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MUMBAI (Commodity Online): Commodities boom in the last one year has broken several records as precious metals, base metals and several agricultural commodities are running at historic, record prices these days.

But what about crude oil and other energy-related sectors? Should you invest in energy sector?

Yes, investing in energy sector including natural gas is the best choice these days, says Marc Faber, global investment analyst and Editor and Publisher of the Gloom, Boom & Doom Report.

In an interview to India’s CNBC TV channel, Faber, who has been forecasting bullish predictions on commodities, said that the entire energy sector including natural gas is probably relatively attractive because the global economy could surprise on the upside.

He said that the emerging markets continue to grow and the oil demand continues to grow, especially out of China and India.

“The Europe and US stabilizes and also recovers somewhat, in which case the demand for oil will go up and drive up prices,” he told the television channel.

On the other hand, Faber said, if the world again goes into recession, it will be accompanied by significant geo-political tensions, in which case there could be oil interruption and oil would also rally. In either case, oil will stay high.

Faber said: “If I look around markets, we had a very negative sentiment about the euro six months ago. Recently, we had a very negative sentiment about the US dollar. From this very low sentiment level for the US dollar where everybody hated the US dollar, in other words we can have somewhat of a recovery.”

On Monday, crude oils went up after a Chinese government report said that energy demand in the dragon country will continue to rise in t he coming months.

The January crude oil contract increased by 0.8 percent, to touch $88.47 a barrel, on the New York Mercantile Exchange and was at $88.43.

10 Amazing Facts About Oil

Like gold, the human connection with oil goes back centuries. Initially used for heating and light, oil has now become the lifeblood of industrialized nations.

The Swedish bank Carnegie recently put together some quick facts about oil that are worth sharing.

Gusher

World’s First Oil Production: Way back in the year 327, Chinese engineers used bamboo pipelines to drill 240 meters below the surface to extract the earliest drops of oil. Carnegie notes that back then, oil was known as “burning water” and was used to evaporate brine and produce salt.

World’s First Offshore Production: The first offshore production wasn’t that far offshore at all. In 1891, workers from Riley and Banker’s Oil drilled for oil in the Grand Lake St. Mary’s from a wooden platform. The lake is about 70 miles west of Columbus, Ohio.

World’s Deepest Offshore Well: The answer to this one we know all too well. Back in September 2009, Transocean’s Deepwater Horizon hit a depth of 10,683 meters, making it the deepest well in the world. The record was short-lived as the Deepwater Horizion blew up just over six months later.

World’s Longest Producing Oil Well: I wonder if the oil riggers in Titusville, Pennsylvania knew their handiwork would still be in use 150 years later? The McClintock #1 started producing back in August 1861 and is still producing today. The well once produced as much as 50 barrels per day but currently produces about 12 barrels a month.

World’s Largest Offshore Oilfield: Measuring 50 kilometers by 15 kilometers, the Safaniya field in Saudi Arabia is the world’s largest offshore oilfield. Discovered in 1951, Safaniya is estimated to hold 37 billion barrels of oil and 151 billion cubic kilometers of gas. That’s enough oil to fulfill U.S. demand for nearly five years.

World’s Largest Offshore Gasfield: Measuring 9,700 square meters, the South Pars/North Dome in the Persian Gulf is the world’s largest offshore gasfield. Straddling the territories of Iran and Qatar nearly 3,000 meters below the seabed, the field holds 51 trillion cubic meters of gas.

Biggest Blowout in History: The blowout and aftermath of the Macondo well, which the Deepwater Horizon (see above) was drilling, is estimated to have spilled 4.9 million barrels of oil into the Gulf of Mexico.

World’s Largest Oil Platform: Weighing in at an amazing 59,500 tons, the largest oil platform in the world, the Thunder Horse PDQ, was built as a joint-venture between BP and ExxonMobil. Despite its size, this picture shows the platform is still susceptible to the elements, in this case 2005’s Hurricane Dennis.

PostDennis

World’s Largest Floating Production Storage and Offloading (FPSO): ExxonMobil’s Kizomba A has a storage capacity of 2.2 million barrels of oil making it the largest in the world. The $800 million structure is currently in use off of the coast of Angola.

FPSO

The FPSO receives and stores the oil after it is pumped from below the ocean floor
World’s Smallest FPSO: Sitting off the coast of southeast Australia is Roc Oil’s FPSO, which has the ability to hold 10,000 barrels per day of oil.

Frank Holmes

Frank Holmes is chief executive officer and chief investment officer of U.S. Global Investors Inc. The company is a registered investment adviser that manages approximately $4.8 billion in 13 no-load mutual funds and for other advisory clients. A Toronto native, he bought a controlling interest in U.S. Global Investors in 1989, after an accomplished career in Canada’s capital markets. His specialized knowledge gives him expertise in resource-based industries and money management. The Global Resources Fund was also Morningstar’s top performer among all domestic stock funds in the five-year period ending Dec. 31, 2006.

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Bullish Indicators Not Bullish Enough to Indicate Recovery

We live in the immediate…the urgent…the here and now…with the noise of the headlines and the blustery winds of current opinion…

Yesterday (Dec 15th), the Dow lost 19 points. Gold lost $18.

But nobody cares what happened yesterday. People want to know what is happening right now. When they enter an elevator, they reach for their cellphones and Blackberries and check to see if they have messages…or if something important has happened.

Trouble is, when your eyes are bolted to a Blackberry, it’s very hard to know where you are. When you are caught in the whirlwind of day-by-day activity, it’s very hard to see where you are going. And if you only read the news, it is almost impossible to know what is going on.

So, where are we? And where are we going?

You wouldn’t know it from reading the press or talking to neighbors, but we are still in a funk.

We only bring it up because so many people seem to have forgotten. They see double-digit gains in stocks for 2010 and of a “Santa Rally” on Wall Street. They see commodities at record prices and bond yields moving up. They read that retails sales are picking up and that small businessmen are more optimistic.

What are they supposed to think? The “recovery” is real, they believe. The economy is getting back in gear. Everything is going to be okay. Heck, unemployment will be down to normal levels – 5% to 6% – within a few years; Ben Bernanke said so himself.

And if this assessment were correct, what should an investor do? Well, buy a stock! Or buy a house! Or buy some copper! Buy something. You don’t want to sit on cash…not when there are so many good investment opportunities. Get on board before this ship leaves the dock. After all, didn’t stock market investors multiply their wealth 14 times by buying in 1982 and holding all the way to 2007? Didn’t bonds go up, year after year, for the last 27 years?

You might think you are almost always better off fully invested in stocks and bonds. And maybe you are. But that’s why it’s important to step back and look at what is really going on. This could be one of the times when it is better to hold cash.

If bond yields have been going down (prices going up) since 1983, what are the trends that will continue for another 27 years? Or how about stocks? If they went up from ’82 to ’07, how likely is it that another big bull market is underway?

Investors were encouraged recently because small businesses had turned optimistic. Yet the level of optimism is still lower than it was in the last 20 years. Hiring too was said to be picking up. But not in the last two decades have small businesses had fewer openings. The same could be said of other indicators – such as capital investment plans. Small business investment is improving, but it is still way below the prevailing since 1990.

Another thing that has been cited as a bullish indicator: retail sales are rising. The November report showed a healthy gain. At the same time, figures for October and September were revised upwards. But if you look beneath the hood you find that consumers were buying necessities at an increased rate. Sales of autos, furniture, building materials and other durables actually fell heavily. What this indicates is what we keep talking about – a “back to basics” mentality, consistent with a period of private sector de-leveraging.

Households are saving money too – about 6% of their disposable incomes. They’re paying down debt; they’re not going on another spending spree. As we pointed out last week, there are reports that consumer credit is expanding. But take out federally-backed credit, and the trend is still definitely down.

Wages are rising too – but the percentage of workers getting increases is still only one quarter the level it was 10 years ago.

There’s also a lot of talk about inflation increasing. Martin Wolf, top economist at The Financial Times maintains that inflation is warming – just as it should. It’s a sign that the feds’ monetary, fiscal, and unconventional policies are working, he says.

But look at the long-term trend. Core inflation is running at 50-year lows. In October, it hit its lowest level ever – that is, since they began keeping track in the 1950s.

Housing, too, is still soft in the US. The latest Case-Shiller numbers show prices sinking nationwide. Apart from the ’07-’09 crisis years, this is only the second time in the last 22 years that this has happened.

It looked like the trend in housing prices had turned positive after bottoming out in 2009. But the most recent figures show housing has gone into a “double dip” with prices falling again.

More people are getting food stamps. More people are unemployed. More people are cutting back, rather than expanding, their lifestyles.

In short, the long-term trends show a Great Correction – not another boom.

Bill Bonner
for The Daily Reckoning

 

Since founding Agora Inc. in 1979, Bill Bonner has found success and garnered camaraderie in numerous communities and industries. A man of many talents, his entrepreneurial savvy, unique writings, philanthropic undertakings, and preservationist activities have all been recognized and awarded by some of America’s most respected authorities. Along with Addison Wiggin, his friend and colleague, Bill has written two New York Times best-selling books, Financial Reckoning Day and Empire of Debt. Both works have been critically acclaimed internationally. With political journalist Lila Rajiva, he wrote his third New York Times best-selling book, Mobs, Messiahs and Markets, which offers concrete advice on how to avoid the public spectacle of modern finance. Since 1999, Bill has been a daily contributor and the driving force behind The Daily Reckoning.

 

As Zero Hedge had been claiming for about two weeks now, with volatility in stocks virtually gone due to the fact that nobody trades a market that is nothing more than a policy tool, those chasing vol have had to shift elsewhere, namely FX (the

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