Peak Oil Is Almost Here and There’s No Magic To Counter It: Interview with Dave Summers

By OilPrice.com

This where we stand, and it’s a fairly bleak view: Peak oil is almost here, and nothing new (with the possible but unlikely exception of Iraq) is coming online anytime soon and while the clock is ticking – forward movement on developing renewable energy resources has been sadly inadequate. In the meantime, the idea that shale reservoirs will lead the US to energy independence will soon enough be recognized as unrealistic hype. There are no easy solutions, no viable quick fixes, and no magic fluids. Yet the future isn’t all doom and gloom – certain energy technologies do show promise. We had a chance to speak with well known energy expert Dave Summers where we cut through the media noise and take a realistic look at what our energy future holds.

Dr. Dave Summers – scientist, prolific writer and author of Waterjetting Technology, is the co-founder of The Oil Drum and currently writes at the popular energy blog Bit Tooth Energy. From a family of nine generations of coal miners, Summers’ patented waterjetting technology enables the high-speed drilling of small holes through the earth among other applications. In an exclusive interview with Oilprice.com, Dr. Summers discusses:

  • Why new drilling techniques aren’t enough to put peak oil off
  • Why the shale revolution will not lead to energy independence
  • Why the potential of nuclear energy isn’t being realized
  • Why ‘plan B’ for Keystone isn’t beneficial to the US
  • Why we should be worried about the South China Sea and the Middle East
  • How low natural gas prices cannot be sustained
  • Why Europe’s shale future is still indeterminate
  • Why the coal industry’s days aren’t necessarily numbered
  • Why geothermal energy has the greatest potential
  • How media manipulation figures in to the climate debate
  • Why nuclear fusion remains a fantasy in our lifetimes and beyond

 

Interview by. James Stafford of Oilprice.com

 

James Stafford: What do you foresee in our energy future? Will new extraction techniques and advances in drilling technology help put peak oil off?

Dave Summers: Most of the “innovation” in energy extraction from underground has been known for some time. It’s just taken time to work its way through to large-scale market use. There are techniques such as in-situ combustion, whether of coal or oil sand, that are now being developed that show some promise. But each increment of gain is at higher cost, and is chasing after a smaller target volume. Even if better methods of drilling were developed (and we have looked at several) in the cost of overall production this would not, in itself, provide that much benefit.

If ways could be found to economically release more hydrocarbon from existing and drilled reservoirs then this might have a significant impact, but though this has been sought after with lots of effort, there has been no magic fluid or way of doing that yet.

Peak oil is about here, though we can argue about fractions of a million barrels of day, it is hard to find any large volumes that can be expected to come onto the market in the next decade (with the possible, though unlikely, exception of Iraq). The clock on this has been ticking for some time, and some of the moves toward increasing renewable energy sources (though motivated by a different driver) have helped mitigate some of the problem, but sadly not enough.

James Stafford: Can the shale boom be replicated in Europe?

Dave Summers: The technology for developing the hydrocarbon volumes in tight shales and sands is now becoming well defined, and can thus be transferred to Europe. It will likely make that transition fairly quickly. That’s why some countries have American partners in their development. However, the environmental movement that is strongly against the technology is more entrenched, and has more political clout in Europe, so this may slow the transfer.

At the same time, though there are significant volumes of shale, it is only after wells have been drilled and fracked that one can get an estimate as to whether or not the resource can be turned into a reserve. This information is still a bit sparse, and it makes it difficult to be definitive at this time.

James Stafford: Is the Keystone XL pipeline vital to the US quest for energy independence?

Dave Summers: The pipeline is something that is a convenience in getting more oil from Canada into U.S. refineries. There are other steps (pipelines now flowing backwards for example) that are being taken to deal with the situation. As long as the sole export market for the oil is into the United States, Canada has to take the price that it is offered for the oil, or not sell it. Should a second sales path (such as a pipeline to the coast) allow significant sales to other customers (say China) then the price will likely go up, and supplies to the US will get more expensive, and potentially smaller.

James Stafford: What happens if Keystone isn’t approved – is there a plan B?

Dave Summers: On whose part? The Canadians will run a pipeline to the coast and make more money over time. In the short term, the US will be able to balance any shortfalls with domestic production, but in about three years as that starts to fall off then life might get more difficult. It takes a long time to develop a new resource.

James Stafford: How much of a role will fracking play in US efforts to reduce carbon emissions?

Dave Summers: Grin, well that is a little bit of a loaded question. Any drop in carbon dioxide levels that will come from changing from coal-fired power stations to gas-fired are not really going to be significant on a global level, and the changes are more likely be market driven, than for political reasons.

It is hard to see, basic operational costs being what they are, that the low price for natural gas can be sustained that much longer. Any slippage in the supply, however, will drive the price up and that will cause a re-equilibration of the market. How that plays out against the political considerations in the Eastern states is, as yet, anybody’s guess.

James Stafford: If energy independence for the US comes at the cost of reducing carbon emissions, and vice versa, which target do you think they should aim for?

Dave Summers: The hope that hydrocarbon production from the shale reservoirs of the United States will lead to energy independence has about a couple of years of life yet before it is shown to be the unrealistic hype that it is.

The continuing rise in energy costs, both here and in Europe, is likely to continue to sap any strong drive toward growth and a rapid recovery from the events of 2008. This cost factor is not getting the recognition that it should, and this unrelenting drain on the global economies does not have an easy resolution. The quick fixes anticipated from investment in renewable energy has not been found to really help that much, and while every little bit helps, there are no magic solutions on the horizon that will help in the intermediate term and sooner.

And after a certain number of cold winters it becomes harder to convince the general populace that global warming remains a critical problem.

James Stafford: Do you think the coal industry’s days are numbered?

Dave Summers: Ultimately no, but in the short term there will be a reduction in demand for coal in Europe and the United States. But in the longer term there is still no viable replacement fuel that will meet the needs of the growing power markets in places such as China, India and most of Asia and Africa.

As the costs for imported fuels rise, the need to develop indigenous resources will become more vital, while the selection of the cheapest available import to sustain the competitiveness of domestic industries will likely surmount the pressures for change.

James Stafford: Many claim that oil consumption in the US will continue to soar to record levels, yet due to the fast rate of decline in production from fracking wells compared to traditional wells this seems unlikely. What do you predict will be the maximum oil production that the US could achieve?

Dave Summers: It is difficult to foresee where all the additional oil that will be needed to meet the projection of sustained growth in supply is likely to come from. Increasing production depends on finding enough people with enough money to fund the drilling costs, and without sustained successful investment, after a while the pool of likely investors shrinks.

Again I don’t see the current trends being sustained for more than a couple of years, for that reason. It also requires good potential sites for drilling, and those are becoming smaller and harder to identify.

James Stafford: Which renewable energy technologies do you think hold the greatest potential to make a meaningful addition to global energy production?

Dave Summers: I have always thought that we did not take enough advantage of the underground. There is a small but growing use of geothermal energy (and ground source heat pumps) but there are other advantages to putting buildings and other construction underground that will likely eventually dawn on enough people that it will become a more sustainable industry.

But I have been waiting for that to happen for 40 years, and it may well take as long again before it comes to pass.

James Stafford: Who or what is the biggest obstacle to renewable energy?

Dave Summers: Depends on where you are. In Botswana it was finding folk to do the maintenance in the villages. I look out of my window at a snow-covered back yard, in a state where neither wind nor solar has much viability, hence the local university is installing a geothermal system. Where do I get the heat? From the surrounding forest, I purchase wood almost every year for use in a tile stove, and the firebox is wrapped in copper tubing. But, as the British experience showed centuries ago, burning wood is a luxury, and coal was cheaper, as the forests disappeared.

Sadly the folks that discuss future energy alternatives tend to come to the discussion with their own agendas, so that it is difficult to have an open discussion that does not end up in emotional argument.

The world desperately needs new forms of energy to replace those that are starting to run out. The time available before those needs become critical is getting shorter, and thus an open debate is vital. But because of the politics there have been a number of decisions to move technology forward before it was really ready, and that has hurt new development, and is likely to continue to do so.

Keeping solar panels clean without scratching and power degradation has been something I first discussed in an ASTM panel over 30 years ago. Maintenance is likely the biggest hidden problem at the moment.

James Stafford: Which geopolitical hotspots should we be keeping our eyes on over the coming year for potential problems?

Dave Summers: The situation in the China Sea is starting to become a greater concern, and it is a reflection more, I believe, of the potential energy sources under the sea, than it is for any particular right to own tiny islands in the middle of nowhere.

The Middle East is always a worry. Once the can of democracy was kicked open the ways in which this will change things in the region can only be guessed at. Regime changes are rough and rarely run smoothly. Policy changes mean changes for investors, and there are many groups in the region that have little love for the United States or for many of the countries of Europe.


James Stafford:
If energy demand around the world continues to grow at current rates, how do you imagine the future? Will it lead to war? Large differences between the top and bottom echelons of society? Wide spread starvation? Etc.

Dave Summers: Sadly wars have been fought over resources since the beginning of time, and in the last few decades human nature has not changed that much. The impact of mass communication, and its global reach may make it easier to tell the people on both sides the “truth”, which is always adjusted as a function of who is telling it, and the possible impact of fabricators over conventional manufacturing might, however, make more of an impact faster than currently anticipated.

The mass elevation of people into the middle class in Asia cannot be reversed, and the pressures that this will bring can provide unyielding momentum that leads to conflict, particularly where there is some control over communication.

There have been enough breakthroughs in agriculture that the risks of mass starvation are fading, though the availability of water is a constant concern in a number of countries. Spreading information, and providing assistance at the lowest levels of production will come about with the spread of electronic communication and this will have a beneficial impact.

James Stafford: How has media manipulation figured in the climate change debate?

Dave Summers: As long as journalists are advocates rather than reporters the true story will not emerge. The lack of journalistic challenge in the mainstream media to the deliberate deception employed in hiding the decline in temperature prediction accuracy with the tree rings which dropped just as temperatures were rising, thus invalidating the “hockey stick”, was an early indication that media manipulation was going to be a critical factor in this debate.

How long must global temperatures remain relatively stable before someone brings this up as a front page story? The amount of money involved with those who espouse anthropogenic causes of climate change dwarfs the funding that has gone to those who raise questions when so many papers so this “may” happen, and that “might” occur. And those who pay the bills . . . . .

James Stafford: Lockheed recently came out with a statement predicting that they will have a working nuclear fusion reactor within the next 10 years. If this prediction does come true – do you see this having any meaningful impact on the energy sector?

Dave Summers: Um! Nuclear fusion has been the next great thing in energy production for the full extent of my professional life. It is likely to continue to be so through the professional lives of my children, and likely grandchildren.

James Stafford: What are your thoughts on nuclear power? Is it essential to meet our growing energy demand?

Dave Summers: Nuclear power has a considerable potential to help solve some of the shortfalls in energy that are now appearing on the horizon. Unfortunately the long delays in construction, some of which are due to permitting issues that have become political footballs, make it a hard investment to justify.

The move to construction of smaller reactors may well have considerable benefit, and the development of thorium has also got its place. But to make progress requires political will, and that is sadly lacking, and will remain so until energy demand rubs the noses of the body politic in the reality that there is no ideal, only the viable.

James Stafford: Dave thank you for taking the time to speak with us. Hopefully we will have a chance to catch up later in the year.

 

Source: http://oilprice.com/Interviews/Peak-Oil-The-Shale-Boom-and-our-Energy-Future-Interview-with-Dave-Summers.html

By. James Stafford of Oilprice.com

 

Central Bank News Link List – Mar 12, 2013: China politics keep central bank hawks at bay, for now

By www.CentralBankNews.info Here’s today’s Central Bank News link list, click through if you missed the previous link list. The list comprises news about central banks that is not covered by Central Bank News. The list is updated during the day with the latest developments so readers don’t miss any important news.

    USDCAD stays in a trading range

    USDCAD stays in a trading range between 1.0216 and 1.0341. Support is at 1.0216, as long as this level holds, the price action in the range could be treated as consolidation of the uptrend from 0.9932, another rise to 1.0400 area could be expected after consolidation. On the downside, a breakdown below 1.0216 will indicate that lengthier consolidation of the longer term uptrend from 0.9815 (Jan 11 low) is underway, then deeper decline to 1.0150 area could be seen.

    usdcad

    Daily Forex Forecast

    UK Property: How You Can Buy a House For Less Than 250 Grand

    By MoneyMorning.com.au

    That’s right.

    I know it’s hard to believe, but it is now possible to buy your own home for under a quarter of a million bucks.

    From a cool quarter mil’, you’d have enough left over for a couple of flights to London. Not a bad deal!

    In fact, buying a house this way will save you a respectable 58% from the $580,000 price tag of the average Aussie home today.

    So … what’s the catch?

    The catch is this – the housing I’m talking about is in the UK.

    But bear with me. This opportunity may surprise you.

    Three things have happened to make UK property almost irresistibly cheap for Aussie buyers.

    Firstly – the Australian dollar has taken off, as we know. Yes, it’s bad for exports – but it’s great for buying stuff overseas. Like clothes, electronics, and…property.

    Secondly – the British Pound has fallen on very hard times. Ten years ago the Aussie bought 33 pence, but today it buys 68 pence. That makes it painfully expensive for people travelling from the UK to Australia, but it’s great for Aussies.

    Thirdly – UK property has now fallen 25% in the last 5.5 years.

    Combine those three and you get some very interesting statistics indeed. Let me show you what I mean…

    UK Property on Sale for Aussie Investors

    Back in 2006, an Aussie buying the average UK investment property had to shell out A$516,233.

    But today you can buy it with LESS THAN HALF THAT MUCH…in fact it will cost you just A$245,242.

    To show you just how much cheaper it is for Aussies to snap up a UK property today, I’ve downloaded the quarterly data for the last two decades and put this chart together for you. Now, I should point out I’ve used inflation adjusted prices here, to better benchmark the relative move.

    Pommy Property – Half-Price Sale for Aussie Buyers

    Pommy Property - Half-Price Sale for Aussie Buyers

    Source: Money Morning

    To my eyes this chart looks like a cracking long-term investment opportunity for Aussie house buyers wanting to diversify their property exposure, and capitalise on the currency rate.

    That’s for an investor that doesn’t mind long flights, and is prepared to wait for ten years or more for a result! But while the property spruikers have been flogging American housing in some ropey old town five hours from nowhere…at least UK property puts you on the doorstep to Europe…where Paris, Rome and Madrid are only two hours by flight.

    None of this is to say it won’t get cheaper first though. The UK is really in the doldrums right now.

    While here in Australia, we worry about the economy slowing from 3.7% to 3.1%, the UK is now slipping into its THIRD recession in five years.

    And Moody’s rating agency recently downgraded UK debt, taking away its coveted AAA rating. Further downgrades from Moody’s and others could follow.

    Not to mention that UK unemployment is at 7.8%, and creeping back up again.

    All this could drive the pound down further too, making it cheaper still for Aussies to buy in coming years.

    But that’s fine – something like this takes time to transact. You’d need plenty of time to investigate the specifics.

    For example: you’d need to research the tax implications, and legal requirements, of buying and selling property overseas.

    You’d then need to take time study the market, because it is as diverse and varied as Australia’s. Any property market is like the stock market, many different sectors and subsectors: some good, and some bad.

    The ‘average’ prices I’m quoting here hide a huge range of prices. For starters, London may as well be a different country – its property is three times more expensive than the average. But the Midlands and South West is far more reasonable. And go up to Northern England, or Scotland, and they’re practically giving it away free.

    So you would of course need to actually spend time over there looking at property, or find a buyer’s advocate of trusted friend to do the looking for you.

    And then you’d need to hook up with a rental agency to let it out on your behalf.

    By the time you’ve done all that, a year or more may have passed, and you might well find the market bottoming by then anyway.

    For investors with some pommy ties, or mates based over there they could trust with their hard-earned, this could well be the property trade of the next ten years.

    What to Consider When Buying UK Property

    You’d need to first wager that the UK economy will stop falling into recession on a regular basis, and that it starts to recover at some point in the next few years. Generally day tends to follow night – sooner or later.

    It would also involve taking a punt on the exchange rate swinging the other way: so the Aussie calming down and the pound recovering. In case you’re wondering, I used monthly average exchange rates from here to be consistent with the format of the house prices.

    In effect you’d be punting on a UK housing recovery, an improving Pound, as well as on a falling Aussie dollar. If the stars lined up, it would be a leveraged play.

    Why else would you invest in another market like this?

    I’d give two reasons.

    Firstly – looks not overlook the key fact here – it is CHEAP!

    Buying a house for $245,000 is a hard thing to pass up.

    Average rent in the UK is the equivalent of $30,000 a year, so rent could cover a decent chunk of a typical mortgage. The mortgage rate would of course depend on if you set up a mortgage here or in the UK, but you can see right away that you wouldn’t need a huge deposit to make this work.

    Secondly – you would be diversifying your assets.

    What if Australia has a house price crash?

    The chance of that may feel like it’s passed for now, but who really knows what’s in store for the ten years ahead?

    What if Greg Canavan is right, and I’m wrong, and China does blow up? The Australian economy, and Australian housing, could get very ugly indeed.

    But if you had picked up a bit of Pommy property on the cheap before that happened, then you might find yourself nicely hedged. China’s economy blowing up would see the Aussie Dollar tank, taking the value of your Pommy property soaring.

    You shouldn’t buy a house over there though, without doing the relevant due diligence, and thinking about what could happen if the pound weakened further and UK house prices continued to fall.

    Many young Aussies who work in the UK bought property right before the crisis, expecting it to be their nest egg. They’ll have seen the value of their investment (in Aussie dollar terms) more than halve; and the yield from any rental drop with the exchange rate, by 40%.

    In short, there’s definitely an opportunity for a shrewd investor. If you follow the investment maxim of buying low and selling high, then buying a piece of the UK housing market right now could make a lot of sense.

    Dr Alex Cowie
    Editor, Diggers & Drillers

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    From the Port Phillip Publishing Library

    Special Report: Australia’s Energy Stock BLOWOUT

    Daily Reckoning: Why the Stock Market is Like a Deer in the Headlights

    Money Morning: A Small-Cap Speculator’s Delight

    Pursuit of Happiness: Can You ‘Pygmalion’ Your Finances?

    Italy is Solvent – and that’s Just One Reason to Buy Italian Stocks

    By MoneyMorning.com.au

    I’ve been banging a drum for Italian stocks for a while. The election results, of course, put a dent in progress.

    But despite the chaos, I think this is a buying opportunity. And I’m not the only one…

    Arguing the Case for the Italian Economy

    I was interested to read a piece from Albert Edwards at Société Générale arguing the case for investing in Italy’s economy. For those who don’t already know, Edwards is probably one of the most bearish commentators around. So when he says ‘buy’, it’s worth taking note.

    Edwards isn’t at all upbeat on the eurozone. Like us, he finds it hard to believe that the euro can be sustained in the long run, due to the basic impracticality of having such different economies all bound together under the one central bank.

    Nor is he particularly upbeat about Italy’s economic outlook. From a structural point of view, the country has huge problems. Among developed nations, Italy has fewer graduates (in percentage terms) than any country other than Portugal. The World Bank reckons it’s harder to do business in Italy than it is in Romania.

    However, there’s one key area where Italy’s economy is in a better position than any of the other ‘peripheral’ countries. And that’s on debt.

    Italy’s economy has a horrible level of official national debt (the total debt pile). It clocks in at around 127% of GDP. However, its annual overspend – the deficit – is remarkably low.

    For 2012, it’s expected to come in at around 2.9%, below the 3% everyone in the eurozone is meant to stick to. That 2.9% compares to 4.6% for France, 10.2% for Spain, 6.3% for the UK, and 8.5% for the US.

    In other words, while Italy’s existing debt pile is huge, its spending is actually pretty much under control. In fact, the country runs a ‘primary surplus’ of 2.5%. What that means is that if it didn’t have to pay the interest bills on its existing debt pile, it would actually be making more each year in taxes than it spends on public services.

    The other ‘troubled’ countries still need ‘massive fiscal retrenchment’ in order to reduce their deficits below 3%, to meet the demands of ‘the Troika’ (the European Commission, European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund). But, as Edwards puts it, ‘the heavy lifting has been done in Italy.’

    Another piece from Fulcrum Research tries to ‘stress test’ Italy’s finances. They take three, ever-worsening scenarios. First, they look at what would happen if Mario Monti’s reforms were undone. Then they throw in a worse-than-expected recession, with the Italian economy shrinking by 2% in 2013, and 0.5% in 2014. Lastly, they chuck in a panic in the bond market, which would drive interest rates higher.

    ‘Remarkably, even after the introduction of these three negative shocks, the debt-to-GDP ratio would peak in 2015 and still be in a downward trajectory by the end of the decade, although admittedly just barely so.’

    To put that into perspective, for all the talk of austerity, Britain’s debt-to-GDP ratio isn’t expected to peak until 2016 (according to credit rating agency Moody’s). And that’s being relatively optimistic about it.

    In other words, Italy’s economy is in a sustainable fiscal position, believe it or not. And that means that it doesn’t need to do a load more austerity to keep its paymasters in the eurozone happy. What Italy really needs (as does Britain, though in different ways) is reform.

    Reform and austerity are ‘the opposite of each other’, notes Edwards. Proper, structural reform, costs money. ‘If you want to open your labour market to a hire-and-fire rule, you will need policies to deal with those who are laid off. These costs may outweigh the financial benefits of reforms in the short term, but the reforms may still pay off in the long run.’

    Of course, that’s not to say that we’ll get any useful reforms. Given the current political mess, it’s hard to know exactly what will come out of all this. But if Italy’s debt position is actually sustainable, then there’s no need for the ‘Troika’ to get bolshy with Italy. And equally, that means there’s no reason for Italians to throw in the towel on the euro (yet), which is arguably the biggest short-term risk.

    Buy Italian Stocks

    So how do you invest? At current levels, I wouldn’t touch Italian government debt (believe it or not, there is an exchange-traded fund you can buy to do this). There could easily be a spike from here if more election jitters arrive, so it just doesn’t look cheap enough.

    But Italian stocks on the other hand, do look cheap. As Edwards puts it, ‘Italy is much cheaper than most countries in a cheap region.’ On a price/earnings basis, price-to-cash-flow basis, price-to-book value basis, and dividend yield basis, Italy is far, far cheaper than its long run (since 1985) average.

    Yes, ‘the situation in the eurozone is indeed toxic and it will get worse. That is the opportunity. Buy Italy.’

    John Stepek
    Contributing Editor, Money Morning

    Publisher’s Note: This article originally appeared in Money Week

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    From the Archives…

    Why the Stock Market Boom is on Pause
    8-03-2013 – Kris Sayce

    Why the Dow Jones Record High Doesn’t Matter
    7-03-2013 – Murray Dawes

    Taking China’s Economic Pulse from Hong Kong
    6-03-2013 – Dr Alex Cowie

    Buy Gold When They’re Crying…Sell Gold When They’re Yelling
    5-03-2013 – Dr Alex Cowie

    Do You Want to Be Right About Investing, or Do You Want to Make Money?
    4-03-2013 – Kris Sayce

    Mozambique holds rate, flooding could pressure reserves

    By www.CentralBankNews.info     Mozambique’s central bank held its benchmark interest rate on the standing lending facility steady at 9.5 percent, saying it was focused on ensuring economic and financial stability following widespread flooding that has impacted economic activity, inflation and the balance of payments.
        The Bank of Mozambique (CPMO), which cut rates by 550 basis points in 2012 but has held rates steady since November, said the “domestic economic situation continued to be characterized by the effects of floods, especially agricultural production, with a significant impact on the behavior of inflation and the balance of payments, where the bank expects higher demand for imports of food and equipment, which could represent pressure on international reserves.”
        Mozambique’s inflation rate rose to an annual 4.18 percent in February from 2.73 percent in January and the bank said it would intervene in the interbank market to ensure that the monetary base does not exceed 36.694 billion meticais by the end of March, down from a target of 37.16 billion end-February.
        On the final day of February, Mozambique’s net international reserves fell by $US 94.5 to 2.39 billion due to foreign exchange sales by the central bank totaling $66 million to pay for imports, particularly liquid fuel, which cost $91 million, CPMO said.

        The metical depreciated by 0.03 percent during February, and was quoted at 29.99 to the U.S. dollar at the end of last month.
        Mozambique’s Gross Domestic Product rose by an annual rate of 6.8 percent in the third quarter, down from the second quarter’s 8.0 percent, but this was prior to flooding in recent months that has affected large parts of the country. Many economists have started to cut their growth forecasts.
        But in its latest economic review, the central bank said that it expects inflation to accelerate slightly in 2013, to around its target of 6.5 percent, while GDP growth may accelerate to nearly 8.4 percent.
        In its review of Mozambique’s economy, the International Monetary Fund in December described the country’s economic performance last year as “remarkable” with policies that have supported growth while bringing down inflation and strengthening international reserves.
        It forecast economic growth of 7.5 percent in 2012 and 8.4 percent in 2013, helped by an expansion of the country’s coal industry.
        It also said the gradual easing of monetary policy last year has supported private sector credit growth and preserved the low inflation environment and government’s budget was prudently executed, helping foster economic stability despite global uncertainty.

         www.CentralBankNews.info

    BlackBerry Finally Gets Some Love… in Nigeria

    By WallStreetDaily.com

    BlackBerry (RIMM) might be struggling to gain market share in the United States, but that’s not the case in Nigeria.

    Of the four million smartphones owned in the country, two million (HALF!) are BlackBerrys.

    Why does the company have such a large presence there? Its free text messaging service, BlackBerry Messenger, has a lot to do with it.

    Robert Bose, the company’s managing director in the region, says, “We think BlackBerry Messenger is very strong, has a very strong community, has a very strong connectedness that Nigerian society enjoys.”

    Indeed, for many of Nigeria’s two million users, BlackBerry Messenger is key. As one resident in Lagos says, “You can reach your families; you can reach your friends through pinging – without spending much money.”

    If only BlackBerry Messenger had such cachet globally.

    But with free text messaging services like iMessage for the iPhone and Kik Messenger (which works for Android, iOS, Windows phones and BlackBerry), the company needs to figure out a new way to generate market share.

    Article By WallStreetDaily.com

    BlackBerry Finally Gets Some Love… in Nigeria

     

    Choosing the Best European Dividend ETF

    By The Sizemore Letter

    Last year, I compared U.S. dividend ETFs and gave readers a simple choice.  If you want current income, a high-yielding option like the iShares Dow Jones Select Dividend ETF (NYSE:$DVY) is your best option.  But for long-term growth, you might be better off investing in the Vanguard Dividend Appreciation ETF (NYSE:$VIG).  Though it yields little more than the broad S&P 500, it’s comprised of companies with a long history of raising their dividends.  I consider the ETF to be a one-stop shop for high-quality growth companies.

    I utilize both ETFs in my portfolios.  VIG is the largest holding in both my Tactical ETF Portfolio and in my Strategic Growth Allocation, and DVY is a core income holding in my Strategic Growth Allocation.

    But what about European dividend payers?  After two years of crisis, European stocks are cheaper than their American rivals, and they tend to pay out a higher percentage of their profits as dividends.

    Here, investors have several viable choices. The first is the STOXX European Select Dividend ETF (NYSE: $FDD).  This ETF holds 30 of Europe’s highest yielders, offering a juicy 4.9% dividend.  Unfortunately, it is a little too heavily weighted in financials for my liking.  Nearly 40% of the ETF is invested in banks and insurance companies; I’d prefer to see that number well below 20% given the current macro risks to Europe’s financial system.  That said, one of FDD’s largest holdings is Spain’s Banco Santander (NYSE:$SAN), which I own in my aggressive Sizemore Investment Letter portfolio.

    WisdomTree offers an ETF that offers a high dividend yield but with zero exposure to the financial sector: the International Dividend ex-Financials ETF (NYSE:$DOO).

    Though not technically a “Europe fund,” as it has exposure to Australia, Japan, and other developed markets, 70% of the fund is invested in European stocks.  And for a high-yielding, dividend-focused ETF, the fund is surprisingly light in utilities.  Utilities are only 14% of the portfolio as of early March, which I consider a positive.  Utilities are slow-growth (and arguably no-growth) industries in much of the developed world.

    DOO sports a dividend yield of 4.0%, which is remarkable given its sector diversification.  In an income-oriented portfolio, WisdomTree’s offering is not a bad choice.

    Finally, I’d like to touch on the PowerShares International Dividend Achievers ETF (NYSE:$PID), which is essentially an international version of the Vanguard Dividend Appreciation ETF I mentioned at the beginning of this article.  Like DOO, PID is not technically a “Europe fund,”but Europe is the largest geographic area represented.

    There are a few idiosyncrasies worth noting.  To be included, a company must be incorporated outside the United States but must trade as an ADR, GDR or on the U.S. or London exchanges.   The ETF is weighted by dividend yield, so the stock with the highest weighting, at 4.5%,  is Teekay Offshore Partners (NYSE:$TOO).  Tanker stocks are volatile, and this is not the sort of stock I would normally want in a conservative dividend portfolio.  Unilever (NYSE:$UN, NYSE:$UL) is a stock that I would (and, in fact, do) put in a conservative dividend portfolio, but it is included in the PowerShares ETF twice: once for the Dutch-traded shares (UN) and once for the British-traded shares (UL).

    Still, even with its quirks, PID is an excellent ETF choice for all of the same reasons as VIG.  There is no better signal of quality than a consistent history of raising a company’s dividend.

    PID yields less than the other ETF options, at 2.6%.  But like VIG, it should be considered a high-quality growth ETF rather than a pure income ETF.

    Disclosures: Sizemore Capital is long VIG, DVY, PID and UL.  This article first appeared on MarketWatch.

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    Mauritius holds rate, upside inflation risks vs. growth risks

    By www.CentralBankNews.info      The central bank of Mauritius kept its benchmark repo rate steady at 4.90 percent and said the upside risks to inflation are persisting while downside risks from weak and uncertain economic conditions in the country’s main export markets continue to weigh on the domestic growth outlook.
        The Bank of Mauritius said its Monetary Policy Committee kept the rate steady in light of the “continued uncertainty on the global growth outlook,” but some committee members had “expressed strong concerns about the deteriorating inflaiton outlook” and “emphasised the need to normalise rates to encourage savings while containing speculative activities in some sectors.”
        “The MPC maintains strong vigilance in monitoring economic and financial developments and stands ready to meet in between its regular meetings, if the need arises,” the bank said.
        Mauritius’ inflation rate rose to 3.6 percent in February from January’s 2.9 percent, the bank said, noting the persistent upside risks to elevated global commodity prices, the impact of a recent PRB award to the public sector, a rise in retail petroleum prices and the expected second-round effect of these, as well as the projected rise in administered prices.

        Based on no rate changes, the bank’s staff forecast a headline inflation forecast of 4.7-4.9 percent by December 2013 compared with an expectations survey from last month that put the annual headline inflation rate at 5.0 percent in December and 5.2 percent for December 2014.
        The bank’s policy committee took note of fragile economic conditions among the developed economies of export interest to Mauritius while recovery is more robust among emerging economies.
        Mauritius’ third quarter Gross Domestic Product rose 1.3 percent from the second quarter for annual growth of 3.9 percent, up from the second quarter’s 3.2 percent and the first quarter’s 3.0 percent.
        The central bank said the output gap had narrowed a little but remained negative, but the underlying economic momentum is expected to remain positive.
        The bank’s staff forecasts 2013 economic growth of 3.4-3.9 percent, up from projected 2012 growth of 3.3 percent. In 2011 Mauritius’ Gross Domestic Product rose a real 4.1 percent, the same as in 2010.

        www.CentralBankNews.info