Archive for October 21st, 2012

Meet The Billionaires Behind The Best Presidents Money Can Buy

Sunday, October 21st, 2012

The last time we checked on the (funding) status of America’s real presidential race – the one where America’s uber-wealthy try to outspend each other in hopes of purchasing the best president money can buy – the totals were substantially lower. With November 6 rapidly approaching, however, the scramble to lock in those record political lobbying IRRs is in its final lap. And thanks to the unlimited nature of PAC spending, look for the spending to really go into overdrive in the next 2 weeks as the spending frenzy on the world’s greatest tragicomedy hits previously unseen heights.

 

RESTORE OUR FUTURE

Total raised as of Sept. 30: $110.5 million – supports Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney

  • Bob Perry - Houston builder who was a major donor to Swift Boat Veterans for Truth, a group that helped undermine 2004 Democratic presidential nominee John Kerry by attacking his Vietnam War record. Total donations: $10 million
  • Sheldon Adelson - billionaire Las Vegas casino magnate who built the Venetian hotel and casino. Donation: $5 million
  • Miriam Adelson - Sheldon’s wife. Donation: $5 million
  • Bill Koch - brother of conservative financiers David and Charles Koch. He runs Oxbow Carbon, a Florida-based firm that is also a donor and shares its address with another contributor, Huron Carbon. Total donations, including through firms: $4 million
  • Steven Lund - runs Nu Skin, a Utah skin care and cosmetics company whose former executives have been linked to two other firms that share an address in Provo, Utah, and donated to the Super PAC: F8 LLC and Eli Publishing. Lund’s wife Kalleen is also a donor. Total donations from the Lunds and firms: $3 million
  • Julian Robertson - hedge fund industry legend at Tiger Management. Total donations: $1.3 million
  • Crow Holdings - Dallas-based investment firm managing the wealth of the family of the late Dallas real estate mogul Trammell Crow, whose sons Harlan and Trammell S. Crow are also donors. Total Crow Holdings and Crow donations: $1.3 million
  • Harold Simmons - billionaire Dallas banker and CEO of Contran Corp who has contributed to PACs supporting Rick Perry and Newt Gingrich. Donations: $1.3 million
  • Frank VanderSloot – Idaho businessman who runs the nutritional and cosmetics company Melaleuca. The firm and its subsidiaries have also donated. Total donations: $1.1 million
  • The Villages of Lake Sumter - a community in Florida run by billionaire Gary Morse, who is also a donor alongside his wife Renee and their several children. Along with the Morse family, thirteen companies controlled wholly or partially by Morse that share an address in The Villages have also contributed. Total donations of all: $1.7 million.
  • Kenneth Griffin - Chicago-based hedge fund manager and CEO of Citadel LLC. Total donations: $1.1 million
  • Bob Parsons - billionaire founder of web hosting giant Go Daddy. Donation: $1 million
  • Jim Davis - chairman of New Balance Athletic Shoes Inc. Donations: $1 million
  • Stanley Herzog - CEO of Missouri-based Herzon Contracting Corp. Donation: $1 million
  • Bruce Kovner - billonaire hedge fund manager at Caxton Alternative Management. Donation: $1 million
  • Rocco Ortenzio - Pennsylvania healthcare executive and founder of Select Medical Corp. Total donations: $1 million
  • John Childs - founder of private equity firm J.W. Childs Associates LP in Florida. Donation: $1 million
  • Edward Conard - a New York investor and former executive at Bain Capital, a private equity firm co-founded by Romney. Donation: $1 million
  • John Kleinheinz - Texas hedge fund manager for Kleinheinz Capital Partners Inc. Donation: $1 million
  • J.W. Marriott Jr. - chairman and CEO of Marriott International, brother of Richard. Total donations: $1 million
  • Richard Marriott - chairman of Host Marriott International. Total donations: $1 million
  • Robert McNair - owner of the Houston Texans football team. Donation: $1 million.
  • Robert Mercer - New York hedge fund manager at Renaissance Technologies. Donation: $1 million
  • John Paulson - a prominent New York hedge fund manager at Paulson and Co. Donation: $1 million
  • Rooney Holdings Inc – private investment firm formed in 1980s to acquire the Manhattan Construction Co. and has since expanded into many areas. Total donations: $1 million
  • Paul Singer - hedge fund manager who helped fund efforts to legalize gay marriage in New York. Donation: $1 million
  • Paul and Sandra Edgerly - Paul Edgerly of Brookline, Massachusetts, is an executive at Bain. The Edgerlys each have given $500,000. Total donations: $1 million
  • Steven Webster - private equity executive at Avista Capital in Houston. Total donations: $1 million
  • Robert Brockman - executive at Reynolds and Reynolds, a Dayton, Ohio-based car dealership support company that shares a P.O. Box with CRC Information Systems Inc, Fairbanks Properties LLC and Waterbury Properties LLC, which split the donation three ways. Total donations: $1 million
  • Miguel Fernandez - chairman of MBF Healthcare Partners, a private equity firm. MBF Family Investments also donated to the Super PAC. Total donations: $1 million
  • Renco Group Inc. - owned by New York billionaire Ira Rennert, another frequent contributor to Republicans this year. Donation: $1 million
  • OdysseyRe Holdings Corp - reinsurance underwriting company in Stamford, Connecticut that is a U.S. subsidiary of Toronto-based Fairfax Financial. Donation: $1 million

 

PRIORITIES USA ACTION

Total raised as of Sept. 30: $50.1 million – supports Democratic President Barack Obama

  • James Simons - billionaire hedge fund manager, founder of Renaissance Technologies Corp. Donation: $3.5 million
  • Fred Eychaner - founder of Newsweb Corp. Donation: $3.5 million
  • Jeff Katzenberg - chief executive of DreamWorks Animation. Donation: $3 million
  • Steve Mostyn - Houston attorney. Donation: $2 million
  • Irwin Mark Jacobs - former CEO of Qualcomm Inc. Donation: $2 million
  • Jon Stryker - billionaire activist and heir to the medical supply company fortune of his grandfather. Donation: $2 million
  • Anne Cox Chambers - billionaire daughter of James M. Cox, founder of Cox Enterprises. Total donations: $1.5 million
  • National Air Traffic Controllers Association - union representing more than 16,000 workers. Donation: $1.3 million
  • S. Daniel Abraham - billionaire creator of Slim-Fast brand, chairman of S. Daniel Abraham Center for Middle East Peace. Donation: $1.2 million
  • Barbara Stiefel - retiree in Coral Gables, Florida. Donation: $1.1 million
  • United Auto Workers - Donations through various funds: $1.1 million
  • Kareem Ahmed - chief executive at Landmark Medical Management in California. Donation: $1 million
  • David Boies, Jr - New York lawyer. Donation: $1 million
  • Morgan Freeman - Hollywood actor. Donation: $1 million
  • Amy Goldman - writer and heiress to the New York real estate fortune of Sol Goldman. Donation: $1 million
  • Franklin Haney - owner and CEO of FLH Company, a Washington-based real estate company. Donation: $1 million
  • Bill Maher - stand-up comedian. Donation: $1 million
  • Mel Heifetz - real estate developer and gay activist. Donation: $1 million
  • Michael Snow - Minnesota lawyer. Donation: $1 million.
  • Steven Spielberg - film director. Donation: $1 million.
  • Ann Wyckoff - Seattle philanthropist. $1 million.
  • Service Employees International Union Committee on Political Education – union representing more than 2 million workers. Donation: $1 million.
  • United Association of Journeymen and Apprentices of the Plumbing and Pipe Fitting Industry - union representing some 340,000 workers. Total donations: $1 million

 

AMERICAN CROSSROADS

Total raised as of Sept. 30: $68 million – supports Republican candidates for federal offices

  • Harold Simmons - Total donations together with Contran Corp: $15.5 million
  • Bob Perry - Total donations: $6.5 million
  • Robert Rowling - an Irving, Texas, businessman and a conservative and active Republican donor. His company, TRT Holdings Inc, which runs Omni Hotel and Gold’s Gym chains, is also a donor. Total donations: $4 million
  • Joe Craft - billionaire coal executive from Tulsa, Oklahoma, and CEO of Alliance Holdings, which is also a donor. Total donations: $2.1 million
  • Jerry Perenchio Living Trust - a trust of billionaire television tycoon A. Jerrold Perenchio, who is a former chairman of Spanish-language broadcaster Univision. Donation: $2 million
  • Crow Holdings - Dallas-based real estate investment firm. Total donations: $1.5 million
  • Weaver Holdings and Weaver Popcorn - Indiana-based company specializing in popcorn. Total contributions: $1.9 million
  • Stephens Inc - a Little Rock, Arkansas, broker dealer. Total donations: $1.3 million
  • Armstrong Group - telecommunications conglomerate in Pennsylvania. Donation: $1.3 million
  • JWC III Revocable Trust - Donatoin: $1.3 million
  • Robert Brockman - executive at Ohio-based Reynolds and Reynolds. Similarly to Restore Our Future, three firms sharing a P.O. Box – CRC Information Systems Inc, Fairbanks Properties LLC and Waterbury Properties LLC – split the donation three ways. Total donations: $1 million
  • Whiteco Industries - Indiana-based company involved in advertising, construction, entertainment and hotels. Donation: $1 million
  • The Mercury Trust - entity linked to California private equity firm of Saul Fox. Donation: $1 million
  • Clayton Williams Energy Inc - Midland, Texas-based drilling company. Donation: $1 million
  • Jay Bergman - of PETCO Petroleum Corporation. Donation: $1 million
  • Kenneth Griffin - Citadel Investment Group chief executive. Total donations: $1 million
  • Wayne Hughes - Founder of Public Storage. Total donations: $1 million
  • John Childs - Chairman and CEO of Boston-based JW Childs Associates. Total donations: $1 million
  • Philip Geier - New York executive. Total donations: $1 million
  • Irving Moskowitz - a Florida bingo magnate who runs a charity in California and is known for his support of Jewish settlers in East Jerusalem. Donation: $1 million
  • Robert Mercer - co-CEO of hedge fund Renaissance Technologies. Donation: $1 million

 

BARACK OBAMA (Democrat)

  • Total raised, including transfers: $609.4 million
  • Raised in September, including transfers: $136.2 million
  • Total transferred from the funds jointly used by the campaign and the Democratic Party: $176.6 million
  • Transferred in September: $39.8 million
  • Total spent: $469.9 million
  • Spent in September: $111.4 million
  • Cash on hand: $99.3 million
  • Debt: $2.6 million

DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL COMMITTEE

  • Total raised: $253.6 million
  • Raised in September: $20.3 million
  • Total transferred in: $108.4 million
  • Transferred in September: $4.0 million
  • Total spent: $261.6 million
  • Spent in September: $22.8 million
  • Cash on hand: $4.6 million
  • Debt: $20.5 million

OBAMA VICTORY FUND 2012 (The main joint Obama/DNC fund)

  • Total raised: $371.1 million
  • Raised in September: $80.0 million
  • Cash on hand: $45.2 million

 

MITT ROMNEY (Republican)

  • Total raised, including transfers: $337.2 million
  • Raised in September, including transfers: $76.2 million
  • Total transferred from the funds jointly used by the party and the Romney campaign: $236.4 million
  • Transferred in September: $34.2 million
  • Total spent: $298.2 million
  • Spent in September: $54.7 million
  • Cash on hand: $63.1 million
  • Debt: $5.0 million

REPUBLICAN NATIONAL COMMITTEE

  • Total raised: $331.2 million
  • Raised in September: $48.4 million
  • Total transferred in: $127.5 million
  • Transferred in September: $28.6 million
  • Total spent: $249.4 million
  • Spent in September: $42.4 million
  • Cash on hand: $82.6 million
  • Debt: $9.9 million

ROMNEY VICTORY INC (Joint Romney/RNC fund – third quarter, July through Sept.)

  • Total raised: $375.6 million
  • Raised in third quarter: $235.2 million
  • Cash on hand: $37.4 million

Appendix: SUPER PACS:

RESTORE OUR FUTURE, a Super PAC supporting Romney

  • Total raised: $110.5 million
  • Raised in September: $14.8 million
  • Total spent: $94.9 million
  • Spent in September: $4.6 million
  • Cash on hand: $16.6 million

PRIORITIES USA, a Super PAC supporting Obama

  • Total raised: $50.1 million
  • Raised in September: $15.3 million
  • Total spent: $43.6 million
  • Spent in September: $12.8 million
  • Cash on hand: $7.3 million

AMERICAN CROSSROADS, a Super PAC supporting Republicans

  • Total raised: $68.0 million
  • Raised in September: $11.4 million
  • Total spent: $53.4 million
  • Spent in September: $27.9 million
  • Cash on hand: $15.8 million

Source: Reuters

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Chinese Stocks Looking Like a Bargain

Sunday, October 21st, 2012

Chinese Stocks Looking Like a Bargain

October 19, 2012

With negative sentiment toward China reaching an extreme in recent months, patient investors have been rewarded with this week’s news of improving data from the Asian giant.

CLSA Sinology’s Andy Rothman reported that in September, retail sales growth rose 13.2 percent, which was the fastest pace of the year. Real urban disposable income grew nearly 10 percent and real rural disposable income rose more than 12 percent during the first three quarters of the year. And, while export numbers are weak, China has “so far avoided the large-scale export-sector layoffs that led to 2009’s massive stimulus,” says Andy.

There was strength in commodity imports, too. Copper imports into China increased 11 percent compared to the previous month due to increased demand from power infrastructure, white goods restocking and auto production. Iron ore rose a modest 4 percent compared to the previous month, which is encouraging. There was also a sharp rebound in oil imports most likely due to holiday restocking and lower international prices. In fact, Pareto Securities found that Chinese implied oil demand came in at an all-time high of 9.8 million barrels per day in September.

Chinese Implied Oil Demand as All-Time High

The markets also saw an increase in fixed asset investment (FAI), a measure of capital spending, which grew at “the fastest pace since October 2011,” says CLSA. According to Credit Suisse, “a surge in transportation spending in the month of September [is] starting to reflect the project approvals for highway, rail, airport, and metropolitan transport projects announced in May and June.”

While Credit Suisse says FAI growth was boosted by government investment stimulus, CLSA also notes that fixed asset investment and capital spending by private firms has been rising faster than state-owned firms for 30 of the last 31 months.

Money supply, a key lubricant of the economy and markets, also continued to increase, and this has historically driven Chinese equities. Take a look at the chart below, which shows the year-over-year money supply compared to the MSCI China Index over the past decade. Over the past 10 years, after the supply in money bottomed, stocks soon rebounded.

On January 31, 2012, money supply hit a near decade low of 12.4 percent year-over-year growth. Since then, the number has been creeping higher, rising sharply to 14.8 percent in September, and shortly thereafter, equities responded.

Money Supply Growth Bullish for Chinese Stocks

The Wall Street Journal recognized the improvement in Asian stocks and investor sentiment this week, suggesting that the “region’s economy could be nearing the end of a slowdown.” I’ve been trying to temper investors’ expectations of China as weak economic data caused investors to be skittish, telling Investor Alert readers that it wasn’t the time to be bearish. Now, “if the Chinese economy shows sustained signs of stabilizing, it would remove a major overhang of worry for investors in Asia, and may spur more capital raising and other deals as investors become confident enough to switch money out of bonds and back into equity markets,” says The Journal.

This appears to be a good time to be investing in China, as stocks are historically cheap. At the beginning of October, BCA noted that there was a “prevailing pessimism” around China and that the stocks were “currently trading at hefty discounts to world averages and even to euro zone stocks.” The firm indicated that Chinese shares had a forward price-to-earnings ratio of below 9 times; the world and U.S. benchmarks traded at 12 and 13 times, respectively.

Chinese stocks are also cheap compared to emerging markets. In 2007, China traded at a 75 percent premium to emerging markets. Today, Chinese stocks trade at a 20 percent discount. If you look at a comparison of price-to-earnings in China to those in emerging markets, you have to go back to 2006 to find that ratio as low as it is today.

Chinese Stocks Cheap Relative to Emerging Markets on a P/E Ratio Basis

The low price-to-earnings indicates to me that the negativity pendulum has swung too far. “Investors have turned from euphoria at the height of the ‘China mania’ five years ago to extreme pessimism,” says BCA.

Back in April, I listed three trends that global investors should watch in China: A rebound in the liquidity cycle signaling a rally in equity prices, a new leadership with an incentive to maintain growth, and Chinese stocks reverting to their mean, as history appears to favor Chinese stocks landing in the top half of emerging markets. Time will tell.

The Periodic Table of Emerging Markets - China

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The Economy and Bond Market Radar (October 22, 2012)

Sunday, October 21st, 2012

The Economy and Bond Market Radar (October 22, 2012)

Treasury bond yields rose this week on better-than-expected economic data. Long-term yields hit their highest levels in a month before pulling back on Friday.

Housing starts and building permits in September were much stronger than expected, rising 15 percent and 11.6 percent, respectively, on a month-over-month basis. The chart below shows the long-term trend in housing starts and building permits. While housing is in recovery mode, we still have a long way to go before the housing market normalizes.

US Private housing Starts and Building Permits - U.S. Global Investors

Strengths

  • Housing starts reached the highest level in four years, continuing the recent trend of strong datapoints out of the housing market.
  • Global central bank easing continues with Turkey and Brazil both cutting interest rates by 25 basis points this week.
  • Retail sales rose 1.1 percent in September and, while boosted by iPhone5 sales, the gains were broad-based.

Weaknesses

  • Initial jobless claims bounced higher this week indicating no improvement on the employment front.
  • European Union new car sales fell 10.8 percent in September which was the twelfth straight month of decline.
  • Consumer prices in the eurozone rose 2.6 percent in September, with austerity-led tax hikes as a partial driver.

Opportunity

  • There remains considerable speculation about the prospects in China for near-term government policy action that would support the economy or stock market.
  • Interest rates are likely to remain very low for the foreseeable future, both here in the U.S. and globally.

Threat

  • Europe remains a wildcard with the markets shifting focus on a weekly basis.
  • China also remains somewhat of a wildcard as the economy has slowed and officials appear in no hurry to take decisive action.

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U.S. Equity Radar (October 22, 2012)

Sunday, October 21st, 2012

U.S. Equity Market Radar (October 22, 2012)

The S&P 500 Index rose 0.32 percent this week even as the market sold off sharply on Friday. Earnings season is in full swing and technology shares have not fared well. Intel, IBM and Google all disappointed investors and built on other recent disappointments in the space.

Domestic Equity Market - U.S. Global Investors

Strengths

  • The materials sector was the best performer this week, rising 2.10 percent. Steel and chemical names were particularly strong. Sentiment on cyclicals in general improved this week as investors are looking to strong growth in 2013, and steel companies are classic cyclicals. Within the chemical space, ethylene prices appear headed higher, helping margins for many chemical companies.
  • The financial sector registered the second-best performance this week, rising by 1.95 percent. Citigroup rose 7 percent on earnings and on news that the CEO had been replaced. Insurance stocks also performed well as catastrophe losses have been lower than expected from a few companies that have already reported.
  • Dean Foods was the best performing stock in the S&P 500 this week as the company rose by more than 22 percent after its WhiteWave Foods unit filed for an IPO.

Weaknesses

  • The information technology sector was the worst performer, falling 2.42 percent. The sell-off was largely related to high profile names such as Intel, IBM and Google reporting disappointing earnings results or outlooks.
  • The consumer staples sector also underperformed as several companies in the sector reported disappointing results, which often were driven by negative European sales and/or unexpected currency losses.
  • Apollo Group was the worst performer this week in the S&P 500, falling by more than 28 percent as the company reduced its 2013 revenue forecast and announced it would close campuses and implement layoffs.

Opportunity

  • While debasing the value of its paper currency in the long term, renewed money printing in the developed world may have the ability to send asset prices higher in the near term.

Threat

  • The market is clearly focused on earnings announcements and the upcoming elections, which could cause some volatility.

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Gold Market Radar (October 22, 2012)

Sunday, October 21st, 2012

Gold Market Radar (October 22, 2012)

For the week, spot gold closed at $1,721.75 down $32.73 per ounce, or 1.87 percent. Gold stocks, as measured by the NYSE Arca Gold Miners Index, gained 0.12 percent. The U.S. Trade-Weighted Dollar Index slipped 0.05 percent for the week.

Strengths

  • Junior Colombian mergers and acquisitions are heating up. Billionaire Eike Batista’s private gold company, AUX, announced cash takeovers of two Colombian junior gold companies, Galway Resources and Calvista Gold, worth more than $300 million combined. Galway and Calvista provide AUX several projects in the California district including Calvista’s 450,000 ounces gold indicated, and about as much again in inferred resources, and Galway’s 424,000 ounces gold indicated and 666,000 ounces gold inferred, all within two kilometers of AUX’s larger La Bodega and La Mascota projects, according to Mineweb.
  • This week aanalysts at BMO significantly boosted their gold and silver price forecasts and highlighted their bullish view on related stocks versus bullion as they see positive momentum for metals due to a “new and open-ended round” of quantitative easing. They now expect gold to average $1,950 in 2013, up from their prior forecast of $1,700.
  • Despite a down weak for gold bullion, gold stocks, as measured by the Gold Miners Index, gained 0.12 percent this week, edging out bullion which slid 1.32 percent this week. The stocks of miners have shown relative strength versus bullion for the last three months and may be poised to continue to outperform bullion.

Weaknesses

  • Gold bullion slid over $33 per ounce this week with much of the decline coming on Friday as weak economic data out of China caused a broad sell-off of stocks and commodities. Silver prices slipped over 4 percent for the week.

Opportunities

  • India’s gold imports are expected to climb in the last quarter of 2012 which will mark the first gain in six quarters as a decline in domestic bullion prices stokes jewelry and investment demand ahead of major festivals. The World Gold Council sees imports jumping to approximately 200 tonnes in the fourth quarter, or about 18 percent sequentially and up 27 percent year-over-year.
  • Gold Fields said most miners returned to work at its strike-hit South African operations this week, but a new walkout at Lonmin’s Marikana platinum mine dampened hopes of an end to the worst labor unrest since apartheid. More than 80,000 miners have downed tools since August in often violent strikes that are hitting growth and investor confidence in Africa’s biggest economy and raising questions about President Jacob Zuma’s leadership. In a surprise move, 4,000 workers at Lonmin’s Marikana mine stayed away from work on Thursday, disrupting operations once again at a plant where police killed 34 striking miners in August. “There have been disruptions at various shafts since yesterday,” Lonmin spokeswoman Sue Vey said. The company later said it believed the workers were protesting against the arrest of three miners as part of a police investigation.
  • The Australian reported that “gold has soared past coal as Australia’s second most valuable physical export to China, with sales up a whopping 900 per cent for the first eight months of the year, bringing in $4.1 billion. Chinese buyers are hoarding the precious metal amid a slowing economy, property-buying restrictions and uncertain financial markets as its central bank increases its holdings. The unprecedented jump in gold sales, along with continued acceleration of export revenues for other commodities led by coal—up 80 percent to $4 billion—caused total exports to China to rise by 10.7 per cent for the year to August, according to Australian Bureau of Statistics figures. Shipments of Australia’s biggest export, iron ore, were up 20 percent for the same period but the total value of $26.9 billion was down 5 percent compared to last year, because of the mid-year price slump.”

Threats

  • Deutsche Bank analysts, who are longer-term bullish on gold, said this week that they expect that the gold market could trade in a range over the next couple of months as they see a vacuum in terms of monetary action due to upcoming transitions/decisions in government in both the U.S. and China. Additionally, they believe somewhat supportive economic data from the U.S. could also weigh on market sentiment for gold as conditions seem to be normalizing.

 

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Energy and Natural Resources Market Radar (October 22, 2012)

Sunday, October 21st, 2012

Energy and Natural Resources Market Radar (October 22, 2012)

Chinese Implied Oil Demand at All-Time High - U.S\. Global Investors

Strengths

  • Nymex natural gas futures edged up slightly this week to finish at an 11-month high price of approximately $3.63 per mmbtu on data released by the U.S. Department of Energy which showed gas going into storage continues to decline relative to last year.
  • Chinese refineries processed a record amount of oil in September, countering data indicating the world’s second largest economy is slowing. Crude runs for September were 9.47 million barrels a day, passing January’s 9.38 million barrels a day and 6.2 percent higher than the 8.92 million barrels a day refined in August.

Weaknesses

  • China’s coal imports fell 18.6 percent year-over-year to 18.63 million tonnes in September, the China Coal Transport and Distribution Association said.
  • Bloomberg news reported that oil exporter Norway may miss production estimates. Jan Bygdevoll, the head of forecasting at the Norwegian Petroleum Directorate, released a statement yesterday that Norway may struggle to meet its output target this year due to a worker’s strike, technical problems, and delays to the start of new fields.

Opportunities

  • Deep-water oil-drilling permits for the Gulf of Mexico have reached their highest level since 2007 as high crude prices revive exploration slowed by the 2010 BP spill. The U.S. Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement, which regulates offshore drilling, has as of yesterday issued 89 permits this year for new wells in waters deeper than 500 feet (152 meters). The U.S. issued 76 permits for all of 2009, 32 in 2010, and 38 last year, according to the agency’s website. In 2007, 106 permits were issued.
  • The head of Codelco, Chile’s large state-owned copper miner, is constructive on the copper market. “We expect to see healthier growth rates as we enter the new year,” Chief Executive Officer Thomas Keller said in an interview in London. China’s new leadership will “provide important stimulus for the economy and for the mining industry at large, and copper in particular,” according to Bloomberg news.

Threats

  • In an interview with Bloomberg news, David Cohen, the U.S. Treasury’s undersecretary for terrorism and financial intelligence, stated that the U.S. stands ready to increase pressure on Iran to address concerns over the country’s nuclear plans. He stated that the country is able to intensify sanctions on Iran as it advances on its nuclear program. Iran, which once was the second largest OPEC producer, has cut output to 2.63 million barrels per day in September down from 2.85 million barrels in August. Exports in September decreased to 860,000 barrels a day, down from 2 million barrels a day in early 2012.
  • Chinese demand for nickel, a key ingredient in stainless steel, is likely to lag growth in the country’s steel market considerably as producers turn increasingly to scrap for use in their products, the chief analyst at Beijing Antaike Information Development Co. Ltd. said Wednesday. Xu Aidong forecast apparent stainless steel production to reach 17 million metric tons by 2015, up from around 11 million tons this year. Nickel consumption, however, is only estimated to rise to almost 790,000 tons in 2015, from around 642,000 tons this year, she said. “The growth rate (for nickel usage) will be much slower than before…and lower than in the stainless steel market as more scrap is used,” she told a conference in Sydney.

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Emerging Markets Radar (October 22, 2012)

Sunday, October 21st, 2012

Emerging Markets Radar (October 22, 2012)

Strengths

  • China reported September and third quarter economic data that was better than market expectations and showed upside strength for the economy. Third quarter GDP grew 7.4 percent, in line with the market consensus, and believed to be the bottom for the year. September industrial production grew 9.2 percent versus the estimate of 9 percent. September retail sales were up 14.2 percent versus the estimate of 13.2 percent. September year-to-date fixed asset investment grew 20.2 percent, slightly better than 20.1 percent for the first half of the year. Money supply (M2) was up 14.8 percent, better than the 13.5 percent in August due to increasing corporate bond issuance and trust loan lending.
  • China’s September CPI moderated slightly to 1.9 percent year-over-year from 2.2 percent in August.
  • China September exports went up 9.9 percent versus the estimate of 5.5 percent, while imports expanded 2.4 percent after contracting 2.6 percent in August.
  • Bank of Thailand, the central bank, cut the benchmark lending rate by 25 basis points to 2.75 percent, which is said to be a precautionary action to hedge potential slower economic growth due to weak external markets.

Weaknesses

  • China’s foreign direct investment dropped 6.8 percent in September, 3.5 percent worse than the estimate.
  • China’s September power consumption growth was at 2.9 percent on a year-over-year basis, down from 3.6 percent in August due to slower industrial consumption growth. The September Producer Price Index (PPI) continued a downtrend by decreasing 3.6 percent, indicating the de-stocking processing has yet to end.
  • The Hungarian government has announced new austerity measures for 2013, increasing the tax burden for Hungarian banks in terms of both the financial transactions tax and the bank levy. In the Frank Talk blog, we recently discussed the effect that the taxes had on the Hungarian economy.

Opportunities

Philippines' Record Remittances Bullish for Domestic Consumption and Property

  • The graph above shows Philippines’ monthly overseas remittance. In August, it was another record monthly high, rising 7.6 percent year-over-year. As more overseas remittance comes in, it helps domestic consumption and keeps Philippines’ current account in surplus.
  • Greg Weldon of Weldon Financial points out that the Polish Central Bank has ample room to ease while maintaining positive real interest rates. He illustrates that by juxtaposing falling inflation with the previous rate increases.

Poland CPI - U.S. Global Investors

Poland National Bank Official Short-Term Rate

Threats

  • China’s September PPI was down 3.6 percent, which shows weak demand for industrial products. Further evidence of weak industrial activities is the producer purchase index in September which was down 4.1 percent, showing weak industrial demand for raw materials and commodities. However, the recent cement and coal price firmness from their lows in the summer may indicate an improving demand for commodities.
  • This evidence of weak demand for industrial products has major negative implications for iron ore and coking coal companies and for vertically integrated steel companies in Brazil, Russia and elsewhere.
  • In local elections last weekend, Communists together with Social Democrats won 44 percent of the vote and could control 10 out of 13 regions in Czech Republic. The ruling parties received only 12.3 percent ahead of a key parliament vote on a tax/pension reform package and a no-confidence vote in late October.

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