Bonds & Interest Rates

19markets-articleLargeAfter Cyprus Bank Bailout, Depositors Race to Withdraw Their Cash. Is the Rest of Europe, the US Next?

A small bailout in a small state has roiled the global financial markets and triggered a political backlash as far away as Russia.  Euro and shares slide over fears that Cyprus could trigger bank runs in other countries

The €10-billion Cyprus bailout  breaks taboo of hitting bank depositors with losses, After all-night Friday talks, euro finance ministers agreed a €10-billion bailout for the stricken Mediterranean island and said since so much of its debt was rooted in its banks, that sector would have to bear a large part of the burden.

The hit imposed on Cypriot bank depositors by the euro zone has shocked and alarmed politicians and bankers who fear the currency bloc has set a precedent that will unnerve investors and citizens alike. 

“This is an unprecedented decision for a eurozone country. It is also one whose potential consequences reach much further than an island in the eastern Mediterranean. It threatens to cause the transmission system between the economic and financial sectors on one side and the political and social on the other to seize up. Without this, the euro cannot be propelled forward. It cannot function.”

.1363545856477.cached…the latest:

Cyprus bailout deal rattles investors around the world

The Cyprus bailout broke ‘the cardinal rule’

Cyprus Delays Vote on Bailout Plan

Cyprus bailout crisis shakes markets

 

The Young Are Going to Get Screwed by Debt: Part One

debt-KIDS  CERTAIN futureThomas Jefferson was opposed to a ‘national debt‘. He thought it was immoral that one generation should spend on credit, forcing the next generation to pay the bill.

Jefferson knew what a burden debt could be – especially when it is debt for spending he didn’t enjoy himself. He had inherited debts from his father-in-law. You’ve heard of ‘something for nothing’? On the flip side is a second condition as disagreeable as the first is pleasant: nothing for something.

‘Nothing for something’ describes the financial situation of America’s youth. If things go according to plan, they will pay a large portion of their incomes (if they have incomes) to pay for social welfare ‘benefits’ that they will never enjoy themselves.

Professor Laurence Kotlikoff of Boston University puts the total of US government debt and unfunded pension and healthcare liabilities at $222 trillion. The biggest part of that money will be spent on the baby boomer generation…as it heads into retirement homes, nursing homes and hospitals. This is such a huge sum that it cannot be paid. But the burden of trying to pay it (and not succeeding) will fall heavily on younger generations.

Large debts also retard growth. This is the conclusion of professors Rogoff and Reinhart in ‘This Time it’s Different’ – their study of 800 years of financial folly. Much of current output must be used to pay for past consumption.

That is part of the reason that today’s growth rates are only about half of those in the 1960s and 1970s. Low growth means fewer new job opportunities. Those that do become available are generally at lower salaries. The real growth that doesn’t happen leads to the real jobs that will not be created and to the real careers your children and grandchildren may never have.

High debt levels also mean higher taxes. Taxes tend to be levied on earnings, not on pensions and healthcare consumption. An estimate for how high taxes on young people would have to go (if it were possible) to finance this debt: about 80%.

Today, I take up the cause of our children and grandchildren. In the modern vernacular: They’re screwed.

Our job is to unscrew them. First, by trying to understand how the system works. And second, by setting up parallel or alternative systems of our own that help them protect themselves.

Nothing for Something

Let’s begin with the big picture. The economies of the US and other modern, developed social welfare nations are based on several conceits and delusions.

Serious observers keep saying that if we continue doing what we’re doing bad things will happen ‘sooner or later’. We never know when sooner or later will get here. But it’s a fair bet that it will come during our children’s and grandchildren’s lives.

Remember Herb Stein’s law: Things we all know can’t last forever will come to a halt sometime. Most likely, it will be during the working careers of our children and grandchildren.

For example, the credit expansion that began after World War II had to end sooner or later. For the private sector, it ended in 2007. It almost ended, too, for many governments – such as Japan, Greece, Spain, California and others.

But large nations with their own printing presses are still going at it – with public debt-to-GDP ratios reaching up over 200% already. (If you included the aforementioned unfunded pension and health obligations, the ratio for the US is already at nearly 1,400% and growing 20 times faster.)

The system of indirectly funding deficits through money printing (QE), while holding interest rates at the zero bound, will also have to end sooner or later. More alarmingly, the current system of fiat money is one for the record books. None has ever lasted this long. But it, too, will go away sooner or later.

So too will the system of intergenerational wealth transfers to fund health and retirement benefits. This system, developed in the 19th century, and brought into wide service in the 20th, was an illusion from the get-go.

In a stable society, the contributors – in the aggregate – can never get out of the system what they put in. Bureaucratically managed programs are too wasteful and beset by too much fraud. And it doesn’t really make sense for people to go along with a system where they get less out of it than they put in.

Nevertheless, there was – and still is – wide support for these programs. Why? Because people still expect to get ‘something for nothing’ – or at least more than they put in. That has been the experience of the last 100 years.

Citizens were able to get more than they put in because the following generation was always bigger and richer – until now. Now, in the US, Japan and most of Europe, birthrates are so low that the native-born population is falling. And, for the first time in US history, the next generation may actually be poorer than we are.

In other words, our children and grandchildren are getting a bum deal in more ways than one.

The short version of this story is simple: Old people vote. Politicians found they could be bribed. Promise them something they couldn’t get by honest labour – someone else’s money – and you are a shoo-in for elective office.

Year after year, the promises got to be more and more costly. How high have the promises gone? The median retiree has a total of about $120,000 in net savings. But he’ll consume about $275,000 worth of healthcare services before he finally adjourns. Who will pay the difference? Who bears the burden of this unfunded liability?

The Social Security Fund – which was the source of the phony ‘surpluses’ of the Clinton era – is now in deficit. This year, it will pay out about $100 billion more than it takes in. That’s $100 billion more to retirees than working people contribute in Social Security tax payments. And the baby boomers have only just begun to retire!

Old people vote for higher Social Security payments. They vote for more healthcare. They vote for pills, wheelchair access and senior discounts. They vote for spending in the here and now…and a few brief tomorrows. As to the long term, it can take care of itself…

Regards,

Bill Bonner
for The Daily Reckoning Australia

Legend James Dines: Entire Money Talks Interview Below

dines11Michael Interviews James Dines, one of the Great Investor Legends who long ago defiantly warned investors of the “invisible crash” that would bring down stocks in 1966. In an industry where it takes courage and conviction to go against the crowd, Dines also alerted investors of the unexpected gold boom of 1974, the Internet revolution of 1996, warned of the market top in 2000, and more. A pioneer in technical analysis and Crowd Psychology applied to markets, Dines answers Michael’s questions on today’s Markets and the environment they are operating in.  

Victor Adair is first, Michael starts interviewing James at the 8:50 mark:

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Michael Campbell’s commentary plus interview’s with Ozzie Jurock on Real Estate and Michael Levy on Gold in the 1st 1/2 hour of Money Talks below:

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A Crash Course in Getting Value

j0402840“Price is what you pay; value is what you get.” – Warren Buffet

Market Buzz – A Crash Course in Valuation
 
For those that have followed KeyStone’s research and commentary on a regular basis, there is a single term that you have heard us discuss repeatedly – valuation. We commonly refer to valuation both when describing our overall investment philosophy and when explaining the investment merits of a particular company.

Warren Buffet once said, “Price is what you pay; Value is what you get”. What Buffet is saying is that intelligent investment practise differentiates between market price and value. Most of us have an innate concept of what value is in our everyday lives when we shop for houses, household products, automobiles, and just about anything else. We have a sense of what something is worth to us and whether or not the market price of that product is lower or higher than the value we will receive from it. In the consumer market this concept of worth or intrinsic value is often difficult to quantify and highly subject to emotional whims which can result in the consumers overpaying for products that they don’t need and eventually don’t use. We have all paid a high price for a product from which we initially thought we would get years of enjoyment and which quickly ended up collecting dust in the back corner of the basement. Whether consciously or unconsciously, in our minds we arrived at a perceived intrinsic value of that product which was above the price we were asked to pay. But in the aforementioned example, we did not adequately assess the real intrinsic value of the product as we were distracted by emotional desire and short-sighted analysis. This happens commonly in the investment market as well.

When we refer to a specific company’s valuation, we are typically talking about some form of price multiple which could be price-to-earnings, price-to-cash flow, or even, price-to-book value. Mathematically, these concepts are quite simple. As illustrated below, one simply divides the current share price by the earnings, cash flow, or book value per share.

                     Price-to-Earnings Multiple = Share Price / Earnings per Share
                     5 Times = $5.00 (share price) / $1.00 (earnings per share)
 
Value investors typically look for companies that trade at a relatively low valuation multiple. In most cases, with everything else being equal, the lower valuation multiple, the better the value, and the more attractive the investment. But in the real world of investing, everything else is rarely equal and this is what makes the practise of intelligent investing more complex than a simple mathematical calculation. Truthfully speaking, if the only thing an investor had to worry about was calculating valuation multiples then we could all be as rich as Warren Buffet. Unfortunately this is not the case.

The simple fact of the matter is that no two companies are identical. Some companies in the same industries may appear similar but they can still vary widely in quality due to management ability, financial position (balance sheet), earnings quality, competitive advantages and future growth (or lack thereof). For example, a value investor may find two companies with company A trading at a valuation multiple of 6 times reported earnings and company B trading at a multiple of 12 times reported earnings. With everything being equal, company A appears to be more attractively valued. However, when we conduct a deep analysis of the companies, we may determine that company A’s earnings are expected to be cut in half over the next year, while company B is expected to double their earnings. Therefore, company A’s valuation over this period is actually 12 times earnings and company B’s valuation is in fact 6 times earnings. The situation has been reversed and although at the start of the analysis, company A looked more attractively valued, we actually discovered that company B had the better valuation. A similar scenario occurs when the expected growth rates of each company are similar but one company has a more sustainable earnings profile or lower financial risk which can also warrant a higher valuation multiple. Warren Buffet who is considered a value investor himself also said, “I would rather buy a great company at a reasonable price, then a poor company at a great price.” In many (perhaps most) cases, a very low valuation multiple is in fact an indication that the company is higher risk or lower quality. It is up to the analyst to determine what constitutes an appropriate valuation given all of the attributes of the particular company and its market. The numbers help us to understand the relative value but they do not by themselves tell the whole story. They are simply one piece of a much larger puzzle.

 

KeyStone’s Latest Reports Section

3/13/2013
MOBILE SATELLITE MANUFACTURER REPORTS SOLID EARNINGS BUT AS EXPECTED ARE DOWN YEAR-OVER-YEAR, SOLID DIVIDEND, 40% OF MARKET-CAP IN CASH, POSITIVE LONG TERM, BUT NO NEED TO CHASE LONG TERM

2/21/2013
EXTRUSION & AUTOMOTIVE MANUFACTURER POSTS SOLID START TO 2014, DIVIDEND INCREASED 20%, REASONABLE VALUATIONS WITH A STRONG BALANCE SHEET – REITERATE BUY

1/18/2013
UNIQUE FINANCIAL SERVICES FIRM WITH STRONG CASH POSITION (58% IN CASH), SOLID EXPANSION PLANS AND ATTRACTIVE VALUATIONS

1/18/2013
ENERGY & AGRICULTURAL PRODUCT MANUFACTURER AND SERVICE MICRO-CAP STOCK WITH STRONG CASH POSITION, SOLID GROWTH, & TRUE CASH FLOW FROM RECENT ACQUISITION NOT FULLY RECOGNIZED

1/18/2013
CASH RICH TECHNOLOGY EQUIPMENT MANUFACTURER (PRIMARILY FOR O&G MARKET) WITH STRONG CASH FLOW, LOW VALUATIONS & DOMINANT CDN MARKET SHARE IN SOLID NICHE – ESTABLISH HALF POSITION

 

Canada: An Emerging Energy Super Producer

Canada is getting into the Big leagues of Energy Production according the a recent report from the Fraser Institute.

In short, Canada has “pretty much vast untapped potential for Economic benefits to Canadians by continuing along this path of increased energy production and trade” says Ken Green of the Fraser Institute. According to this report,  Canada is well on its way to becoming a Superproducer of energy with its vast new reserves of Oil from unconventional sources like the Oil Sands, new reserves of Natural Gas from Fracking shale reserves, as well as our existing supplies of power generated by Hydro Electricity.

The price of natural gas is coming down dramatically in North America due to the vast new supplies of shale gas coming online.

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The shale gas revolution has generated many changes. As Ken Green says “the shale gas revolution has multiple tendrils. It is not just about affecting availability and electrical supply, as well as bringing back manufacturing and chemical manufacturing back to countries that it has left. It is also a complete overturning of the Geopolitics of energy because the natural gas supplies, the shale supplies are found in many many Democratic countries and it breaks the stranglehold of Non-Democratic countries over oil and natural gas.” 
 
Technology has discovered how to extract oil economically from sand, and both oil and natural gas from rock (shale). “Japan just recently managed to produce methane from something called methane hydrates, that are a sort of natural gas slushy that occurs on the margins of continents and islands. There is such a supply of that around the world you could be talking about 1000 years of natural gas supply if people learn how to exploit that.”
 
Its technology that made the Oil Sands go from a lab experiment into a 170 Billion Dollars of proven reserves. 
 
In short technology has rendered “Peak Oil” a quaint idea, and Canada is sitting on top with a very prosperous energy future. 
 
Ezra Levant has a  great interview with Ken Green of the Fraser Institute HERE
 
The entire Fraser Institute Report HERE
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

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