Emerging Markets: The Uranium of Macro-investing

By MoneyMorning.com.au

Another day, another disaster in emerging markets.

We can only hope the world’s financial markets can pull through this one.

This could be the big one. It could be the one to end it all…or probably not.

Yesterday the Kazakhstan central bank devalued its currency by 19%.

As we admitted yesterday, we don’t know much about currency moves…but we do know a good deal on stocks when we see one…

The latest news out of Kazakhstan made it to the main story on the Bloomberg News website last evening:

Kazakhstan’s announcement follows Argentina’s devaluation of the peso last month and Ukraine’s decision to impose capital controls to stem a plunge in the hryvnia. The move will bolster the competitiveness of [the] central Asian nation’s economy and reduce speculative pressure on the tenge, the central bank said.

Who’d have thought currencies such as the peso, hryvnia, and tenge would get so much attention. Clearly it’s very important.

OK, it’s not important at all. But we’re pleased for Kazakh investors. According to Bloomberg News, ‘The Kazakhstan Stock Exchange rose 12 percent after the announcement.

We can only hope that Kazakh investors hadn’t been frightened into holding cash prior to the devaluation. They would have seen their wealth drop 20% straight away. At least stock investors will have recovered some of that loss thanks to the rising stock market.

Conventional Wisdom Loses Again

This is perhaps another example of throwing conventional wisdom out the window.

Conventional wisdom suggests that when things look risky, investors should look towards the safest assets. And by safest assets we mean cash.

Because, despite the worries about inflation and money printing, there are still plenty of people who think that cash offers the best security. That’s despite evidence to the contrary.

You only have to look at the bank runs in the US and UK during the financial meltdown in 2008. Even if savers got their cash out of the bank, they now have devalued money after nearly six years of money printing.

Or look at Japan in 2012. The Bank of Japan resolved to double the money supply in an attempt to create inflation and weaken the value of the yen against foreign currencies.

The poor saps who held cash – whether they realise it or not – have seen the real value of their wealth fall. By contrast, the risk takers who could see what was happening bought stocks and enjoyed rapid gains.

The same goes for investors in the US and UK, where the stock markets have gained 138% and 77% respectively since the 2009 market bottom…oh, and Japan’s market is up 94%.

That’s the key thing investors have to learn if they want any chance of making money in this market: they have to throw conventional wisdom out the window and look for opportunities in some of the most unlikely of places.

Emerging Markets are the Uranium of Macro-investing

That’s why we see great opportunities in emerging markets at the moment.

Sure, we know it could be a hiding to nothing. We know that emerging markets are the ‘uranium’ of macro-investing.

Just as uranium stocks have had more booms and busts over the past 10 years than you can shake a stick at, the same goes for emerging markets.

And yet we can’t help but feel that the fear-mongering about these markets is more than slightly overdone. In fact, we say it’s now worth speculating on them at these relatively beaten-down prices.

This is part of being a successful contrarian investor. Heck, it’s part of being a successful investor full stop.

As an investor you should look for opportunities to buy into a market that other investors fear. Now, that doesn’t always mean buying into a market straight away. Sometimes it can take days, weeks or even months for a ‘bear market’ cycle to play out.

But however long it takes to play out, you have to be ready to act if you want to make the most of the early move.

Take even the S&P/ASX 200 index as an example. It was barely more than a week ago that the front page of the business websites were screaming about the billions wiped off the market.

We have no doubt that would have scared the bejeezus out of all but the most disciplined investor. That’s a shame because just a few days later the Australian market is up 157 points from the low, or 3.1%.

Some stocks have done even better, including the tiny stock that analyst Jason Stevenson says is one of the best gold miners on the Aussie market. It’s up 10.3% in five days. Who says you can’t make money in this market?

Don’t be a Scared Investor

That’s pretty good, but look at what can happen if you get on board a riskier asset. Take the SPDR S&P Russia ETF [NYSEARCA:RBL]. It’s an exchange traded fund that trades in New York.

It covers Russian stocks.

Since the big ballyhoo over emerging markets last week, and the apparent fears of a crash, guess what has happened?

That’s right, since then this ETF has gained 4.7%. So much for the ‘flight to safety’.

It goes to show you that when some investors are running scared, other investors are out shopping for stock bargains. If we could only give you one bit of advice it would be this…

Don’t be a scared investor, be an opportunistic investor.

Cheers,
Kris

Special Report: The Last Time This Stock Bottomed Out…


By MoneyMorning.com.au

The Five Keys of Revolutionary Technology

By MoneyMorning.com.au

On the 13th November, 1789, Benjamin Franklin wrote a letter to Jean-Baptise Leroy. He wrote it in fluent French. The letter contained one of the most recognised quotes in history.
In the letter Franklin wrote:

Notre constitution nouvelle est actuellement établie, tout paraît nous promettre qu’elle sera durable; mais, dans ce monde, il n’y a rien d’assure que la mort et les impôts.

The last part of that paragraph translates as, ‘nothing is certain except death and taxes.’

This is a renowned quote, but I believe had Franklin lived 200 years later, he might have added a third certainty.

Because in a world of revolutionary technology nothing is certain except death, taxes and technological advancement. Technological advancement is the Third Certainty. And it’s the key to everything.

I call this the ‘Vision of The third Certainty’. It’s a blueprint of the future. It’s a detailed outline of the technologies and trends that will drive the world forward. It explains how society works, lives, engages and moves. It’s a tightly held construct of the next five, 10, 20 and even the next 100 years.

You see, this blueprint, the Vision of the Third Certainty, is something I work on and think about all the time.

That’s because as a technology analyst it’s not just my full time job to research, investigate and find revolutionary technology. But it’s more than a full-time job. It’s a way of life, it’s a complete lifestyle.

It’s a 12, 13, 14-hour day (and longer) looking for the next trend and technological advance, and then finding a way to invest in it.

You may have read some examples of the Third Certainty in past articles I’ve written for Money Morning. These trends include Immersive Tech, the Molecular Revolution, 3D Printing and the new Industrial Revolution, and the War to Protect the Internet.

These trends illustrate that a vision of the future isn’t some bizarre sci-fi movie with aliens and flying cars. It’s a logical theory of where the world is heading based on my insight into the applications of new technology.

Look, I don’t claim to have a crystal ball. But the ‘Vision of the Third Certainty’ is how I see the big trends evolving and playing out in the future.

And importantly, it’s how I identify the innovative companies that are best placed to capitalise on these trends.

Armed with this vision of the future I hone in on the next trend that’s set to hit the mainstream and then find the best companies with the biggest opportunities.

Once I’ve got a shortlist of stocks I then subject them to a five-step screening process. These are what I call the five keys of revolutionary technology…

CRITERIA 1: The anti-Newton principle.

This is the most important of the five keys.

This criteria involves the most amount of analysis because it’s the most subjective, and I’ll explain how we do it in a moment. But first, why the name?

The Apple Newton was a PDA released by Apple in 1993. At the time it seemed like pioneering technology. But within five short years the Newton platform and hardware was discontinued. It was blink-and-you’ll-miss-it technology. It was tech that appeared too soon and in the wrong design.

Technology that really made an impact in terms of bringing together all your ‘personal assistant needs’ was the laptop, tablet and smartphone.

Although the Newton itself was outstanding, it lacked longevity. And that’s one of the biggest risks of technology. Much of it is fly by night; it rarely lasts more than a few years. That’s not the kind of technology we’re looking for.

For something to be revolutionary technology it should have a long lifespan ahead of it.

Another example of the anti-newton principle is the LaserDisc. The technology itself was revolutionary and pioneering. It was the step forward from VHS and Betamax, but was ultimately doomed by technology that dragged the world into the Digital age: CD’s and DVD’s.

LaserDisc was effectively the technology that sparked the era of CD and DVD. But at its heart LaserDisc was merely new technology that promised a lot, delivered little and never lasted.

We look for the opposite, the anti-Newton. The key for a company to be a real revolutionary stock tip is to have the technology that’s pioneering, timed perfectly, and has the potential to go above and beyond even its own capabilities.

It needs to be the kind of technology that inspires others. That creates new, unique markets. And then spawns new markets off that. It’s the kind of technology that we identify with 3D printing, composite materials, immersive tech and molecular biotech.

This leads us to the second most important criteria.

CRITERIA 2: The big picture potential.

The Big Picture principle is all about whether the company and the technology has scope beyond what it currently does.

A company with big picture potential knows the way technology advances means they need to innovate and expand their technology for a bigger purpose. And that means the future potential of the company is unlimited. More on that in a moment.

CRITERIA 3: Fit the trend requirement

In every case the stock must fit within the specific trends I’ve identified.

Not only must it be relevant to the trend, but also we must be able to pinpoint what role the company will play in the trend. It may be that they create the ecosystem or infrastructure needed for the future of immersive tech. They might be the benchmark standard for new forms of medical treatment like ddRNAi or 3D bioprinting. Regardless of what the trend is, the company must play an active and vital role in the longer-term macro vision.

By this stage, after having assessed the first three criteria we’ll know if the company genuinely has revolutionary technology.

The last two criteria are the more ‘traditional’ concepts. They’re also the two that not every one of our tips will meet.

Ideally we want these last two criteria to be satisfied as well. But it’s not a requirement.

CRITERIA 4: The visionary leader

It’s all well and good to have a company that is successful, makes good products and is well established. But that doesn’t make for a revolutionary technology company. You need leadership with a greater vision. They need to carry a bigger picture view of what the company is capable of. Without that visionary mentality, even the biggest of big companies can fail.

Kodak, Blackberry and Netscape are all examples where leadership was incapable of seeing past the end of their noses.

If I can find a revolutionary company without a visionary leader, great. But if I can find one with a visionary leader that’s even better.

CRITERIA 5: The financial opportunity

There’s no point in a company that’s only going to return 5% or 10% in a year. Of course that’s a possibility because of other external factors. But in essence I look for a company with untapped financial opportunity. A company that the market has underpriced. Or the best of all, a company that’s priced on their current market value and not the full potential of their revolutionary technology.

So there it is. Hopefully that should give you some insight into what I look for in a revolutionary stock. One final point I’ll make is that not every stock will meet every criteria.

For example, we may recommend a company even if it doesn’t have a visionary leader. Sometimes a technology is so good and the trend so strong that anyone could run the company.

Now, I can’t take you through everything I do to find these stocks. For a start it wouldn’t be very interesting, and I could probably go on about it for hours on end. But these five keys are an important part of how I hunt for technology companies with the potential to revolutionise the world.

Sam Volkering,
Contributing Editor, Money Morning

Ed note: Next week Money Morning technology analyst Sam Volkering will launch his brand new free email Tech Insider. Six days a week he’ll bring you the latest tech breakthroughs around the globe, the innovative companies behind them, and reveal how to potentially profit from these changes. To make sure you’re among the very first to receive Sam Volkering’s Tech Insider, click here to automatically sign up now

Join Money Morning on Google+


By MoneyMorning.com.au

The Direction of Binary Options Brokers

Binary Options BrokersBinary options were introduced to the trading public back in 2012. Since that short amount of time binary options have evolved as well as the platforms that they trade on and the brokers that offer these products. Binary options were derived originally from fixed return options or FRO.

Initially many of the brokers that began to offer these products were really marketing companies of binary option trading providers. Companies like Spot Options would offer brokers a “ white label solution”  that would be very easy for them to integrate and would provide an easy plug-and-play for their clients. These white label solutions provided the broker with a pricing engine, a customer resource management system, and everything they needed to effectively to run a brokerage. While this work well for the broker there really wasn’t much in terms of education and in terms of market transparency to the customer.

Binary option brokers that operate in regulated jurisdictions and offer clients platforms that provide market transparency are now offering the trading public a new solution.  This may take the binary options market and binary option brokers and a whole new direction. Safety of funds will allow clients to open a deposit with brokers with much more confidence. Being able to see charts and to see the actual market of the underlying product that they’re trading are other ways that the trading public benefit and enjoy trading binary options.

Demand from the trading public and market forces will probably steer the binary options market and binary options brokers to begin to offer products this way.

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.

 

 

 

Regenerative Medicine Finally Gets Some Respect: Reni Benjamin

Source: JT Long of The Life Sciences Report  (2/11/14)

http://www.thelifesciencesreport.com/pub/na/regenerative-medicine-finally-gets-some-respect-reni-benjamin

Of the many themes that propelled the biotech sector to record returns in 2013, regenerative medicine and therapeutics targeting cancer were front and center. In this interview with The Life Sciences Report, Reni Benjamin, managing director and equity research analyst at H.C. Wainwright & Co., talks about two companies with impending catalysts that play on these themes, and offers his take on the prospects for the regenerative medicine sector going forward.

The Life Sciences Report: You have been following the regenerative medicine space for more than 10 years, during which time it has had a series of successes and setbacks. Have investors, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and big pharma finally developed a level of confidence with small cell therapy companies such that they feel comfortable working with these biotechs to develop and fund new products?

Reni Benjamin: I believe we have turned the corner regarding increased confidence, both on a regulatory level as well as on a partnership and investor level.

From a regulatory perspective, over the last decade, the number of clinical trials evaluating a variety of stem cells in a myriad of indications has never been higher. A quick search of clinicaltrials.gov demonstrates that more than 1,500 clinical trials are currently underway in the space, suggesting that a number of companies have been able to convince regulators of the safety of the cells under investigation.

From a partnering perspective, both big pharma (including the likes of Johnson & Johnson [JNJ:NYSE] and Shire Plc [SHPGY:NASDAQ; SHP:LSE]) and big biotech (Amgen Inc. [AMGN:NASDAQ] and Celgene Corp. [CELG:NASDAQ], to name a few) continue to invest in internal regenerative medicine programs as well as to increase the number of acquisitions in the space. And finally, investors have stepped in and committed hundreds of millions of dollars toward the advancement of these therapeutics through clinical development. In short, what was once thought of as an early-stage space is now composed of marketed products generating revenues, as well as products in advanced stages of development (in randomized, controlled phase 3 and phase 2 trials). In our view, the coming decade will showcase the power and potential of the regenerative medicine field and its profound impact on the healthcare system.

TLSR: How can regenerative medicine companies be more successful in securing funding/partnerships in the future?

RB: We are firm believers that it is all about the data! In our opinion, the cell therapy space has been plagued by one-arm studies and the use of historical controls as comparisons. Going forward, I believe companies looking to secure partner and investor interest will need to conduct more randomized phase 2 trials to demonstrate the true potential of their therapies. Of course, as part of this clinical development, a keen understanding of the mechanism of action, a reproducible and scalable manufacturing process, and rigorous treatment protocols that have vetted the dose and delivery of the therapeutic cells are musts, in our opinion.

TLSR: Which companies are coming to maturity in the space?

RB: There are plenty of companies in advanced stages of clinical development. Mesoblast Ltd. (MSB:ASE; MBLTY:OTCPK)Athersys Inc. (ATHX:NASDAQ)NeoStem Inc. (NBS:NASDAQ),StemCells Inc. (STEM:NASDAQ), and Neuralstem Inc. (CUR:NYSE.MKT) are but a handful of names well known to investors.

However, I would like to highlight ThermoGenesis Corp. (KOOL:NASDAQ), a company that may not be on the radar screens of a lot of investors, but that has the potential to make a significant mark in the regenerative medicine space. Upon completion of a merger with TotiPotentRX (private)—the company will then be known as Cesca Therapeutics—what was a small, device-oriented company will be transformed into a fully integrated biotechnology company focused on developing novel cell therapies in the regenerative medicine space.

In our opinion, while the company will always have a base business of selling medical devices—primarily in the cord blood markets, with some sales into the bone marrow processing markets as well—the new focus will be integrating cellular therapies for a wide variety of indications. By way of background, investors should realize that the company’s devices have been used to isolate very specific cells in 10 studies to date, eight by TotiPotentRX, one by SpineSmith LP (private) and one in collaboration with the University of Naples. Six of these studies have been presented in peer-reviewed platforms, including studies in critical limb ischemia (CLI), two studies in nonunion fractures, one safety study using bone marrow cells in 35 patients as presented by TotiPotentRX at the 2011 International Society for Cellular Technology annual meeting, and an acute myocardial infarction study.

Regarding its pipeline, we believe the company has six indications that they would like to move forward in clinical trials. Of interest to us is the phase 1b trial in acute myocardial infarction and phase 2 trials in CLI, to be initiated after the merger is completed. We believe the initiation of these two trials should drive significant value for shareholders and attract attention from potential partners.

TLSR: What catalysts do you see ahead that will move ThermoGenesis to the next milestone?

RB: The next major milestone for the company is shareholder approval of the merger to form Cesca Therapeutics, set for Feb. 13, 2014. In our opinion, long-term shareholders of both companies should approve the merger. Following an approved merger, we believe the company will be well positioned and strategically aligned to penetrate the regenerative medicine markets and unlock significant shareholder value going forward.

TLSR: Is there another company with upcoming catalysts you’d like to mention?

RB: Spectrum Pharmaceuticals Inc. (SPPI:NASDAQ) is an oncology company that could soon be generating revenue from five products: Fusilev (levoleucovorin; advanced metastatic colorectal cancer), Zevalin (ibritumomab tiuxetan; non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma), Folotyn (pralatrexate injection; peripheral T-cell lymphoma), Marqibo (vinCRIStine sulfate liposome injection; Philadelphia chromosome-negative acute lymphoblastic leukemia), and belinostat (PXD 101; an HDAC inhibitor targeting solid tumors and hematological malignancies). If successful, combined annual revenues should reach $178 million ($178M) in 2014. We believe Spectrum represents an undervalued player with significant upside potential for the long-term investor.

TLSR: Spectrum was granted priority review by the FDA last week for the belinostat new drug application for peripheral T-cell lymphoma, with a Prescription Drug User Fee Act (PDUFA) date of Aug. 9, 2014. What could this mean for the company?

RB: We view this announcement as great news for investors, given that the space has several therapeutic options. Even with a crowded competitive landscape, the fact that the FDA still granted a faster review cycle highlights the potential for belinostat to fill an unmet need. This announcement could also mean that sales could begin a quarter earlier than we had expected. If successful, we expect peak sales of $50M by 2020.

TLSR: We have seen a flurry of merger and acquisition activity lately. Are you expecting more in 2014? Could any of the companies you have mentioned be acquisition targets, and at what values?

RB: Biotech acquisitions will likely continue to increase in 2014. Companies comparable to Spectrum, including Astex Pharmaceuticals Inc. (acquired by Otsuka Holdings Co. Ltd. [OTSKF:OTCPK]) and Santarus Inc. (acquired by Salix Pharmaceuticals Inc. [SLXP:NYSE]), have been acquired for 6 to 10 times their 2014 projected revenues. Applying the low end of this valuation metric, we believe Spectrum’s acquisition value would be less than $1 billion.

TLSR: Thank you for your time.

Dr. Reni Benjamin is a managing director and equity research analyst at H.C. Wainwright & Co. His expertise and coverage focuses on companies in the oncology and stem cell sectors. Benjamin has been ranked among the top analysts for recommendation performance and earnings accuracy by StarMine, has been cited in a variety of sources including The Wall Street Journal, Bloomberg Businessweek, Financial Times and Smart Money, and has made appearances on Bloomberg television/radio and CNBC. He authored a chapter in “The Delivery of Regenerative Medicines and Their Impact on Healthcare,” has presented at various regional and international conferences, and has been published in peer-reviewed journals. He currently serves on the UAB School of Health Professions’ Deans Advisory Board. Prior to joining H.C. Wainwright, Benjamin was a managing director and senior biotechnology analyst at both Burrill Securities and Rodman & Renshaw. He was also an associate analyst at Needham and Company. Benjamin earned his doctorate from the University of Alabama at Birmingham in biochemistry and molecular genetics by discovering and characterizing a novel gene implicated in germ cell development. He earned a bachelor’s degree in biology from Allegheny College.

Want to read more Life Sciences Report interviews like this? Sign up for our free e-newsletter, and you’ll learn when new articles have been published. To see a list of recent interviews with industry analysts and commentators, visit our Streetwise Interviews page.

DISCLOSURE:
1) JT Long conducted this interview for The Life Sciences Report and provides services to The Life Sciences Report as an employee. She or her family own shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: None.
2) The following companies mentioned in the interview are sponsors of The Life Sciences Report:ThermoGenesis Corp., Athersys Inc., NeoStem Inc., Neuralstem Inc. Mesoblast Ltd. is not affiliated with Streetwise Reports. Streetwise Reports does not accept stock in exchange for its services or as sponsorship payment.
3) Reni Benjamin: I or my family own shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: ThermoGenesis Corp. 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: ThermoGenesis Corp. and Spectrum Pharmaceuticals Inc. I was not paid by Streetwise Reports for participating in this interview. Comments and opinions expressed are my own comments and opinions. I had the opportunity to review the interview for accuracy as of the date of the interview and am responsible for the content of the interview.
4) Interviews are edited for clarity. Streetwise Reports does not make editorial comments or change experts’ statements without their consent.
5) The interview does not constitute investment advice. Each reader is encouraged to consult with his or her individual financial professional and any action a reader takes as a result of information presented here is his or her own responsibility. By opening this page, each reader accepts and agrees to Streetwise Reports’ terms of use and full legal disclaimer.
6) From time to time, Streetwise Reports LLC and its directors, officers, employees or members of their families, as well as persons interviewed for articles and interviews on the site, may have a long or short position in securities mentioned and may make purchases and/or sales of those securities in the open market or otherwise.

 

Streetwise – The Life Sciences Report is Copyright © 2014 by Streetwise Reports LLC. All rights are reserved. Streetwise Reports LLC hereby grants an unrestricted license to use or disseminate this copyrighted material (i) only in whole (and always including this disclaimer), but (ii) never in part..

 

Streetwise Reports LLC does not guarantee the accuracy or thoroughness of the information reported.

 

Streetwise Reports LLC receives a fee from companies that are listed on the home page in the In This Issue section. Their sponsor pages may be considered advertising for the purposes of 18 U.S.C. 1734.

 

Participating companies provide the logos used in The Life Sciences Report. These logos are trademarks and are the property of the individual companies.

 

101 Second St., Suite 110
Petaluma, CA 94952

Tel.: (707) 981-8204
Fax: (707) 981-8998
Email: [email protected]

 

 

 

Ryan Castilloux: Sorting Reality from Hype in the Crowded Rare Earth Industry

Source: Kevin Michael Grace of The Mining Report  (2/11/14)

http://www.theaureport.com/pub/na/ryan-castilloux-sorting-reality-from-hype-in-the-crowded-rare-earth-industry

Evaluating rare earth projects is a tricky business, and the ambiguous reporting methods some companies use don’t make it any easier. In this interview with The Mining Report, Ryan Castilloux of Adamas Intelligence examines misleading metrics that hide the devil in the details. He also explains the complex, objective methodology he uses to rank the world’s 52 most advanced rare earth projects, and names five development-stage projects and three exploration-stage projects with lucrative upside potential. A must-read for anyone interested in rare earth elements.

The Metals Report: What implications will recent news of China’s rare earth element (REE) industry consolidation have on prices in 2014 and beyond?

Ryan Castilloux: In the near term, it will firm up REE prices in China and elsewhere. This consolidation is part of Beijing’s larger efforts to stamp out illegal REE production, phase out inefficiencies and secure China’s position as the world’s lowest-cost REE producer and supplier.

TMR: How significant is illegal REE production in China?

RC: China has two competing REE industries: legal and illegal. This results in an abundance of REE suppliers. End-users are aware of this and exploit it by shopping around. They use the last guy’s offer to negotiate a lower price with the next supplier, and ultimately, the spread between prices widens, and prices trickle downward.

China’s consolidation plans aim to remedy this situation. The Baotou Rare Earth Products Exchange shares this goal. In the long term and in the context of the recent World Trade Organization (WTO) ruling against China’s REE restrictions and tariffs, consolidation is a power play. It aims to drive down production costs, so that China can undercut emerging suppliers, should it find its grip on the industry weakening.

TMR: How powerful is that grip?

RC: China yields separated rare earth oxides (REOs) at costs that no one else can match. In the mid-1990s, China exploited this fact to dramatically undercut global REO prices, which resulted in the end of production from most other regions—most notably the U.S. with the closure of Molycorp Inc.’s (MCP:NYSE) Mountain Pass mine.

For almost a generation, China has enjoyed an enduring monopoly on global REO supply. It has also absorbed most value-added production capacity in the supply chain by attracting foreign manufacturers to set up facilities in China. It’s secured its monopoly against the emergence of foreign competitors through the use of export restrictions and taxes. But China now faces the possibility that the WTO ruling could lead to a softening of its industry policies. Its strongest defense without these policies is to cement itself as the global cost leader so it can undercut foreign producers if it feels the need.

The outlook was much different in 2010, when many were predicting REO demand would double by 2016. At that time, I do believe China wanted to see the emergence of foreign producers, but demand hasn’t grown much since then. As a result, any new producers that emerge in the near term are going to take a significant bite out of China’s market share. If its market share begins eroding too quickly, China may again slash the competition by cutting REO prices. So while prices are likely to strengthen in 2014, they could head lower over the long term.

TMR: Do current REO prices provide the support necessary for new REE projects?

RC: Generally, REO prices are about where they were before the 2011 spike, with the exception of the critical REOs (neodymium [Nd], dysprosium [Dy], Europium [Eu], terbium [Tb] and yttrium [Y] oxides), which are slightly higher. There’s been a lot of groaning from investors since then about how prices have come down to levels that challenge the feasibility of many projects. But in actuality, prices are quite similar to what they were in 2007–2009, when many of these projects emerged.

TMR: After the 2011 price spike, many REE end-users began looking for substitutes. Have they found any?

RC: Many end-users have been trying to replace or reduce the amount of REOs or REEs they use in their products, since even before the 2008 economic crisis. However, rather than substituting REEs entirely, they have instead reduced the amount they use in many applications. A car, for example, can have as many as 50 electric motors in it, most of which utilize REE-bearing permanent magnets. Substituting some of these with motors that don’t use REEs can go a long way toward reducing costs and supply risk. For instance, BMW’s Mini E electric car and Tesla’s Roadster are both powered by induction motors, which don’t use REE permanent magnets.

TMR: To what extent is an optimistic outlook for REEs dependent upon explosive growth in the adoption of new technologies such as electric cars?

RC: The optimistic outlooks for REO demand that dominated headlines in 2008-2011 were entirely based on forecasts of explosive demand growth for technologies such as electric cars, wind turbines and ubiquitous gadgets and electronics. The demand for these technologies is still growing strong in most cases, but the amount of REO or REE consumed on a per-unit basis for many applications has decreased, leading to slower REO demand growth than predicted.

Somebody once told me that any forecast on future demand is wrong, and I think that’s a relevant statement, especially for the nascent REE industry. It’s important to realize just how young the REE industry is compared to other industries such as copper, aluminum or steel. We’ve only realized a small fraction of the potential applications, which will depend on REEs in the coming decades.

It’s all about the performance versus economics. If REEs are the optimal material to be used in an application for performance, but translate into very high prices for the end-user, technology developers will likely sacrifice some functionality or efficiency to stay competitive. The question is: How can developers reduce their REE needs without making sacrifices that will reduce their competitiveness and harm their brands?

TMR: What will lower long-term REE prices mean for explorers and developers outside China?

RC: It means that tomorrow’s producers will need healthy profit margins to endure potential downturns in pricing. Producers that yield significant revenues from non-REE byproducts will be able to protect themselves against REE price volatility. That’s definitely an advantage. Unfortunately, there aren’t many projects with that potential.

TMR: Could you name some?

RC: Orbite Aluminae Inc.’s (ORT:TSX; EORBF:OTXQX) Grande-Vallée project in Quebec’s Gaspé region is perhaps the best example of a byproduct-sustainable project. But in some respects, you could say that REEs are the byproduct of Orbite’s operation, since its REO production will be less than 1,000 metric tons per annum.

Tasman Metals Ltd.’s (TSM:TSX.V; TAS:NYSE.MKT; TASXF:OTCPK; T61:FSE) Norra Kärr project in Sweden and Avalon Rare Metals Inc.’s (AVL:TSX; AVL:NYSE; AVARF:OTCQX) Nechalacho project in Canada’s Northwest Territories are two other projects that can cover a major portion of operating costs and payback capital using revenue from byproducts alone.

TMR: You wrote in a report, “Sifting the Winners from Losers Amidst the Impending Rare Earth Industry Shakeout,” that “misleading metrics and ambiguous reporting practices have pervaded the REE industry.” Could you elaborate?

RC: The REE sector is rife with ambiguous and misleading project metrics, for example, basket pricing, which is the go-to practice of calculating a dollar-per-kilogram figure for contained REOs. This metric is abstract, opaque and in direct discordance with NI 43-101 standards. However, the compliant way of reporting, which is to calculate an equivalent grade referenced to one of the REEs that dominate a project’s economics, such as the percentage of Nd and Nd equivalent, is even more opaque, I would argue, because it sheds no light on what is in the deposit other than Nd.

Another opaque practice concerns costs-reporting, specifically the reporting of planned production capacity in “metric tons of REOs,” versus reporting planned production capacity in “metric tons of REOproducts.” The latter tells you nothing about the quantity of REO in the product (concentrate). It could be an REO product containing 1% REO, or containing 99.9% REO – the investor is left to make their own assumption unless it is specified elsewhere.

Things get even trickier with some companies projecting costs on a “dollar-per-metric-ton of REO produced” basis, whereas others project costs on a “dollar-per-metric-ton of REO product produced” basis, which could refer to anything from low-grade bulk ore to a purified mixed REO concentrate. Here’s an example: A project plans to produce 10,000 tonnes of REO concentrate (aka REO product) per annum. In this concentrate is 5,000 tonnes of REOs. Therefore, if it costs the company $1,000 per tonne of REO to produce, you could also say it costs them $500 per tonne of REO product, which looks a lot better. Now if the company doesn’t reveal that the “REO product” is actually only 50% REO, then the reader or investor is left to speculate, or maybe even make inaccurate conclusions.

Other confusion arises with some reporting their planned production in “tons” whereas most others report in “metric tons” or tonnes. Since REO prices are denoted on a dollar-per-kilogram basis, reporting in “metric tonnes” is most transparent in my opinion, but reporting in “tons” will naturally make your numbers look larger to anyone skimming through a news release or technical report.

Another foggy practice is the way that projected revenues are discounted in technical reports for projects that aim to produce unseparated REO concentrates. Commonly they will discount by 15–40% for the anticipated cost of paying a third party to separate REOs from the material, but seldom offer justification for this discount rate, or specify exactly which third party will do the separation.

TMR: Is there a best reporting practices code to which some but not all companies subscribe?

RC: Best practices in reporting have been adopted by some companies, but they have not been formally adopted by the industry as a whole. Generally, the best practice is to be as transparent as possible. When companies discuss production in terms of “metric tons of REO product” and fail to mention what the REO grade of that material is, or what the chemical nature of the product is—for example, carbonate, oxalate or chloride—they are not being transparent and this is certainly not a best practice.

TMR: Adamas Intelligence tracks the economic and technical development of 52 REE exploration and development-stage projects. With nearly every release in the sector touting success, how do you distinguish reality from hype?

RC: Of the 52 projects that we track, 27 are exploration stage and 25 are development stage. Exploration-stage projects possess compliant resource estimates but lack preliminary economic assessments (PEAs), preliminary feasibility studies (PFSs) or feasibility studies (FSs). Development stage projects possess PEAs, PFSs or FSs but are still preproduction. All the projects we track have either NI 43-101-, JORC- or SAMREC/SAMVAL-compliant resources.

With that sorted, we cross-compare and rank the projects by a suite of metrics that highlight their economic promise or lack thereof. We then cross compare the 27 exploration-stage projects on four metrics and the 25 development-stage projects on six metrics and apply specific weights to the individual metrics, given that some are more important than others. Finally, we sum up the weighted ranks of each of these metrics to see how each project stacks up overall. The metrics and the ranking methodology are detailed in a presentation on the Adamas Intelligence website.

 

TMR: What are the characteristics common to the projects that score highest in your ranking, and what are the characteristics common to your lowest-ranking projects?

 

RC: Our top-five ranked development projects offer robust profit margins, timely payback on preproduction capital and the prospect of solid revenues from REOs as well as non-REO products. The most promising projects can endure REO price swings and will remain lucrative in a future marked by low REO prices.

 

The lower-ranked projects tend to have smaller resources and lower grades. Thus, they have lower volumes of in situ REOs. If you consider that the average project requires around $804 million ($804M) in preproduction capital alone (thus, not including sustaining capital), it quickly becomes apparent to us that a greenfield deposit with only 10,000 or 20,000 metric tons of in situ REOs will struggle. It is important to say preproduction capital since projects also require sustaining capital during their lifetimes which is not included in this average.Other projects that didn’t rank highly are those for which we anticipate low profit margins or losses. And there are also those projects with low relative abundances of critical rare earth oxides (CREOs) and heavy rare earth oxides (HREOs). Again, CREOs include Nd, Dy, Eu, Tb and Y oxides. LREOs include lanthanum (La) through gadolinium (Gd) oxides on periodic table. HREOs include Tb through lutetium (Lu), plus Y oxides. Scandium (Sc) is none of the above, but is considered a REE or REO nonetheless.

 

TMR: The average pre-production capex is $804M?

 

RC: That’s the average of the 25 development projects we cover. The range is quite wide. The lowest figure is somewhere around $65M for AMR Mineral Metal Inc.’s (private) Aksu Diamas project in Turkey, and the highest, at over $3.766 billion ($3.766B), is DNI Metals Inc.’s (DNI:TSX.V; DG7:FSE) Buckton project.

TMR: In recent years, there has been a negative reaction to projects with capex over $500M. Does this $685M average capex demonstrate that the REE sector itself is high risk?

 

RC: With the volatility we’ve witnessed in recent years, it certainly does from a project investor standpoint. And that, in turn, makes projects that can promise a short payback period on preproduction capital the most attractive. Especially to institutional investors, who like to get in and get out.

 

And while this $685M comes with a lot of sticker shock, it’s generally a small figure compared to the life-of-mine operating costs that these projects will incur. We’re talking billions of dollars in operating costs, figures that dwarf the preproduction capital expense. When looking for room for improvement in the economics of these projects, operating costs are certainly where the biggest dent can be made.

 

TMR: Is future success in the REE sector especially correlated with a generalized upturn in the market?

 

RC: I think so. I think investors and followers of the industry have become a lot more informed in recent years, and the sticker shock of the sector’s high capex projects is wearing off. Yes, these projects are extremely expensive and require much technical expertise, but the long-term revenue potential of many of them is tremendous, and will stimulate more economic growth downstream in the market.

 

If we do see an upturn in prices in 2014, that could result in investors sitting on the sidelines stepping forward.

 

TMR: Name a couple of projects with the greatest potential to add production in the coming five years.

 

RC: Given that it can take five years or more to go from PEA to production, later-stage projects have a natural advantage in the near-term. This would include Avalon’s Nechalacho Basal Zone. The project’s polymetallic revenues offer robust profit margins despite its $1.5B capex. This project also plans to produce separated REOs, which will help align the company’s production with the needs of its eventual customers.

 

Tasman’s Norra Kärr project is another very promising contender. In fact, it’s ranked first in our development-stage ranking. Norra Kärr is also a polymetallic, heavy rare earth element (HREE)-rich deposit that offers a profit margin healthy enough to endure future price volatility. Based on its PEA, preproduction capex is low, and operating costs will be among the lowest in the sector. Affirming these costs through feasibility studies and arranging toll separation or offtake agreements are the key next steps for Norra Kärr.

 

TMR: What are some others?

 

RC: Other contenders to watch out for are Frontier Rare Earths Ltd.’s (FRO:TSX) Zandkopsdrift project in South Africa and Greenland Minerals & Energy Ltd.’s (GGG:ASX) Kvanefjeld project in Greenland. Zandkopsdrift plans to produce around 20,000 metric tons of separated REOs annually and has a joint venture with Korea Resources Corp., which will help align the project’s eventual production with major Korean technology developers and end-users. Kvanefjeld plans to produce around 23,000 metric tons of REOs annually containing a variety of high-grade concentrates, along with significant volumes of uranium oxide, zinc and fluorspar. The Kvanefjeld deposit is massive. It contains more than 6.5 million metric tonnes of in-situ REOs—about 55 times current annual global demand.

 

TMR: What are some promising exploration-stage projects?

 

RC: Namibia Rare Earths Inc.’s (NRE:TSX, NMREF:OTCQX) Lofdal project in Namibia is very interesting. The resource to date is small: only around 10,000 metric tons of REOs in situ. However, these REOs are 80% heavy rare earth oxides (HREOs) and 70% CREOs.

 

Another interesting project is Northern Minerals Ltd.’s (NTU:ASX) Browns Range project in Australia. Similar to Lofdal, the REOs at Browns Range are around 75% HREO and 70% CREOs.

 

GéomégA Resources Inc.’s (GMA:TSX.V; GOMRF:USX) Montviel project in Quebec is another rising star. While it lacks the high proportions of HREOs and CREOs of Lofdal or Browns Range, the resource is very large, with around 3.6 million metric tons of REO in-situ. The company recently announced the development of a novel physical separation process for REOs, which it claims could dramatically reduce the capital required for building separation facilities. This is exciting news but still needs more verification and development.

 

TMR: How important is the potential shortage of HREOs in the next few years?

 

RC: It has been a big concern for many end-users in recent years, and has fueled a surge in exploration. The big problem is the extreme scarcity of HREO separation capacity outside China. Projects such as Lofdal, Norra Kärr, and Nechalacho have high proportions of HREOs to meet impending shortages, but it’s still unclear where those materials could ultimately be separated and where they could be refined into the more specific materials that companies are looking for.

 

TMR: REEs are often called “critical” or “strategic” metals. Is it possible that Western governments, and the U.S. in particular, could decide that Chinese supply cannot be counted on, so domestic supply must be guaranteed?

 

RC: I think that is certainly a possibility, and there have been some developments in that direction. A number of legislative proposals have been put forth to Congress to address to the U.S.’ supply risks and to support the development of domestic REO production. For example, in June 2013 the U.S. House of Representatives passed the “National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2014 (H.R. 1960)” that forces the U.S. Department of Defense (DOD) to develop strategies for mitigating REO supply chain risks. [View source]

 

In September 2013, the House passed the “National Strategic and Critical Minerals Production Act of 2013 (H.R. 761),” which aims to streamline the federal permitting process for domestic exploration and development of critical and strategic minerals.

 

REEs are called critical and strategic metals for good reasons. They’re at the heart of new automotive technologies, a lot of aerospace technologies, and they play out an important role in certain healthcare applications.

 

Perhaps even most important, REEs are essential to the macro initiatives of European and American governments with respect to energy efficiency and greenhouse gas emissions reductions. Achieving mandated reductions in energy use or emissions without REEs can be a major challenge.

 

Consider the ongoing transition from inefficient incandescent lamps to fluorescent lamps, which contain valuable HREOs. Because of anticipated shortages of these HREOs, in 2012, eight major manufacturers of fluorescent lamps applied for (and were granted) “exception relief” by the U.S. Department of Energy that allows them to utilize less REO in their lamps than would otherwise be required to meet efficiency standards for a period of two years. I believe this is indicative of lighting companies’ awareness of impending HREO shortages or bottlenecks in the supply chain.

 

TMR: Are there any downstream gaps in the supply chain that will challenge the establishment of a western REE industry?

 

RC: As I mentioned above, the lack of REO separation capacity outside China is a challenge. This has become the elephant in the room few wish to acknowledge. Only five of the 24 most advanced projects today plan to produce separated REOs exclusively. That means that as some or all of these 19 other projects near production, this downstream gap in the supply chain will become a major problem.

 

A few companies, such as Innovation Metals (private), actively seek to fill the separation gap through the establishment of toll separation plants. But any such undertaking comes with a significant lead time. There’s really no guarantee that this gap can be closed in time for the emerging producers.

 

TMR: What other supply chain problems do you see?

 

RC: Looking even further downstream at the specific needs of end-users, they’re not necessarily looking for separated REOs or REEs. They want the alloys, the phosphors, the magnets and the other materials that the REOs and REEs are refined into. For the most part, the West is generally lacking in those areas too.

 

TMR: 2013 saw a very limited interest in REE projects from institutional investors, private equity and other financiers. Do you see foresee this changing in 2014?

 

RC: As more and more projects advance to later stages, it’s becoming clear which hold the greatest near-term promise. This could lead to some big investments in 2014. The risk for financiers and private equity investors interested in the REE space is that, if they wait too long to make their bets, one of their competitors might do so first.

 

Because the world only really needs a couple of new producers in the near-term, these investors might find themselves with only losing horses left to bet on. I think we could also see some non-traditional deals or partnerships in 2014 as REE end-users look for creative ways to secure supplies.

 

TMR: Why are creative ways needed?

 

RC: Aside from Molycorp’s vertical integration efforts and similar plans by a couple of others, the rest of the REE industry outside of China is fragmented and disconnected. The problem is that the alignment of these fragments into a competitive supply chain is hindered by catch-22s and chicken-before-egg dilemmas.

 

For example, bankers are hesitant to finance mine development because of REO price and demand uncertainty. End-users are hesitant to commit to demand because of REO price and supply uncertainty. The supply chain gap still exists because it’s a challenge to get backing to build a toll separation plant when you can’t guarantee you’ll have feed coming in the door until new mines are actually built.

 

TMR: What are the possible solutions to these catch-22s?

 

RC: Multi-stakeholder offtake agreements and commitments can help overcome a lot of these challenges. If stakeholders covering each step of the supply chain from the mines to the end-user can agree in advance to link up, major investors would see the light at the end of the tunnel. That’s definitely easier said than done, but we’re starting to see a lot of multi-stakeholder groups and different industry consortiums popping up, which is a step in the right direction.

 

TMR: Ryan, thank you for your time and your insights.

 

RC: My pleasure, thank you.

 

Ryan Castilloux is the founder of Adamas Intelligence, an independent research and advisory firm that provides strategic advice and ongoing intelligence on critical metals and minerals sectors. He helps investors, financiers, end-users and other stakeholders track emerging trends and identify new business opportunities in the critical metals and minerals sectors. Castilloux is a geologist with a background in mining and exploration and has a Master of Business Administration (finance) from the Rotterdam School of Management, Erasmus University. Subscribe for free updates from Adamas Intelligence atwww.adamasintel.com.

 

Want to read more Mining Report interviews like this? Sign up for our free e-newsletter, and you’ll learn when new articles have been published. To see a list of recent interviews with industry analysts and commentators, visit our Streetwise Interviews page.

 

DISCLOSURE:
1) Kevin Michael Grace 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: Tasman Metals Ltd. and Namibia Rare Earths Inc. Streetwise Reports does not accept stock in exchange for its services or as sponsorship payment.
3) Ryan Castilloux: 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.
4) Interviews are edited for clarity. Streetwise Reports does not make editorial comments or change experts’ statements without their consent.
5) The interview does not constitute investment advice. Each reader is encouraged to consult with his or her individual financial professional and any action a reader takes as a result of information presented here is his or her own responsibility. By opening this page, each reader accepts and agrees to Streetwise Reports’ terms of use and full legal disclaimer.
6) From time to time, Streetwise Reports LLC and its directors, officers, employees or members of their families, as well as persons interviewed for articles and interviews on the site, may have a long or short position in securities mentioned and may make purchases and/or sales of those securities in the open market or otherwise.

 

Streetwise – The Gold Report is Copyright © 2014 by Streetwise Reports LLC. All rights are reserved. Streetwise Reports LLC hereby grants an unrestricted license to use or disseminate this copyrighted material (i) only in whole (and always including this disclaimer), but (ii) never in part.

 

Streetwise Reports LLC does not guarantee the accuracy or thoroughness of the information reported.

 

Streetwise Reports LLC receives a fee from companies that are listed on the home page in the In This Issue section. Their sponsor pages may be considered advertising for the purposes of 18 U.S.C. 1734.

 

Participating companies provide the logos used in The Gold Report. These logos are trademarks and are the property of the individual companies.

 

101 Second St., Suite 110
Petaluma, CA 94952

Tel.: (707) 981-8999
Fax: (707) 981-8998
Email: [email protected]

 

 

 

65 Is Not a Magic Number

Guest Post By Dennis Miller

Is retirement really all it’s cracked up to be? The answer depends on where you find yourself financially, emotionally, and health-wise come age 65 or so.

When we’re young, we trade time for money and hope to stash away enough of it to later reverse the process and trade money for time. Ideally, we’d each have a few decades of independence before the grim reaper—or assisted living facility—comes knocking.

The statistics published on the Social Security website note that: “A man reaching age 65 today can expect to live, on average, until age 84. A woman turning age 65 today can expect to live, on average, until age 86.”

Should you retire at age 65? What’s so magic about age 65 anyway? Nothing! It was the retirement age the government used when setting up Social Security in the 1930s. Since then Social Security’s full retirement age has moved to 68 to compensate for increasing life expectancies. Should Washington get serious about fixing Social Security, the age is likely to be pushed back further.

Keep age in perspective. It’s only one barometer; there are other factors much more important for deciding if and when to retire. Poor health may make the decision for you. But if you’re healthy, the most important factor is whether you have enough acorns stashed away to support yourself and your spouse for the rest of your lives. When you run the numbers—there are countless financial calculators available for doing just that—be optimistic and assume you’ll live long past age 84 or 86.

If you do have enough to make it and you enjoy your job, consider working a few extra years. That extra money is icing on the cake. Think of it this way: if you’re lucky enough to be healthy and vital at age 95, you don’t want to find yourself wishing for a bout of pneumonia because you’ve run out of money.

Once you’ve jumped over the financial hurdle, it doesn’t mean you have to or even ought to retire. Quite the contrary! Now you’re ready to do work or projects that fit your terms. If you love your job, are having fun, and see nothing else you’d rather do, just keep on enjoying it.

Personally, the wealthiest friend I have—now age 73—could have retired before he was 50, and he’s still working. When I discuss retirement with him, he makes it clear that boredom is the biggest enemy of retirees. He loves the challenges of the business world and feels it keeps him going.

On the flip side, I have a doctor friend in his 40s who’s unhappy with the state of the healthcare system here in the US. He has plenty of money and plans to give up his practice and move back to the family farm. He also mentioned that being on call and working weekends robbed him of too much time with family. He has several children and wants to be a more integral part of their lives. He no longer wants to work in an environment he does not enjoy, and trading more of his time for wealth is no longer a necessity for him.

Here are some questions to ask yourself:

  • Is there anything else I would rather be doing?
  • Do I enjoy the environment I’m working in?
  • Am I accomplishing something other than just earning a paycheck?
  • Do I enjoy the people I work with, or am I just putting up with them?
  • Do I feel I am missing something?
  • Is my spouse on board, or does he/she feel my working is prohibiting us from doing too many other things?
  • Do I have other hobbies I enjoy that I could turn into a part-time business I would enjoy?
  • Do we currently live where we want to live?
  • Am I just tired of the rat race and want a change?

When I was in my late 50s, I asked a friend how you know when you’re ready to retire. He grinned and simply said, “You’ll know.” He was right.

Matching Wants with Financial Ability

A happy retirement means you have enough to money to quit working and live the lifestyle you want—for most people that does not mean microwave dinners in front of the television.

Sad to say, we have a few old friends who made the mistake of not saving. They discovered you cannot live very well on Social Security alone. They are all back to work at low-paying jobs, and their time choices are subordinated to their work schedules. That’s far from the dream of enjoying your golden years.

Helpful Hints

What kind of lifestyle do you want? It may take some compromises to mesh your dream with reality. We have several friends who live in doublewide mobile homes in 55-plus gated communities here in Florida. The communities have clubhouses, golf courses, community pools—most anything you would want. If you look at the calendars on their refrigerators, you realize their biggest challenge is finding time to schedule all the fun things they want to do.

Many of our friends in these communities were very successful and have plenty of money. They’ve decided to downsize economically so they have money for trips, cruises, time for family, friends and most of all, no money stresses. They are truly enjoying their golden years and don’t feel like they’re missing a thing.

I asked them if they want any do-overs. The most common answer was wishing they’d moved there five years before they retired instead of waiting. They would have been a bit better off financially, and they could have built up their network of retired friends sooner. Many admitted to initial reluctance about retirement and said that had they known it would be this much fun, it would have made the transition much easier.

Family also plays a key role in retirement decisions. Being part of your grandchildren’s lives often means spending most major holidays in your children’s homes, watching the next generation build their family traditions. It seems more grandmas and grandpas are traveling over the river and through the woods, to their children’s house they go.

We have fed 20-plus on many holidays. Just showing up and enjoying a meal has some advantages. Seeing the next generation handle the family gatherings has helped me realize the family will continue on just fine for many years to come.

On that note, proximity to family has a wide range of implications. As we age, some children feel it’s easier to keep an eye on us if we live nearby. Others want grandparents far enough away to ensure they stay independent as long as they possibly can.

We have friends who pick up the grandchildren from school every day and are taking a major role in raising the next generation. Other friends say they want no part of that; raising children is their parents’ job. They much prefer to be grandparents and not recycled parents. Whatever floats your boat and works for your family is the right way to go.

The Biggie

Once you’ve experienced the exhilaration of true freedom and independence from a full-time job—doing what you want, when you want—you never want to go back. Never again do you want to financially depend on anyone.

My wife Jo loves to share this experience as a good example. We were traveling in our motorhome from point A to point B and ended up in Cheyenne, Wyoming for the night. As I looked at all the brochures in the campground office I said to Jo, “This looks like a cool place.” We stayed a week and had a blast. As we left she said, “Ten years ago you would have never done that.” She was right. Retirement changes your mindset.

What is retiring on your own terms? It’s being financially able to approach a state of mind where your time is your own. You and your spouse can do the fun things you want to, whether that’s planning a long trip or making spur-of-the-moment decisions because you feel like it.

We have friends who go on cruises, but they wait for the deals on ships that depart in less than a month. They’re having a ball. For them, a long-term plan is a couple of weeks away, and they like it that way.

The peace of mind that you can “keep on keeping on” as long as your health allows is what enjoying your golden years truly means.

One last thought: if you want to earn a steady “retirement” income—whether you’re actually retired or not—our premium subscription can help make that a reality. If your goal is to hit a “five-run homer” with huge gains, our newsletter is probably not for you. On the other hand, if your goal is to provide good income well ahead of inflation, with the best safety measures available in today’s investment climate, then I recommend you give us a try. Click here to learn more and sign up today.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Armenia cuts rate 25 bps on swift decline in inflation

By CentralBankNews.info
    Armenia’s central bank cut its rate by a further 25 basis points to 7.5 percent, its third rate cut since November, as inflation has declined faster than expected due to low economic activity and lower international food prices.
    The Central Bank of Armenia (CBA) cut its rate by 50 basis points in November and then another 25 points in December, changing course after raising its rate in August by 50 basis points. In December the CBA said monetary policy would be weakened further in 2014.
    Armenia’s inflation fell to 5.5 percent in January from 5.56 percent in December, hitting the CBA’s upper limit of its inflation target. The central bank targets inflation in a range of 5.5 percent to 2.5 percent around a midpoint of 4.0 percent.
    The bank said its board believes that inflation will continue to decline over the next 12 months, hitting the lower border of its range by the third quarter, erasing the impact of higher energy prices in July. It does not expect any inflationary pressures from the external sector.

    Economic growth remains low, the central bank said, although improving in the fourth quarter and should improve further on the back of the bank’s rate cuts and an expected expansion of fiscal policy in the second half of this year and private investment.
    Armenia’s headline deficit is projected to rise to 2.3 percent of Gross Domestic Product in 2014 from less than 1.0 percent in 2013 and then ease to 2.0 percent in 2015.
    In the third quarter of 2013, Armenia’s GDP expanded by an annual 1.4 percent, up from 0.6 percent in the second quarter.
    Last week the International Monetary Fund and Armenia agreed on an IMF credit of up to US$125 million.
   
     http://ift.tt/1iP0FNb

The Golden Age of Gas, Possibly: Interview with the IEA

The potential for a golden age of gas comes along with a big “if” regarding environmental and social impact. The International Energy Agency (IEA)—the “global energy authority”–believes that this age of gas can be golden, and that unconventional gas can be produced in an environmentally acceptable way.

In an exclusive interview with Oilprice.com, IEA Executive Director Maria van der Hoeven, discusses:

  • The potential for a golden age of gas
  • What will the “age” means for renewables
  • What it means for humanity
  • The challenges of renewable investment and technology
  • How the US shale boom is reshaping the global economy
  • Nuclear’s contribution to energy security
  • What is holding back Europe’s energy markets
  • The next big shale venues beyond 2020
  • The reality behind “fire ice”
  • Condensate and the crude export ban
  • The most critical energy issue facing the world today

Interview by. James Stafford of Oilprice.com

Oilprice.com: In 2011, the IEA predicted what it called “the golden age of gas,” with gas production rising 50% over the next 25 years. What does this “golden age” mean for coal, oil and nuclear energy—and for renewables? What does it mean for humanity in terms of carbon emissions? Is the natural gas boom lessening the sense of urgency to work towards renewable energy solutions?

IEA: We didn’t predict a golden age of gas in 2011, we merely asked a pertinent question: namely, are we entering a golden age of gas? And we found that the potential for such a golden age certainly exists, especially given the scale of unconventional gas resources and the advances in technology that allow their extraction. But the potential for a golden age of gas hinges on a big “if,” and we elaborated on this in 2012 in a report called “ Golden Rules for a Golden Age of Gas”. Exploiting the world’s vast resources of unconventional natural gas holds the key to golden age of gas, we said, but for that to happen, governments, industry and other stakeholders must work together to address legitimate public concerns about the associated environmental and social impacts. Fortunately, we believe that unconventional gas can be produced in an environmentally acceptable way.

Under the central scenario of the World Energy Outlook-2013, natural gas production rises to 4.98 trillion cubic metres (tcm) in 2035, up nearly 50 percent from 3.38 tcm in 2011. But we have always said that a golden age of gas does not necessarily imply a golden age for humanity, or for our climate. An expansion of gas use alone is no panacea for climate change. While natural gas is the cleanest fossil fuel, it is still a fossil fuel. As we have seen in the United States, the drastic increase in shale gas production has caused coal’s share of electricity generation to slide. Of course, there is also the possibility that increased use of gas could muscle out low-carbon fuels, such as renewables and nuclear, from the energy mix.

OP: When will we see “the golden age of renewables”?

IEA: Although we have not yet predicted a “golden age” of renewables, the current, rapid growth of renewable power is a bright spot in an otherwise bleak picture of global progress towards a cleaner and more diversified energy mix. Still, the investment case for capital-intensive, low carbon power technologies carries challenges. We need to distinguish between two situations:

  • In emerging economies, renewable power often provides a cost-competitive alternative to new fossil based generation and are perceived as part of the solution to questions of energy supply, diversification, and economic development. In China, for example, efforts to reduce local pollution are stimulating major investments in cleaner energy.
  • By contrast, in stable systems with sluggish demand, no technology is competitive with marginal electricity prices, due to overcapacity. Governments are nervous about increasing investment in low-carbon options which impact on consumer prices, and this is causing policy uncertainty. But long term energy security and environmental goals need to be kept in mind.

The overall outlook for renewable electricity remains positive, even as the outlook can vary strongly by market and region. However, the electricity sector comprises less than 20% of total final energy consumption. The growth of renewables in other sectors such as transport and heat has been more sluggish. For a golden age of renewables to materialise, greater progress is needed in these areas, for example, with the development of advanced biofuels and more policy frameworks for renewable heat.

OP: How is the shale boom reshaping the global financial and economic system? Who are the winners and losers in this emerging scenario?

IEA: One of the key messages of our World Energy Outlook-2013 is that lower energy prices in the United States mean that it is well-placed to reap an economic advantage, while higher costs for energy-intensive industries in Europe and Japan are set to be a heavy burden.

Natural gas prices have fallen sharply in the United States – mainly as a result of the shale gas boom – and today they are about three times lower than in Europe and five times lower than in Japan. Electricity price differentials are also large, with Japanese and European industrial consumers paying on average more than twice as much for electricity as their counterparts in the United States, and even Chinese industry paying almost double the US level.

Looking to the future, the WEO found that the United States sees its share of global exports of energy-intensive goods slightly increase to 2035, providing the clearest indication of the link between relatively low energy prices and the industrial outlook. By contrast, the European Union and Japan see their share of global exports decline – a combined loss of around one-third of their current share.

OP: The IEA has noted that the US is no longer so dependent on Canadian oil and gas. What could this mean for pending approval of TransCanada’s Keystone XL pipeline? How important is Keystone XL to the US as opposed to its importance for Canada?

IEA: The decision on the Keystone matter is one that must be taken by the United States Government. I am afraid it is not for the IEA to comment.

OP: With the nuclear issue taking center stage in Japan’s election atmosphere, is Japan ready to pull the plug entirely on nuclear, or is it too soon for that?

IEA: This year’s World Energy Outlook, which we will release in November 2014, will carry a special focus on nuclear energy, so please stay tuned. While I won’t discuss what Japan should do, I will say that every country has a sovereign right to decide on the role of nuclear power in its energy mix. Nevertheless, nuclear is one of the world’s largest sources of low-carbon energy, and as such, it has made and should continue to make an important contribution to energy security and sustainability.

A country’s decision to cut the share of nuclear in its energy mix could open up new opportunities for renewables, particularly as some phase-out plans envision the replacement of nuclear capacity largely with renewable energy sources. However, such a decision would also likely lead to higher demand for gas and coal, higher electricity prices, increased import dependency on fossil fuels and electricity, and a more difficult path towards decarbonisation. Such a scenario would therefore make it much more difficult for the world to meet the 2°C climate stabilisation goal, and have potentially negative impacts on energy security.

OP: What is the key factor holding back European energy markets?

IEA: Europe has quite a few advantages but also many hurdles to overcome. If I had to pick one key factor that is holding back European energy markets, I would say it is the lack of cross-border interconnections. Let me explain what I mean. As we showed in WEO 2013, Europe’s competitiveness is under pressure, as energy price differences grow between Europe and its major trading partners – the US, China and Russia. High oil and gas import prices combined with low gas and electricity demand, following the recession, are impacting European economies.

Europe should accelerate the use of its indigenous potential and reap the social and economic benefits from energy efficiency, renewable energies and unconventional oil and gas. In open economies, there are significant advantages to be gained from free trade and a large energy market. One example: Today, we cannot make use of competitive electricity prices across the EU, as physical trade barriers exist and markets remain national. Europe is failing to achieve its potential. The electricity grid and system integration is very low, which also serves as a barrier to the full and efficient exploitation of renewable energy potentials. This is why addressing the issue of cross-border interconnections is so important.

OP: Where do you foresee the next “shale boom”?

IEA: According to WEO projections, there will be little non-North American shale development before 2020 due to the much earlier stage of exploration and the time needed to build up the oil field service value chain. Beyond 2020, we project large-scale shale gas production in China, Argentina, Australia as well as significant light tight oil production in Russia. The current reform proposals in Mexico have the potential to put Mexico on the top of that list as well, but they need to be properly implemented.

OP: What is the realistic future of methane hydrates, or “fire ice”?

IEA: Methane hydrates may offer a means of further increasing the supply of natural gas. However, producing gas from methane hydrates poses huge technological challenges, and the relevant extraction technology is in its infancy. Both in Canada and Japan the first test drillings have taken place, and the Japanese government is aiming to achieve commercial production in 10 to 15 years.

One thing I always mention when I am asked about methane hydrates is this: It may seem far off and uncertain, but keep in mind that shale gas was in the same position 10 to 15 years ago. So we cannot rule out that new energy revolutions may take place through technological developments and price incentives.

OP: Have we hit the “crude wall” in the US, the point at which oil production growth may end up slowing due to infrastructure and regulatory constraints?

IEA: In January 2013, the IEA’s Oil Market Report examined the possibility that as surging production continues to move the US closer to becoming a net oil exporter, there may come a time when various regulations, particularly the US ban on exports of crude oil to countries other than Canada, could have an adverse impact on continued investment in LTO – and thus continued growth in production. We called this point the “crude wall”.

A year later, in our January 2014 Oil Market Report, we noted that with US crude oil production exceeding even the boldest of expectations in 2013 by a wide margin, the crude wall now seems to be looming larger than ever. Having said that, challenges to US production growth are not imminent. Potential US growth in 2014 seems a given, even against the backdrop of resurgent non-OPEC supply growth outside North America.

OP: How is this shaping the crude export debate and where do you foresee this debate leading by the end of this year?

IEA: You are better off asking my friends and colleagues in Washington! This is obviously a sensitive topic. Different people feel differently about it, often very strongly. Oil policy always is the product of multiple, sometimes-competing considerations.

OP: What would lifting the ban on crude exports mean for US refiners, and for the US economy?

IEA: Many refiners and other major oil consumers have said they support keeping the ban amid worries that allowing exports would result in higher feedstock costs and erode their competitive advantage, or shift value-added industry abroad. On the other hand, oil producers have in general come out in favour of lifting the ban, arguing that the “crude wall” may become so large that it cannot be overcome; they see the possibility of a glut causing prices to slump and thereby choking off production. We have not produced any detailed analysis on the economic impact of lifting the ban, so I cannot comment on that part of your question.

OP: Are there any other ways around the “crude wall” aside from lifting the export ban?

IEA: As we wrote in our January 2014 Oil Market Report, much of the LTO is produced in the form of lease condensate, which is most optimally processed in a condensate splitter. There is currently only one such facility in the United States, although at least five others are in various stages of planning and construction.

I mention this issue because one could imagine a scenario under which lease condensate is excluded from the crude export restriction. The US Department of Commerce, which enforces the export ban, includes lease condensates in the definition of crude oil. However, this definition could be changed, or the Commerce Department could simply issue lease condensate export licenses at the behest of the President.

OP: How will the six-month agreement to ease sanctions on Iran affect Iranian oil production? And if international sanctions are indeed lifted after this “trial period”, how long will it take Iran to affect a real increase in production?

IEA: The deal between P5+1 and Iran doesn’t change the oil sanctions themselves. The oil sanctions remain fully in place though the P5+1 agreed not to tighten them further. Relaxing insurance sanctions doesn’t mean more oil in the market.

As for the second part of your question, I am afraid I can’t answer hypotheticals and what-ifs.

OP: What is the single most critical energy issue in the US this year?

IEA: I think that if you take the view that the energy-policy decisions you make now have ramifications for many decades to come, and if you believe what scientists tell us about the climate consequences of our energy consumption, then the single most critical energy issue in the US is the same issue for every country: what are you going to do with your energy policy to mitigate the risk of climate change? Energy is responsible for two-thirds of greenhouse-gas emissions, and right now these emissions are on track to cause global temperatures to rise between 3.6 degrees C and 5.3 degrees C. If we stay on our present emissions pathway, we are not going to come close to achieving the globally agreed target of limiting the rise in temperatures to 2 degrees C; we are instead going to have a catastrophe. So energy clearly has to be part of the climate solution – both in the short- and long-term.

OP: What is the IEA’s role in shaping critical energy issues globally and how can its influence be described, politically and intellectually?

IEA: Founded in response to the 1973/4 oil crisis, the IEA was initially meant to help countries co-ordinate a collective response to major disruptions in oil supply through the release of emergency oil stocks to the markets.

While this continues to be a key aspect of our work, the IEA has evolved and expanded over the last 40 years. I like to think of the IEA today as the global energy authority. We are at the heart of global dialogue on energy, providing authoritative statistics, analysis and recommendations. This applies both to our member countries as well as to the key emerging economies that are driving most of the growth in energy demand – and with whom we cooperate on an increasingly active basis.

Source: http://oilprice.com/Interviews/The-Golden-Age-of-Gas-Possibly-Interview-with-the-IEA.html

Interview by James Stafford of Oilprice.com

 

 

 

 

International Buying & Your Shot at 1,000% Gains

By Jeff Clark, Senior Precious Metals Analyst, Casey Research

As a gold investor in North America, it sometimes feels like I’m living in some far-off land where everyone believes in fairy tales and unicorns.

Most people around me don’t seem to see anything wrong with the Fed creating $65 billion a month out of thin air—hey, it’s not $85 billion anymore, what a relief! It’s business as usual for the US government to spend billions more than it takes in, and a public debt hovering at $17.2 trillion—up from $7 trillion just 10 years ago—seems no more alarming than a rainbow.

No surprise then that these people don’t feel any need to own assets that might help them in times of crisis. Hard assets like… gold.

I’m reminded of a visit I made to China several years ago. One night, I awoke in the middle of the night—something was crawling under the bed sheet. I shot up like a cannonball, trampolined out of bed, and hit the light switch. I searched and searched for whatever bug had made its way under the sheet, but never did find the little vermin. Still, I was so creeped out, I spent the rest of the night on the couch.

I told the staff the next morning what happened—and they did nothing. They just stared at me. They spoke English, so it wasn’t that they didn’t understand me. It was just that none of them seemed to think it was a big deal. One of them even chuckled. They obviously didn’t appreciate the potential health hazard and had no sense of customer service. I left bemused, wondering how people could accept bedbugs as normal—or even if they did, how they could not care about a customer’s experience. It was like being on another planet.

I have some of those same feelings when I think about mainstream investors today. How can they not appreciate the potential financial hazard inherent in something as obviously dangerous as today’s unprecedented levels of money printing? How can they not care that they have nothing solid, like gold, at the core of their investment portfolios? It’s like these people think they live on Planet Sesame Street.

Most people seem to really believe that today’s heavy-handed government interventions are not only the right course of action, but will have no negative fallout. Massive currency dilution, unstoppable tides of rising debt, and never-ending fiscal imbalances are hardly a way to cure decades of money mismanagement, and certainly aren’t consequence-free. How is it that this is not obvious to all?

I honestly don’t know. Perhaps people are aware at some level, but the truth is just too awful to face, and so people don’t.

Very few of my friends and neighbors own any gold. Rarely am I asked about it anymore, even by those who know what I do for a living. The doctor I saw last month gave me the distinct impression I could be doing better things with my money. Most of the mainstream media ignore gold, while many of the big banks loudly proclaim their latest short position as if they had some sort of divine insight.

I’m starting to feel like the proverbial lone voice in the woods…

But We’re Not Alone!

As deluded as most Americans seem to be, that is definitely not the case for everyone in the world—the Japanese, for example, are much more prudent and levelheaded.

I wonder if my fellow citizens would feel differently if they lived in any of these countries where people have witnessed economic insanity firsthand, and are acting accordingly:

Japan was a net importer of gold in December, the first time in almost four years. Net purchases totaled 1,885 kilograms (60,604 ounces). It was only the tenth time Japan was a net monthly buyer since the end of 2005. There are reports that Japan’s pension funds, which hold the world’s second-largest pool of retirement assets, are buying gold.

Dubai gold jewelers just reported the strongest gold sales in seven years. Pure Gold Jewelers, one of the largest dealers in the country, reported a 25% increase in gold jewelry sales during the Dubai Shopping Festival this year.

The state of Gujarat in India reported that silver bullion imports hit a five-year record from April 2013 to January 2014. Imports were more than 450% higher than the same period a year ago. The Indian government has since hiked the import duty on silver to 15%, the same rate as gold, and official imports in January subsequently fell. Smugglers will surely add silver to all those secret luggage compartments they’ve been using for gold.

Australia’s Perth Mint said gold sales jumped 41% and silver 33% in 2013. In January, gold demand was up 10% and silver 8%.

Mexico’s pension funds are now investing in gold after strict investment regulations were recently lifted. The World Gold Council says it spoke to 10 of the country’s most influential pension fund managers (with over $160 billion in assets) and was told that they began investing in gold and commodities in 2013.

Central banks were once again big buyers last year. Of those that have reported so far…

  • Turkey purchased 150.4 tonnes (4.83 million ounces)
  • Vietnam 110 tonnes (3.53 million ounces)
  • Russia 57.3 tonnes (1.84 million ounces)
  • Kazakhstan 24.16 tonnes (776,762 ounces)
  • Azerbaijan 16.02 tonnes (515,054 ounces)
  • Sri Lanka 6.51 tonnes (209,301 ounces)
  • Nepal 6.22 tonnes (199,977 ounces)
  • Ukraine 6.22 tonnes (199,977 ounces)
  • Indonesia 4.04 tonnes (129,889 ounces)
  • Venezuela 1.87 tonnes (60,121 ounces)

And of Course, There’s China…

Last year’s record import number is impressive enough, but it’s the pace that’s mind-blowing. 1,139 tonnes is…

  • More than 2011 and 2012 imports combined.
  • Over 42% of global mine production last year.
  • Roughly twice as much as the amount GLD sold in all of 2013.

Meanwhile, Back in the Good Ol’ US of A…

Gold coin demand for 2013 jumped 24%. Some headlines have pointed out that January 2014 gold and silver coin sales were down compared to a year ago—but January 2013 was the all-time record for single-month sales. Further, Eagle and Buffalo gold coin sales were more than double December’s sales, and were the highest since last April. Silver coin sales in January were almost four times more than in December.

There, now I feel better.

Even if you sometimes feel like a lone wolf investing in this market, understand that worldwide demand for gold and silver bullion continues unabated. If you live in the US, realize that people in many other countries are seeing more positive headlines about gold, have more friends who own gold, and heck, could even walk into a bank to buy gold.

I don’t think the people in these other countries are stupid. Whatever consequences result from the historic levels of currency dilution across the globe, they seem as sure as I do that they’ll be good for gold.

What should you buy? I first recommend buying gold and silver bullion to establish a financial safety net. And then, to maximize gains on the more speculative end of your portfolio, you should look at Louis James’ just-released “10-bagger List for 2014” in the February issue of International Speculator. A 10-Bagger is a stock with the potential to gain 1,000% or more—that’s not a typo, we really did make 10 times our money on junior gold stocks the last time the sector rebounded, and Louis thinks that’s about to happen again.

For example, one of those prospective 10-Baggers is a junior with a multimillion-ounce gold project that’s run by one of our Explorers League honorees. This company is on the verge of securing the funds needed to build its exceptionally high-margin gold mine, but it’s on sale. Speaking of the potential, Louis said: “If the company delivers, it’d be easy to see these 40-cent shares trading for $4” by 2015.

Investing in these stocks—and there are nine of them on Louis’ list—could quite literally make you a fortune, but the opportunity to get in on the ground floor is fading fast. Click here to learn more about Louis’ 10-Bagger List for 2014—or watch the recording of our just-aired one-hour video event “Upturn Millionaires” to learn why the time to act is now.

 

Original Article: International Buying & Your Shot at 1,000% Gains

 

 

 

 

 

Thoughts from the Frontline: A Most Dangerous Era

By John Mauldin – Thoughts from the Frontline: A Most Dangerous Era

 

“In the economic sphere an act, a habit, an institution, a law produces not only one effect, but a series of effects. Of these effects, the first alone is immediate; it appears simultaneously with its cause; it is seen. The other effects emerge only subsequently; they are not seen; we are fortunate if we foresee them.

“There is only one difference between a bad economist and a good one: the bad economist confines himself to the visible effect; the good economist takes into account both the effect that can be seen and those effects that must be foreseen.

“Yet this difference is tremendous; for it almost always happens that when the immediate consequence is favorable, the later consequences are disastrous, and vice versa. Whence it follows that the bad economist pursues a small present good that will be followed by a great evil to come, while the good economist pursues a great good to come, at the risk of a small present evil.”

– From an essay by Frédéric Bastiat in 1850, “That Which Is Seen and That Which Is Unseen”

The devil is in the details, we are told, and the details are often buried in an appendix or footnote. This week we were confronted with a rather troubling appendix in the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) analysis of the Affordable Care Act, which suggests that the act will have a rather profound impact on employment patterns. You could tell a person’s political leaning by how they responded. Republicans jumped all over this. The conservative Washington Times, for instance, featured this headline: “Obamacare will push 2 million workers out of labor market: CBO.” Which is not what the analysis says at all. Liberals immediately downplayed the import by suggesting that all it really said was that people will have more choice about how they work, giving them more free time to play with their kids and pets and pursue other activities. Who could be against spending more time with your children?

Paul Krugman noted that the data means that potential GDP will be reduced by as much as 0.5% per year, which he dismissed as a small number. And he states that people voluntarily reducing their work hours does not have the same economic effect as people being laid off or fired. Which is true, but not the point nor the import of that pesky little appendix.

Where Will the Jobs Come From?

To me the economic and employment effects of Obamacare are another piece of the larger puzzle called Where Will the Jobs Come From? This may be the most important economic question of the next 30 years. Because this topic has been the focus of my thinking for the past few years, I could be reading more into the CBO’s report than I should, but indulge me as I make a few points and then see if I can tie them together in the end.

First let’s look at what the report actually said. The CBO stated that the implementation of the Affordable Care Act will result in a “substantially larger” and “considerably higher” reduction in the labor force than the “mere” 800,000 the budget office estimated in 2010. The overall level of labor will fall by 1.5% to 2% over the decade, the CBO figures. The revision was evidently driven by economic work done by a professor at the University of Chicago by the name of Casey Mulligan. (When you do a little research on Professor Mulligan and look past the multitude of honors and awards, you find people calling him the antithesis of Paul Krugman. I must therefore state for the record that I already like him.) For you economics wonks, there is a very interesting interview with Professor Mulligan in the weekend Wall Street Journal. For those who don’t go there, I will summarize and quote a few salient points.

Let’s be clear. This report and Mulligan’s research do not say Obamacare destroys jobs. What they suggest is that Obamacare raises the marginal tax rates on income, and to such an extent that it reduces the rewards for working more hours for marginally higher pay at certain income levels. The chart below does not pertain to upper-income individuals but rather to those at the median income level.

What Mulligan’s work does demonstrate is that the loss of government benefits has the same effect on an individual as a tax increase. If you lose a government subsidy because you work more hours, then for all intents and purposes it is the same as if you were taxed at a higher rate. Quoting now from the WSJ piece:

Instead, liberals have turned to claiming that ObamaCare’s missing workers will be a gift to society. Since employers aren’t cutting jobs per se through layoffs or hourly take-backs, people are merely choosing rationally to supply less labor. Thanks to ObamaCare, we’re told, Americans can finally quit the salt mines and blacking factories and retire early, or spend more time with the children, or become artists.

Mr. Mulligan reserves particular scorn for the economists making this “eliminated from the drudgery of labor market” argument, which he views as a form of trahison des clercs [loosely translated, “the betrayal of academic economists” – JM]. “I don’t know what their intentions are,” he says, choosing his words carefully, “but it looks like they’re trying to leverage the lack of economic education in their audience by making these sorts of points.”

A job, Mr. Mulligan explains, “is a transaction between buyers and sellers. When a transaction doesn’t happen, it doesn’t happen. We know that it doesn’t matter on which side of the market you put the disincentives, the results are the same…. In this case you’re putting an implicit tax on work for households, and employers aren’t willing to compensate the households enough so they’ll still work.” Jobs can be destroyed by sellers (workers) as much as buyers (businesses).

He adds: “I can understand something like cigarettes and people believe that there’s too much smoking, so we put a tax on cigarettes, so people smoke less, and we say that’s a good thing. OK. But are we saying we were working too much before? Is that the new argument? I mean make up your mind. We’ve been complaining for six years now that there’s not enough work being done…. Even before the recession there was too little work in the economy. Now all of a sudden we wake up and say we’re glad that people are working less? We’re pursuing our dreams?” The larger betrayal, Mr. Mulligan argues, is that the same economists now praising the great shrinking workforce used to claim that ObamaCare would expand the labor market.

Paul Krugman interprets the CBO estimates to mean a loss of the number of hours that would be equivalent to the loss of 2 million jobs. The Wall Street Journal sees that same number as equivalent to 2.5 million jobs. Professor Mulligan’s research suggests that they are still off by a factor of two and that it could be closer to 5 million job equivalents.

That means a drop in potential GDP growth of somewhere between 0.5% and 1% per year. A small price to pay for universal healthcare, suggests Krugman. I would personally see it as a large price to pay for structuring healthcare reform the wrong way. That we need healthcare reform and that we as a country want it to be universal is clear. But the CBO report makes it evident that there is a hidden economic cost to the country in the way healthcare reform is currently structured. Dismissing potential GDP growth loss of 0.5% per year as “not all that much” is simply not intellectually sufficient.

(And that is taking Krugman’s estimate of 0.5% to be the actual negative effect. There are other economists who can produce credible estimates that are much higher, but for the purposes of this letter Krugman’s lower estimate will do.)

Doug Henwood over at The Liscio Report produced some fascinating research this week on what it has meant for our economy to be growing at a lower rate since 2007. In another report, the CBO offered its own estimate of future growth, which the normally sanguine Henwood thinks has the potential to make us complacent. Let’s jump right to his impact paragraphs (emphasis mine):

Another way to measure where GDP is relative to where it “should” be is by comparing the actual level to its long-term trend. [That’s what’s graphed below.] This technique shows the economy in a much deeper hole than the CBO does.

By this method, actual GDP at the end of 2013 was 86.7% of its trend value. That’s actually 3 points below where it was when the recession ended. Consumption was 87.4% of its trend value; investment, 75.1%; and government, 84.5%. (Note that government, despite perceptions to the contrary, has been falling, not rising, relative to its trend.)

These are huge gaps. In nominal dollar terms, per capita GDP is $8,278 below its 1970–2007 trend. Using the CBO’s less dramatic gap estimate works out to an actual per capita GDP $2,141 below its potential. Either way, that’s a lot of money. One way of reconciling the $6,137 disparity between the figures derived from CBO’s method and the trend method is by pointing to the long-term economic damage done by the financial crisis and recession.

The hit to investment, productivity, and labor force participation is enormous and long-lived. To put that $6,137 number in perspective, it’s very close to the per capita GDP of China. That is not small, and if the CBO is even half right, it’s not going away any time soon.

By the way, Casey Mulligan argues in his 2012 book, The Redistribution Recession, that the expansion of the welfare state through the surge in food stamps, unemployment benefits, disability, Medicaid, and other safety-net programs was responsible for about half the drop in work hours since 2007, and possibly more.

The CBO is de facto admitting that the increase in the entitlement spending due to Obamacare is going to reduce GDP. If Mulligan’s larger projection is right, we could lose roughly 10% of GDP potential over the next decade. That means the pie in the future will be smaller by 10%. That is a huge difference, not an inconsequential one. It means tax revenues needed to pay for government benefits will be 10% smaller. I am not arguing for or against whether such benefits are a proper expenditure of money; I’m simply saying that we cannot ignore the economic consequences simply because they may be politically inconvenient.

Think about this for a moment. We have lost the equivalent of Chinese per-person GDP in the space of seven years as a result of policy choices made by both Republican and Democratic administrations and due to the financial repression visited upon us by the Federal Reserve – which, by the way, has created multiple bubbles. The way we structure our policy decisions has consequences beyond the obvious.

More Unintended Consequences

Rather than immediately jumping to some kind of conclusion on employment that simply offers a number and doesn’t offer insight, I want us to look at the larger picture of work and what we get paid for it. We are rightly concerned in the developed world about the concentration of income and wealth in the top fraction of the population. When 85 people own 46% of the world’s wealth, as we’ve repeatedly heard the past few weeks, what does this portend for the future?

To continue reading this article from Thoughts from the Frontline – a free weekly publication by John Mauldin, renowned financial expert, best-selling author, and Chairman of Mauldin Economics – please click here.

© 2013 Mauldin Economics. All Rights Reserved.
Thoughts from the Frontline is a free weekly economic e-letter by best-selling author and renowned financial expert, John Mauldin. You can learn more and get your free subscription by visiting www.MauldinEconomics.com.

Please write to [email protected] to inform us of any reproductions, including when and where copy will be reproduced. You must keep the letter intact, from introduction to disclaimers. If you would like to quote brief portions only, please reference www.MauldinEconomics.com.

To subscribe to John Mauldin’s e-letter, please click here: www.mauldineconomics.com/subscribe
To change your email address, please click here: http://www.mauldineconomics.com/change-address

Thoughts From the Frontline and MauldinEconomics.com is not an offering for any investment. It represents only the opinions of John Mauldin and those that he interviews. Any views expressed are provided for information purposes only and should not be construed in any way as an offer, an endorsement, or inducement to invest and is not in any way a testimony of, or associated with, Mauldin’s other firms. John Mauldin is the Chairman of Mauldin Economics, LLC. He also is the President and registered representative of Millennium Wave Advisors, LLC (MWA) which is an investment advisory firm registered with multiple states, President and registered representative of Millennium Wave Securities, LLC, (MWS) member FINRA and SIPC, through which securities may be offered. MWS is also a Commodity Pool Operator (CPO) and a Commodity Trading Advisor (CTA) registered with the CFTC, as well as an Introducing Broker (IB) and NFA Member. Millennium Wave Investments is a dba of MWA LLC and MWS LLC. This message may contain information that is confidential or privileged and is intended only for the individual or entity named above and does not constitute an offer for or advice about any alternative investment product. Such advice can only be made when accompanied by a prospectus or similar offering document. Past performance is not indicative of future performance. Please make sure to review important disclosures at the end of each article. Mauldin companies may have a marketing relationship with products and services mentioned in this letter for a fee.

Note: Joining The Mauldin Circle is not an offering for any investment. It represents only the opinions of John Mauldin and Millennium Wave Investments. It is intended solely for investors who have registered with Millennium Wave Investments and its partners at http://www.MauldinCircle.com (formerly AccreditedInvestor.ws) or directly related websites. The Mauldin Circle may send out material that is provided on a confidential basis, and subscribers to the Mauldin Circle are not to send this letter to anyone other than their professional investment counselors. Investors should discuss any investment with their personal investment counsel. John Mauldin is the President of Millennium Wave Advisors, LLC (MWA), which is an investment advisory firm registered with multiple states. John Mauldin is a registered representative of Millennium Wave Securities, LLC, (MWS), an FINRA registered broker-dealer. MWS is also a Commodity Pool Operator (CPO) and a Commodity Trading Advisor (CTA) registered with the CFTC, as well as an Introducing Broker (IB). Millennium Wave Investments is a dba of MWA LLC and MWS LLC. Millennium Wave Investments cooperates in the consulting on and marketing of private and non-private investment offerings with other independent firms such as Altegris Investments; Capital Management Group; Absolute Return Partners, LLP; Fynn Capital; Nicola Wealth Management; and Plexus Asset Management. Investment offerings recommended by Mauldin may pay a portion of their fees to these independent firms, who will share 1/3 of those fees with MWS and thus with Mauldin. Any views expressed herein are provided for information purposes only and should not be construed in any way as an offer, an endorsement, or inducement to invest with any CTA, fund, or program mentioned here or elsewhere. Before seeking any advisor’s services or making an investment in a fund, investors must read and examine thoroughly the respective disclosure document or offering memorandum. Since these firms and Mauldin receive fees from the funds they recommend/market, they only recommend/market products with which they have been able to negotiate fee arrangements.

PAST RESULTS ARE NOT INDICATIVE OF FUTURE RESULTS. THERE IS RISK OF LOSS AS WELL AS THE OPPORTUNITY FOR GAIN WHEN INVESTING IN MANAGED FUNDS. WHEN CONSIDERING ALTERNATIVE INVESTMENTS, INCLUDING HEDGE FUNDS, YOU SHOULD CONSIDER VARIOUS RISKS INCLUDING THE FACT THAT SOME PRODUCTS: OFTEN ENGAGE IN LEVERAGING AND OTHER SPECULATIVE INVESTMENT PRACTICES THAT MAY INCREASE THE RISK OF INVESTMENT LOSS, CAN BE ILLIQUID, ARE NOT REQUIRED TO PROVIDE PERIODIC PRICING OR VALUATION INFORMATION TO INVESTORS, MAY INVOLVE COMPLEX TAX STRUCTURES AND DELAYS IN DISTRIBUTING IMPORTANT TAX INFORMATION, ARE NOT SUBJECT TO THE SAME REGULATORY REQUIREMENTS AS MUTUAL FUNDS, OFTEN CHARGE HIGH FEES, AND IN MANY CASES THE UNDERLYING INVESTMENTS ARE NOT TRANSPARENT AND ARE KNOWN ONLY TO THE INVESTMENT MANAGER. Alternative investment performance can be volatile. An investor could lose all or a substantial amount of his or her investment. Often, alternative investment fund and account managers have total trading authority over their funds or accounts; the use of a single advisor applying generally similar trading programs could mean lack of diversification and, consequently, higher risk. There is often no secondary market for an investor’s interest in alternative investments, and none is expected to develop. You are advised to discuss with your financial advisers your investment options and whether any investment is suitable for your specific needs prior to making any investments.

All material presented herein is believed to be reliable but we cannot attest to its accuracy. Opinions expressed in these reports may change without prior notice. John Mauldin and/or the staffs may or may not have investments in any funds cited above as well as economic interest. John Mauldin can be reached at 800-829-7273.