Stocks & Equities

10 Top Ranked Dividend Paying Canadian Energy Stocks

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(1) Bonterra Energy Corp 6.4% YIELD
 
Ed Note: These stocks are selected by looking at a variety of data, from dividend yield, book value & quarterly earnings. These stocks listed here came out at the top of their list in the energy field. To read more about how they choose these stocks go HERE Editor Money Talks
 

Bonterra Energy is a dividend paying oil and gas company. Co.’s primary focus is to maintain and enhance cash dividends to its shareholders through the optimum utilization and development of existing crude oil and natural gas properties and acquisition or development of new producing properties. Development efforts are concentrated in the Pembina field mainly in the Cardium, Belly River and Edmonton zones. Ticker symbol TSE: BNA.CA

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Juggling in China: What our Wave Charts Foreshadow

BlackSwan2“Successful traders are not gamblers, they are probability players.”

                                                                                      -Mark Weinstein

Technical analysis on these two particular charts suggest the intersecting actions in China could cause problems

It has been a bad idea to be a bear on China over the last few years (though not necessarily their stock market) based on the expectation the credit crunch would lead to a financial crisis there.
 
Screen Shot 2014-03-19 at 12.49.05 PMI say that because I was very much aboard the China cum-financial-crisis bandwagon. 
 
But no matter how you slice it, Chinese authorities have done a brilliant job of keeping all the balls in the air. As we know, there is often some type of transmission lag after a major global macro event. And the credit crunch bubble that popped may have been the mother of all bubbles.

Are we now about to see, or are already seeing, its lagging impact finally bubbling to the surface in China?
 
For every action there is a reaction.China’s actions to avert the credit crunch impact now seem to be intersecting. Here are two actions, for example:

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OUR LATEST POSTS 

Boom: The Aussie delivers profits just as anticipated

Really … A Real Recovery Redux?

JPY, GBP, AUD: Big moves coming?

Trade smart: Are you committed to crude oil?

Nick and Jack … being frank.

Copper: Lower on the path of least resistance?

Weekend Reading of Interest

4 Moves to Make After Russia’s Annexation of Crimea

Everybody has his own view on Russia’s annexation of Crimea… 

A righting of historical wrongs? A breach of international rules? A land grab? Colonization? A rescue mission? Self-determination in action? Take your pick. 

What is clear is that Russia will now add Crimea to its territorial and political map. And this has the EU and the US in a flap. 

So, how should you respond to events in Crimea? 

First off, resist the temptation to invest on the basis of headlines… unless those headlines are helping create opportunities to buy quality assets at steep discounts. 

If you already own Russian stocks, in other words, don’t let scary news headlines distract you from your original investment case. 

Second, always stay diversified. Most investors ignore “boring” diversification considerations. Instead, they spend their time chasing hot stock stories. 

Simply put, the more diversified you are the less any single event (such as a Russian incursion into Ukraine) can hurt your portfolio. If events in Crimea are having a significant impact on your portfolio, something is wrong. And you need more portfolio diversification. 

Third, ask yourself: Cui bono? 

In this case, what assets will benefit from heightened tensions between Moscow and the West? 

It’s likely that liquefied natural gas exporters will do well, as Europe looks to alternatives to piped natural gas from Russia. 

The nuclear industry… and uranium producers… are also likely to do well, as Europe looks to reduce its dependence on Russian natural gas… something leaders there are going to be a lot less comfortable with following the Ukraine-Russia crisis. 

“Safe haven” investments such gold will also benefit from heightened geopolitical uncertainty – especially if an emboldened Putin decides to press on for territorial gains in Ukraine. (After all, who’s going to stop him?) 

We recommend you always have some gold in your portfolio as “insurance” against these kinds of unforeseen events. 

Fourth, go bargain hunting. 

The Russian stock market is ridiculously cheap right now. You want to keep any positions relatively small. But at 5.1 times 12-month reported earnings… and a dividend yield of 3.7%… the Russian stock market is screaming value right now. And it looks like most of the bad news has already been priced in.

Ed Note: Below is the Russian MICEX BMI BROAD MARKET INDEX (Additional Charts HERE)

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Democracy? Forget about It…

by Bill Bonner – Diary of a Roque Economist

They say we have violated international law. At least they remember about international law – better late than never. 

– Vladimir Putin talking about US and the West 

Once again, world politics dominate the news. The Crimea drama is over… finished… done. The Russians did what you would expect. So did the Crimeans. 

Crimea has voted overwhelmingly to join Russia. And the markets seem to be celebrating. The US stock market, as measured by the Dow, rose 88 points yesterday. Gold – the antidote to crises of all sorts – dropped $13 an ounce. 

We promised a second foray into the time that land forgot – that dark future where things that couldn’t go on forever finally stop. The question on the table yesterday was “when.” We had no answer to it. 

The question today is “how”… about which we have more to say… so much that we will have to leave it until tomorrow. Instead, we will riff on world politics… about which we know even less than we know about economics! 

The people of Crimea have spoken, at least according to what they claim to be fair referendum results (although the EU and the US dispute them). Naturally, the defenders of democracy are appalled. The LA Times reports: 

In the most direct East-West confrontation since the Cold War, the White House and the European Union imposed sanctions against more than two dozen Russian and Ukrainian officials Monday and threatened more penalties if Moscow does not back down in Crimea. However, Russian President Vladimir Putin issued a decree that recognized Crimea as “sovereign and independent” after Sunday’s overwhelming vote there in favor of secession from Ukraine.

CNN continues: 

Vice President Joe Biden, meeting with Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk Tuesday, accused Russia’s leaders of “a brazen, brazen military incursion” and said NATO would “emerge from this crisis stronger and more unified than ever.” 

UK Foreign Secretary William Hague, speaking in the British House of Commons Tuesday, said Russia was “choosing the route of isolation, denying the citizens of his own country and of Crimea partnership with the international community.” 

Hague also warned of “a grave danger of a provocation elsewhere in Ukraine that becomes a pretext for further military escalation.” German Chancellor Angela Merkel said the “so-called referendum” and the acceptance of Crimea to the Russian Federation was in violation of international law. 

Convenient BS

Why are folks in the West so animated? Isn’t the principle of self-determination enshrined in the Declaration of Independence… and wasn’t it repeated in the setup documents for the League of Nations… as well as the United Nations? 

Isn’t the right of people to decide for themselves by whom they will be misgoverned the sacred foundation stone of democracy? 

Oh, dear reader, sometimes you surprise us. “Self-determination” has always been convenient BS. It is only handy when you have the guns to back it up. Otherwise, it is just air. 

America’s greatest and bloodiest war – the War Between the States – proved it. You can talk about democracy all you want; but when push comes to shove, the pushers always shove you around. 

Compare Putin with Lincoln. Putin invaded Crimea, where people overwhelmingly wanted him to come. Lincoln invaded Virginia, where no one wanted him. 

As far as we know, Putin’s men didn’t fire a shot. Lincoln’s troops shot at everything that moved. By the time they were finished, one out of four white men of fighting age in the South was dead. 

And then, after the troops were firmly in control of their prize, do you remember Lincoln offering the South a chance to vote on whether they wanted to rejoin the North? 

And where was the declaration that the South was sovereign and independent? We must have missed it. 

Craving War

Nobody really gives a damn about democracy or self-determination. And perhaps for good reason. Alexander Boot in Britain’s Daily Mail

According to Freedom House the world didn’t boast a single democracy in 1900. However, in 2007 there were supposed to be 123 democracies out of 192 existing countries… 

As the shift from zero to 123 occurred in the 20th century, then, according to democracy worshippers, it ought to be regarded as the sunniest period ever. Instead, somewhere between 400 and 500 million people died violent deaths at the time – more than in all the other centuries of recorded history combined. 

Moreover, some of the most horrific massacres ensued after failed attempts to implant the saplings of one-man-one-vote democracy into a soil all too ready to reject them. Russia and Germany spring to mind, but then you can name your own examples from just about every continent. 

Woodrow Wilson, one of the neocons’ icons, dragged America into the First World War under the slogan of “making the world safe for democracy.” The principal warring parties were perplexed, considering that France was already a republic, Britain a constitutional democracy with a fine parliamentary tradition, while Germany, Austria and even Russia had functioning parliaments, even though the last had been struggling to come to terms with it. And all those parliaments craved war. 

 

Regards,

Bill

 

 

 

Feelin’ the Fire – Investors are Hot for Gold

Negative Real Interest Rates & Gold

Gold seems to be sparking more attention these days, as investors have seen the precious metal steadily rise from its December low of around $1,200, to a new high of $1,350 just three months later.

What’s Driving Gold?

The media has been focusing on the conflict in Ukraine and Russia as the main driver for gold, but I think an equally important driver relates to real interest rates.

For gold, the real fuel lies in negative-to-low real rates of return. Historically, the gold price rises when the inflationary rate (CPI) is greater than the current interest rate. Similarly, when real interest rates go positive, you can expect the gold price to drop.

Investors can watch out for two factors to see if the embers still spark for gold. Take a look at what happened over the past year with real interest rates and gold:

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A Year in Review

 

  • A year ago in March 2013, the five-year Treasury yield was offering investors 0.88 percent, while inflation was 1.5 percent. This equaled a real rate of return of -0.62 percent, so investors were losing money. That month we saw gold reach as high as $1,614.
  • The five-year Treasury yield rose to 1.74 percent in December of that year, as inflation lowered to 1.20 percent, returning a positive rate of 0.54 percent. What happened to gold? The price dropped to a staggering $1,187.
  • Today inflation has gone up 40 basis points to 1.60 percent while the five-year Treasury yield is at 1.53 percent. A negative real rate of return has resurfaced. Meanwhile, gold rose to $1,350.

More Inflation Coming?

Inflation has been off the radar for most people in the U.S., but Macquarie Research made an interesting observation as wage growth experienced the largest monthly increase in more than three years. Going back more than 15 years, you can see the six-month annualized change of 3.3 percent is “the highest pace of wage growth in over five years,” says Macquarie.

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Usually, wage growth leads to an increase in the cost of goods, which translates to higher inflation.

And, with the Federal Reserve expected to keep rates low for a period of time to allow the economy to continue growing, it looks like real interest rates will remain low-to-negative, which should keep investors hot for gold.

Frank

 

Check out our latest Special Gold Report to read more on how the gold price is driven by Fed policy, unemployment and inflation.

The Consumer Price Index (CPI) is one of the most widely recognized price measures for tracking the price of a market basket of goods and services purchased by individuals.  The weights of components are based on consumer spending patterns.

All opinions expressed and data provided are subject to change without notice. Some of these opinions may not be appropriate to every investor.

 

Chart of The Day – An Eye Opener

The PE ratio from 1900 to present is shown here in today’s chart. Generally speaking, when the PE ratio is high, stocks are considered to be expensive. When the PE ratio is low, stocks are considered to be inexpensive. From 1900 into the mid-1990s, the PE ratio tended to peak in the low to mid-20s (red line) and trough somewhere around seven (green line). The price investors were willing to pay for a dollar of earnings increased during the dot-com boom (late 1990s), surged even higher during the dot-com bust (early 2000s), and spiked to extraordinary levels during the financial crisis (late 2000s). Since the early 2000s, the PE ratio has been trending lower with the very significant but relatively brief exception that was the financial crisis. More recently, the PE ratio has trended higher (to just shy of the 20 level). However, over the past four months, corporate earnings have increased enough to maintain a relatively flat PE ratio — an overall positive for the stock market.

Notes:
Where should you invest? The answer may surprise you. Find out right now with the exclusive & Barron’s recommended charts of Chart of the Day Plus.

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Quote of the Day
“Nowadays, people know the price of everything and the value of nothing.” – Oscar Wilde

Events of the Day
March 20, 2014 – First day of Spring (Northern Hemisphere)
April 01, 2014 – April Fool’s Day 

Stocks of the Day
— Find out which stocks investors are focused on with the most active stocks today.
— Which stocks are making big money? Find out with the biggest stock gainers today.
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— You can also quickly review the performance, dividend yield and market capitalization for each of the Dow Jones Industrial Average Companies as well as for each of the S&P 500 Companies.

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