Stocks & Equities

Lessons From the Legend of Contrarian Investing

Dreman is a legend because of what he did in 1979. I explained it as I introduced him at an investment conference. Here’s what I said: 

David Dreman literally wrote the book on contrarian investing strategies. Consider this: His book called Contrarian Investment Strategies came out in 1979…

You have to realize, when the book came out, stocks had done nothing for a dozen years. David said that it was time to buy stocks – that they were incredibly cheap.

I bet David and his mom were the only people to buy the book… NOBODY wanted to buy stocks back then.

But he got it exactly right. The greatest two decades in the entire history of stocks was from 1979 to 1999. And Dreman, more than anyone else, called it.

I love that Dreman didn’t listen to what anyone else had to say. In 1979, he trusted his own research.

He understood that stocks were dirt-cheap and out of favor. After a dozen years of poor performance in stocks, investors were busy buying gold and bonds and avoiding the stock market. Sound familiar to today? 

What’s Dreman saying today? 

These days, he’s fearful of inflation, and he believes stocks are the place to have your money… He’s been writing a column for Forbes for 30 years. Here’s what he said in his most recent column: 

Smoldering inflationary fires will burst into an inferno once the unemployment rate falls below 7.5%, if not sooner. In this environment, good stocks, not Treasuries, are the place to be.

What’s he doing with money now?

Given my bullish views, I am in buying mode… We will undoubtedly have more scares and volatility ahead, but if you’ve taken an ultraconservative ­approach to date, it’s time to revamp your assets in preparation for rising ­inflation and interest rates.

Dreman wrote a white paper on “The Case for Inflation” in 2011. In it, he said:

We think it’s unquestionable that inflation is in our future for some time… it’s just as certain that a portfolio of great companies will protect an investment portfolio from the challenges to come.

You can read Dreman’s white paper on inflation HERE or click on the image below (link fixed)

Screen Shot 2012-11-02 at 11.40.20 AM

Dreman doesn’t follow the crowd. He is the ultimate contrarian.

And right now, this contrarian is expecting inflation, and he believes high-quality stocks (like cigarette giant Altria and banking giant Wells Fargo) are the best place to be positioned.

I suggest you follow his lead…

Good investing, 

Steve

About Dr. Steve Sjuggerud

Founding Editor, DailyWealth

In a nutshell, our investment philosophy here at DailyWealth is this: Buy things of extraordinary value at a time when nobody else wants them. Then sell when people are willing to pay any price.

You see, at DailyWealth, we believe most investors take way too much risk.
 
So our mission is to show you how to avoid risky investments, and how to avoid what the average investor is doing. We believe that you can make a lot of money – and do it safely – by simply doing the opposite of what is most popular.

 

A Powerful Case This is a Normal Gold Correction

In fact, going back 30 years, the historical seasonality of gold has been to rise during September, with a subsequent correction in October.

I spent the latter half of last week at the New Orleans Investment Conference, talking with investors, mining companies and analysts about the state of the gold industry. The annual conference falls at an interesting time of the year, as the price of gold typically corrects in October.

DRH11-1-12-01

This fall, gold has followed this historical trend, with the metal climbing throughout the month of September to reach a high of $1,790 an ounce on October 4, only to have a normal correction to $1,701 by October 24. This decline typically comes ahead of the Love Trade fueling demand prior to the Hindu festival of lights, Diwali, which begins in November.

Miners, Show Me the Money!

At the conference, I’ve been discussing the multiple forces squeezing the profits and earnings out of gold miners, causing equity investors to become the Rod Tidwells of the gold world, getting miners energized to “Show me the money!” In my opinion, this phenomenon highlights the importance of selectively choosing among those gold companies that exhibit the best relative growth and momentum characteristics to help obtain outstanding investment results.

DRH11-1-12-02-300x300My workshop presentation in “The Big Easy” integrated preeminent thinking from multiple gold experts, including research firm CIBC, Gold Fields and the World Gold Council, about how gold companies’ performance has been neither “big” nor “easy.” There’s been a decline in production per share, an 80 percent increase in the average cost per ton of gold over the past six years, and a 21 percent decline in global average grades of gold since 2005. Cash taxes per ounce of production have increased dramatically, and, according to CIBC World Markets, the replacement cost for an ounce of gold is now $1,500, with $1,700 as a sustainable number. Cash operating costs eat away the most, at $700 an ounce, while sustaining capital, construction capital, discovery costs, overhead and taxes eat up $800. At the October 24 gold price of $1,700 an ounce, only $200 is left over as profit, says CIBC.

Gold companies have had their share of challenges in the past. Prior to the huge run-up in gold prices in the late 1970s, forward price-to-cash flow ratios crashed from a high of about 22 times to just under 9 times. Eventually, as gold climbed to its high, multiples spiked back up to 21 times.

DRH11-1-12-03

Miners also didn’t increase the supply of the precious metal in the 1970s. Back then, there were only a few major players in the gold game. South Africa was a significant gold-producing country, as well as Russia and North America.

However, following years of a gold bull market in the 1970s, production climbed. In fact, Pierre Lassonde, chairman of Franco-Nevada and a living legend in the mining and resource world, says it took seven years for the gold industry to respond after the rise in the price of gold. Ironically, as the price kept falling over the next 20 years, production doubled, says Lassonde.

DRH11-1-12-04

Beginning in 2000, gold companies have experienced a similar phenomenon, with production remaining flat, even declining in some years. In 2008, mine supply of gold fell to levels not seen since the early 1990s.

Now, after a seven-year lag, the industry has responded as we’re beginning to see some growth in supply.

From 2006 through 2011, production throughout the entire gold industry has increased about 3 percent, says CEO Nick Holland of Gold Fields. During his keynote presentation at the Melbourne Mining Club in July, he indicated that most of the growth was not coming from the major producers. In more mature markets, such as South Africa, Australia, Peru and the U.S., annual production decreased by about 5 million ounces since 2006. Emerging markets on the other hand—China, Colombia, Mexico and Russia—added about 7.6 million ounces over the last six years, Holland says.

Of gold finds that contain at least 2 million ounces of gold, research from the Metals Economics Group (MEG) finds that there have been 99 significant discoveries between 1997 and 2011. Only 14 of the 26 major gold producers made these major gold discoveries. “Today, the major producers and their majority-owned subsidiaries hold 39 percent of the reserves and resources in the 99 significant discoveries made in the past 15 years.” This amounts to less than half of the yellow metal needed to replace the gold companies’ production from 2002 to 2011, says MEG.

According to Lassonde, this is the “elephant in the room,” as new finds have become elusive. The chart below from CIBC shows that there was only one major discovery that was more than 3 million ounces in 2011. Over the past seven years, there have been only nine major discoveries of gold.

DRH11-1-12-05

Lassonde doesn’t think we have hit “peak gold,” but believes the gold industry needs a “3D seismic” event similar to what occurred in the oil industry before we see considerable finds.
For as many challenges as gold companies face today, they have rarely experienced such a well-diversified consumer base and diversified demand for their product: It’s “the best we could ask for,” says Lassonde.

A newer trend that I’ve discussed is the reemergence of emerging markets central banks as buyers of gold, as they have been “relearning that all paper currencies are suspect,” says Lassonde. Today, he says “cash is trash,” with the value of euro, dollar and yen in question.

He believes this source of demand could be long-lasting and quite significant if you look at emerging market countries’ gold holdings as a percent of total reserves. In 2000, the European Central Bank decided that the right proportion of gold to own should be 15 percent. Pierre says if you apply that figure to the potential gold holdings of the emerging market central banks, they would need to accumulate 17,000 tons of gold. At a purchase of 1,000 tons a year (or about 40 percent of today’s production), these central banks would have to buy gold for the next 17 years!

DRH11-1-12-06

Another growing source of demand has been from the Fear Trade’s scooping up of gold exchange-traded funds (ETFs). Eight years after the products were launched, 12 gold ETFs and eight other similar investments are valued at around $120 billion and hold 2,500 tons of gold, says Nick Holland.

I believe the Fear Trade will continue buying not only gold but also gold stocks, as the group is driven by Helicopter Ben’s quantitative easing program.

In the latest Weldon’s Money Monitor, Greg Weldon discusses the consequences of the Federal Reserve’s debt monetization and liquidity provisions, showing the “somewhat frightening pace” of expansion in money supply.

Weldon says that over the last four years since August 2008, the U.S. Narrow Money Supply, or M1, which is physical money such as coins, currency and deposits, has increased 73 percent, or more than one trillion dollars. This is about as much as it expanded in the previous forty years!

DRH11-1-12-07

Don’t let the short-term correction fool you into selling your gold and gold stocks.

The dramatic increase in money suggests that monetary debasement will continue, and in addition to all the above drivers, I believe these are the positive dynamics driving higher prices for gold and gold stocks.

Frank Holmes

Original article posted on Daily Resource Hunter

 

 

4 Reasons to Look Out Below

Screen Shot 2012-11-02 at 8.05.30 AM

Investor Complacency Ends – Market Decline Underway

(Ed Note: This is an excerpt from Josef Schacter’s 15 page Energy Report)

The risk on trade of the last three months, as the central bankers announced another round of quantitative easing, now appears to have ended as worries about the US “fiscal cliff” and the ongoing debt crisis in Europe once more impacts investors. The “risk off” trade has returned. Bond prices are on the rise again, and the long US Treasury Bond would signal another round of significant “risk on” focus with a rise above 149. On November 6th the US has one of the most seminal elections in its history. Both candidates for the top job have evaded the issue of how they would cut the trillion dollar annual budget deficit and bring the overall government debt burden under control. It should be a hard fought and very tight race. The winner may in fact be a loser, as they are forced by the markets and the “fiscal cliff “cuts that take affect on January 15th, 2013, to tell the American people that the government has been living a lifestyle that can no longer be afforded and that tax increases and significant cuts to popular spending programs and entitlements would need to occur. If the winner does not take charge and make the tough choices quickly, nearly 5% of GDP will be removed (in an economy barely growing at 2%) as spending cuts and taxes rise. Another recession in the US would unfold quickly and, would in short order, drag down the world with it.

Economic Releases Warn of More Trouble Ahead

We continue to watch for “at the margin problems” in the world economy that would highlight an upcoming synchronized slowdown and problematic period. These are some of the recent events that are weakening the underpinnings of the current positive consensus view and may indicate that many parts of the world will face a pronounced slowdown and possible recession in 2013.

Europe

  • France continues down its path of solving its fiscal deficit via tax increases. The marginal income tax rate is being lifted to 75% and the capital gains rate has been proposed to be doubled to 60%. Interestingly, the biggest opposition to this increase is coming from young entrepreneurs who are campaigning in favour of new business creation and the upside win if successful via capital gains. Their call of “les pigeons” or “suckers” for taking the risk of starting new businesses is gaining traction and the government is looking at taxing passive gains at the higher rate and are looking to propose a lower rate for job creating entrepreneurs.
  • European car sales continue to collapse. In September sales fell 11% to 1.13M registrations, the lowest level in 19 years according to the European Automobile Manufacturer’s Association.
  • Spain is edging closer to a bailout request from the ECB as bad bank loans rose to 10.5% of all loans (and larger than their equity). This amount now is 178B Euros and is larger than the proposed 100B Euro bailout for Spanish banks.
  • Greece needs a new funding deal (and the next installment of new loans) from the EU/IMF in the next 30 days or it will run out of funds to pay its bills. D-day or default day is closing in again

China

  • China’s auto sales fell in September 2012 by 1.8% – the first such decline in many years, as the weakening economy impacted demand and the ongoing dispute with Japan over the Diaoyu Islands escalated and plunged sales of Japanese car sales by 41%. Commercial vehicles sales in China, fell by a more disconcerting 7.6%. Overall, the dispute between China and Japan is taking a severe toll on the Japanese economy which saw overall exports fall by 10.3% in September. Japan may now be entering its second quarter of its next recession.

US

  • US third quarter earnings have been somewhat disappointing and most importantly the negative guidance for Q4/12 and into 2013 has spooked investors. Such noteworthy companies as: Amazon, Caterpillar, DuPont, Google, IBM, McDonald’s Microsoft, Texas Instruments and Xerox have noted their concern for the upcoming year. Stocks had been priced for quantitative easing monetary policy heaven, and are now reacting to real world profit deterioration. A 20-30% price decline may be needed to fully discount the ongoing fiscal and economic problems. 

Markets still have big downside risk – be careful!  Hold large cash reserves. Be ready to buy during upcoming tax loss selling season into mid-December – Josef

 

About Josef Schacter

Josef is one of Michael Campbell’s favorite analysts. He writes research reports for:

Maison Placements Canada Inc.

2116-130 Adelaide Street West

Toronto, Ontario

M5H 3P5

Telephone:    416.947.6040

Fax:    416.947.6046

Maison Placements Canada Inc.,  an independent, Toronto-based investment dealer providing a comprehensive array of financial services to institutional investors and small to midsize corporate clients. Founded in 1955, Maison has established a reputation of providing Corporate Canada with high quality strategic investment banking advice and access to sources of financings. The heart and strength of the company is research, a small team of specialists providing both research and expertise. Maison has been able to execute successful financings, mergers, and acquisitions. Maison is committed to the resource industry offering a broad range of services including corporate finance, mergers and acquisitions, venture capital and institutional research. Maison’s principals believe that the business landscape is changing greatly and will continue into the next decade. Increased trade between Canada and Asia Pacific countries will help create new industries and business opportunities, instigating growth in the region. Maison is ideally positioned to act as a catalyst for this change.

As a company that markets financial services, Maison’s major assets are its people. John Ing’s industry experience spans forty years in the investment business. John is a recognized expert in the resource industry and is one of the most knowledgeable gold analysts in the world.

Maison’s strategy is to:

1. provide high quality and high growth companies with strategic advice and access to sources of capital

2. staff transactions with focus, experience, senior banking professionals.

3. execute successful financings, mergers, acquisitions, and strategic partnerships.

4. dedicate long term support to these companies;

5. generate high quality, money making investment research ideas.

 

Astounding Oil Drilling Projects = Dollar Bills for a Dime

With all the talk about the fracking boom under way in the Bakken, Marcellus, and Eagle Ford, we forget there are other earth-shattering drilling projects and technologies going on around the world.

Now, two weeks ago I told you about a new technology that’s emerging in America’s oil and gas-rich shale formations…

It’s called “well pad drilling,” or “multi-well pad drilling.”

Multi-well pad drilling allows companies to drill four to ten wells on a single pad site.

Historically only one well was drilled on a pad site, but with the revolution in horizontal drilling, companies can spread out their drill bits from a single pad site — almost like tentacles of an octopus.

It’s estimated that multi-well pad drilling can double the recovery rate of oil in North America.

As American companies perfect horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing with multi-well pad drilling, another technology is quickly emerging on the scene.

And it’s being utilized by “old oil” companies…

In fact, this method — called “extended-reach drilling” — recently helped Exxon destroy a record for drilling depth.

From the Russian island Sakhalin (just north of Japan), Exxon drilled onshore wells to a depth of 12,376 meters.

That’s over 7.5 miles down into the earth.

It then turned the drill bit and drilled horizontally for 11,745 meters to reach the offshore Odoptu oil field…

brian image1 1031

brian map 1031According to media reports:

Exxon, the world’s largest oil company, has completed drilling the world’s deepest well in the Chayvo oil field on the Sakhalin Shelf in the Russian Far East.

The shaft of well Z-44 is 12,376 meters deep — the equivalent of 15 times the height of the world’s tallest skyscraper, the Burj Khalifa in Dubai.

“We are proud of this achievement, which furthers the successful implementation of this remarkable project,” ENL chief James Taylor is quoted as saying.

Six of the world’s ten deepest wells, including Z-44, have been drilled in Russia for the Sakhalin-1 project using ExxonMobil drilling technology — the so-called “fast drill,” Taylor added.

Chayvo is one of the three Sakhalin-1 fields and is located off the northeast coast of Sakhalin Island in eastern Russia. The Sakhalin-1 project is being developed by an international consortium led by ENL, which holds a 30% stake, the Japanese SODECO (30%), India’s ONGC Videsh Ltd (20%), and subsidiaries of Russian oil major Rosneft, RN Astra (8.5%) and Sakhalinmorneftegaz Shelf (11.5%).

The total project is estimated to cost $10-$12 billion. The fields of Chayvo, Odoptu, and Arkutun-Dagi are estimated to yield 2.3 billion barrels of oil and 17.1 trillion cubic feet of natural gas.

The total resource value of these three fields is estimated to be above $200 billion.

But this is just the beginning…

Extended-reach drilling allows companies to go after reserves that were previously too costly and out of the reach of traditional drilling methods (sound familiar?).

In other words, oil reserves that have been known about for decades — but weren’t produced because of economic and technology constraints — are now open for business.

The oil and gas singularity is here.

Forever wealth, 

Brian Hicks Signature

Brian Hicks

Brian is a founding member and President of Angel Publishing and investment director for the income and dividend newsletter The Wealth Advisory. He writes about general investment strategies for Wealth DailyEnergy & Capital, and the H & L Market Report. Known as the “original bull on America,” Brian is also the author of Profit from the Peak: The End of Oil and the Greatest Investment Event of the Century, published in 2008. In addition to writing about the economy, investments and politics, Brian is also a frequent guest on CNBC, Bloomberg, Fox, and countless radio shows. For more on Brian, take a look at his editor’s page.

 

Canada GDP “Unexpectedly” Shrinks – “Overdue Housing Bust” Underway

Economists who cannot see anything but the rear view mirror were surprised to learn Canadian Economy Shrinks as Oil, Mining Slump.

The Canadian economy shrank unexpectedly in August, pointing to a sharp third-quarter slowdown in growth from the first half and reinforcing the Bank of Canada’s message that interest rate hikes are less imminent.

The surprising 0.1 percent contraction in August from July reflected broad weakness across most industries, prompting economists to revise forecasts down. The Canadian dollar weakened to below parity with its U.S. counterpart.

August’s dip was the first monthly contraction in GDP since February. Statistics Canada said on Wednesday it was largely caused by decreased production in the natural resources sector – oil and gas extraction and mining – as well as in manufacturing,

Statscan said temporary maintenance work at some mines and oilfields was partly to blame. But some economists argued that the economy had stalled more broadly.

“There are too many negatives in this report to dismiss the headline weakness as being attributable to just temporary disruptions in some sectors,” said Derek Holt and Dov Zigler of Scotia Capital.

canadian-economy

Doug Porter, deputy chief economist at BMO Capital Markets, noted that output fell in 10 of 18 sectors. “We can’t brush this off as driven by special factors,” he said.

Flaherty was more sanguine. “We’re going to see some variations, but overall, for the year we are on track with GDP growth,” he told reporters.

Flaherty expects 2.1 percent growth this year, based on the average forecast of private sector economists his office surveyed this month.

The Bank of Canada has also suggested the third quarter was an anomaly. Last week it halved its forecast for third-quarter growth to an annualized 1 percent, but predicted a rebound to 2.5 percent growth in the fourth quarter and average growth of more than 2 percent through 2014.

Pollyannas Come Out Of Woodwork 

BMO and Scotia Capital analysts may be late to the recession party (or not, I do not know previous calls),  but otherwise, Pollyannas like Jim Flaherty, Canada’s Finance Minister, and officials at the Bank of Canada and Statscan are still looking for growth.

Forget about it. This is not an anomaly as suggested by the Bank of Canada.

As I have said repeatedly, the slowdown in Asia is going to hit Canadian commodity producers more than most think.  Moreover, signs suggest Canada’s long overdue housing bust is finally underway according to the Canadian Real Estate Association Report on October 15.

Here is the key item: Actual (not seasonally adjusted) activity is down 15.1 % from year-ago levels, with more than half of all local markets posting declines of at least 10 per cent.

The rest of the report staked out a claim that real estate was “balanced”, I maintain in the same way that spinning plates in this video can be stated as balanced.

With the US economy slowing, with Asia slowing, and with Europe in a full-blown recession, the odds of Canada and the US bucking the trend is essentially zero.

Mike “Mish” Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com

Mike “Mish” Shedlock is a registered investment advisor representative for SitkaPacific Capital Management. Sitka Pacific is an asset management firm whose goal is strong performance and low volatility, regardless of market direction. Visit http://www.sitkapacific.com/account_management.html to learn more about wealth management and capital preservation strategies of Sitka Pacific.

 

test-php-789