A Radical Solution for the Rare Earth Supply Crunch: Jack Lifton

Source: Alec Gimurtu of The Metals Report (7/9/13)

http://www.theaureport.com/pub/na/15427

Iron miners don’t make cars, so why should rare earth miners make magnets? According to longtime rare earth expert/consultant Jack Lifton, “mine to magnet” vertical integration strategies are little more than pie in the sky schemes. But Lifton just might have the perfect solution for the world’s rare earth element supply problems. In this interview with The Metals Report, Lifton tells us how a non-Chinese international rare earth toll refinery would get separated rare earths downstream more efficiently, while simplifying miners’ business plans. Find out which companies could be part of the solution.

The Metals Report: Recently, you have written about the strategies junior rare earth element (REE) miners need to follow to survive this tough market. What are the critical attributes of a surviving junior REE miner?

Jack Lifton: Junior REE miners need a well formulated business model. That is critical and often missing. My experience indicates that in the REE industry, many junior miners have not given any thought to their business beyond producing concentrated ores. In this business though, downstream processing is a critical part of the added value. A miner needs to produce something that customers want to buy. This revelation surprised many of the enormous number of juniors that popped up over the last five or six years. Companies that understood the supply chain had a greater chance of surviving. In REEs, profits are not derived directly from mining ore, because the concentrates are heavily discounted by the market due to the current shortage of accessible separation capacity outside of mainland China.

TMR: So greater vertical integration is the key to profitability? Is completely vertically integrated the best?

JL: You can’t be totally vertically integrated. The end-use products that contain REEs are complex. For example, an iron miner with the strategy to make cars would be laughed at. Yet, when a REE miner advocates making REE permanent magnets, everybody applauds. Simplistically, it sounds like a great way to make money. But it is an example of the foolish overreach by almost all of the REE juniors a few years back. And nobody has accomplished it. Interestingly, that type of “mine to magnet” vertical integration does not exist in the Chinese industry for the simple reason that it doesn’t make economic sense.

TMR: Does that mean the differentiator between the survivors and the non-survivors is technology—either proprietary technology or operational use of technology?

JL: I’m calling it “technology awareness.” In other words, company survival is dependent on recognizing limits. Patented processing technology is not necessarily important. But most companies that make REE permanent magnets have quite a bit of proprietary knowledge they don’t disclose. No outside company is going to get that process knowledge for free. When I heard about companies talking about their “mine to magnet” strategy, I realized they really didn’t understand what REE permanent magnets were all about. To me it was Bay Street hype or Wall Street hype. It was obvious promotion. However, I noticed that small investors and even institutional investors, who should know better, were falling for this story.

I have been saying from day one—total vertical integration is not possible. Now that doesn’t mean that there weren’t companies like Great Western Minerals Group Ltd. (GWG:TSX.V; GWMGF:OTCQX) or evenMolycorp Inc. (MCP:NYSE), that weren’t attempting to do this by mergers and acquisitions. Great Western, for example, acquired what was an existing high-technology company, Less Common Metals Ltd. of Great Britain, which was already in the rare earth magnet alloy market making a profit. What Great Western did with Less Common Metals was an example of sensible vertical integration. However, when companies started trying to get into these technology-enabled end products on their own, this was just silly.

Companies should have been looking at each step of the process required to produce a sellable product. They needed to understand a multi-step value chain. For example, if they are able to concentrate the REE ores, what do they do with the ore concentrate? How will the company get from the ore concentrate to some kind of chemical solution or solid form that it can then further process? With the REEs, the first step to create a bulk concentrate is not much of an accomplishment. The real problem in REE processing is separation—and that is the issue that most REE juniors have not solved in a cost effective way.

TMR: Are there technologies that differentiate some juniors in separation?

JL: No. At this point, everyone is planning to separate and purify REEs using the same basic technology, called solvent extraction. The differentiator is the ability to cost effectively separate the most valuable heavy rare earths (HREEs). The richest REE mineral concentrate contains little of the desirable HREEs. Most REE ore is 75% to 80% light rare earths (LREEs)—mostly lanthanum, cerium, neodymium and praseodymium. Of the LREEs, the only one that is really critical is neodymium, which is the basis of most of the REE permanent magnets. All of the other critical REEs, the ones that we really need in our modern technology are the HREE category. Altogether, these would not exceed more than 15–20% of the total mass of the best ore. When processing and separating REEs, almost 80% of the material will be lanthanum and cerium with a smaller amount of neodymium,the revenue from which has to pay for the separation of all of the first three elements. After that, the operator needs to calculate if it makes sense to keep running to produce another 5–6% of the HREEs that are valuable. While the richest deposit is up to 20% HREEs, an average deposit is more likely between 1–5% HREEs. As ore is processed to separate the less common HREEs, the cost gets progressively higher. Solvent extraction is a very expensive process such that operational costs of the technology becomes a differentiator. When it comes to survivors, we can discuss a company like Orbite Aluminae Inc. (ORT:TSX; EORBF:OTXQX). Orbite’s success isn’t all about a new technology, it’s about a streamlined technology.

TMR: What is Orbite doing differently than others?

JL: Orbite is starting small. The juniors that I believe will survive have a willingness to cut back on their projections of future production volume. I’m only going to talk about those who are not yet producing. In the United States, for example, there is Ucore Rare Metals Inc. (UCU:TSX.V; UURAF:OTCQX) and Rare Element Resources Ltd. (RES:TSX; REE:NYSE.MKT). In Europe we’re talking about Tasman Metals Ltd. (TSM:TSX.V; TAS:NYSE.MKT; TASXF:OTCPK; T61:FSE). These companies have all developed the same business model independently. The idea is to size mining and refining correctly. The total output of Ucore will be 2,200 tons per year (2,200 tpa) total rare earth oxide (TREO). Rare Element Resources and Tasman are on the order of 5,000 tpa each of TREO, which are skewed in total value toward the HREEs.

A good example of right sizing is Rare Element Resources recent business model showing the majority of its income will come from everything but lanthanum and cerium. Lanthanum and cerium in that plan are around 15% of the total value. To me, this is excellent. Those elements are nearly 80% of the produced volume, but represent only 15% of the revenue. The majority of the revenue comes from neodymium and heavier elements. The plans for Ucore and Tasman are similar. They have refocused their business models to produce less volume and more of the “good stuff.” To do that they had to reconsider their plans for building solvent extraction plants. The new plans are not like Lynas Corp. (LYC:ASX) or Molycorp. The Lynas plant will process 122,000 tpa of ore, to produce 22,000 tpa of concentrate mostly in lanthanum, cerium, neodymium and praseodymium. Approximately 5% of the total is the midrange and HREEs. That is only 1,000 tpa of the best material. But the company has had to construct one of the largest solvent extraction plants in the world to be able to get at that 1,000 tpa.

The current production rate at Molycorp is approximately 19,800 tpa. It is almost entirely LREEs, because the deposits in California do not have significant midrange or HREEs. Unless they bring in new ore sources, they will be producing exclusively LREEs. The publically available numbers indicate the Molycorp plant cost over $1 billion ($1B) and Lynas approximately $800 million ($800M). Those are huge capex numbers for an industry that is under price pressure.

The business models of Rare Element Resource, Ucore and Tasman call for separation plants of 2,200–5,000 tpa. Frontier Rare Earths Ltd. (FRO:TSX) in Africa is approximately the same size. Assuming that costs scale, to estimate the capex of a 5,000 tpa plant, I can divide Lynas’ approximate costs by four. That is about $200M for a plant to produce 5,000 tpa. Ucore’s projected costs are lower according to its plan. These capex figures are numbers that are reasonable if you’re producing HREEs.

Let’s discuss Orbite again, where the situation is a little different. The company’s plan is to establish a 1,200 tpa solvent extraction REE separation plant. It is designed to process the entire spectrum of REEs. Orbite’s REE capex plans amount to $32M based on using byproduct feedstock from a large aluminum oxide plant to be brought into operation on the Gaspé Peninsula of Québec. A 1,200 tpa, total-spectrum REE plant for $32M is much cheaper per-unit capex than either Lynas or Molycorp, both of which have plants that are limited LREE separation. If the Orbite facility can be built according to plan, it will be a benchmark for low-cost REE separation. Keep in mind that Orbite is not a REE company. Orbite is a high-purity alumina oxide company that plans on producing REEs as a byproduct.

I’m very impressed by what I know of Alkane Resources Ltd.’s (ANLKY:OTCQX; ALK:ASX) business model. Alkane is a polymetallic producer and its mix of metals, which includes zirconium, niobium, yttrium, REEs and gold, has allowed it to minimize the risk of depending entirely on REE production. Alkane is making a series of individual off-take agreements with separate vertically integrated refiners who themselves are also downstream end users and marketing experts in the products for which Alkane will provide the feedstock. This is an outstanding 21st-century business model that has allowed Alkane to create a synergistic revenue stream. In a sense, Alkane has become a mini-Glencore International Plc (GLEN:LSE), a vertically integrated trading company. This is a business model that I urge juniors with polymetallic deposits to emulate.

These producers are all pushing the industry toward centralized HREE separation. It would make a lot of sense if individual producers focused on LREE separation and left the heavy concentrates to be toll processed centrally by one company. HREE separation is a capability today of the Rhodia division ofSolvay Group (SOLB:NYX), which has a full-scale separation plant of 9,000 tpa in France that processes the total spectrum of REEs. That plant has been in operation for 45-years and is dedicated to making specialty chemicals for the Solvay Corporation, the current owner of Rhodia. The Rhodia feedstock is mostly sourced from China and production is geared toward internal company needs—at this time it is not a toll separation plant.

TMR: Is there room in the industry for an international toll separation plant to be built?

JL: Yes. Even if Rhodia were to run its current plant only as a toll separation, it wouldn’t produce enough volume both for Rhodia’s internal needs and for the international, non-Chinese consumers.

TMR: In August, you are presenting your case for a new international REE toll refinery to the Chinese Society of Rare Earths. What reaction are you expecting?

JL: My thinking about this has evolved. I think that the Chinese want this to happen. The Chinese are now restructuring their REE production industry and downsizing it to match their internal demand. They will grow the industry in the future, but only to meet their domestic demand. I do not believe that the Chinese are interested in the REE export business. In the last year the Chinese have cut legal, reported production by more than 30%. Originally, Chinese domestic users consumed 60% of their own production. It’s up to more than 80% today. When I proposed an international toll refinery, I was surprised at the positive reaction I got from this in China. I was told by a high-ranking Chinese official in the REE industry that this is an excellent topic. The Chinese really do want to hear outsider views on this. It appears that the Chinese would like the rest of the world to develop enough REE production and refining so that the domestic Chinese REE industry can be left alone. That’s my analysis at this point in time.

TMR: How would new international toll refining change REE pricing? Would there still be a Chinese domestic price and a different international price?

JL: Yes. At the moment the export prices are set by tax. Domestically, Chinese REEs are much cheaper than internationally posted prices because of the large export tax. There’s a cap on volume as well as a large tax. The prices we see for cerium or lanthanum in North America, for example, are Chinese domestic prices plus export duties and transport.

The problem for a new REE producer is—which price is it that you’re going after? For example, say I can buy lanthanum in Chicago for the Chinese export price of $20/kg. Suppose I can produce lanthanum in New Jersey for $10/kg. That looks like a solid profit. The problem is “where is your market?” Yes, $10/kg is great if you’re going to sell this into a North American market and the Chinese maintain their export duties. That is fine, except that there’s no real market for these materials in North America. There’s no total supply chain outside of China. China is the main place where the raw materials get turned into finished product. China is the only location of an existing “mine to magnet” total supply chain. Better than even, “mine to magnet,” China has “mine to vacuum cleaner,” “mine to car,” and “mine to washing machine.” They’ve got everything. As a North American producer of lanthanum, I’m going to have to sell into China at the domestic price, and pay the import duty and cover transport costs. These are all issues that junior miners do not think about. But these issues matter if you are trying to finance a $1B refinery. Is there a market at the price you’re going to produce? It’s not just about your costs per kilogram. When there is an accidental or intentional monopoly player like China, there are substantial additional factors to consider. And we haven’t even mentioned the possibility of import quotas. And then there is the uncertainty. . .everything could change tomorrow.

The Chinese REE market is evolving rapidly. They have dramatic overcapacity in everything: mining, refining, fabrication, you name it. There is a desire to cut back to profitable unit production. As they move in that direction, prices will rise in China. The Chinese goal is to have prices that can sustain the industry. External competition in the commodity markets is not their concern. The model of Rhodia as a toll refinery does not concern China. Solvay is not in the mining business. They don’t make metals. They don’t make magnets. They are a solvent exchange separation and high-purity refining company. Their output goes directly to the chemical, automotive and high-tech industries. Rhodia has a large competitive advantage because of its extant investment and China is not trying to take it away.

However, REE permanent magnets are a different business because the refined elements from a company like Rhodia have to go to metal maker, an alloy maker and then a magnet maker. While they have these industries in Europe, there is not enough capacity to satisfy all European industrial demand. The Chinese dominate the HREEs because there are no sources outside China. There are still no mines outside of China that are producing significant quantities of HREEs. The Chinese still supply 100% of the world production.

The locations of the REE survivors will determine where the toll refining business opportunities will happen. Ucore is in Alaska, Rare Element Resources in Wyoming. The American political climate is such that exporting natural resources to China, especially ones that have been as hyped as REEs, is not very likely to get the support of the government. Therefore, I think there is a strong possibility of a REE toll refinery being built in North America.

Tasman is located in Sweden and does not have to deal with the U.S. political climate. In this case, there is a strong possibility that HREE concentrates will be sold to China, for processing inside China. Other than Rhodia and perhaps two other small facilities in Japan, there’s no HREE processing capability outside of China. While Tasman could ship ore or concentrates to China for the dysprosium content, the company wouldn’t make any money doing it. Tasman is under review by several European companies as a source for potential feedstock into their vertical supply chain. That would be one path to the creation of a central European REE toll separation and refining plant.

The entire HREE industry of the world, which today is 100% in China, produces total of 15,000 tpa of HREEs. Of that, 60% is the element yttrium. Two new toll refining plants outside of China could double the world’s production of the HREEs. In order to do that, we’d have to obtain HREEs ores from outside of China. The surviving juniors will be the companies that supply the midrange and HREEs to these types of refineries.

TMR: Could the Molycorp plant be modified slightly become a toll refinery?

JL: It would be more than a slight modification. It would be very expensive. I wrote earlier this year that if I were Molycorp, I would change the company direction. I would deemphasize mining and expand the Phoenix project to be the Western world’s toll refiner. To me, that would be an ideal solution.

TMR: Does Molycorp agree with you?

JL: Well, I have to admit that statement of mine met with some ridicule from the company, but now I’ve noticed that they’ve gotten very quiet. The company is in the process of restructuring. Theoretically, as a toll refinery, Molycorp would be well positioned. Executing that strategy would be another matter. Financially, it would be tough. However, although the California plant only separates LREEs, Molycorp is in that business of total-spectrum rare earth separation because of its ownership of Neo Materials, which has two small plants in China. Those are relatively small plants, but they are capable of processing and purifying HREEs. Putting that technology into operation in California would be expensive. However, I think that’s a good idea. Because Molycorp has no HREE feedstock, it would become a toll refinery.

TMR: Is there anything you want to summarize before we sign off?

JL: The “good stuff” the industry needs is the HREEs. I still hear to this day, “Rare earths are like gold.” No they’re not. Not all of them. The juniors that have worked out solid business models to produce HREEs will be the survivors. One or two international toll refineries would further enable the development of any and all of these deposits. If there was a toll refinery that could process midrange and HREEs concentrates, this would make ventures in Australia, like Hastings Rare Metals Ltd. (HAS:ASX) and Northern Minerals Ltd. (NTU:ASX), extremely interesting while simplifying the business models for the junior miners we discussed. Otherwise, we’re going to wind up with a monopolized Chinese REE industry and the rest of us will be looking at it from the sidelines.

TMR: It has been great to talk to you again.

JL: Glad to speak with you.

Jack Lifton is an independent consultant and commentator, focusing on market fundamentals and future end-use trends of the rare metals. He specializes in sourcing nonferrous strategic metals and due diligence studies of businesses in that space. He has more than 50 years of experience in the global OEM automotive, heavy equipment, electrical and electronic, mining, smelting and refining industries.

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DISCLOSURE:

1) J. Alec Gimurtu conducted this interview for The Metals Report and provides services to The Metals 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 Metals Report: Great Western Minerals Group Ltd., Orbite Aluminae Inc. and Tasman Metals Ltd. Streetwise Reports does not accept stock in exchange for its services or as sponsorship payment.

3) Jack Lifton: I or my family own shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: None I personally, as an operations consultant, am paid by the following companies mentioned in this interview: Ucore Rare Metals Inc., Rare Element Resources Ltd. and Tasman Metals Ltd. My company has a financial relationship with the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. I was not paid by Streetwise Reports for participating in this interview. Comments and opinions expressed are my own comments and opinions. I had the opportunity to review the interview for accuracy as of the date of the interview and am responsible for the content of the interview.

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Thailand holds rate, sees growth returning to normal path

By www.CentralBankNews.info     Thailand’s central bank unanimously voted to maintain its policy rate at 2.50 percent, saying the pace of economic growth was slowing to a more normal pace and it was closely monitoring the “rapidly changing global economic and financial conditions, as well as risks to domestic financial stability.”
    The Bank of Thailand (BOT), which cut its rate by 25 basis points at its previous meeting in May due to an rise in downside economic risks, said the domestic environment with high employment and private spending was supporting the recovery, which was also helped by accommodative monetary and fiscal policies that were reflected in continued growth of private credit and fiscal deficits.
    Thailand’s Gross Domestic Product contracted by 2.2 percent in the first quarter compared with a quarterly expansion of 2.8 percent in the fourth quarter. On an annual basis the economy grew by 5.3 percent, down from 19.1 percent in the fourth quarter when growth was boosted by government stimulus measures following extensive flooding in 2011.
    But Thailand’s economy has been hit by a slowdown in China along with a softening of domestic consumption “as consumers exercise more caution partly as a result of rising debt burden, coupled with waning government consumption stimulus measures,” the BOT said, adding weak domestic and external demand had caused delays in private investment.

    “The global economy expanded less than previously assessed due to China’s economic slowdown, which weighed on Asian exports, despite some improvement in the U.S. economy from better housing and labour market conditions,” the BOT said.
    The BOT is expected to revise downward its economic growth forecasts and last week a member of the BOT’s policy committee said growth could ease to 4.5 percent this year from a forecast 4.9 percent, with the country facing the risks of capital outflows.
    In June the IMF forecast Thai growth of 4.75 percent this year and 5.25 percent in 2014 compared with growth of 6.4 percent in 2012.
    Earlier this year Thailand found itself on the front lines of the currency wars as Japan’s launch of aggressive monetary easing from April lead to a rise in the baht, triggering fears of large capital inflows into such countries as Thailand.
    Thai authorities prepared measures to combat a rise in the baht whose strength threatened to make Thai exports uncompetitive at a time of slowing exports due to slower growth in China.
    Fears of intervention in foreign exchange markets by Thai authorities helped take the pressure off the baht in late April and then in May the currency weakened further, along with many other emerging market currencies, as capital flowed out of these riskier markets as major investors responded to an earlier-than-expected pullback in the U.S. Federal Reserve’s asset purchases.
    In today’s statement, the BOT did not make any reference to the Thai baht apart from the reference to “rapidly changing global economic and financial conditions.”
    From the start of the year to late April, the Thai bath rose by almost 6 percent, hitting a high of 28.6 baht to the U.S. dollar, but since then it has dropped by almost 10 percent, quoted at 31.36 to the U.S. dollar today.
    Thailand’s headline inflation rate eased marginally to 2.25 percent in June from 2.27 percent in May with the BOT saying inflationary pressures had eased from softer demand and lower production costs.
    Last year Thailand’s headline inflation rate was 3.0 percent with core inflation of 2.1 percent and the BOT has forecast headline inflation this year of 2.8 percent and core inflation of 1.7 percent.
   
     www.CentralBankNews.info

Rising Borrowing Costs Nudge Gold Higher But Indian Retailers Halt Coin Sales

London Gold Market Report
from Adrian Ash
BullionVault
Wednesday, 10 July 08:20 EST

WHOLESALE prices for gold rose 1.1% in Asian and London trade Wednesday morning, nearing yesterday’s 1-week highs at $1260 per ounce as the rate for leasing and borrowing gold rose further.

Silver prices rose 1.8% from an overnight low at $19.05 per ounce.

 Equity markets slipped while commodities rose with major government bond prices, nudging 10-year US Treasury yields further back from Monday’s 2.73% – their highest level since August 2011.

 Interest rates on weaker Eurozone debt rose, however, after ratings agency S&P cut Italy’s long-term credit to BBB, just two notches above “junk” status.

 “There has been some [gold] borrowing interest recently,” the FT quotes Swiss bank UBS’s precious metals strategist Joni Teves.

 “It’s related to the demand for physical,” with premiums in Shanghai continuing to hold $40 per ounce above London’s benchmark.

 “As wholesalers, refiners and retailers of investment products are scouring for the metal to make physical products,” agrees consultancy CPM Group’s head Jeffrey Christian, speaking to Reuters, “some of them are actually borrowing the gold in advance.”

 After falling into negative territory for the first time in 5 years on Monday, the forward rate offered by London bullion banks fell further to -0.12% on 1-month swaps today.

 The offered rate is paid to borrowers who are willing to swap cash for gold bullion, and so bear the cost of storage and lost interest payments for the period of the swap.

 Data from trade association the London Bullion Market Association show gold offered rates were last negative – meaning that gold owners are demanding payment, rather than offering it – in November 2008, after the collapse of Lehman Brothers.

 One-month rates have only been negative on 12 trading days in the LBMA’s twenty-four year records.

 The most negative rate – meaning the highest rate demanded by large gold owners – came at -4.53% in September 1999, when European central banks agreed to cap their annual gold sales. A sharp jump in gold prices forced a scramble amongst gold mining companies who, after a near two-decade bear market, had borrowed and sold gold for fear of further price drops.

 The rising price and cost of borrowing gold led to the near-bankruptcy of Ghana miner Ashanti.

 “[The negative rate] is important news,” says refining and finance group MKS’s daily note.

 “It has piqued people’s interest” in buying gold to profit from a squeeze on bearish traders, the FT quotes a senior bullion banker, with the turnaround in the gold borrowing rate helping support prices after the worst quarterly drop in three decades.

 Barring a spike in May this year, the overall return to large gold owners for offering metal for a 1-month swap and earning the interbank interest rate on the cash received hit its best level since February 2009 at 0.30% annualized.

 Meantime in Asia on Wednesday, gold retailers in India – the world’s No.1 consumer market – agreed Wednesday to suspend further sales of gold coins and investment bars, meeting a government plea for help in reducing gold bullion imports.

 The All India Gems & Jewellery Trade Federation, which this week proposed a gold-deposit banking scheme to “mobilize” existing households stockpiles and so reduce gold imports, said more than two-in-three of its 40,000 members have agreed to the ban.

 Physical gold demand from wholesalers in China, the world’s No.2 consumer, was strong overnight according to dealers.

 Looking at recent weak economic data from China, “A hard landing could shake faith in the government,” says a note on gold investing from Barclays Research, and lead to a big fall in Yuan-denominated assets.

 “[That] could mean gold becomes important for domestic investors to hedge what they may view as a greater set of risks than previously,” reckons Barclays commodities analyst Sudakshina Unnikrishnan.

Adrian Ash

BullionVault

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Please Note: This article is to inform your thinking, not lead it. Only you can decide the best place for your money, and any decision you make will put your money at risk. Information or data included here may have already been overtaken by events – and must be verified elsewhere – should you choose to act on it.

 

US Dollar Correcting Lower

EURUSD – The EURUSD Trying to Develop a Correction

eurusd09.07.2013

The EURUSD keeps trying to form the basis near the 28th figure, and there has already been seen some progress in this regard. Despite the negative weekly close with a further decrease, the pair managed to stay above the current support and increased to the resistance of 1.2880 which was broken through during the Asian session, having allowed the euro to test the 1.2894 level. There is no doubt that the matter in hand is about the recovery after a large-scale reduction, contributed by the pair’s state of being oversold on the 4 hour chart. The single currency remains negative, but it may recover to the 30th figure, and only the growth and ability to consolidate higher would signal a possible trend reversal. Until then, the pair is at the continuous risks of resuming its decrease.




GBPUSD – The GBPUSD May Increase to 1.5000 — 1.5040

gbpusd09.07.2013

As expected, the pair’s state of being oversold, as well as the rate’s nearing to the strong support levels caused profit-taking by the short-term players, due to which the pound found the support at 1.4858 with its following recovery and increase to 1.4971. Similar to the EURUSD, there is a clear correction after the pair’s plummeting. The immediate target of the correction can be the 1.5000 – 1.5040 levels’ proximity – the increase up to 1.5175 is wise to be taken into account as well. Only if the pair increases above 1.5200, it will be advisable to anticipate the downtrend completion, as well as development of the upward movement.




USDCHF – The USDCHF Remains Positive

usdchf09.07.2013

The dollar is rather confident being in pair with the Swiss franc. The bears managed to break below the support at 0.9624, but the USDCHF is testing the current highs around 0.9666 due to the Swiss franc’s weakness in the EURCHFcross-rate. The USDCHF remains positive, but its state of being overbought on the 4 hour chart could trigger profit-taking, as well as development of a downward correction with the immediate target at the level of 0.9555. The drop below would weaken the bullish momentum.




USDJPY – The USDJPY Finds Support at 100.80

usdjpy09.07.2013

The USDJPY was gradually moving away from the 101.53 high reached yesterday, but the decrease was limited by the support near 100.80. The rebound from this level allows the dollar to demonstrate a positive trend again. Consequently, it has already tested the 101.29 level. As long as the pair is trading above the ascending support line, the bulls can count on the continued increase, but the breakdown of the resistance will increase the upward momentum with a subsequent increase to 102. If the dollar decreases below the 99th figure, this will mean the trend reversal, as well as the downward correction in USDJPY.

provided by IAFT

 

USDCAD is facing trend line support

USDCAD is facing the support of the upward trend line on 4-hour chart. As long as the trend line support holds, the fall from 1.0608 could be treated as consolidation of the uptrend from 1.0137, one more rise to 1.0700 area to complete the upward movement is still possible. On the downside, a clear break below the trend line support will indicate that the uptrend from 1.0137 had completed at 1.0608 already, then the following downward movement could bring price back to 1.0300 zone.

usdcad

Provided by ForexCycle.com

Why Oil Could be the One Commodity to Defy the Doom…

By MoneyMorning.com.au

There’s always some corner of the market that’s making money for investors.

Even in the tough times, when all the ink seems to be in the red, you can still track down a trade with a bit of good old-fashioned detective work.

It may be more challenging than usual in today’s resource sector – but good opportunities still lurk out there.

The first place to start looking is in the energy sector. Even as the small resources index had a horror fall of 63% over the last eighteen months, one of my energy tips, Sundance Energy (SEA), went the other way, letting us lock in a gain of 63%.

But that’s not all. There are plenty more energy opportunities out there too…

Apart from the fact that the world always needs energy, there’s one good reason why energy stocks are doing better than other resource stocks: the price of energy is holding up.

Take the Brent oil price for example. It’s at $107 a barrel today…pretty much exactly where it was two years ago.

Compare that to a commodity index like the Continuous Commodity Index (CCI), which takes in a whole basket of commodities, and is down over 20% in the same timeframe.

The Oil Price – Holding Fairly Steady as Other Commodities Fall


Source: StockCharts

If you look closer at the chart you’ll see the diversion has been very pronounced in the last month.

While oil has shot up 7%, the CCI has fallen 7%.

What’s Going On With Oil?

Well, you can pin most of this on the simmering geopolitical risk in the Middle East.

Egypt has been all over the news as President Morsi was kicked out of the top job. Violent protests have seen scores of people killed. It’s like Groundhog Day as the most populous country in the Arab world spirals into instability again.

The thing is that Egypt is the largest non-OPEC oil producer in Africa and the second largest natural gas producer on the continent. And due to major recent discoveries, natural gas is likely to be the primary growth engine of Egypt’s energy sector.

So the prospect of a drop in production from Egypt due to political chaos is one factor keeping oil prices strong.

But it doesn’t stop there. The Suez Canal and Sumed Pipeline, which both travel through Egypt, are strategic routes for Persian Gulf oil shipments to Europe. Closure of the Suez Canal and Sumed Pipeline would add an estimated 6,000 miles of transit around the continent of Africa.

So when protests broke out right next to the Suez Canal a few days ago, oil prices took another leg up.

Egypt isn’t the only hot spot either. Protests in Libya have shut down several fields there. A pipeline from Iraq to Turkey has mysteriously sprung a leak. And Syria is still a basket case: its oil production keeps falling and has now halved in the last few years.

This tongue-in-cheek ‘map of the world according to investors’ went round the office this morning, simply describing the Middle East as ‘Oil, Drama’! A bit of a simplification maybe, but right now it’s about right…

Middle East: ‘Oil, Drama’


Source: TRB

A bit of fun there, but I wouldn’t laugh too hard. Its summary of Australia as ‘China Echo Bubble’ might not be too far off the mark either!

The ‘drama’ in the Middle East isn’t the only determinant of the oil price of course. With US data going through a better phase for now, the prospect of the world’s biggest oil importer wanting to import more oil has also given the price a kicker in recent weeks.

As well as all this, the simple fact is that it costs more to produce oil today than it used to. There is a natural floor to the price at around $85 / barrel by some estimates.

When oil plunged twelve months ago, it didn’t stay close to that price for long. A price close to production costs would have triggered a drop in production, leading in turn to higher prices.

The reasons being that it’s more expensive to drill oil today as the easy stuff is already gone, and oil companies have to go to ever more inventive and expensive measures to get harder-to-access reservoirs.

We take it for granted, but imagine how hard it would be to drill offshore through five kms of rock from a platform floating a few kms above the ocean floor.

Or how about the costs incurred by the relatively new technique of fracking, which is revolutionising the industry? The infrastructure that goes into ‘fracking’ a well is astonishing.

There is also increasing discussion about the shelf-life of a frack well. It looks increasingly like they expire more rapidly than conventional wells. Because of this, more are needed to sustain flow, and this increases costs further.

Anyway, the point is that thanks to ‘Drama’, stronger demand, and higher production costs, you could expect oil prices to stay stronger than most commodities.

And I’m not overlooking natural gas either, which is a whole other story. Over the last few years it had doubled to break through $4 a few months ago.

So with natural gas doubling, and oil holding its ground, you could do worse than look at energy plays in today’s resource market.

This doesn’t mean that all energy stocks will do well…far from it. ASX-listed energy stocks vary from the great and the good, to the sublime and the ridiculous. Serious homework is required, and a healthy dose of risk appetite is needed on top of that.

But…get it right with energy stocks…and triple digit percentage gains are a realistic prospect.

Dr Alex Cowie+
Editor, Diggers & Drillers

From the Port Phillip Publishing Library

Special Report: Panic of 2013

Daily Reckoning: The Lucrative Spot for Investors to Look… The Energy Sector

Money Morning: Gold Breaks A Record

Pursuit of Happiness: Make Sure You’re Not a Property Investing ‘Loser’

[Ed note: Continuing for the rest of this week, we’ll publish some of the best recent articles from the guys over at our sibling free e-letter, The Daily Reckoning. As mentioned yesterday, they take a different view on the market.

The Daily Reckoning editors look at the big picture view of the economy and analyse the impact of central bank monetary policy on the value of assets and money. As they see it, these policies have resulted in an almighty asset bubble which will lead to a devastating crash. You’ve read our view; now it’s time to consider the other side. Following is an essay from Greg Canavan, first printed in The Daily Reckoning on 19 June 2013…]

The Holden Moment for the Australian Economy

By MoneyMorning.com.au

[Ed note: Continuing for the rest of this week, we’ll publish some of the best recent articles from the guys over at our sibling free e-letter, The Daily Reckoning. As mentioned yesterday, they take a different view on the market.

The Daily Reckoning editors look at the big picture view of the economy and analyse the impact of central bank monetary policy on the value of assets and money. As they see it, these policies have resulted in an almighty asset bubble which will lead to a devastating crash. You’ve read our view; now it’s time to consider the other side. Following is an essay from Greg Canavan, first printed in The Daily Reckoning on 19 June 2013…]

Australian car maker, Holden, is in a powerful negotiating position. The car maker is threatening to close its manufacturing plant in Adelaide unless it can cut costs by $18 million per year. The cost target equates to a pay cut of around $200 per week for Holden’s workers, which is not something the Australian government or the unions will allow to happen.

Its local manufacturing operations are loss-making, and that’s after receiving government assistance. It wants to be able to move back into profitability or leave, threating not just its 1,700 employees but the whole car manufacturing industry.

Taxpayers have given Holden a total of $2.17 billion in ‘co-investment’ funds since 2001 but the company still can’t make a profit. It’s not just Holden; the problems are structural. High labour costs, poor productivity relative to the cost of labour and a high dollar are all part of the problem.

This begs the question, should Australia try to maintain a local car-making industry when it can’t make money doing so?

The free-market answer is no it shouldn’t. If you have a whole bunch of national resources aimed at producing a good that doesn’t actually create any profit or wealth, or doesn’t create a long term return above its cost of capital, then those resources should be directed towards more productive enterprises.

But free-market thinking only exits in text-books. In the real world you have vested interests and governments interfering in the market mechanism. And while we have sympathy for the view that governments should temper the vagaries of the markets, we have absolutely no faith in it being able to do so adequately and dispassionately. Anyway, who measures the ‘adequacy’ of any intervention?

So instead you get a situation where governments counter the harsh but necessary adjustments created by the market with misguided and one-dimensional responses.

Peter Roberts argued recently in the Australian Financial Review that if Holden pulled up stumps and left, it would be ‘catastrophic’ for the Australian economy. It would lead to an exodus of car makers, with ‘44,000 direct car-making jobs lost immediately and perhaps three times that number in supporting industry.’

That sounds pretty grim. After all, many industries, from the steel makers to the parts suppliers, rely on the car industry to make a living.

But if the government had not provided such large assistance payments over the years, and the car makers wound down their manufacturing facilities, would such a large support network exist? The resources (labour and capital) currently devoted to supplying the car industry would have, by economic necessity, looked elsewhere for their sustenance.

And if those resources instead went into productive enterprise, the long term wealth created would be much better for the country. There would be no need for government subsidies, and the returns received by the new enterprises’ (in excess of their cost of capital) would represent the accumulation of real wealth.

But in its well intentioned effort to create jobs and maintain a manufacturing presence, the government has inadvertently created a very large work force almost entirely dependent on its continuing assistance payments. And while parts of that work force may be highly productive, they’re still feeding off an unproductive economic carcass.

Overall, that’s bad for the Australian economy. But the interventionist view says the government is right to support an unprofitable industry because it keeps people in jobs. And to any half-caring person, especially those with kids or dependents, maintaining jobs is a worthy political goal.

That’s why the interventionist view is so seductive. And if you pooh-pooh it, you’re just a heartless, right-wing, George Bush loving a-hole who only cares about profits.

But the free-marketer says it’s not the government’s role to create jobs. That’s what entrepreneurs are for. The government is there to do as little as possible and make sure conditions are ripe for entrepreneurs to succeed…to create productive jobs and wealth, which, if redistributed via that old notion of philanthropy, creates a more prosperous and independent society.

In short, free marketers realise that government subsidies, no matter how well intentioned, create distortions and is ultimately detrimental to a society’s wealth.

But the flaw with the free market view is that it fails to take humans into account. It expects politicians to not be politicians. And it expects business to be more chivalrous than it really is.

So we’re stuck with the seductive view…the view that governments, central banks, and whoever is handing out wads of someone else’s cash really are doing the right thing.

Well, if you want to be seduced, go right ahead. But understand that the more interference you have, the more wealth destruction happens under the surface. It’s not immediately apparent, but one day, and all of a sudden, the market will face a ‘Holden’ moment, which will threaten the entire underlying infrastructure.

Greg Canavan+
Editor, The Daily Reckoning Australia

[Ed Note: To read more of Greg’s in depth macro-economic analysis, click here to subscribe to the free daily e-letter The Daily Reckoning.]

From the Archives…

The Power of Low Interest Rates Coming to the Aussie Market
5-07-2013 – Kris Sayce

S+P 500 Downtrend Looms? Counting Down The Days…
4-07-2013 – Murray Dawes

Here’s Your Six-Point Stock Buying Checklist
3-07-2013 – Kris Sayce

Are the Credit Rating Agencies at it Again?
2-07-2013 – Kris Sayce

Why This Could be Another Great Year for Australian Stocks…
1-07-2013 – Kris Sayce

Why the Indices Are About to Stop Rising

By Profit Confidential

Key Stock Indices While the key stock indices might be giving the impression that everything is fine with the global economy, the reality is far less optimistic.

The global economy is actually standing on the verge of a severe economic slowdown that could wipe out the wealth of many investors. Now is a great time to be careful.

The four biggest economic hubs in the global economy are going through a period of slow growth or are in an outright economic slowdown. And wise investors know that when the big movers in the global economy witness an economic slowdown, the small nations will follow. That will eventually result in widespread turmoil in the stock markets.

The U.S. economy, the biggest contributor to global output, is in a period of stagnant growth. In fact, I consider it to be on the borderline of an economic slowdown. The unemployment in the country remains very high, the consumer spending numbers are dismal, and the number of people using food stamps continues to increase.

And the Chinese economy, the second-biggest in the global economy and often referred to as a “powerhouse,” is experiencing an economic slowdown like it has never seen before. Exports from the Chinese economy to the global economy witnessed their slowest growth rate in a year, and the factory activity in the nation dropped to a nine-month low. (Source: CNBC, June 26, 2013.)

The Chinese economy is expected to grow at a very slow rate compared to its historical average, and the credit problems there continue to undermine its financial system. I worry that the credit crisis could send even bigger problems to the global economy.

And the Japanese economy, the third-biggest contributor to the global economy, has been in a continuous economic slowdown despite rigorous actions taken by its central bank.

According to the Japanese government’s cabinet office, sentiment in the service sector declined in June. The index for “economy watchers”—those who are closest to the economy in Japan—fell for the third straight month in June to 53.0 from 55.7 in May. (Source: Reuters, July 8, 2013.)

Even Germany, the fourth-biggest contributor to global output and the biggest economic hub in the eurozone, is also showing signs of an economic slowdown. In May, the industrial output in Germany dropped the most since October by twice what was forecast.

The production fell one percent for the month, with capital goods plummeting 2.3% and output from construction falling 2.6% in May. (Source: Reuters, July 8, 2013.)

As I continue to point out, the troubles in the global economy are unwinding, and U.S.-based companies will face more hardship—yes, more than they have already experienced. There’s no rocket science behind it; they do business in the global economy, so as the demand decreases, their profitability suffers.

We are now entering the second-quarter earnings season. Readers of Profit Confidential already know how companies on key stock indices are showing profits—they are buying back their shares and cutting their workforces.

And since we have already seen a significant number of companies on key stock indices like the S&P 500 provide negative earnings guidance, I wouldn’t be surprised to see an earnings growth rate lower than the previous quarter’s, with companies showing more concern about global growth.

Article by profitconfidential.com

How Rising Oil Prices Can Help Your Portfolio

By Profit Confidential

Oil Prices There are a lot of reasons why the spot price of oil is back over $100.00 a barrel, and the fact that it is up there is very good for oil stocks.

The price of natural gas continues to be subdued, but that doesn’t mean that oil and gas companies that are growing production are not able to do well on the stock market.

Resource equity investing always has the added risk of the value of the underlying commodity, but the Bakken oil boom, itself a counterplay on oil prices, is creating a number of winners.

We looked at Kodiak Oil & Gas Corp. (KOG) before. This is one of the many highly liquid oil stocks that have become a big favorite of institutional investors.

Kodiak has oil and natural gas reserves concentrated in the Williston Basin of North Dakota and Montana and the Green River Basin of Wyoming and Colorado.

Kodiak’s first quarter (ended March 31, 2013) saw oil and gas sales of $165.1 million. That compared to $79.9 million in the comparable quarter in 2012 and $130.8 million in the fourth quarter of 2012, representing increases of 107% and 26%, respectively.

The company sold 1.95 million barrels of oil equivalent (MMBOE) in the first quarter of 2013 for a gain of 103% comparatively, of which 94% was crude oil.

Earnings came in at $19.4 million, or $0.07 per diluted share, compared to $1.7 million, or $0.01 per diluted share, for the same period in 2012.

There are plenty of oil stocks in the equity universe that have done well and should continue to do so. But even the top growth stories generally don’t see their share prices appreciate unless either oil or natural gas prices are soaring.

That’s why there’s a great deal of growth when it comes to speculating in oil stocks and resource stocks in general. You always have to keep in mind that the underlying commodity rules.

The other indicator to watch out for when it comes to speculating in oil stocks comes from the fact that these companies always require new capital in order to grow. That means that if their share prices are stronger, it’s increasingly likely that they will issue new shares and/or debt to the marketplace. Shareholder dilution is a fact of life with oil stocks, especially smaller production companies.

In more aggressive equity portfolios, there certainly is a role for one or two junior oil stocks. Resource investing requires a solid package—qualified management, good backing from Wall Street and strong institutional interest, great properties, and the prospect for meaningful production growth over a number of years. (See “What’s Signaling the End of the Current Recovery?”)

But it is worthwhile to keep this thought in the back of your mind: no matter what the growth story or the prospects for the future, resource stock investing is a high-risk endeavor.

For serious speculators in oil stocks, it is useful to deal with investment banks that specialize in raising capital for this sector.

Everyone knows where the oil and gas is. The rest is just a game of who can raise the money to go get it profitably.

Article by profitconfidential.com

Australia, Negative Outlook

Article by Investazor.com

Mining (down 15 to -28 points), retail (down 17 to -28 points) and manufacturing (down 13 to -27 points), one by one the most important sectors of activity in Australia are ceasing to work at previous standards. Thus, the business conditions went back to low levels from May 2009. The overall outlook is disappointing: weak employment conditions, decreasing demand, falling prices, low interest rates and a falling Australian dollar. These weaknesses may be explained by the global weaker conditions and low demand for raw materials.

The wholesaling numbers are considered to give a reliable idea about the evolution of the economy, as the history has been proved this relationship. In these circumstances, by the end of 2013 the economy of Australia is expected to run below the trend. Recent press conferences revealed the fact that a better controlled and supervised financial system is the main concern and the key to solve important issues with long term implications.

The post Australia, Negative Outlook appeared first on investazor.com.