How to Vet Graphite Investments: Stephen Riddle

Source: Brian Sylvester of The Mining Report  (2/18/14)

http://www.theaureport.com/pub/na/how-to-vet-graphite-investments-stephen-riddle

Stephen Riddle, CEO of Asbury Graphite Mills Inc., has been in the business long enough to have seen companies come and go, sometimes more than once. He brings a realist’s perspective to this Mining Report interview, and explains the questions he asks himself, as an investor, at each stage of mine development. He also comments on the supply-and-demand picture, and names the characteristics of his ideal graphite mine.

The Mining Report: Since 2005, prices for natural flake graphite spiked several times, but spikes have been less common since 2012. How long before we see another price spike or a sustained price run?

Stephen Riddle: That won’t happen until we see a strong increase in demand, or until something major happens in China, our largest supply base. Demand has declined over the last year or two due to the downturn in the steel industry, which means less use of graphite in the refractory industry.

We also have to watch what happens with new supply outside of China. The world would love to have additional supply outside of China, but if the graphite industry adds capacity too fast and demand does not keep pace—well, we know what happens when supply is greater than demand.

TMR: Dozens of new graphite equities are trading on exchanges around the world, but not one has brought a new mine into production. What should the absence of new mines tell investors about the graphite space?

SR: First, I would emphasize that just because graphite mining has a low capital expense (capex) compared to other minerals, investors shouldn’t assume that graphite mining is an easy industry in which to make a return on investment.

Second, public reports issued by the industry rely on much higher average selling prices per metric ton than I would consider realistic market prices. New graphite mines will most likely have to sell at below-market prices to entice end-users to change suppliers. In addition, real world demand is not what most people report; it’s typically less. Part of that is optimism, and another part is because most deals are kept private in this very small industry.

Third, junior mining companies assume it will be easy to sell out their full graphite output once it is mined and produced. Graphite is not like any other mineral. You have to sell all the qualities and all the particle sizes that you produce at the mine. This becomes extremely difficult.

For example, TIMCAL Stratmin Graphite in Canada closed last year because it couldn’t sell portions of its output. Why keep producing more graphite if you can’t sell all of your output? People think that graphite is easy to sell. It’s not. It takes graphite miners years to develop a customer base. Thus, companies need cash flow to cover any losses during that period.

TMR: How does Asbury Mills obtain its graphite?

SR: We buy some on an annual basis and some on a spot basis. We negotiate privately with graphite-producing mines all over the world.

TMR: Why do you negotiate with mines all over the world rather than a few located nearby—for example, in Canada?

SR: In most cases, it’s price. Like most industrial metals, graphite is a commodity and pricing talks.

TMR: So if you can get cheaper graphite of roughly the same quality from Brazil instead of Québec, that’s where you buy?

SR: Correct.

TMR: Stephen, what is your ideal, early-stage junior graphite project, in terms of geology, grade, infrastructure, agreements and such?

SR: My ideal project is a graphite mine that would produce at a 94–96% purity level. It would have as much medium (plus-80 mesh) and large flake (plus-50 mesh) as possible. The lower percentage of fine flake (minus-80 mesh), the better, since it’s the most abundant material in the market and thus has the lowest selling price. The mine would have capacity of about 15,000 tons, and its total costs would be below $400/ton.

TMR: What about infrastructure?

SR: Nearby infrastructure affects cost. You need to consider the freight-on-board cost and add on the freight costs to deliver globally. Only then can you compare your costs to the existing market price and determine how competitive you can be.

TMR: What accounts in the price difference, say between graphite from Brazil and Québec?

SR: Mining costs are the first factor. That goes to the type of ore being mined, the percentage of graphite in the ore and the percentage of overburden. All that factors into the average cost to mine a ton of graphite ore.

TMR: But there are high-grade mines in Québec.

SR: There are high-grade mines that have a high percentage of graphite; that’s a good starting point. However, if the costs to move the overburden and get the ore to the flotation plant are higher than those of a company with a lower-percentage ore, that can cancel out the cost benefit of a high-grade resource.

The second factor is the footprint of the graphite ore after the flotation is done. In other words, what percentage of the graphite ore is in the plus-50 mesh, minus-50-by-80 mesh and minus-80 mesh sizes? What purity level can be obtained through normal flotation, without chemical treatments that add cost? That will help determine the average selling price.

Take Northern Graphite Corporation (NGC:TSX.V; NGPHF:OTCQX), for example. Because it has a very high percentage of coarse, large and medium flake, its average selling price will be higher than that ofFocus Graphite Inc. (FMS:TSX.V) or Mason Graphite Inc. (LLG:TSX.V; MGPHF:OTCQX). Both companies have much lower percentages of large and medium flake and a much higher percentage of fine flake. Smaller flake simply has less value.

This is what distinguishes the graphite industry. If you mine nickel at 80% purity, you sell it at X price for 80% purity. If your purity is only 75%, it sells at X minus some small percentage. The graphite industry depends on both the size and purity level of the flakes.

There is another scenario in the industry. Hypothetically, if I produce 40,000 ton/year (40 Ktpa) of 98-carbon graphite, I would need to assess what the demand is for 98-carbon graphite. I might determine that global demand is 20 Ktpa. In that case, I would have to get 100% of the market to sell 50% of my output. I would then have to sell the rest at 96-carbon prices, to sell the other 50% of my output. The net result is, it will lower my average selling price to sell all the volume because there is not a big enough market for 98-carbon graphite.

TMR: In five years, will there be enough room for Focus, Mason and others to share the graphite space?

 

SR: It will depend on how many lithium-ion batteries all of us will be using. That, and other energy storage applications, is where increased demand will come from.

 

TMR: Is it realistic for junior companies to cultivate a new set of end markets now?

 

SR: I don’t think it’s realistic, no. To justify its existence, a junior mining company has to look at the traditional markets. It takes too long to cultivate new markets and you can’t justify the investment.

 

TMR: Graphene is one of the buzzwords in this space. Is producing graphene from natural graphite a theory or a legitimate business model?

 

SR: I wouldn’t justify a graphite mine based on the graphene market. The graphene market will take an extremely long time to develop products for everyday use. What’s more, a little graphite goes a long way in making graphene.

 

TMR: People argue that the graphene market may be small, but the prices are very high.

 

SR: There are two kinds of graphene. One is made from chemical vapor deposition, in which you make a graphene coating on top of another substrate, then remove the substrate, leaving only the graphene. Most of the graphene being used today is made that way. That is the graphene the electronic industry wants, because it’s ultra-high purity and can be easily controlled.

 

The lower-cost way to make graphene uses natural graphite as the precursor. That market will take longer to develop, but it will be a bigger market because that kind of graphene can be used in the more practical, higher-volume products that we use every day.

 

TMR: Do you have any particular concerns about the graphite market?

 

SR: My only concern is that most of the spherical graphite anode material used in lithium-ion batteries is made in China.

 

If I open a mine in Canada and I want to supply graphite to that market, most likely I will have to sell my graphite to the Chinese graphite anode producers. Today, China has a 20% export duty, thus current market prices include this 20% duty, so I would have to sell 20% below market prices just to compete on price, let alone any freight equalization.

 

Most companies making lithium-ion battery anode material are using the lowest cost graphite, that being the minus-80 mesh in a typical carbon of 94–96%.

 

TMR: What is the approximate global demand for graphite in lithium-ion batteries?

 

SR: Our market analysis shows that about 50% is synthetic graphite and 50% is natural graphite. Of the finished anode material after coating, we believe the market is around 80K metric tons.

 

TMR: What do you expect that to grow by annually?

 

SR: That’s a good question. Analysts projected a fast growth rate based on expectations for the pure electric vehicle. That market hasn’t grown much. What has grown is the hybrids, which use fewer batteries. I see the hybrid market growing; the electrical vehicle market less so.

 

TMR: Could graphite demand for lithium-ion batteries double in five years?

 

SR: It could. The question then becomes, which form of graphite—synthetic or natural—will be preferred?

 

The real, much bigger long-term question in the automotive market—the biggest consumer of graphite anode—is what does the future hold for anode material? Batteries take too long to recharge and only allow you to drive a certain distance before they need to be recharged. The battery industry has to come up with a better battery that can last longer and recharge in 10 minutes or so. Will those batteries be made with a graphite anode or some other form of anode material?

 

TMR: Recently, end-users have been adding graphene to polymers used in 3-D printing. Credit Suisse forecasts revenues from the global 3-D printing market will reach $12 billion ($12B) by 2020, up from a mere $2B in 2012. Can investors hang their hat on that?

 

SR: That is a potential market, but I wouldn’t open a new graphite mine based on it. Like the graphene market, it will take a long time to develop.

 

TMR: Focus Graphite recently signed an offtake agreement with a Chinese company for up to 40 Ktpa of graphite concentrate. Why haven’t more companies reached similar deals?

 

SR: First I’d like to congratulate the management of Focus for obtaining an offtake agreement. It’s the first in the industry to do so.

 

Most junior mining companies are not signing offtake agreements because major buyers want to purchase at market prices or, in most cases, slightly below market prices. The risk for graphite producers is whether the buyer is willing to guarantee a minimum price if the market price constantly changes.

 

In other words, nobody thinks really long term. No company wants to pay a premium for graphite if it thinks prices will drop in the long term.

 

TMR: Is that because end-users have seen more downs than ups in graphite, and rely on the spot market?

 

SR: Those of us in the industry have an idea of what we believe are the fair-market costs of the suppliers and what would be a minimum fair market price.

 

TMR: What do you think of the offtake deal Focus Graphite signed?

 

SR: My questions—and these are questions investors should ask—are: Is there a minimum price in the agreement? Is it a take-or-pay agreement? How, or can, the buyer get out of the agreement? Does the agreement cover all grades, not just those the buyer prefers?

 

TMR: Is 40K tons a lot?

 

SR: For the next two years, the market outside of China doesn’t need additional capacity in excess of 40K tons. If this is the only mine that gets underway, that amount should fit in well.

 

TMR: Asbury Mills has a long history in the carbon and graphite business. Have you ever seen hedging in the graphite space?

 

SR: Not too much. Asbury’s probably one of the few to hedge, because we’re not afraid to invest in inventory. If the price were really low, we could buy excess inventory.

 

TMR: How many tons a year does Asbury buy?

 

SR: Our usage varies depending on how much we want to participate in the commodity market.

 

We are involved in two markets for natural flake. One is the graphite trader market, where we drop-ship graphite directly from the mine to end-users around the world.

 

In the drop-ship business, in which our buys can change from year to year depending on the margins we’re willing to live with, we might buy 25–45 Ktpa.

 

In the other part of the market, we buy the natural flake grades and process the material before selling it to the end-user.

 

TMR: Are you familiar with other companies operating in Québec?

 

SR: Yes. Let me start by saying that we, and the graphite industry in general, want to thank the junior mining industry. Thanks to their work in funding, finding and quantifying graphite reserves around the world, they’ve found enough graphite to satisfy current and future demand for the next 200 years. That’s not just in Québec; there are more than 350 different graphite deposits throughout the world, and that does not include undeveloped deposits in China.

 

That doesn’t mean that all of them are economical, at least at today’s prices. But it tells you that the surviving graphite operations will have to be low-cost deposits that offer high-quality product and give the investor a fair return.

 

TMR: Another Québec player, Saint Jean Carbon Inc. (SJL:TSX.V), recently acquired Minmet Carbons. Is vertical integration the most effective way to build a profitable graphite company?

 

SR: The best way to build a graphite company is like raising a child. You start out teaching the child how to crawl. You’ve got to start out small and develop your customer base, keeping your capex and operating margins as low as possible, so you can have a margin.

 

TMR: But buying a company that already has a retail base would seem to be a reasonable approach.

 

SR: It depends on what the expertise of the retail base is. The expertise of Minmet’s retail base is selling carbon material, not natural flake graphite, to the steel industry. Could that help Saint Jean Carbon sell graphite to the markets that consume graphite, (i.e., refractory markets or other lubricant markets)? Yes, but that is not the expertise of the company Saint Jean bought.

 

TMR: How does Saint Jean compare with other players?

 

SR: It’s too early to tell. According to some of the company’s press releases, it has some veins in which the percentage of graphite is quite high. Finding a way to separate the ash from the graphite at a reasonable cost would speed Saint Jean’s way to market. The next question is: How big are the veins that contain the large percentage of graphite and is there enough volume available to justify an investment?

 

TMR: Would Minmet Carbons be a competitor of yours?

 

SR: Yes and no. Because we’re fully involved in all forms of carbon, Minmet is a competitor in some materials. At other times, it has been a supplier to us. We are more in the business of processing carbon, while Minmet trades and brokers carbon.

 

TMR: What do you know about Saint Jean’s early-stage project in Sri Lanka?

 

SR: Two or three companies are trying to reopen old mines in Sri Lanka. The country’s graphite production peaked in the ’40s and early ’50s. After that, demand dropped and the mines closed. The questions today are, can the mines be reactivated cost effectively, and can they compete with flake graphite market prices?

 

The Sri Lankan veins are very small but incredibly pure, between 85–99%. The graphite doesn’t need any further processing once it’s been separated from the rock walls. If the Sri Lankan graphite can be competitive with flake graphites out of China, it’s a justifiable business.

 

Currently, Sri Lankan graphite gets a premium, but only in very small niche businesses that have not been growing. I don’t see that changing any time soon.

 

TMR: In your last Mining Report interview in 2012, you mentioned Energizer Resources Inc. (EGZ:TSX.V; ENZR:OTCQX) and Northern Graphite. What’s happened with those companies since then?

 

SR: Northern Graphite has been reducing both its capex, which is around $100M, and its average selling price. One way to reduce your average selling price is to increase capacity, but then you have to sell the additional product.

 

Energizer is determining its expected footprint. By footprint, I mean the typical particle size breakdown of the coarse, medium and fine flake, and the purity level for each. When that is determined, the company can calculate realistic selling prices based on expected volumes.

 

TMR: Sherritt International Corp. (S:TSX), a nickel company, just went into commercial production at the Ambatovy Nickel mine in Madagascar. Does that enhance the chance of Energizer’s Molo deposit being developed?

 

SR: Yes. Sherritt’s experience is indicative of how difficult it is to operate in Madagascar. It cost Sherritt a lot more to get that nickel mine up and operating than was budgeted for.

 

The good news is that the government of Madagascar has become more mining-friendly, in a bid to develop its minerals, job market and value-added products. Still, it’s not an easy place to operate in, nor as low cost as people think.

 

TMR: Energizer just raised $7.5M, much of it for a feasibility study. What will investors want to see from that study?

 

SR: I’d want to see what the company thinks its footprint will be and based on that, its realistic cost and volume forecasts. Finally, what would be a realistic selling price to move that volume? I want to see whether the net difference between cost and selling prices would justify the kind of investment needed.

 

TMR: Are there three juniors that you consider solid investments in the graphite space?

 

SR: The better way to look at it is that Asbury, if we wanted to, could fund at least two mines. We haven’t found the right ones yet, but we’re looking.

 

TMR: You would become an offtake partner with the right company?

 

SR: Yes. We’ve probably looked at 15 or more. We could also be an investor, if the economics work.

 

TMR: What are your criteria for becoming an offtake partner?

 

SR: I want a company that can sustain the ups and downs of market prices for the long haul.

 

TMR: What do you think when you see an asset that has changed hands two or three times? When a new company promotes an old deposit that didn’t work?

 

SR: That’s the nature of the junior mining industry, especially public junior mining companies. First, the funding dries up. The company goes dormant. Then, somebody else is able to raise funding, reactivates the project and changes the name.

 

I look at companies that can survive long term. That means they have the right footprint, at the right cost structure, under the right amount of volume and the right management to make it happen.

 

TMR: Has enough changed for these companies to make money?

 

SR: In most cases, not enough has changed.

 

The change has to happen in China, where most of our supply comes from. Costs there are slowly increasing. The Chinese now have to spend more money and worry more about the environment. But costs haven’t gone up to the point where it really opens the door for a significant number of juniors to enter the market quickly.

 

TMR: Do you have any parting thoughts?

 

SR: I’m concerned that as an industry, we don’t add too much capacity outside of China too fast. We don’t want to kill each other off. We want to work together and make the graphite industry survive long term. We need to diversify supply, but we need to do it economically.

 

TMR: Stephen, thanks for your time and your insights.

 

Asbury Graphite Mills Inc. CEO Stephen Riddle, widely regarded as an expert in the graphite and carbon industry, is the fourth-generation leader of the privately owned company. Founded in New Jersey in 1895, Asbury Graphite is a processor and supplier of all types of granular and powder natural and synthetic graphite, petroleum and metallurgical cokes, anthracite coal, carbon black, carbon fibers and other inert materials. Joining the company as territory sales manager in June 1979, Riddle progressed to assistant sales manager (1984), sales and export marketing manager (1986), president (1995) and, in January 2011, to CEO. Riddle, who attended Lafayette College and Deerfield Academy, is a member of the Electrochemical Society, ASM International, the Casting Industry Supplier Association, American Foundry Society and American Powder Metal Institute.

 

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DISCLOSURE:
1) Brian Sylvester conducted this interview for The Mining Report and provides services to The Mining 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 Mining Report: Northern Graphite Corporation, Focus Graphite Inc., Mason Graphite Inc., Saint Jean Carbon Inc. and Energizer Resources Inc. Streetwise Reports does not accept stock in exchange for its services or as sponsorship payment.
3) Stephen Riddle: I or my family own shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. I personally am or my family is paid by the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. My company has a financial relationship with the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. I was not paid by Streetwise Reports for participating in this interview. Comments and opinions expressed are my own comments and opinions. I had the opportunity to review the interview for accuracy as of the date of the interview and am responsible for the content of the interview.
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Looking too Hard at the Gold Price…

By MoneyMorning.com.au

We used to spend a lot of time looking at it.

We’d watch the price closely.

It’s up. Why?

It’s down. Why?

What does it all mean? Should we be happy or sad?

And then we realised it was pointless focusing on it day in and day out. So these days we let others do that. From time to time we’ll look at the price, but then we’ll quickly move on.

We’re talking about gold.

It’s up 9.7% since the start of the year, which while good still doesn’t beat the performance of one cracking Aussie stock. More on that later, but first…

We realised a while ago that we were hopeless at predicting the gold price.

We also realised that we spent far too much time trying to analyse it. Gold is, after all, gold. That’s it. It’s nothing else.

So we stopped paying it so much attention.

Don’t get us wrong, we like gold. We own gold. And you should probably own gold too. But the thing that most people criticise gold for – that it doesn’t do anything – is actually one of the key reasons to own it.

Gold is Gold is Gold

Think of it this way. When you buy a share of a company today, it may not be exactly the same company tomorrow, next week or next year.

When you buy the shares, the company may be in good shape. But what if within weeks the company’s main product develops a fault, or a competitor takes market share, or fashions change and the company’s product is no longer desirable?

What you thought you bought may not turn out to be the same thing that you currently own.

The same goes for a property investment. You may buy it today assuming one thing, only to discover six months from now it’s something else. You may discover a termite problem, or that someone plans to build a 20 story apartment block next door, or that you need to completely strip out and replace the electrical wiring.

Do you see what we mean?

Compare that to gold. The gold bar you buy today will still be a gold bar tomorrow, next week, next year or 100 years from now. Just as the gold jewellery made in the Middle East 600 years ago is still gold jewellery today.

The fact that gold doesn’t change is one of its key benefits. That’s what has made it a popular choice as a medium of exchange for thousands of years.

It means that when you need gold to be gold, well, there it is. Trouble is, most of those who criticise gold don’t understand that.

Money Printing Doesn’t Equal Higher Gold Price

So, what is the latest news in the gold market? It’s a while since we looked.

But do you know what, having checked out the scene yesterday and today it feels as though we’ve never been away from it. The battle still rages about the point of gold, and whether it’s on the verge of another height-defying rally, or whether it will crash to earth with a thud.

Even the big banks, who usually move in lockstep when it comes to interest rates and stocks, can’t see their way to agreeing when it comes to gold. As Bloomberg reports:

This year’s rally with “flounder” absent a “more meaningful shift” in investor sentiment, Barclays analysts said in a Feb. 14 note. Goldman analysts led by Jeffrey Currie, the head of commodities research, said in a report two days earlier that gold will “grind lower” as U.S. growth improves, reiterating a forecast for prices to reach $1,050 by the end of the year.

Ouch! That would be close to a 20.4% drop from today’s price.

But not everyone agrees. According to the same report:

Today, UBS AG said in a report that U.S. clients are becoming “friendlier” to gold investing and that the price may trade in a range about $1,300.

Everyone has a problem valuing gold. Even the gold bugs would have to admit that. If the gold price was just about money printing, it would have to be at a record high today, because that’s where the US money supply is right now.

The following chart from the Federal Reserve Bank of St Louis proves it:


Source: Federal Reserve Bank of St Louis
Click to enlarge

But gold hit a record high in 2011, when the US monetary base was about half of what it is today. And the gold price is 30.5% lower than it was then.

So the gold price isn’t just about money printing. The chart is proof of that.

Still Better Than Gold

So what does move the gold price?

The same thing that moves every investment (gold bugs won’t like this): human emotion.

What moves the gold price from US$600 to US$1,900 is the same thing that moves a share price from $10 to $80. It’s the belief that the prevailing price is cheap compared to what the price will be in the future.

We’re sorry if that’s too basic for the Harvard educated pointy-heads you see on TV, but that’s exactly how it works.

That’s why we don’t see any point in over-analysing gold. Gold itself doesn’t change on a daily basis, what changes is the economy around it. That’s why it’s important to consider the investing options in the broader economy rather than a narrow focus on gold.

For instance, gold may have turned in a 9.7% gain since the start of the year, but isn’t there a better way to punt on a rising gold price?

It turns out there is. One of Jason Stevenson’s favourite resource stocks has piled on a 76.8% gain since the start of the year. In other words, it has beaten the gold price by nearly eight-to-one. And Jason tells me it could have further to go.

This is why gold investors need to think about more than just the physical metal. There are so many other opportunities to profit from a rising gold price.

After all, the point of investing isn’t an academic exercise on who’s right or wrong about the meaning of gold. The point of investing is to make money. And right now, despite gold’s good run since the start of the year it proves one thing: the best place to build long term wealth is still the stock market…as the eight-to-one outperformance of Jason’s favourite gold stock proves.

Cheers,
Kris+

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By MoneyMorning.com.au

Myanmar’s Untouched Natural Gas Reserves

By MoneyMorning.com.au

If I could put all of my money into Myanmar, I would. Myanmar is in the same place China was in early 1979, when Deng Xiaoping said “we have to do something new”. Myanmar is now opening up and it’s the next economic frontier in Asia.

Jim Rogers, commodities guru and co-founder Quantum Fund

 In 1962 Myanmar (or Burma as it was then called) was the single richest country in Asia.

It was fast on its way to becoming the second developed nation in Asia after Japan.

The country was abundant in rubies, oil, and valuable timber. It also had the largest qualified and educated workforce in Southeast Asia.

The main temple in Myanmar’s Royal City of Yangon even has a diamond the size of a fist sitting on top of the central spire!

In a way, due to its natural resources Myanmar was the El Dorado of Asia. El Dorado was the mythical South American city nicknamed the ‘Lost City of Gold’.

According to legend, El Dorado was abundant with gold. The tribal chiefs and tribe members all wore gold. Gold earrings, gold pendants, gold plaques, and gold crowns.

Attracted by the tales of riches, Spanish fortune hunters (conquistadores) risked their lives trekking through uncharted territory. But it was a futile search.

While local tribes used gold for ceremonial purposes, the amount of gold discovered by the Spanish conquistadores was nowhere near the amount promised by the legends.

It turned out El Dorado was a myth…it didn’t exist. But Myanmar isn’t a myth. It exists, and more than that, it potentially hosts the world’s fifth largest conventional natural gas field…

Under-explored Energy Oasis

That’s what makes Myanmar and the opportunity to invest in this ‘Real El Dorado’ an exciting story.
Already, Myanmar has 20 trillion cubic feet (tcf) of natural gas reserves. That’s worth around $106 billion at today’s natural gas prices. The great news is most of these reserves are still in place as Myanmar has only exported its gas for the past 15 years.

But that could be just the beginning.

Since the 1970s explorers have only drilled a total of 19 offshore exploration wells. This is an almost completely unexplored zone.

Experts suggest that in addition to the current 20 tcf of reserves, there could be another 80 tcf of undiscovered natural gas worth around $424 billion.

Add this to Myanmar’s other potential reserves and the slow freeing up of the economy, and it’s no wonder that commodities guru Jim Rogers would like to ‘put all of [his] money into Myanmar.

You shouldn’t take Rogers’ view lightly. He co-founded the Quantum Fund in 1973 with another legendary investor, George Soros.

He helped steer the fund to a 4,200% total return before he ‘retired’ at the age of 37.

So when Rogers says Myanmar is a great opportunity, I listen. But before we go any further let’s turn back the clock.

At the Epicentre of Growth

Myanmar has been ruled by a military dominated government since 1962.

The military rule has had a devastating impact on Myanmar’s economy. Due to its isolation from international trade, it has bypassed globalisation and missed out on many of the benefits of improved technology.

To illustrate this, only 10% of the population has access to mobile communications.

Compare that to Australia where almost all the population has access to mobile communications, and most of them use it.

In fact, a common saying about Myanmar is that once you land at the airport, you have to wind your watch back by decades.

But things are changing.

Recent once-in-a-lifetime changes to the military constitution means that ground breaking reforms could be on the way.

This would allow explorers to exploit these undiscovered oil and gas fields and lead to a boom for Myanmar’s repressed economy.

The possibility is so big that the growth potential for Myanmar today could be on a par with China’s economic growth from 1979 through to today. It’s that big.

And with today’s technology, Myanmar’s growth should happen much quicker than China’s amazing growth.

Marc Holtzman, chairman of Meridian Capital, a leading billion-dollar private equity firm, has been to Myanmar eight times over the last few years. He says the reforms taking place are ‘real this time, the genie is out of the bottle.

And the McKinsey Global Institute, a top-tier global management consulting firm, estimates that Myanmar’s economy could grow from US$50 billion today to US$200 billion by 2030.

That’s a compound annual growth rate of 9.68% – greater than China’s current growth rate of 7.5%. That would do wonders to help lift many of Myanmar’s 65 million people out of poverty.

But that’s not all. It’s also important to consider geography. Myanmar borders both China and India. Those two country’s populations combined represent 40% of the world population.

In fact, as the following map shows, more people live in the circled area than live outside it. It just so happens that Myanmar is almost at the epicentre of this circle:


Source: Reddit.com
Click to enlarge

This alone offers a great opportunity in terms of providing export markets for its natural resources.

So, I hope you can see the scale of the opportunity at play. An economy that’s set to quadruple in size over the next 16 years, one in which commodities guru Jim Rogers would invest all his money if he could.

While I don’t advise you to take Rogers’ advice literally (as in don’t put all your money into Myanmar) you should definitely take a look at the opportunities on offer as Myanmar opens up to the world.

Jason Stevenson,
Contributing Editor, Money Morning

Ed note: The above article is an edited extract from Diggers and Drillers.

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By MoneyMorning.com.au

99 Problems… But Oil Ain’t One of Them

By Marin Katusa, Chief Energy Investment Strategist, Casey Research

America has some serious problems.

Despite the fact that the United States spends $15,171 per student—more than any other country in the world—American students consistently trail their foreign counterparts, ranking 23rd in science and 31st in math.

The US also spends more than twice as much on health care per capita than the average developed country, yet underperforms most of the developed world in infant mortality and life expectancy. The US rate of premature births, for example, resembles that of sub-Saharan Africa, rather than a First World country. And if you think Obamacare is going to change that… I have a bridge to sell you.

K Street has a bigger influence on American politics now than Main Street, and economic key players like the TBTF banks, the insurance industry, etc., have nearly carte blanche to act in whichever way they see fit, with no negative consequences.

The US government is spending more money to spy on Americans and foreigners than ever before. Since August 2011, the NSA has recorded 1.8 billion phone calls per day (!)—with the goal of creating a metadata repository capable of taking in 20 billion “record events” daily.

More than one in seven Americans are on the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP)—better known as “food stamps.”

The list goes on and on.

But there is one problem that America doesn’t have—getting oil out of the ground.

After decades of declining domestic production, US producers finally figured out how to extract oil from difficult locations, whether that’s the shale formations or deposits under thousands of feet of water… and they’ve kept going ever since.

Today, the US is one of the few countries in the world that have seen double-digit growth in oil production over the past five years.

This presents some great investment opportunities for the discerning investor.

The oil industry’s new treasure trove, the legendary Bakken formation, has turned formerly sleepy North Dakota into one of the hottest places in the United States. According to the Minneapolis Fed, “the Bakken oil boom is five times larger than the oil boom in the 1980s.”

Unemployment in the state with 2.7% is the lowest in the nation; in Dickinson, ND, even the local McDonald’s offers a $300 signing bonus to new hires, on top of an hourly wage of $15.

Here are some more fun facts, courtesy of the Fiscal Times:

  • There are now an estimated 40,856 oil industry jobs in North Dakota, plus an additional 18,000 jobs supporting the industry. Between 2010 and 2012, Williston, ND, a town with a population of only 16,000, produced 14,000 new jobs.
  • While other US states are struggling, some even being close to bankruptcy, North Dakota now has a billion-dollar budget surplus.
  • The number of ND taxpayers reporting income of more than $1 million nearly tripled between 2005 and 2011—and that in a state with a total population of 700,000.
  • The low population numbers will soon be a thing of the past, though: the population in the oil-producing region is expected to climb over 50% in the next 20 years.
  • 2,000-3,000 new housing units are built every year in Williston, ND, but it’s still not enough to fill the need. Rents have gone from a pre-boom $350 per month for a two-bedroom apartment to over $2,000 today… the equivalent of a studio apartment in New York’s rich Upper East Side.

The entire “energy map” of the United States has been altered by the Bakken: the Midwest, rather than the Gulf, is now the go-to area.

And who profits the most? The pipeline companies that can quickly adapt to this new situation and the refinery companies that can use this readily available domestic oil.

Though the rest of the world is trying to catch up, the United States has a huge head start over everyone else. The advancements it holds in hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling had been built on the back of one and a half centuries of oil and gas exploration and the thousands of firms that service the drillers and producers.

So far, other countries simply lack the experience and the infrastructure to even compete.

In fact, American companies have spent 50% more money on energy research and development (R&D) than companies anywhere else in the world. What’s more, they are exporting this technology across the globe, enabling other countries to unlock their own hydrocarbon reserves.

Obviously, they’re not doing this out of philanthropy; there is a lot of money to be made by licensing out their technology and “lending a helping hand.”

The biggest winners, hands down, are the energy-service companies that already know how to get oil out of US fields… and that apply these methods to other fields worldwide to boost production and reduce decline rates.

As the easy-to-extract oil depletes in the US and abroad, oil companies and governments are beginning to look at past-producing oil fields. As it turns out, the producing wells drilled in the 1970s and ’80s weren’t very good at getting every drop of oil out of the ground. With modern technology, however, it is now possible to access previously out-of-reach deposits. Even a mere 5% or 10% improvement in oil recovery rates means billions, if not trillions, more in revenues.

Rediscovering previously overlooked fields was what started the boom in the Bakken as well as the Eagle Ford formations… and other countries are beginning to catch on.

We believe that this new trend of applying new technologies to old oil fields is not a fad but here to stay. That’s why our energy portfolios are stocked with companies doing just that in Europe, Oceania, and even South America.

As it’s becoming clear that the era of cheap, light, sweet crude is nearing its end, the industry is adapting to this new reality of oil becoming more difficult to access. And if investors want to make profits in today’s energy markets, they, too, must learn to adapt.

Read our 2014 Energy Forecast for more details on what’s hot and what’s not in this year’s energy markets. This free special report tells you about the 3 sectors we are most bullish on for this year, and which sectors to avoid in 2014. Read it now.

 

 

 

 

Chile cuts by 25 bps, further cuts may be necessary

By CentralBankNews.info
    Chile’s central bank cut its policy rate by a further 25 basis points to 4.25 percent, as expected, and said “in coming months it might be necessary to increase the monetary stimulus to ensure that projected inflation will stand at 3% in the policy horizon.”
    The Central Bank of Chile cut its rate by 50 basis points in October and November and also said last month that further easing may be necessary in coming months.
    The central said the country’s economy had continued to lose strength, with output and demand growing less than the bank had assumed in December, particularly in investment-related sectors.
    But inflation remains in line with the bank’s 2-4 percent target range and the peso has depreciated while the pace of nominal wage rises has moderated in recent months.
    Chile’s inflation rate eased to 2.8 percent in January from December’s 3.0 percent while the peso has risen this month, trading at 547.8 to the U.S. dollar today, up from 562 on Feb. 4. But since the start of the year the peso has depreciated by 4 percent.
    Economic recovery in Chile’s trading partners is expected to continue in coming months, based on the U.S. rebound, the central bank said, adding that subdued inflation in these economies means that their monetary policy would normalize slowly.
    However, volatility in emerging markets has risen and oil prices have risen in the last month while copper prices had decreased slightly.
    Chile’s Gross Domestic Product expanded by 1.3 percent in the third quarter from the second quarter for annual growth of 4.7 percent, up from 4.0 percent in the previous quarter.
    In its December monetary policy report, the central bank forecast 2014 growth of 3.75 percent to 4.75 percent and estimated 2013 growth of 4.2 percent.

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Candlestick Patterns In Technical Analysis

Article by Investazor.com

In what concerns the candlestick chart we have established the basics in our previous article Candlesticks in Day to Day Trading. This type of chart offers information regarding the price action in a limited time frame like the opening price, the closing price but also the highs and lows. The body and shadows of a candle can be very important because their interpretation is different from case to case.

You may have seen in our past articles that we used different types of candlestick patterns to confirm our trading position. The patterns can be used in strategies and can help the trader reduce his false signals and have a better turnover at the end of the day or month.

It is important to know that a candlestick pattern can be formed from a single candle or more than one candle. There are usually two types of candlestick patterns: continuation (they usually need gaps and are pretty rare on the forex instruments) and reversal (which we will discuss later on). A candlestick pattern has more power and can be more reliable on a bigger time frame resembling very much with price patterns. On higher time frames they will appear less than on lower time frames, meaning that on lower time frames they could also give lots of false signals.

In my day to day trading I have more often used and benefit from the reversing type of candlestick pattern and I will go on with describing some of the most important patterns.

Bullish Patterns

It is relevant for a trader to look after bullish candlestick patterns at low levels, after the market had a down move.

morning-star-pattern-18.02.2014Morning Star (formed of three candles.)

–          It’s first candle should be a downside one, as longer as better suggesting that the bears are in control;

–          The second one it is an indecision candle, meaning that it could be a Doji or a spinning top and it doesn’t matter the color. In the theoretical pattern the indecision should open with a gap down;

–          The third candle should be a bullish candle and its body must exceed at least 50% of the bearish candle’s body. It should open with a gap up after the close of the Doji/Spinning Top.

The psychology of this candlestick pattern is pretty easy to understand. The first candle means that bears are in control, the indecision candle suggests that a balance is in place and the third one means that bulls are taking control and the price could rally under their pressure.

piercing-line-pattern-18.02.2014Piercing Line (it is a two candles pattern)

–          The first candle should be a bearish (red/black) one, the longer the better;

–          The second candle should open with a gap down and its body should exceed at least 50% of the bearish candle.

This candle shows that at a low point the control of the price it is passed from the sellers to the buyers. In some conditions the signal given by this pattern could be very strong, still I believe that the next one is stronger.

bullish-engulfing-18.02.2014Bullish Engulfing (two candles pattern)

–          The first candle should be a descending one and also the longer the better;

–          Next candle should open with a gap down and its body should exceed the full body of the previous candle.

This pattern I believe it is stronger than the piercing line. When bulls take control from the bears, over price, their power is shown in the fact that the bullish candlestick engulfs the bearish candlestick. This is a pattern on which I have bet my money and didn’t disappoint me.

hammer-pattern-18.02.2014Hammer (one candle pattern)

–          This pattern is characterized by a small body (less than 10% of the full candle), a big lower shadow and a very small or inexistent upper shadow.

This is one of my favorite candlestick pattern, which I successfully used in different strategies and trade setups. It is very important for it to be found in a low and the lower shadow to be as big as possible. It shows that the bears tried to push the price very low. When bulls thought the price is very good, they start buying and pushed it back very close to the opening price. The color of this pattern doesn’t quite matter.

Bearish Patterns

Thea bearish type patterns signals sell opportunities. The patterns appear on tops after a rally and you will see that they the upside down images of the now-known bullish patterns.

evening-star-pattern-18.02.2014Evening Star (three candles pattern)

–          It’s firs candle is a rising candle confirming the up move;

–          The second candle should open with a gap up and draw itself as an indecision candlestick (Doji or Spinning Top);

–          The third and last candle of the pattern should be a descending one that covers at least 50% of the bullish candle. This one should open with gap up.

This is the mirror image of the Morning Star. Bulls are in control firs but the balance is equilibrated and this can be seen through the Doji/Spinning Top and after that the bears take control and the prices fall.

dark-cloud-cover-pattern-18.02.2014Dark Cloud Cover (two candles pattern)

–          First candle should be bullish (green/white);

–          Second candle should open with gap down and its body should cover at least 50% of the first candle.

It might sound familiar the two characteristics, it is because this pattern is actually the mirror image of the Piercing Line but with a different name. Buyers are control, but the wheel turns and at a certain price sellers take their place in the leadership.

 

 

bearish-engulfing-pattern-18.02.2014Bearish Engulfing (two candles pattern)

–          First candle should be a green/white suggesting a rising market;

–          The second should open with gap up and its body should engulf the body of the previous candle.

Being an engulfing, but upside down, the interpretation is quite the same. Bulls are in control but bears take over and the market has now a strong sell signal. As well as for the bullish patterns I trust more the bearish engulfing than the Dark Cloud Cover.

shooting-star-pattern-18.02.2014Shooting Star (one candle pattern)

–          This pattern is also characterized by a small body (<10% of the full candle), but this time a long upper shadow.

It is very important to be found after a rally. Bulls are trying to continue the trend but get to a price where bears are starting to act and put pressure on the price so it drops. As well as in the case of the Hammer, this pattern is my favorite from the bearish candlestick patterns.

More on candlesticks…

As you could see I have brought up, where it was the case, gaps. The candlestick patterns were discovered on a volatile and with less liquidity stock market. The gaps there were relevant, but if we put this patterns on a high liquidity market like the FX market we might have the surprise to not find these kind of reactions. It doesn’t mean that the patterns won’t work, they actually will have almost the same impact as for the stock market.

These are to be considered the most powerful and used candlestick patterns there are. Don’t think that technical analysis is limited only at these 8 patterns. You will find that there are also Hanging Man, Harami, Dragonfly and Tombstone Doji, Reverse Hammer and hundreds others.

I can say that candlestick patterns can be some strong weapons for a trader in the battle with the market. But if they are taken as they are it might happen that their actual probability to not be that high. In my next articles I will show some of my way in using Candlestick Patterns in day to day trading and help you make some interesting trading setups.

A line that I am always keeping in mind and I would like to share it with you is:

Candlestick patterns revers moves not trends!

If you will keep it in mind you will not fall in the trap to lose control over reality. A candlestick pattern will never signal with a high probability a trend reversal.

The post Candlestick Patterns In Technical Analysis appeared first on investazor.com.

MT4 Binary Options Facts

Since 2005 there has been one dominant Forex trading platform. That trading platform is MT4.

Currently over 70% of the retail Forex market is traded on the MT4 trading platform. Hundreds of Forex brokers and banks have integrated the platform into their trading systems to accommodate the public demand for MT4.  What was it about the MT4 platform that made it so popular? There are really two answers to this question.

From the broker’s perspective MT4 is relatively inexpensive and easy to deploy.  Brokers would not charge their clients a platform fee which allowed for rapid growth. The brokers would not sacrifice providing their clients with an inferior product either the MT4 platform has all of the bells and whistles most traders are looking for.

From the clients’ perspective and MT4 was a platform that was easy to use and also did not require a great deal of computer resources. A full charting package as well as being available in many different languages also makes the attractiveness of MT4 that much more evident. What really made MT4 attractive for the retail trader was the addition of expert advisors. This allowed traders to come up with systems that would trigger buy and sell signals and the MT4 expert advisor allowed these signals to be fully automated.

Prior to the popularity of MT4 many Forex brokers were using web-based interfaces. These web-based systems offered very little in terms of charting and analytics for the trader. A very similar situation exists today with regards to binary options.  The vast majority of binary option brokers offer their clients a web-based graphical interface. Once again this interface usually lacks any kind of market transparency or any type of charting. Until now that some select brokers offer MT4 binary options trading. This should not be confused with certain plug-ins or patches that are available but full binary options brokers integration with the MT4 platform.  Binary option traders can now trade both binary options and forex on the same platform. They can also develop and use expert advisors to test out their systems and use them for trading both for FX and binary options.

To learn more please visit www.clmforex.com

 

Disclaimer: Trading of foreign exchange contracts, contracts for difference, derivatives and other investment products which are leveraged, can carry a high level of risk. These products may not be suitable for all investors. It is possible to lose more than your initial investment. All funds committed should be risk capital. Past performance is not necessarily indicative of future results. A Product Disclosure Statement (PDS) is available from the company website. Please read and consider the PDS before making any decision to trade Core Liquidity Markets’ products. The risks must be understood prior to trading. Core Liquidity Markets refers to Core Liquidity Markets Pty Ltd. Core Liquidity Markets is an Australian company which is registered with ASIC, ACN 164 994 049. Core Liquidity Markets is an authorized representative of Direct FX Trading Pty Ltd (AFSL) Number 305539, which is the authorizing Licensee and Principal.

 

 

 

Hungary cuts rate by 15 bps, to review stance in March

By CentralBankNews.info
    Hungary’s central bank cut its base rate by another 15 basis points to 2.70 percent, its 19th cut in a row, but signaled that it may call a halt to further cuts by saying it would first decide on further moves following a review of the economic outlook in next month’s economic forecast.
    The National Bank of Hungary, which has cut rates by 430 basis points since embarking on an easing cycle in August 2012, noted a deterioration in investors’ view of Hungary and other emerging markets during the recent volatility in global financial markets, with the country’s bond yields rising and higher volatility in the forint’s exchange rate.
    “In the council’s judgement, a cautious approach to policy is warranted due to uncertainty related to the global financial environment,” the central bank said.
    However, the central bank also said Hungary’s position was stronger than other emerging market economies, pointing to a decline in its external debt and a surplus in the current account that has reduced the country’s reliance on foreign investors.
    But the central bank acknowledged that room for manoeuvre in monetary policy was influenced by investors’ perception along with how well inflation was approaching its 3.0 percent target.

    “The Monetary Council will decide on the need and possibility for continuing the easing cycle after a comprehensive assessment of the macroeconomic outlook and developments in perceptions of the risks about the economy in view of the baseline projection and alternative scenarios of the March forecast,” the central bank said.
     Hungary’s headline inflation rate fell to zero in January from 0.9 percent in December while the central bank’s own gauge of underlying inflation showed a rise in core inflation to 1.6 percent in January from 1.1 percent in December.
    The drop in inflation was due to a moderation of fuel prices and the central bank said its own inflation gauge indicated moderate inflationary pressures due to weak domestic demand and low external inflation, helping anchor inflation expectations.
   “Domestic real economic factors are expected to continue to have a disinflationary impact, although to a declining extent, as activity rises further,” the central bank said. The bank has said it expects inflation to move back toward its 3.0 percent target by the second quarter of 2015.
    Economic growth in Hungary is likely to continue to strengthen this year and next and while employment is rising, the central bank said unemployment still exceeds the long-term level and there is unused capacity so inflationary pressures are likely to remain subdued over the medium term.
    Hungary’s Gross Domestic Product expanded by a higher-than-expected 0.6 percent in the fourth quarter from the third quarter for annual growth of 2.7 percent, up from 1.8 percent, and the central bank said growth should pick up further in the quarters ahead, helped by higher corporate investment.
    But growth in real incomes will be partly offset by continued reduction in debt that was accumulated in the years before the financial crises.
    From August 2012 the central bank cut rates in 25-basis point increments until August 2013 when it reduced the pace of rate cuts to 20 basis points following an large outflow of capital from emerging markets, including Hungary. The central bank continued cutting rates in 20-basis points increments until last month when it reduced this to 15 basis points, as this month.
    Hungary’s forint currency has been depreciating against the euro since mid-2012 and has continued to decline this year. The forint was trading at 310.33 to the euro today, down 4.3 percent since the beginning of the year.

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Turkey holds rates, repeats tight stance till inflation falls

By CentralBankNews.info
    Turkey’s central bank maintained its short-term interest rates, including the one-week repo rate at 10.0 percent, and reiterated that a “tight monetary policy stance will be maintained until there is a significant improvement in the inflation outlook.”
     At an emergency meeting of its policy committee last month, the Central Bank of the Republic of Turkey (CBRT) raised its rates in response to a sharp fall in the lira currency and growing inflationary pressures, and pledged to maintain a tight stance until the outlook for inflation improved.
    Following today’s meeting, the central bank said inflation was likely to hover above its 5.0 percent target “for some time due to recent tax adjustments, exchange rate developments, and elevated food prices” while the current account deficit was expected to show a “significant improvement” this year.
    The growth of lending has slowed due to its tight policy stance, weak capital flows and other measures and data from the first quarter of this year showed a deceleration in domestic demand.
    “Meanwhile, with the help of the recovery in foreign demand, the contribution of net exports to economic growth in expected to increase,” the CBRT said.
    Turkey’s inflation rate rose to 7.75 in January from 7.4 percent in December.

    In its January inflation report, the CBRT raised its 2014 inflation forecast by 1.3 percentage points, with the lira’s depreciation accounting for an estimated 0.5 percentage points of that increase and higher taxes for another 0.5 percentage points.
    The central bank forecast that inflation would to ease in the second half of this year and fluctuate between 5.2 percent and 8.0 percent before ending the year at 6.6 percent.
    In 2015 inflation is projected to fall further, fluctuating between 3.1 precedent and 6.9 percent, and stabilize around the bank’s 5.0 percent target by mid-2015.
    In addition to raising its one-week repo rate to 10.0 percent from 4.50 percent on Jan. 28, the CBRT also said this would once again become its primary tool for providing liquidity to markets. At that meeting, the central bank also shifted its overnight rate corridor upwards by raising the marginal funding rate, the ceiling in the corridor, to 12.0 percent from 7.75 percent, and the borrowing rate, or the floor, to 8.0 percent from 3.5 percent.
    “It should be emphasized that any new data or information may lead the Committee to revise its stance,” the CBRT said today.
    In the summary of its Jan. 28 meeting, the central bank said that the current policy stance should be enough to anchor inflation expectations and if necessary, its liquidity policy may be tightened further to invert the slope of the yield curve.
    Economists had expected the central bank to maintain rates today after last month’s surprisingly aggressive move that helped calm financial markets and seems to have put a floor under the lira.
    The lira has been declining ever since early May 2013 and fell to a record low of 2.37 to the U.S. dollar on Jan. 27. Since the rate hike, the lira has strengthened by 8 percent, but is still down 1.4 percent since the beginning of the year. The lira was trading at 2.18 to the dollar today.
    Turkey’s current account deficit widened to US$ 8.322 billion in December from November’s $4.098 billion while its Gross Domestic Product expanded by 0.9 percent in the third quarter from the second quarter for annual growth of 4.4 percent, down from the second quarter’s 4.5 percent rate.
    Earlier this month, Standard & Poor’s cut its outlook on Turkey to negative from stable, citing risks of a hard economic landing amid a less predictable political environment. The rating’s agency said a corruption scandal involving the government of Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan along with falls in the lira and inflationary pressures had raised concerns about political and economic stability.

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BOJ holds QE target, doubles bank and growth facilities

By CentralBankNews.info
Japan’s central bank maintained its policy stance but extended and doubled the size of its bank lending and growth-supporting facilities while it repeated that it would continue with quantitative and qualitative monetary easing for as long as necessary to reach its 2 percent inflation target.
The Bank of Japan (BOJ) embarked on an aggressive easing campaign last April to rid the country of some 15 years of deflation by doubling the country’s monetary base by an annual 60-70 trillion through the purchase of Japanese government bonds, exchange traded funds (ETDFs) and real estate investment trust along with commercial paper and corporate bonds.
The BOJ reiterated its description of Japan’s economic recovery as moderate with the outlook for continued moderate growth affected by “the front-loaded increase and subsequent decline in demand prior to and after the consumption tax hike” in April.
Excluding the impact of the tax rise, the BOJ said consumer price inflation was likely to be around 1.25 percent for some time.
Japan’s inflation rate has been accelerating since June, following 12 consecutive months of declining prices, with inflation in December rising to 1.6 percent from November’s 1.4 percent.
    The BOJ’s lending facility aimed at stimulating bank leading and another facility aimed at supporting economic growth were due to expire next month and the BOJ’s policy board extended the life of these facilities by another year and expanded them.
Under the bank lending facility, financial institutions will be able to borrow funds from the BOJ up to twice as much as the net increase in banks’ lending. Under the growth supporting facility, banks’ maximum provision of funds was doubled to 7.0 trillion yen from 3.5 trillion, with financial institutions able to borrow funds at a fixed rate of 0.1 percent per year for four years instead of 1-3 years.
“The Bank expects that these enhancements will further promote financial institutions’ actions as well as stimulate firms’ and households’ demand for credit, with a view to encouraging banks’ lending and strengthening the foundations for economic growth,” the BOJ said.
In addition, the BOJ extended its operations to support financial institutions in the areas that were affected by the 2011 earthquake and tsunami.
Japan’s Gross Domestic Product expanded by a lower-than-expected 0.3 percent in the fourth quarter of 2013 from the third quarter, renewing speculation that the central bank may ease its policy stance even further to help compensate for the expected negative impact from the tax rise in April.

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