Source: Google Finance
Click to enlarge

The Industrial & Commercial Bank of China Ltd [SHA:601398] has fallen 34.6% since late 2010. That doesn’t mean it can’t fall further, because it could. But we still say that talk of a crash is somewhat late. We’ll repeat, China’s market is down more than 40% from the 2009 rebound high.

And let’s put the bank profit numbers in perspective. China’s four biggest banks locked in profits of US$126 billion for the 12 months to September 2013. By contrast, the big four Aussie banks ‘only’ made profits of US$24.7 billion (AU$27.4 billion).

Down and buying stocks

We’re going out on a limb here by saying that talk of a China crash from today’s level is overstated.

The mainstream can go on as much as it likes about China crashing and the spat between Russia and Ukraine. We’ll just say that from experience, investing through the rear view mirror rarely leads to investment rewards.

But if you have the foresight to look ahead, sure you’ll go through plenty of bumps and rallies along the way, but in both the short and long term you’ll find that it’s a much more effective way to invest.

Aussie stocks are down today…but we’re buying. The stock rally may have started last year, but it’s far from over.

Cheers,
Kris+

From the Port Phillip Publishing Library

Special Report: 574 Years in the Making


By MoneyMorning.com.au

Profit from China’s War on Pollution

By MoneyMorning.com.au

China’s rapid growth has dragged hundreds of millions of people out of poverty. But it’s also had one very nasty side effect – a massive increase in pollution.

Until recently, most Chinese were happy to accept more pollution in return for faster growth. In any case, the political system left them with little choice.

But over the past few years there have been increasing protests about conditions. And with growth now slowing, people will have more time to get angry about the downsides of the country’s economic transformation.

A popular revolt is the last thing the communist leadership wants. So last week, premier Li Keqiang declared a ‘war on pollution’.

This will have a major impact on several industries. So how can you profit?

A pack-a-day cigarette habit – even for non-smokers

China’s most visible problem is its poor air quality. The problem is that China gets over two-thirds of its energy from coal.

Coal plants emit a lot of sulphur and soot. When this combines with vehicle exhaust and pollution from factories, it produces smog. According to official statistics, all but three cities in the whole of China breach international air quality standards.

Nowhere is this problem more obvious than in Beijing, China’s capital, which is regularly covered in smog for days at a time. During the last spell, which blanketed even the tallest buildings, flights had to be cancelled and factories shut. Similar problems have also been seen in Shanghai, which recently even took the unprecedented step of closing schools.

Things are so bad that some Chinese people wear protective masks, ranging from simple paper filters to industrial grade respirators, as they go about their day-to-day lives. And you can hardly blame them. The World Health Organisation reckons that in 2010, poor air quality contributed to the early deaths of 1.2 million Chinese citizens. And a study by Professor Michael Greenstone of MIT suggests that the effects of living with all that pollution are similar to smoking a packet of cigarettes a day.

The air pollution is bad in China, but the water pollution is worse

China’s air is obviously bad, and a very visible sign of pollution. But experts think its water may be even worse. Thanks to lax or non-existent controls, firms discharge all sorts of waste into rivers without treating it first.

As a result, over half of China’s rivers are classed as ‘poor’ or ‘very poor’. A fifth are considered toxic. Even ministers call it ‘grim’.

As with the polluted air, this is having a serious impact on the cities, towns and villages who depend on the water for drinking and washing. One of the most notorious cases is the river Huai. This river is so polluted that villagers living next to its tributaries can’t open their windows because of the smell. They can’t even use the water to irrigate their crops – it poisons them.

The Huai, and other rivers just as bad, has also been held responsible for a string of ‘cancer villages’, where rates of the disease are far above the norm. Water pollution has also been linked with birth defects and mutations.

Alongside air pollution, it is responsible for the third of Chinese children with high levels of lead in their blood – which has been linked with learning problems and criminal behaviour.

The other problem is that China already has too little water to go around. The fact that a large part of its supply is unusable has made this problem far worse. In 200 cities, water shortages are a critical problem.

Fixing China’s pollution problem – and how to profit

So what will the ‘war on pollution’ involve?

China admits that the problem may take over a decade to solve. But it has already started to tackle the problem, with a major program announced last year.

Firstly, there will be tougher standards and bigger penalties for polluters who break them. Secondly, there will be more spending on anti-pollution infrastructure, such as ‘scrubbers’ for power plants.

It seems likely that China will follow through on this, too. Apart from worries over popular uprisings, even the most corrupt government official can’t relish the idea of waking up in a penthouse swathed in smog, or of sending their child out to school with a gas mask in their school bag.

But there’s one quite obvious play that we’ve covered a few times recently – and you don’t have to invest in Chinese stocks to benefit from it. The government plans to spend a lot more on nuclear power to reduce reliance on coal. That’s set to have a knock-on effect on uranium prices (which are still at a pretty low ebb). Uranium is also set to benefit from increased Indian interest, and Japan restarting its nuclear power plants. One way to profit is through uranium miners which have large reserves.

Matthew Partridge,
Contributing Editor, Money Morning

Ed note: The above article was originally published in MoneyWeek. For an Australian perspective on how to profit from China’s ‘war on pollution’, consider a small Australian firm that is selling a direct solution to China and other Southeast-Asian markets. Tim Dohrmann analysed and recommended the stock recently for Australian Small-Cap Investigator readers. You can find out more here.


By MoneyMorning.com.au