A Safer Than Super Investment?

By MoneyMorning.com.au

Yesterday we told you about one of our upcoming reports. It’s about a way to keep your savings safe from falling asset prices, like a stock market crash. But the real twist on this alternative safe and boring asset is that it’s about to get a whole lot less boring.

The Australian government has decided it wants you to buy the asset. In fact, you probably won’t even get a choice. But if you get in ahead of the tide, you’ll have everybody else’s buying wind in your sails.

If you think it’s impossible for the Australian government to force you to invest in something, take a look at Superannuation. If they can force you to invest, they can force you to invest in something specific.

And here’s Former Finance Minister Lindsay Tanner saying that, ‘it needs to be understood by players in the market that it is not a given that there will be no government intervention on this issue.’

But why would the government bother making you invest in a safe and boring asset? Well, it wouldn’t be a great look if the government forced you to invest in Super and then your savings disappeared the next time the stock market crashes. You’d have been better off with a term deposit than Super.

Hey, wait a minute. Didn’t that happen in the last few years? Yep, over the last 5 and 10 years the top performing balanced Super Funds pulled off a worse performance than term deposits, by our count. So where are the protesters, the occupy movement, the financial institution revolution?

It won’t happen until the Super savers begin running out of money. Then they’ll go to the government for help. And it will be too late.

You, in the meantime, need to figure out how to build your wealth so you don’t land on the government’s doorstep. And profiting by getting ahead of their big asset reshuffle would be a good way to start.

The problem is that the Australian government’s asset of choice is difficult to get your hands on. It’s expensive, cumbersome and requires a high initial investment. Most Australians couldn’t tell you how the investment works. But in some cultures it’s actually the default investment over stocks.

All this will have to change if the government wants the average Aussie buying these assets. But there is a way around these barriers today, if you want to jump in early. And that’s just the kind of opportunity we’ve been focusing on in our research over the last few years.

There are plenty of other opportunities we’ve uncovered. Ways you can secure your savings, make huge amounts of effortless income in retirement and enjoy your wealth.

But the most important discovery we’ve made is what’s wrong with the current way Australians think they can fund their retirement. They are on the wrong side of several powerful forces that determine who gets rich and who doesn’t.

If you want to retire comfortably, it’s time to get on the right side. We’ll show you exactly how soon.

Nick Hubble
Editor Money Morning

From the Archives…

Why this Could be the Most Important Day of the Year for the Stock Market
19-10-2012 – Kris Sayce

A Back-Door Way to Invest in the Electric Car Industry
18-10-2012 – Kris Sayce

The Stock Market is Up, What’s Next?
17-10-2012 – Murray Dawes

Debt and Government Spending Means You Should Be Wary of this Stock Market
16-10-2012 – Greg Canavan

The Secret Investment to Buy When GDP Falls
15-10-2012 – Nick Hubble


A Safer Than Super Investment?

How Technical Analysis of the Stock Market Can Save Your Investments

By MoneyMorning.com.au

Most folks see technical traders as lucky market magicians. They know nothing about the principles of technical analysis, so they quickly dismiss the practice as witchcraft or coincidence.

I understand where many of these investors are coming from. I mean, it’s hard to embrace the chaos that is the stock market. We’re only human — and most of us desire predictability and absolutes above all else.

It’s no wonder so many investors have trouble shaking the buy-and-hold philosophy that has shaped their investing worldview.

But even if you consider yourself a fundamentals-driven investor, you have to incorporate some technical analysis into your strategies. If you open your mind and apply technical indicators to your fundamental ideas, I promise you’ll begin to rake in the profits that were once so elusive.

And your brokerage account won’t be the only beneficiary. Once you start to use a few small technical tricks, you’ll begin to feel more confident in your investment choices and their potential outcomes.

Meshing technical with your fundamental ideas is easy and painless. To get you started, I’ve created a few short ideas you can use the next time you plan on buying (or selling) an investment. All of these tips take less than five minutes to implement, so there’s no excuse for you to ignore them.

Spotting Technical “Value Traps”

Everyone likes a deal. So it’s no surprise that fundamental investors love stocks that are cheap relative to earnings, sales or book value. After all, why wouldn’t you want to buy a cheap, out-of-favor stock and hold it until its true value is realized?

In theory, it sounds like a can’t-miss plan. But the realities of the market can easily derail this strategy. Instead of buying any old “cheap” stock you come across, you should consider modifying your strategy to exclude any names that might trap you in a losing position.

Here’s how you do it:

First, avoid buying stocks at or near 52-week lows. I know it might be tempting to pick up shares. After all, the stock is cheaper than it’s been all year. The typical investor logic here is that shares couldn’t possibly trade any lower.

But they can. And they probably will. Just because a stock hits a new low does not mean that it has found a bottom. Stocks move in trends — up, down or sideways. If a stock is moving lower, you have to assume it will continue to do so until the price tells you otherwise. Even as an investor, you should never try to buy into a downtrending stock.

Let’s say you’ve done your research. You like a company. You think its shares are cheap, but the stock is locked in a downtrend. Instead of buying, place the stock on your watch list and keep an eye on its chart.

If and when the price appears to hit a floor and move higher, you can begin to plan your entry. Your best bet is to look for double bottoms or rounding bottoms. These patterns will help signal a stock might be ready to turn higher.

Buying Support

When you’re not bottom-fishing, you might come across a potential investment that’s trending higher. All this means is the stock is displaying a series of higher highs and higher lows on a daily or weekly chart.

In the case of an uptrending stock, you will want to time your entry to coincide with support. Naturally, as a longer-term investor, you want the best price possible — even when you’re buying a stock that’s moving higher.

Use moving averages or draw trend lines to determine where you should be a buyer:

Source: Penny Sleuth

In this chart, I’ve drawn a simple trend line. The arrows indicate where you should look to buy the stock. You don’t have to be too precise. Just construct a line that best fits your particular chart. From there, you can use your judgment to determine when to plan your initial buy — or when to add to an existing position.

Selling Strength

Of course, you also want to sell your position for the best possible price. Fortunately, technical analysis can help you pinpoint where shares might be running out of steam. So if you have an investment in your portfolio that you believe has realized its potential value, you can use resistance lines to plan your sells.

Here’s the exact same price chart from above. Only this time, I’ve added different annotations:

Source: Penny Sleuth

By drawing a resistance line above this uptrending stock, you can see where share price tends to become exhausted. The arrows show where price touches or briefly crosses resistance. Again, your trend line doesn’t have to be exact. You’re simply using it as a general guide to help sell shares close to near-term highs.

I’m not saying you have to become a trader (don’t get me wrong — I believe everyone should give trading a shot). But whether you’re new to the markets or a seasoned veteran, everyone should try to employ time-tested trading techniques on their investments.

In order to stay on top of your game, you must incorporate these trading tools into your everyday research. If you’re not using technical analysis, you’re making a huge (and expensive) mistake.

Greg Guenthner
Contributing Writer, Money Morning

Publisher’s Note: This article originally appeared in Penny Sleuth

From the Archives…

Why this Could be the Most Important Day of the Year for the Stock Market
19-10-2012 – Kris Sayce

A Back-Door Way to Invest in the Electric Car Industry
18-10-2012 – Kris Sayce

The Stock Market is Up, What’s Next?
17-10-2012 – Murray Dawes

Debt and Government Spending Means You Should Be Wary of this Stock Market
16-10-2012 – Greg Canavan

The Secret Investment to Buy When GDP Falls
15-10-2012 – Nick Hubble


How Technical Analysis of the Stock Market Can Save Your Investments

Study Shows Studies Show Nothing

By MoneyMorning.com.au

If you’ve ever wondered how a study can show something that just can’t be true, or how studies can completely contradict each other, we’ve figured it out. With a little help of course. After today’s Daily Reckoning, I hope you never believe another ‘study’.

Our heartfelt congratulations go out to Mathgen. A mathematics journal provisionally accepted its paper for publication.

Wait, ‘its’ study?

Yes, that’s right. These days a computer program can write an academic paper about mathematics. Then get published in academic journals like ‘Advances in Pure Mathematics’. And you thought those computer programs dominating the stock market were smart!

No longer are your sons and daughters safe from having to compete with machines in the academic world. That’s another ‘safe’ career choice gone. So what was the paper Mathgen wrote about? Here’s the abstract, which describes it:

‘Let &#961 = A. Is it possible to extend isomorphisms? We show that D’ is stochastically orthogonal and trivially affine. In [10], the main result was the construction of p-Cardano, compactly Erdös, Weyl functions. This could shed important light on a conjecture of Conway-d’Alembert.’

If you’re confused, that’s sort of the idea.

Only a mathematics academic could decipher that abstract, because it’s completely meaningless. You see, Mathgen creates papers by combining random nouns, verbs, numbers, symbols and the rest of it.

It spits out something that makes grammatical sense, not that you’d know it, but is completely devoid of any meaning. The formatting is said to be nice, though.

Once the paper is randomly generated and submitted for the academic journal’s review, the academics safeguarding the gates of science and knowledge read the paper and figure it must mean something.

That’s how the paper gets past the peer review process. The same process that keeps climate change science squeaky clean, by the way. Here’s what the anonymous peer reviewer wrote about Mathgen’s bizarre creation:

For the abstract, I consider that the author can’t introduce the main idea and work of this topic specifically.

Maybe that’s because there is no main idea. No ideas at all, in fact.

Anyway, once the academics of the peer review process give the paper a once over and decide it’s fine to publish in their illustrious journal, the valuable and useful knowledge in the paper is disseminated around the academic world. That will probably never happen to Mathgen’s paper because the joke was exposed before the journal was finalised.

If all this makes you chuckle and shrug, consider that it’s the norm in academic publishing. A similar computer program managed to get an article about postmodernism published in a Duke University journal. And even when people run coherent scientific experiments (with real people) the results have a habit of being suspect too.

Many studies can’t seem to be replicated these days. Meaning, if you ran exactly the same experiment, you wouldn’t get results that confirm the study’s findings. According to one science journalist, 47 of the top 53 most important cancer studies can’t be replicated. They might be completely wrong, and yet we base modern research on the assumption they are right.

To be clear for any sceptics, the Mathgen paper is a true ‘gotcha’ moment. It wasn’t about the fact that a paper can be written by a clever computer program. It wasn’t about anything. It was complete gibberish. But it did show the fact that academic journals are…academic. Let’s hope nobody reads them.

Unfortunately, finance and economics journals actually do get mentioned in the real world. In fact, their conclusions often determine public policy. Politicians hurl studies at each other proving their opinion.

Luckily for economists, it’s very difficult to disprove an economics study. You never know the ‘counterfactual’ — what would have happened. But if maths and science are corrupted, you’d think economics is corrupted twice over.

So the next time you read ‘a study has shown,’ you can disregard the end of the sentence.

Regards,

Nick Hubble
Editor Money Morning

From the Archives…

Why this Could be the Most Important Day of the Year for the Stock Market
19-10-2012 – Kris Sayce

A Back-Door Way to Invest in the Electric Car Industry
18-10-2012 – Kris Sayce

The Stock Market is Up, What’s Next?
17-10-2012 – Murray Dawes

Debt and Government Spending Means You Should Be Wary of this Stock Market
16-10-2012 – Greg Canavan

The Secret Investment to Buy When GDP Falls
15-10-2012 – Nick Hubble


Study Shows Studies Show Nothing

Botswana holds rate, says inflation outlook is positive

By Central Bank News
    The central bank of Botswana held its benchmark bank rate unchanged at 9.5 percent, saying the medium-term outlook for inflation is positive and the current policy stance should ensure that inflation hits the bank’s target.
    In the short term, however, the Bank of Botswana expects inflation to exceed its 3-6 percent target range due to temporary increases of administered prices. In September, the annual inflation rate rose to 7.1 percent from 6.6 percent in August due to higher fuel prices.
    “The underlying trend remains downwards, but, in the circumstances, inflation is now expected to converge to the medium term objective range in the first half of 2013,” the bank said in a statement after a meeting of its Monetary Policy Committee.
    That forecast, however, could be affected by unanticipated increases in administered prices, higher global food prices, a likely fall in international oil prices and weaker global activity, the bank said.
    The bank said global inflationary pressures had eased and persistent capacity under-utilisation and high unemployment in major countries should have a moderating effect on global inflation.

     Botswana’s economic output expanded by an annual rate of 8.7 percent in June, with non-mining output up by 12.1 percent while mining output fell 8 percent, the bank said.
    In the second quarter, Gross Domestic Product grew by 8.4 percent from the same 2011 quarter, up from a rate of 6.7 percent in the first quarter.
     But the bank expects non-mining output to remain below potential in the medium-term, reducing inflationary pressures, and domestic demand is also expected to be subdued.
    Botswana’s central bank last changed its bank rate in November 2010 when it cut the rate by 50 basis points.
    www.CentralBankNews.info

Forget Renewables, We Need Cheap Oil – An Interview with Gail Tverberg

By OilPrice.com

What does our world’s energy future look like? Does renewable energy feature as much in the energy production mix as many hope it will? Will natural gas and fracking help reduce our dependence upon oil and how will the world economy and trade fare as supplies of cheap oil continue to dwindle?

To help us take a look at this future scenario we had a chance to chat with Gail Tverberg – a well known commentator on energy issues and author of the popular blog, Our Finite World

In the interview Gail talks about:

• Why natural gas is not the energy savior we were hoping for
• Why renewable energy will not live up to the hype
• Why we shouldn’t write off nuclear energy
• Why oil prices could fall in the future
• Why our energy future looks fairly bleak
• Why the government should be investing less in renewable energy
• Why constant economic growth is not a realistic goal

Gail Tverberg is an independent researcher who examines questions related to oil supply, substitutes, and their impact on the economy. Her background is as a casualty actuary, making financial projections within the insurance industry. She became interested in the question of oil shortages in 2005, and has written and spoken about the expected impact of limited oil supply since then to a variety of audiences: insurance, academic, “peak oil”, and more general audiences. Her work can be found on her website, Our Finite World.

Interview conducted by. James Stafford of Oilprice.com

James Stafford: Do you believe that shale gas is the energy savior we have been hoping for and can deliver all that has been promised? Or have we been oversold on its potential?

Gail Tverberg: I am doubtful that shale gas will be the energy savior that we have been hoping for. There are several issues: (a) It is hard for US natural gas prices to rise to the point where shale gas extraction will truly be profitable, because of competition with coal in electricity generation. (b) While natural gas can be used for transportation, it takes time, investment, and guaranteed long-term supply for it really to happen. This will be a long, slow process, if it occurs. (c) People won’t stand for “fracking” next door, if the end result is LNG for Europe or Japan. We have otherwise “stranded” non-shale gas in Alaska that would be a better option to develop and sell abroad.

If shale gas does come into widespread use, it will take many years. The quantity will be helpful, but not huge. Furthermore, it will still be natural gas, rather than the fuel we really need, which is cheap oil.

James Stafford: The old dream of US energy independence has been finding its way into the headlines again as a combination of resurgent domestic oil production, improvements in vehicle fuel efficiency and the shale boom have led many experts to predict that although it is unlikely, it’s no longer the fantasy it once was. What are your thoughts on US energy independence?

Gail Tverberg: I think that the direction in years ahead will be toward reduced trade of all sorts. By definition, every country will become “more independent,” including more “energy independent”. Whether or not current lifestyles are supportable with lower trade is another question.

James Stafford: Japan recently made the announcement that they aim to phase out nuclear power by 2040. What is your opinion on this decision and on nuclear energy in general? Can the world live without it?

Gail Tverberg: The decision by Japan is worrisome, because there aren’t many good replacement options available. Japan has volcanoes, so it may have an option to use geothermal as an option. Also, 2040 is far enough away that other options may become available.

Phasing out nuclear in other countries is likely to be difficult. In most countries, this will likely mean “less electricity” or “more coal.” It may also mean higher electricity cost, and lower competitiveness for manufacturers. Germany has already started the process of phasing out nuclear. It will be interesting to see how this works out.

In general, I think we should be taking a closer look at nuclear, because we have so few other low-carbon options. There is considerable dispute about the extent to which radiation from nuclear is a problem. This question needs to be examined more closely. To use nuclear long-term, we need to find ways to do it cheaply and without a huge amount of hot fuel that needs to be kept away from people indefinitely.

James Stafford: Renewable energy continues to be a favorite amongst many politicians – yet advances are slow and expensive. Do you see renewables making a meaningful contribution to global energy production? And if so over what time period?

Gail Tverberg: I have a hard time seeing that intermittent renewables (wind and solar photovoltaics) will play a big role in maintaining grid electricity, because of the stress they place on the grid, and the high cost of needed grid upgrades to handle them. Renewables from wood and biomass are hard to scale up, because wood supply is limited and because biomass use tends to compete with food production. Renewables from waste (left over cooking oil, for example) are not something we can count on for the long term, as people stay at home more, and dispose of less waste.

Related Articles: Which Biofuels Hold the Most Promise for the Future – Interview with Jim Lane

All renewables depend heavily on our fossil fuel system. For example, it takes fossil fuels to make new wind turbines and solar panels, to maintain the electrical grid, and to repair roads needed for maintaining the grid system. Biofuels depend on our fossil fuel based agricultural system.

I expect that the contribution renewables make will occur primarily during the next 10 or 20 years, and will decline over time, because of their fossil fuel dependence.

Quite a few individuals living off-grid would like to guarantee themselves long-term electricity supply through a few solar panels. This is really a separate application of renewables. It will work as long as the solar-panels work, and there are still the required peripherals (batteries, light bulbs, etc.) available—perhaps 30 years.

James Stafford: Are there any renewable energy technologies you are optimistic about and can see breaking away from the pack to help us extend the fossil fuel age?

Gail Tverberg: The technology that is probably best is solar thermal. It works like heating a hot water bottle in the sun. This is especially good for reducing the need to use fossil fuels to heat hot water in warm climates. But even this is not going to do a huge amount to fix our problems, especially if they are primarily financial in nature.

James Stafford: Renewable energy innovation has been coming under fire lately, with the Solyndra scandal and now Tesla motors are looking to be in trouble – both of whom were backed by government loan guarantees. Do you believe the government should be investing more or less in renewable energy companies?

Gail Tverberg: Less. I think we should be looking for inexpensive solutions. Anything that is high-priced starts with two strikes against it.

Also, I think if the true picture is considered, the amount of environmental benefits of renewables is very low, or perhaps negative. Their higher cost tends to make countries using them less competitive, sending production to China or other Asian countries where coal is the primary fuel. This may raise world carbon dioxide emissions.

Since 2000, world carbon dioxide emissions have increased far more than would have been expected based on prior patterns. A major cause seems to be the shift in industry to Asian countries, as countries attempted to reduce their own carbon footprint.

James Stafford: In a recent article you mentioned that the world economy is currently suffering from high-priced fuel syndrome. Would you be able to let our readers know a little more about this? And also if there is anything that can be done economically to help move beyond this syndrome?

Gail Tverberg: High priced fuel syndrome is primarily (but not entirely) a problem of fuel importers. It has symptoms such as the following:

• Slow economic growth or contraction
• People in discretionary industries laid off from work
• High unemployment rates
• Governments in increasingly poor financial situation
• Declining home and property values
• Rising food prices

Part of the problem seems to occur when fuel prices rise, and people cut back on discretionary spending. The result is layoffs. Fewer people pay taxes, and more collect unemployment benefits, causing financial problems for governments. The other part of the problem seems to be lack of competitiveness with countries (such as China and India) that use a cheaper fuel mix.

While oil is the fuel with the big price-problem in the US, high-priced natural gas contributes to the problem in Europe and Japan. High-priced renewables also contribute to the problem.

To keep costs down, we really need to consider cost first when considering alternatives to oil. Alternatives that need subsidies or mandates are likely to be a problem. Thus, in the US, natural gas right now might “work” as a substitute, but not offshore wind.

Regarding the competitiveness aspect, tariffs on international trade might help, but would reduce world output.

Related Article: Can Syria’s Rebels Overthrow Assad? An Interview with Jellyfish Operations

James Stafford: What is your position on peak oil? Have we already reached the peak in oil production? Or do you side with Daniel Yergin in saying we have decades more of production growth?

Gail Tverberg: I think the peak in oil production will be determined based on financial considerations. Such a peak is probably not very far away, because we are already experiencing lower economic growth and the governments of several countries are in dire financial straits.

As the oil price gets too high (or already is too high), governments of oil importing nations will be increasingly stressed by high unemployment and low revenue. Any way of fixing this problem (higher taxes, government layoffs, or reduced programs like Medicare, Social Security, and unemployment insurance) is likely to lead to lower disposable income and less “demand” for (that is, ability to pay for) products using oil.

With lower ability to pay for products using oil, the price of oil will drop. Fewer producers will be able to extract oil at this lower price, and the supply of oil will decrease.

James Stafford: What is your view on our energy future? Is it as bleak as some commentators point out – or is there a ray of hope for us?

Gail Tverberg: I see the future as fairly bleak. The big issue is the way high oil prices affect the economy, leading to recession, joblessness, and huge government deficits. The issue is really a lack of cheap oil.

This is an issue that can’t be expected to go away, even with new (high priced) oil supply in the US, or with the possibility of more natural gas supply. We are right now experiencing adverse financial impacts from high oil prices, but these impacts are being disguised by artificially low interest rates and huge amounts of deficit spending.

I find it hard to see much of a ray of hope for avoiding some kind of discontinuity, because the problem seems to be already at hand. For example, I see Europe’s current financial problems and the US’s fiscal cliff as being a direct result of lower energy affordability, especially oil, in recent years.

James Stafford: We recently published a news piece on a broker who in a drunken stupor managed to move the oil markets. What do you believe moves oil prices – is it supply and demand or energy market traders – or a bit of both?

Gail Tverberg: I think that over the long run it is mostly supply and demand that moves prices. (Of course, demand has to be read as “affordability”. People who are paying higher taxes can afford less oil products, so “demand” less.)

There may be some short-term impact of energy market traders, but it is likely quite small as a percentage of the total.

James Stafford: If oil prices continue to rise do you see Americans changing their driving and energy consumption habits?

Gail Tverberg: I think some changes will take place, but they will not be as fast as many would like. New car buyers are likely to be unwilling to pay large upfront costs for fuel-saving features, because they may not own the car for very long. Getting their money’s worth will depend on getting a high resale price for the car.

People in poor financial condition are more likely to make big changes. People who lose their jobs may sell their cars, and share with others. Teenagers who don’t get jobs will not buy a car. People with low wages and long commutes will look for people to share rides with.

James Stafford: A short while ago Forbes ran a piece on Thorium as possibly being the biggest energy breakthrough since fire and both China and India have announced their intentions to develop thorium reactors. What are your thoughts on thorium as a possible replacement for uranium?

Gail Tverberg: From everything I have heard, it is still a long ways away—at least 15 years. If it would work, it would be great.

James Stafford: In another article you have linked energy to employment and recession. Are you suggesting that without growth in energy production the economy will not grow, and employment levels will not rise?

Gail Tverberg: It takes external energy to make anything that we make in today’s economy. It takes energy to operate construction equipment, or to operate a computer, or to manufacture and transport goods. Even making “services” requires energy.

So if we have a lot less energy, today’s jobs are likely to be impacted. It is possible that we can create more half-time (and half-pay) jobs, but the result will still be that the world will be a lot poorer. We can still do jobs that don’t require external energy (such as make a basket out of reeds, or wash clothes in a stream), but our productivity will be much lower than when electricity or oil was available to leverage our production.

James Stafford: What is the most pressing matter that will affect the world in your opinion? food shortage, water shortage, energy shortage, climate change, etc?

Gail Tverberg: I think the immediate problem will be financial, but caused by high-priced energy.

The big concern I have is that financial problems will lead to political disruption. The natural tendency of countries with less energy supply is to break into smaller units—for example, the Soviet Union broke up into Russia and its member nations. There is now talk about whether Catalonia can become independent from the rest of Spain, and whether the Euro can hold together. If breakups become a major pattern, even spreading to the New World, it could make international trade much more difficult than today.

Financial problems could also lead to debt defaults and rapidly shifting currency relationships. These, too, could lead to a reduction in international trade.

Related Article: The Real Reason Behind Oil Price Rises – An Interview with James Hamilton

James Stafford: Economic growth is what the public expects, anything less is treated as a recession, but is constant economic growth a realistic goal? Is it achievable?

Gail Tverberg: Constant economic growth is not a realistic goal. We live in a finite world. This is obvious, if a person stops to think about it. There are only a finite number of atoms in the earth. There are interrelated biological systems on earth, and humans are one part. Humans cannot become too numerous without destroying the ecosystems that we depend on.

In a finite world, it is clear that eventually extraction will become more expensive. When we first started extracting fossil fuels, we started with what was easiest (and cheapest) to obtain. As we move to more difficult locations, such as deep under water, or the Arctic, the cost becomes more expensive. It is these high costs that seem to be disturbing economies now.

It appears to me that we are now hitting some version of “Limits to Growth”. Most economists haven’t figured out the connection between the economy and the natural world, so are oblivious to our current predicament.

James Stafford: If the transition from fossil fuels to renewable energy is ever actually made, what do you believe will be the effect on GDP?

Gail Tverberg: I don’t see renewable energy as being sustainable on its own. If it were, we might expect a GDP level of perhaps 10% or 15% of today’s GDP.

James Stafford: Other than a severe reduction in the global population what solutions are available to humanity as it reaches the limits of the planet?

Gail Tverberg: Unfortunately, solutions seem few and far between. Our biggest problem seems to be a lack of time to fix a financial problem that seems very close at hand.

A partial solution for some people may be a reduced standard of living combined with local agriculture.

Regardless of what happens, we do have quite a lot of “stuff” that humans have made that will cushion any down slope—roads, houses, clothing, and tools, for example. Many people would like a solar panel or two for their long-term use. We also have knowledge that we did not have on the upslope.

The past 10,000 years for humans has been real miracle, first with the discovery of agriculture, and later with the discovery of fossil fuels. If there is a Guiding Hand behind what is happening, there may be other miracles in store, as well.

James Stafford: In your opinion, who will make the better president in terms of energy policies and saving the economy, at the upcoming elections?

Gail Tverberg: The last presidential candidate that I had real enthusiasm for was Ross Perot in 1996. He would have put the United States (and the world) on much more of an isolationist path. In retrospect, this is the one thing that would have helped put off the predicament we are in today, because it would have slowed world economic growth, and with it the extraction of resources. World population would probably be lower now, too.

In this election, I would probably slightly favor Romney, because he seems to have some grasp of the issues we are up against. As I look at the numbers, it is absolutely essential that we start cutting programs, if we are to balance the budget. As bad as fossil fuels may be, they provide our jobs, our food, light, and heat so we need to continue to extract them. We don’t seem to have very good alternatives at this time. Even what we consider renewables depend upon fossil fuels.

In the next four years, I expect we will find ourselves doing a U-turn on economic growth. I don’t think either candidate (or for that matter, any leader) will be able to handle this well. Ideally, the new leader should be looking at the issue of how to deal with a low-energy future. Do we move to local agriculture, and if so, how? If rationing is done, how should it be done? If there are not enough jobs for everyone, should we go to more part-time jobs?

Romney has been accused of flip-flopping, but in some ways, with such big changes coming, I think that what we need is someone who is willing to change his views with changing circumstances. We seem to be headed for truly uncharted territory.

James Stafford: Gail thank you for taking the time to speak with us.

Source: http://oilprice.com/Interviews/Forget-Renewables-We-Need-Cheap-Oil-An-Interview-with-Gail-Tverberg.html

By. James Stafford of Oilprice.com

 

It’s Time to Stop Bogarting Cigarette Stocks

By The Sizemore Letter

You know you have reached a certain level of immortality when your name becomes a verb, and I can think of no better example than the American actor Humphrey Bogart, perhaps best known for his role in that all-time classic Casablanca.

“To Bogart” a cigarette is to leave it dangling sloppily in your mouth, even when speaking, rather than engaging in proper smoking etiquette by giving it a few puffs at a time and then removing it.  Over the years, the word has also come to mean to greedily hog something.

Today, I would say both meanings of the word are accurate descriptions of investors in tobacco stocks.   Investors  are “Bogarting” cigarette stocks by continuing to hold them at current prices.

First, a little disclosure is needed.  I have been a major fan of sin stocks in general and cigarette stocks in particular for years (seeNot All Sin Stocks are Created Equal and Delightfully Sinful Dividend Stocks as recent examples.

But my enthusiasm for Big Tobacco rested on two big assumptions:

  1. They are largely despised by both individual and institutional investors due to their pariah status as politically incorrect merchants of death—making them perpetual contrarian value investments.
  2. They pay high and growing dividends that are significantly better than what can be found elsewhere among mainstream large-cap stocks.

Unfortunately, I cannot credibly say that either of these conditions still hold.  Cigarette stocks have become downright trendy of late as investors have taken to chasing yield in a low-interest-rate world.

Let’s take a look at Philip Morris International (NYSE:$PM), the seller of the iconic Marlboro brand among many others.

For years Philip Morris appeared to be the perfect stock.  It had access to emerging market growth (roughly half its sales) while benefitting from an American listing and top-notch management.   It also paid a dividend far higher than the norm among stable U.S. blue-chip stocks, and that dividend was growing every year.

There’s one little problem here:  Philip Morris International is still a tobacco company.  Its sales may be enjoying a multi-year boost as emerging market smokers trade up from cheaper local competitors to premium Western cigarettes, but worldwide demand for their products is shrinking, and fast.

In its most recent quarterly release, Philip Morris International saw its profits fall 6% on lower volume sales.

And perhaps worse, the regulatory noose continues to be tightened.  Consider Australia’s new plain packaging law.  All cigarette boxes for all brands now look identical in Australia.  Cigarettes must now be sold in logo-free boxes featuring nothing more than graphic pictures of people dying of smoke-related illness.  It’s hard to enjoy taking a drag on that cigarette when you’re looking at a picture of a gangrenous foot on the package.

This does not at all bode well for premium brands like Marlboro.  Given that tobacco companies are all but prohibited from advertising, how can a premium brand differentiate itself from the cheaper competition when it sells its cigarettes in an identical box?

Australia has adopted the most aggressively anti-tobacco regime in the world in taking this approach, but other countries are catching up in a hurry.   Russia, the world’s second-largest tobacco market after China, is starting to take tobacco’s health risks seriously.  Russian prime minister Dmitry Medvedev recently said that a ban on public smoking and cigarette advertising t were “just the beginning” of his efforts to stamp out cigarette smoking in his country. Several countries in Latin America have joined this bandwagon as well.

Meanwhile, Philip Morris International’s dividend yield, now 3.9%, is not the great selling point it used to be.  It’s lower than that of the 4.2% offered by blue chip semiconductor maker Intel (Nasdaq:$INTC) and significantly lower than that of most telecom stocks, MLPs and REITs.

Again, unlike the rest of these industries—which are still growing—Philip Morris faces a shrinking market for its wares.  And its stock valuation of 17 times is ludicrous given that Intel trades for just 9 times earnings.

Taking a look at other Big Tobacco giants, the story isn’t much better.  I have a special fondness for Lorillard (NYSE:$LO) because it was one of my most successful trades in history.  I made 40% in all of two weeks (see “Insider Edge in Practice: Lorillard”).

But I wouldn’t be particularly enthusiastic about buying Lorillard today.  Based on current earnings, it actually trades at a slight premium to the broader S&P 500.   Yes, the juicy 5.3% dividend is appealing.  But Lorillard is still a cigarette company selling primarily to a shrinking U.S. market, and it’s hard to justify buying it at a premium P/E ratio.

The same is true of Reynolds American (NYSE:$RAI) and Altria (NYSE:$MO), the granddaddy of all Big Tobacco stocks.    Reynolds trades for a ridiculous 17 times earnings and Altria trades for 15.  Both enjoy yields over 5%.  (In the interests of full disclosure, MO is currently rated a “Hold” in the Sizemore Investment Letter; it’s been a holding of the portfolio for two years, and I’ve been reluctant to pull the trigger and sell because of the taxable gains it would generate.  But I have tightened my stops in MO and am not advising that investors put new money into it.)

Investors have enjoyed a fantastic ride in Big Tobacco stocks, but like a good cigarette (or cigar if you prefer), they will eventually burn out.  This long-time tobacco bull recommends discarding Philip Morris International like a soggy cigarette butt and viewing the rest of the sector with skepticism.  There are better income opportunities elsewhere.

The post It’s Time to Stop Bogarting Cigarette Stocks appeared first on Sizemore Insights.

Related posts:

Central Bank News Link List – Oct. 23, 2012: Fed likely to send wait-and-see signal at meeting

By Central Bank News
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.

Canada holds rate, tweaks guidance, raises 2012 forecast

By Central Bank News
    The Bank of Canada held its benchmark overnight target rate unchanged at 1.0 percent, as widely expected, and while the bank tweaked the language of its forward guidance, it repeated the same message that a “modest” rate rise may be necessary to keep inflation on target.
    The BOC, which has held rates steady since September 2010, also raised its 2012 growth forecast to 2.2 percent, up from a July forecast of 2.1 percent, held the 2013 forecast steady at 2.3 percent, but cut the 2014 growth forecast to 2.4 percent from a previous 2.5 percent.
    On Wednesday the BOC will release its quarterly Monetary Policy Report (MPR) and it had been expected to adjust forecasts following a speech by Governor Mark Carney this month that described the angst that has gripped financial markets and the synchronous slowdown in the global economy.
    The central bank said core inflation had been lower than expected in recent months but should increase gradually in coming months, reaching 2 percent by mid-2013. Overall inflation has also fallen below 2 percent but is projected to return to target by the end of 2013, later than anticipated.
    Canada’s annual inflation rate in September was unchanged from August at 1.2 percent, in the lower range of the bank’s 1-3 percent target. Last month the bank said it expected both consumer price and core inflation to return to 2 percent in the next year.
    The BOC said the global economy was unfolding largely as it had forecast in its July policy report with the U.S. expansion at a gradual pace and Europe continuing to contract. But growth in China and other major emerging economies had contracted more than expected though there are signs of stabilization.
     It also noted the improved global financial conditions, helped by policy actions by major central banks, but added: “sentiment remains fragile.”
    Global headwinds continue to restrain Canada’s growth but consumption and business investment is expected to drive the country’s growth that should reach full capacity by the end of 2013. Housing activity is expected to decline while household debt burden is expected to rise further before stabilizing by the end of the bank’s forecast horizon, the bank said.
    Canada’s Gross Domestic Product has expanded by a quarterly 0.5 percent the last three quarters in a row for a second quarter annual growth rate of 2.5 percent, up from 1.8 percent in the first quarter.
    Based on the deterioration in the global economy, financial markets had expected the BOC to moderate its forward policy guidance and remove the reference to future tightening.
    But the BOC repeated its past warning that a “modest” tightening in the future should be expected.
    “Over time, some modest withdrawal of monetary policy stimulus will likely be required, consistent with achieving the 2 percent inflation target. The timing and degree of any such withdrawal will be weighed carefully against global and domestic developments, including the evolution of imbalances in the household sector,” the BOC said.
    This statement compares with the BOC’s previous statement that was used since April.
    “To the extent that the economic expansion continues and the current excess supply in the economy is gradually absorbed, some modest withdrawal of the present considerable monetary policy stimulus may become appropriate, consistent with achieving the 2 per cent inflation target over the medium term.”
    www.CentralBankNews.info

“Pause in Monetary Policy” sees Gold Drop Below $1710, Germany’s Central Bank Told to Inspect Overseas Bullion

London Gold Market Report
from Ben Traynor
BullionVault
Tuesday October 2012, 08:15 EDT

WHOLESALE PRICES for gold bullion dropped below $1710 an ounce ahead of Tuesday’s US session, its lowest level in over six weeks, as stocks and commodities also fell and the Dollar rallied, with two weeks to go until the US presidential election.

Silver bullion fell through $32 an ounce to hits its lowest level since the first week of September.

“You’ve had QE priced in and what we’re seeing now is a bit of a retracement following that,” says Daniel Brebner, analyst at Deutsche Bank, referring to last month’s Federal Reserve announcement of open-ended quantitative easing.

“We have a pause in monetary policy action – it’s very unlikely we’re going to see anything in the U.S. and China while there is political transition.”

US voters go to the polls in a fortnight, while next month also sees a change of Chinese leadership.
The Federal Open Market Committee today begins its latest two-day policy meeting, which will be followed by a decision tomorrow.

Over in Germany, federal auditors said yesterday that the Bundesbank should regularly inspect its reserves of gold bullion held at the central banks of the US, UK and France. Press reports suggest the central bank may begin shipping gold held at the New York Fed back to Germany for inspection.

Elsewhere in Europe, stock markets sold off Tuesday morning for the third day in a row, with Germany’s DAX down 1.3% on the day by lunchtime.

In Luxembourg, the European Union Court of Justice is today due to hear a complaint against
The Eurozone’s €500 billion bailout fund the European Stability Mechanism “is at odds with and undermines [European] legal order,” the lawyer for Irish politician Thomas Pringle told the European Union Court of Justice Tuesday.

Pringle argues that the ESM violates EU laws against bailing out single currency members. The ESM, which was set up to replace the temporary European Financial Stability Facility, became operational earlier this month after a preliminary ruling by Germany’s Constitutional Court in September that its creation did not breach German law.

Billionaire investor Wilbur Ross, who has previously bought stakes in Bank of Ireland and Northern Rock, is in talks about buying Spanish banking assets, Bloomberg reports.

The volume of gold held to back the world’s largest gold ETF, SPDR Gold Shares (GLD), rose by 2.7 tonnes yesterday to 1336.9 tonnes, within 3% of the all-time high hit earlier this month.

Ben Traynor
BullionVault

Gold value calculator   |   Buy gold online at live prices

Editor of Gold News, the analysis and investment research site from world-leading gold ownership service BullionVault, Ben Traynor was formerly editor of the Fleet Street Letter, the UK’s longest-running investment letter. A Cambridge economics graduate, he is a professional writer and editor with a specialist interest in monetary economics. Ben writes and presents BullionVault’s weekly gold market summary on YouTube and can be found on Google+

(c) BullionVault 2012

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.

 

AUD/USD: Market Jitters as Federal Reserve Meets

Article by AlgosysFx Forex Trading Solutions

The US dollar is believed to gain opposite the Australian dollar in reduced appetites for risk as the Federal Reserve begins its two-day policy meeting today. Meanwhile, demand for the Aussie is foreseen to continue declining as the government’s mid-year economic and fiscal outlook detailing a series of spending cuts is viewed to provide more ammunition for the Reserve Bank of Australia to implement rate cuts.

Despite encouraging signs of recovery in the housing sector and a lower unemployment rate, the Fed is believed to uphold its cautious stance and keep its stimulus program in place. More than a month after the central bank unveiled a third round of quantitative easing that purchases $40 Billion of mortgage-backed securities per month, analysts see little reason for the FOMC to reverse course this week. Threats including the US election, the fiscal cliff, the European debt dilemma and the Chinese economic slowdown and the still fragile signs of domestic revival are deemed likely to convince the board to retain its policy stance. With the economy still adding fewer than 150,000 jobs a month, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke will likely reaffirm his concern over the slow pace of job creation and underscore the remaining headwinds to the US economy.

Today’s lone economic data up for release is deemed to emphasize the fragility of the economic recovery. The Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond is believed to report that manufacturing conditions in the area slowed this month. The Richmond Manufacturing Index is estimated to come in at 3 points in October, edging lower from the 4-point reading recorded in the previous month. Slowing demand abroad and still lackluster levels of business confidence likely caused the slight easing in factory conditions. Amid apprehensions over the state of the US economy and the Fed’s policy meeting, the Greenback is foreseen to shine today.

Over to the Land Down Under, analysts say that the onus on the RBA to keep the economy growing just got heavier after the government unveiled another round of savings in its mid-year economic and fiscal outlook yesterday. Treasurer Wayne Swan even added pressure, saying that the returning the budget to surplus provides the central bank maximum flexibility to cut rates further. The weakening outlook for the budget and for the commodities boom is widely expected to spur the RBA slash rates again in its November meeting. Considering these, a short position for the AUD/USD is recommended.

For more news, analysis, technical charts and candlestick analysis, visit AlgosysFx