Slow Boat To China
Slow Boat To China
Slow Boat To China
published by
Coxe Advisors LLP
Chicago, IL
THE COXE STRATEGY JOURNAL
A Slow Boat to China
Lehman’s collapse was the final shock to an over-levered financial system, crashing prices of
equities, corporate bonds and commodities. However, while OECD economies survived on
life support from panicky politicians and stunned central bankers, China and India never
made it as far as hospital parking lots, let alone the triage desk. The quick stimuli in both
those economies kept banks and factories functioning, and GDP growth remained strongly
positive.
Thus history was made: The Old, Old World came to the rescue of the Old and New Worlds
in their worst economic collapse since the Depression, nearly drowning in the real estate
and financial engineering debts accumulated to finance the excesses and miscalculations
of the previous cycle.
We have been cautious since September about the runaway US and European equity and junk
bond markets because of their heavy dependence on astounding ingestions of what we termed
“financial heroin.” If there were a Financial World Olympics, the organizing committee would
have long ago disqualified them from further competition, and awarded the gold medal to
China, the silver to India, and the bronze to either Indonesia or Brazil—with a special award
of merit to Canada and Australia—whose economies and stock markets had been growing—to
great extent—based on the commodity price increases spawned in Asia.
In recent months, the global swing in inventory cycles from panic liquidation to modest
accumulation confirms that the industrial recovery has legs, even though house prices remain
weak and unemployment remains strong across most of the US and Europe.
We are therefore rebalancing both our Recommended Asset Mix (for US Pension Funds), and
our sector weightings for commodity stocks. Because we see the divergence between Canadian
and US financial assets as a longer-term phenomenon, we are introducing a new portfolio
for Canadian pension funds. We have added a new category “Commodities and Commodity
Equities” for all pension funds, financed, in the case of American pension funds, primarily from
bonds and cash. We discuss the background to this recommendation under “Recommended
Asset Allocation”, page 51. When those assets are added to the Funds’ stock investments, the
equity-equivalent weighting for pension funds has moved back to near-normal territory at
59%.
Those patients who barely survived a long stay in the Intensive Care Unit are back at work—
part-time. We expect major central banks to begin slowing the rate of their heroin injections
soon—and will watch anxiously to see whether the US and European economies are able to
stand on their aging feet when they discard the crutches provided by government financial
health care.
April 1
2 April THE COXE STRATEGY JOURNAL
A Slow Boat to China
Industrial recoveries are known by the symbols of their leadership. The brief
mid-1930s recovery was symbolized by the speedy new production lines,
with the hapless Charlie Chaplin (in Modern Times) frantically trying to
keep up. The wartime economy was symbolized by Rosie the Riveter. The
postwar recovery was symbolized by roaring blast furnaces and the noisy Melting your
assembly lines converted from manufacturing tanks and armored personnel heart of stone…
carriers to producing cars and trucks. The Seventies were the decade of Oil,
with the oil derrick its symbol. The Eighties were the decade of the Japanese
Miracle, symbolized by pictures and reports on those scarily smooth—
almost surreal—production lines in Japan, whose output of reliable products
challenged the very survival of factories in the West. The emblems of the
Nineties were the chip-machines churning out the brain cells and blood cells
of the information revolutionaries.
In this decade, China’s global impact has, at the margin, switched from
exports to imports, as weak OECD economies can no longer absorb sustained
increases in purchases of Chinese products. China’s imports are mostly the
raw materials needed for infrastructure and urbanization. The symbol of
the second decade of the commodity boom is a ship going to, not from,
China—the bulk dry cargo ship carrying raw commodities, notably iron ore
and metallurgical coal.
April 3
A Slow Boat to China
Iron Ore
(Steel China Iron Ore Spot)
January 1, 2007 to April 13, 2010
1,400
1,300
“We will bury you!”
1,200
1,100
1,000 990.00
900
800
700
600
500
Dec-06 Apr-07 Aug-07 Dec-07 Apr-08 Aug-08 Dec-08 Apr-09 Aug-09 Dec-09
Source: BMO Capital Markets
1,100
1,000
900
800
700
665.42
600
500
400
Dec-06 Apr-07 Aug-07 Dec-07 Apr-08 Aug-08 Dec-08 Apr-09 Aug-09 Dec-09
Source: BMO Capital Markets
The steel industry was a bastion of the American economy from the days
of Henry Clay Frick and Andrew Carnegie, but it grew complacent after
World War II, and, like its biggest customer—the auto industry—succumbed
routinely to union contracts whose generosity was based on the arrogance
that the rest of the world could never really compete with Pittsburgh. In
reality, the new global steel leader was the USSR, and its symbol was the
brawny Stakhanovite worker, whose heroism and productivity had been
so crucial in winning the war against Hitler and was now winning the war
against capitalism. Khrushchev’s famous taunt at the UN, “We will bury
you!,” accompanied by his boastful bang of his shoe, was the live geopolitical
version of the Stakhanov posters.
VALE (RIO)
January 1, 2002 to April 13, 2010
45
40
35 34.14
30
25
20
15
10
5
0
Mar-02 Jan-03 Nov-03 Sep-04 Jul-05 May-06 Mar-07 Jan-08 Nov-08 Sep-09
April 5
A Slow Boat to China
So the imagery in this iron age isn’t brawn, sweat and vigor, but a long ship
at sea loaded with sand—62% iron—or the metallurgical coal which will be
added to the iron ore in some Sino-version of “Satanic Mills.”
“But why,” the reader may ask, “Are you publishing this analysis now?
We remain of the
Haven’t those Chinese mills been pumping out steel with growing gusto for
view that the major
months while you were expressing caution about the financial system and
US and European
the economic conditions in the US and Europe? You kept talking about a
equity indices are
coming correction in the S&P from the time in September when it crossed
heroically priced
1,050 and it’s 1180, and now you tell us about the deep meaning of slow
on heroin...
boats to China?”
Good question.
We remain of the view that the major US and European equity indices are
heroically priced on heroin, and the health risks for those patients newly-
emerged from financial hospitals are under-priced.
However, we are now inclined to the view that the US and major European
economies should improve enough that they will not drag the global economy
into a new recession. We therefore recommend that investors orient their
equity and equity-equivalent portfolios to Oriental demand.
100
90
80
70 65.49
60
50
Jan-07 May-07 Sep-07 Jan-08 May-08 Sep-08 Jan-09 May-09 Sep-09 Jan-10
100
90
80
70
60
56.81
50
40
30
Jan-07 May-07 Sep-07 Jan-08 May-08 Sep-08 Jan-09 May-09 Sep-09 Jan-10
April 7
A Slow Boat to China
These charts show how the BKX (dominated by the big, bad, bonused,
bailout banks, that we call the B5) and the KRE (the equally-weighted index
of fifty geographically-diverse commercial banks) signaled the coming crash
and how well they have been performing since then. The KRE has hugely
...the financial sector and consistently outperformed the S&P for nearly six months, with its
of the US economy is outperformance going to a new high last week. It is still outperforming the
in better health than BKX on a cumulative basis, although its outperformance peaked in January.
it has been since The thrust of these charts is that the financial sector of the US economy is
June 2008... in better health than it has been since June 2008, the last time Barney Frank
dismissed Republicans’ increasingly urgent concerns, insisting that Fannie
and Freddie were in sound shape, were no risk to the taxpayers and should
not be subject to increased regulation.
We now know that the bailout costs for F&F will be greater than all the
other financial bailouts combined, because the TARP program of bailing out
real financial institutions—rather than heavily-politicized bastard children
of government at its most venal—is getting refunds, with interest, at an
impressive rate, (with Citicorp and AIG the only remaining big holdouts,
and even they are looking better than seemed possible a year ago).
Presumably, Ben Bernanke has been given the all-clear to boost fed funds
rates soon, and no Congressperson will blame him when mortgage rates
rise.
April 9
A Slow Boat to China
• The startup steel companies that were challenging the aging, heavily
unionized majors, were using a new technique that substituted readily-
available scrap for raw iron ore—or the 33% iron pellet products fabricated
out of low-grade ores.
• The Cold War was, post-Vietnam, not really a shooting war, which
meant there was no inbred growth in demand for steel for weaponry;
the new, high-tech Pentagon sought specialty metals for its leading-edge
products.
The one constant we have experienced during the eight years since we
proclaimed the greatest-ever global commodity boom has been the regularity
of analyses from another growth industry—the China skeptics. The names
on the reports may change, but a month never goes by that we don’t receive
screeds from experts who’ve just been to China, or who’ve talked to important
insiders whose names they can’t reveal, that the China boom is about to
According to the Financial Times, the recent history of annual contracts for
iron ore prices is:
Last month, the system of annual contract prices set in negotiations between
leading Chinese, Japanese and Korean steelmakers fell apart. Hereafter,
quarterly prices will be set with reference to the still-small—but soon-to-be-
gigantic—spot market.
April 11
A Slow Boat to China
As metals analysts agree, this is a momentous event. With much of the global
economy still struggling to emerge from recession, the hottest of all major
commodities is the most basic of all metals—iron ore. That a product never
traded on any exchange is the new Wonder of the World argues against the
That a product conspiracy theorists who dismiss soaring prices in metals traded on public
never traded on any exchanges, such as copper, nickel, zinc and aluminum. All those investigations
exchange is the new into price manipulations through futures markets should soon become
Wonder of the World irrelevant.
argues against the
There is no argument that iron ore’s pricing and demand have been set by
conspiracy theorists...
China since the onset of the commodity boom. In 2000, China’s seaborne
imports were 72 million tonnes, less than half Western Europe’s. By 2005,
they were 276 million, with Western Europe buying 191 million. In 2009,
China’s estimated purchases from those slow boats were 615 million tonnes,
and the entire rest of the world drew only 289 million.
The collapse of the fixed contract system has produced chaotic iron ore
markets. Spot iron ore deliveries to China last week were priced as high as
$163 per tonne. Already, global steel prices have started to soar.
With iron ore uncapped and running wild, metallurgical coal could not be
far behind.
45 45.63
40
35
30
25
20
Apr-09 Jun-09 Aug-09 Oct-09 Dec-09 Feb-10 Apr-10
April 13
A Slow Boat to China
In other words, although China has almost single-handedly forced the biggest
cost increase in history on integrated steel companies, overall industrial
activity is at levels allowing significant cost pass-through.
Even the mini-mills relying on scrap—not ore—that compete with the major
It is different
integrated companies are facing painful cost increases. According to the last
this time...
two months reports of the US Producer Price Index, steel scrap has been the
star performer in the crude goods category.
To our knowledge, there has never been a recovery from recession marked
by (1) low overall CPI and (2) modest top-line GDP growth with (3) high
unemployment, when (4) no major shooting war was raging, yet (5) steel
scrap and finished steel prices were rising sharply driven by non-OECD
demand—that succumbed quickly into a new recession.
It is different this time, because this time the pulling power for global recovery
comes from Emerging and Emerged Economies—not the established
Industrial Economies.
We admit that skeptics might well reply, “When can you find a slow economic
recovery accompanied for more than a year by near-zero nominal interest
rates? Wouldn’t you expect the Crude Goods component of PPI to give the
first signal of higher prices in the economy? Besides, the overall economic
cost—and economic drag—from somewhat higher steel prices is trivial
compared with what’s been happening to crude oil.”
Crude Oil
January 1, 2002 to April 13, 2010
160 ...oil shock returned
140 with a vengeance.
120
100
80 84.09
60
40
20
0
Jan-02 Nov-02 Sep-03 Jul-04 May-05 Mar-06 Jan-07 Nov-07 Sep-08 Jul-09
Crude oil prices staged their wildest ride in three decades—soaring to $145
a barrel, followed by sudden financial and economic collapse across most of
the OECD, sending crude to as low as $35.
April 15
A Slow Boat to China
There are those who argue that the biggest US economic stimulus came not
from Obama, Pelosi et al but from Saudi-led OPEC, which did almost nothing
to halt the ski-jump plunge in crude prices, and thereafter cut production
only modestly, so that average oil prices in 2009 were roughly back to where
It sharply reduced they were in 2006. Result: US gasoline prices were briefly halved, and only
the Copenhagen recently have begun to climb back to levels that could in themselves constrain
kaffeeklatsch costs overall consumer spending. Arguably the only help the beleaguered airline
for those Greens industry received to avert disaster was cheap jet fuel. Even now, the airlines’
whose private aircraft fuel costs are well-covered by its ticket prices. (As for private jets, a sector
filled up most of the that was decimated by a financial collapse that wiped out so many of its
available airport owners and lessors, the plunge in jet fuel prices was Heaven-sent. It sharply
space... reduced the Copenhagen kaffeeklatsch costs for those Greens whose private
aircraft filled up most of the available airport space as they met to get global
agreement on carbon taxes and offsets on which so many of them expected
to receive revenues appropriate to their secular saintliness.)
If $45 oil was at least as big a stimulus as $2 trillion in Obama deficits (if not
as big as zero interest rates), then will $85 oil shoot the green shoots dead?
Our take: it is certainly bad news for consumers, who don’t need new bad
news. But we do not believe that it signals the onset of an economy-garroting
attack on the OECD from OPEC and Chinese consumers.
Energy prices could well remain reasonably subdued for the next few
years, and therefore act as a source of modest stimulus—not drag—on
the global economy.
Here’s why:
• Saudi Arabia claims to have 5mm b/d of excess capacity to enforce its
campaign for petroleum pricing perfection. Apart from Matt Simmons
and a few other prominent skeptics, that claim is widely respected.
• Brazil’s giant offshore fields will begin producing later in this decade.
• Angola, a ghastly kleptocracy about which we seem to hear little, has quietly
taken in Chinese “supervisors” and joined Iran in the list of China’s top
three oil suppliers.
April 17
A Slow Boat to China
We find it significant that the apparent upside breakout in spot oil has not
been confirmed in the futures curve. Indeed, the curve has been narrowing
for months. Not long ago the oil curve was almost as steep as the Treasury
yield curve, and was assigning a very high relative value to reserves in the
We find it ground compared to the Saudi-set spot prices.
significant that the
Not any more:
apparent upside
breakout in spot Crude Oil Futures (at April 13, 2010)
oil has not been December 2010 to December 2018
confirmed in the 120
futures curve.
110
100
95.42
90
80
70
Dec-10 Dec-11 Dec-12 Dec-13 Dec-14 Dec-15 Dec-16 Dec-17 Dec-18
80
77.48
70
60
50
40
Dec-08 Dec-09 Dec-10 Dec-11 Dec-12 Dec-13 Dec-14 Dec-15 Dec-16
Natural Gas
January 1, 2005 to April 13, 2010
16
Natgas...has long been
14 a boon supplying
12 lush pickin’s to oil
companies’ financial
10
reporting.
8
4 4.15
2
Jan-05 Nov-05 Sep-06 Jul-07 May-08 Mar-09 Jan-10
7.5
7.0
6.5
6.0
5.5
5.0
Dec-10 Dec-11 Dec-12 Dec-13 Dec-14 Dec-15 Dec-16 Dec-17 Dec-18
Natgas may be the only commodity that trades at a far lower price today than
at year-end 2008.
Its coupling with oil, which was solemnized by the SEC in 1982, has long
been a boon supplying lush pickin’s to oil companies’ financial reporting.
However, this obscure accounting practice has gone from the subliminal to
the ridiculous.
April 19
A Slow Boat to China
• Oil companies generally produce both oil and gas. Most oilfields contain
both fuels. So oil companies use an industry formula to report their
combined gas and oil reserves in a single, simple, blended number in
their announced Reserve Life Indices.
But then, as oil prices kept climbing to new higher ranges and natgas stayed
lower-priced, it ceased to be pure science in the service of pure reporting.
Big Oil in general, and Exxon Mobil in particular, have always been comfortable
with this rule. Exxon bought Mobil in the 1990s primarily because of its
huge gas reserves and LNG operations in Indonesia that were supplying 34%
of Japanese gas imports a time Lee Raymond believed the Saudis would keep
oil prices below $35 a barrel for decades.
This audacious overvaluation of assets that will not be actually sold for years
recalls how Wall Street was valuing its subprime-laced CDOs before the
Crash. Those valuations were legal according to the SEC, and even according
to the rules of Basel II, because they were backed by Triple A ratings from the
supposedly clear-eyed and unbiased ratings services.
One reason we have never recommended Exxon Mobil (as efficiently managed
as it famously is) for commodity stock portfolios is that its Reserve Life Index
stated in barrels of oil equivalent (boe) is heavily weighted to gas, and its oil
reserves, (apart from the heavy oil and oil sands its owns in Alberta through
its 69% ownership of Imperial Oil) are dwindling, and include levels of
political risk ranging across the spectrum from low to absurd.
April 21
A Slow Boat to China
We have been telling clients for more than a year to invest in oil producers,
and to avoid gas producers. The more we have learned about the humongous
quantities of natgas that exist in the Lower 48 states of the US and much of
Northern and Central Europe, the more we have been inclined to view natgas
How cold does it as a blessing for gas consumers in the US and Europe, and bad news for
have to get to absorb investors in natgas stocks—and for Messrs. Putin and Chavez. (Yes, Virginia,
all the gas being there is some good news in this story.)
developed?
Nothing we have written in the past two years has evoked such strong
opposition from clients—including some of the smartest investors we
know.
• Investors in Natgas futures and the Natgas ETF have lost money during a
commodity bull market, while investors in oil have won handsomely. Why
should things get better for those who’ve been gas-bagged for so long?
• Seemingly the only constraint on putting more gas into storage is that
almost all the storage space is allocated.
• We are finally escaping from one of the roughest winters in decades, yet
natgas prices languish at $4. How cold does it have to get to absorb all
the gas being developed?
• The government, (which is, we admit, not necessarily the most reliable
source), estimates that recoverable reserves of natgas are enough to meet
the nation’s demand for the rest of this century, whereas oil reserves may
only last for another four decades.
• Perhaps the only thing that could get gas to go to profitable levels is for
some big players to go bust or slash their shale exploration budgets and
write down the value of their reserves.
• Average decline rates of shale gas production are far above oil—roughly
70% in the first year.
The margin for error is said by industry people to be about 10%. “’It’s getting
ridiculously large,” said Ben Dell, analyst with Sanford C. Bernstein.”
This recalls our oft-told tale about the OECD’s energy division, the Paris-
based International Energy Agency, which under-estimated oil consumption,
year after year. They finally admitted that they hadn’t bothered to research
China’s consumption carefully, “because it isn’t a member of the OECD.”
We have routinely characterized the staff of this agency as tax-exempt
boulevardiers living splendidly in Paris, luxuriating in enviable job security,
because, although they were always wrong, they still managed to live well in
an expensive and beautiful city.
We don’t know whether the Washington-based staff of the EIA are frères sous
la peau of those boulevardiers, (although Washington was built on a Parisian
model), but we aren’t surprised that those worthies find it pleasanter to make
a few phone calls to people they know at EOG, XTO and other biggies, rather
than trekking around Midland, Henry Hub, and other such oil centers to talk
to bosses of small operating firms who may lack a proper appreciation of the
intelligence and insight of experts from Washington, and may actually not
understand the nuances of Obaman energy policy.
April 23
A Slow Boat to China
But, just as those sustained UN faux pas didn’t hold back the oil boom, we’re
not sure that rectifying the EIA’s data will drive gas prices skyward. Natgas for
delivery during the prospective mid-December chills of yearend 2012 is only
priced at $6.20—a week after the release of the Wall Street Journal story—
But we like scarcity which had no apparent effect on gas prices.
stories, not surplus
What counts is gas in storage, and those numbers presumably aren’t fiddled,
stories where only
because that would constitute fraud.
the fittest and the
fibbers survive. What also counts is published industry estimates of how much gas that wasn’t
counted in the national inventory five years ago is now counted as probable
and possible because of technology breakthroughs—and it is huge.
Again, clients tell us all that gas won’t be hitting the market because so many
small operators will go bankrupt.
But we like scarcity stories, not surplus stories where only the fittest and the fibbers
survive.
1. Natgas will remain alluringly cheap relative to oil, and will gain market
share where substitution is feasible—such as in chemicals and plastics.
2. Natgas will gain market share in industrial heating from residual oil.
3. Those gigantic LNG projects in Qatar and Iran will not proceed as rapidly
as had been assumed.
4. There will be no further LNG deals that involve shipments into the US
east coast or California.
5. The native groups that managed to stall the various Arctic pipeline projects
have done a big favor to Big Oil, and have done great disservice to Sarah
Palin and the taxpayers of Alaska. Those projects will not proceed. If and
when the pipelines are eventually built, it will be because the Chinese
owners of the resources will have ordered the construction and obtained
compliance from any unruly natives.
6. If, as industry experts expect, there are huge shale and tight gas opportunities
in central Europe, that will be splendid news for the Eurozone and will
offset some of the economic problems from grunting and growling
PIIGS.
8. If natgas remains plentiful and cheap, it will begin to invade oil’s dominance
Perhaps Washington
in transportation. Already, thanks to T. Boone Pickens-promoted subsidies,
will make natgas
it is attracting interest from government-related trucks and buses. Perhaps
the next ethanol,
Washington will make natgas the next ethanol, replete with subsidies,
replete with subsidies,
tariffs, and forced allocations—in which case demand would soar and
tariffs, and forced
prices would rise.
allocations...
As this was being written, we got some news about how EOG, a well-run oil
and gas producer and one of the shale kingpins, is rebalancing its strategies.
It is apparently not content to rely on the phantom valuation of reserves the
SEC accepts.
According to The Wall Street Journal, “It plans to boost production of crude
oil, particularly unconventional shale oil. Those plans require higher capital
expenditures of $5.1 billion this year. True, that is much more than the $3.5
billion Citigroup expects the company to make in operating cash flow. But
EOG plans to sell up to $1.5 billion of gas assets to help bridge the gap.”
Who will buy those assets and how will they be priced?
We have some personal experience with this process because the only
American shale gas-levered stock we held in the Coxe Commodity Strategy
Fund (TSX: COX.UN) was XTO Energy—our hedge against being completely
wrong about gas prices. We were pleased to be able to sell it very profitably
when Exxon Mobil made its first major corporate acquisition since it bought
Mobil. How profitable all that shale production will be for XOM remains
to be seen, but those assets will do wonders for the acquirer’s Reserve Life
Index, whose oil component has been falling almost as fast as the reserves in
the Social Security Trust Fund.
Sustained cheap gas and restrained oil prices are together good reason to
feel more confident about the pricing outlook for industrial metals—and
about the future profitability of some of the major gold mining companies.
It is also a reason to feel more confident about farmers’ net incomes—which
bodes well for the farm equipment manufacturers and fertilizer and seed
producers.
April 25
A Slow Boat to China
120 130
110 120
100 110
90 100
93.26
80.49 90
80
70 80
Jan-02 Nov-02 Sep-03 Jul-04 May-05 Mar-06 Jan-07 Nov-07 Sep-08 Jul-09 Jan-02 Nov-02 Sep-03 Jul-04 May-05 Mar-06 Jan-07 Nov-07 Sep-08 Jul-09
0.8 200
Jan-02 Nov-02 Sep-03 Jul-04 May-05 Mar-06 Jan-07 Nov-07 Sep-08 Jul-09 Jan-02 Nov-02 Sep-03 Jul-04 May-05 Mar-06 Jan-07 Nov-07 Sep-08 Jul-09
1.05
1.00 1.00
0.95
0.90
0.85
0.80
0.75
Jan-06 Jul-06 Jan-07 Jul-07 Jan-08 Jul-08 Jan-09 Jul-09 Jan-10
In recent weeks, the dollar has been rallying powerfully, despite continuing
flows of negative reports about the Fed’s balance sheet, Washington’s deficits,
Washington’s spending, the likely cost of major new programs (such as health
care and cap and trade), and that the Social Security Trust Fund cash flow has
gone negative six years ahead of schedule.
In its time of need, the dollar is being rescued by the dramatic revisions
of global investors’ appraisals of Greeks and other PIIGS. That term covers
members of the Eurozone whose finances are as bad—or worse than—the
US, including Portugal, Italy, Ireland, Greece and Spain. But the greatest of
these is Greece, where the weekly news ranges from union leaders bewailing
a new kind of Greek tragedy or commentators across the world musing about
a new kind of Greek comedy. Greece’s fiscal deficit is listed at 12.5% of GDP,
whereas eurozone members’ deficit is supposedly capped at 3% of GDP and
its national debt is said to be near 130% of GDP. Those numbers would
not, in themselves, constitute disaster if there were any evidence that Greece
could, with short-term aid, become credit-worthy without reliance on the
productive eurozone members and the IMF.
But almost nobody believes that Greece can rein in its massive public sector
with its massive benefits—including early retirement. Nor does almost
anybody believe Greece can kickstart its economy by suddenly becoming
strongly competitive. On the macro level, Greeks are better known for their
charmingly casual approach to paying taxes and working efficiently. However,
they share space in the world’s largest free trade zone with such industrious
and thrifty people as the Germans, Dutch, and Austrians.
April 27
A Slow Boat to China
Greece has a storied past, as the founding culture of what would become the
West. But its record since Alexander the Great’s time is of 22 centuries in which
most of the news was bad, and heroes were few—or nonexistent. The rest of
Europe is willing to buy Greek art treasures and Aegean islands, but little
The yen is the else that is Greek. The Glory that was Greece lives on in our neighborhood:
zero-yielding currency atop the former Board of Trade Building that now houses the CME is a
of a country whose splendid statue of Ceres, the Greek goddess of agriculture. (Thankfully, those
demography is the atheist activists who rage against any public religious displays have tolerated
worst in human history. Ceres.)
Because, in foreign exchange markets, there are only three major trading
zones—the dollar, the yen and the euro. Roughly 80% of all trades involve
the dollar on one side. Until recently, investors wishing to escape from the
dollar’s highly-publicized problems could choose the yen or the euro.
Until Greece went from the obscurity which allowed it to peddle its bonds
to investors abroad—and to the European Central bank—to Page One status
as the Wastrel of the Western World, the euro was the currency of choice for
currency traders and investors wishing to reduce their dollar risk.
Investors are now beginning to realize that Greece is just the first and most
malodorous of the eurozone’s PIIGS.
Result: more and more foreign exchange funds and institutional investors
are almost compelled to buy US-denominated debt.
Switzerland is not part of the EU, but even the classic haven Swiss franc
risks looking less and less Alpine and more and more like what Hannibal’s
elephants left behind. Its bailed-out banks are reporting robust trading
profits redeploying their government-guaranteed deposits, but much of the
economy is high-cost, and Swiss demography resembles the rest of aging
Europe.
April 29
A Slow Boat to China
1.00
0.95 0.95
0.90
0.85
0.80
0.75
0.70
Jan-06 Jul-06 Jan-07 Jul-07 Jan-08 Jul-08 Jan-09 Jul-09 Jan-10
1.05
1.00 1.00
0.95
0.90
0.85
0.80
0.75
Jan-06 Jul-06 Jan-07 Jul-07 Jan-08 Jul-08 Jan-09 Jul-09 Jan-10
US Dollar – Rupee
March 1, 2008 to April 13, 2010
53
...the US dollar is now
51
first among the worst
49 big alternatives to gold.
47
45
44.32
43
41
39
Mar-08 Jul-08 Nov-08 Mar-09 Jul-09 Nov-09 Mar-10
Conclusion: the US dollar is now first among the worst big alternatives to
gold.
The turnaround in the dollar has already had its effect on some Asian central
banks. They had begun unloading greenbacks in favor of euros—partly
because they have more trade with Europe than the US, but mostly because
the dollar’s highly-publicized problems scared them at a time when total
global forex reserves were roughly two-thirds in Treasurys. So we’ve seen
greater central bank participation in some recent Treasury auctions.
This must please Barack and Ben. When you know that in the next year you’re
going to be rolling over more than a trillion in outstanding Treasury paper
and adding another trillion to the supply, you’d like to think there are some
buyers other than local banks who are buying your stuff because they are so
financially emasculated they can’t make new loans.
April 31
A Slow Boat to China
So, we are asked, can we have a commodity bull market coexisting with a
dollar bull market?
In a word: Yes.
We have come to believe that this Odd Couple can coexist if investors
conclude that bonds are no haven, and economic growth remains much
stronger in the key Asian economies than in the US or Europe.
Why?
We try to resist “New Era” thinking, but current conditions are collectively
unique:
4. Global economic leadership now coming from China, India, Korea and
Taiwan, not from the US and Europe.
6. US State and local debt ratios at horrendous levels even before realistic
costing of liabilities under employee pension and medical plans. We live
A Stanford team
in Illinois, which ranks just behind California for the scale of its unfunded
recently costed out
employee pensions. A Stanford team recently costed out the unfunded
the unfunded portion
portion of California’s state pensions at $500 billion—which is roughly
of California’s
seven times the total amount of state general obligation bonds outstanding.
state pensions at
Illinois and California would need years of GDP growth at China’s rate
$500 billion...
to make their existing debts manageable—and many other states are in
similar crises.
Everyone has always known that Social Security was headed for trouble, but
we were told its cash flow wouldn’t turn negative until 2019; then 2016. It
goes negative this year and that means the “fund” is evaporating quite rapidly.
(Remember when the Democrats savaged Bush’s plans for Social Security
savings accounts by telling frightened voters that Bush would be taking their
money from its safe piggy bank where it was being kept for them? Great
politics.)
The Social Security Trust Fund, which is a mere bookkeeping entry, “invests”
in Treasurys at the approximate duration of the national debt. We appeared
before the US Senate Finance Committee in 1988 to testify about what was
wrong with the Fund. We criticized its investing strategy, pointing out that
any private plan with long-term liabilities that invested in what was then a
7-year duration would be shut down. We argued the Fund should be getting
the benefit of the high interest rates available on long Treasurys. Senator
Moynihan called our testimony “powerful,’ but told me he couldn’t rally
any votes for it because the Treasury was saving money by paying such low
yields into the fund, and if Social Security invested in long bonds it would
increase the reported fiscal deficit. Result: all those years of double-digit
and high-yielding Treasurys came and went and Social Security only briefly
prospered.
April 33
A Slow Boat to China
Compare that experience to the Canada Pension Plan, which for its early
years (until the 1990s) invested in 20-year provincial government bonds
whose blended real yields were high, then switched, as the bonds mature,
to investing in market instruments managed by skilled professionals at the
...what is the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board. The CPP isn’t fully-funded, but its
difference between market rate returns mean that its assets will keep growing for decades. Chile
a store of value and and Norway may be the only nations with better-financed public pension
an inflation hedge? systems.
The commodity bull market in this decade will be driven by (1) industrial
demand for raw materials; (2) sustained demand for petroleum; (3) continued
protein upgrades in diets in emerging and emergent economies, and (4)
greater reliance on precious metals as stores of value—not necessarily as
hedges against actual inflation. Inflation could in fact come with a rush if the
global economy turns strong, government deficits stay high, and real yields on
government bonds turn sharply negative. At the moment, measured inflation
remains subdued because of heavy unemployment and large percentages of
unused capacity across the OECD.
Gold
What is the difference between a store of value and an inflation hedge?
Answer: a store of value at least maintains its market value under widely
varying economic conditions and widely-varying or steadily-rising inflation;
an inflation hedge is an asset bought and held to produce big profits when
inflation is high and rising—and investors think it’s going to rise even faster.
Gold ran from $38 to $850 when inflation ran from 5% to as high as 14%,
but annual inflation during that period averaged in the high single digits.
Once gold’s price was running far faster than inflation, it ceased to be a true
store of value and became a speculative hedge—ultimately against inflation
that Paul Volcker was about to terminate.
140
120
100
80
67.75
60
40
20
Jan-05 Aug-05 Mar-06 Oct-06 May-07 Dec-07 Jul-08 Feb-09 Sep-09 Apr-10
April 35
A Slow Boat to China
Mosaic (MOS)
January 1, 2005 to April 13, 2010
180
160
140
120
100
80
60 56.78
40
20
0
Jan-05 Aug-05 Mar-06 Oct-06 May-07 Dec-07 Jul-08 Feb-09 Sep-09 Apr-10
Deere (DE)
January 1, 2005 to April 13, 2010
100
90
80
70
60 61.54
50
40
30
20
Jan-05 Aug-05 Mar-06 Oct-06 May-07 Dec-07 Jul-08 Feb-09 Sep-09 Apr-10
CNH Global
January 1, 2005 to April 13, 2010
70
60
50
40
32.84
30
20
10
0
Jan-05 Aug-05 Mar-06 Oct-06 May-07 Dec-07 Jul-08 Feb-09 Sep-09 Apr-10
750
650
550
450
350 350.50
250
150
Jan-05 Aug-05 Mar-06 Oct-06 May-07 Dec-07 Jul-08 Feb-09 Sep-09 Apr-10
Soybeans
January 1, 2005 to April 13, 2010
1,700
1,500
1,300
1,100
968.00
900
700
500
Jan-05 Aug-05 Mar-06 Oct-06 May-07 Dec-07 Jul-08 Feb-09 Sep-09 Apr-10
Wheat
January 1, 2005 to April 13, 2010
1,250
1,150
1,050
950
850
750
650
550
450 476.00
350
250
Jan-05 Aug-05 Mar-06 Oct-06 May-07 Dec-07 Jul-08 Feb-09 Sep-09 Apr-10
April 37
A Slow Boat to China
As the charts show, the world’s realization that its crop carryovers were
shrinking slowly took a while to translate into a bull market for grains. In
part, there was complacency: there’s always more corn and wheat than we
need; in part, there was investors’ multi-decade conviction that grain farmers
But what is good for were pampered by governments so outrageously that there would always
the human race and be surpluses; in part, there was sustained good weather: the kind of short
for investors in other growing seasons seen during the mid-1970s were rarely repeated.
commodities is bad
We said after our trip to India in 2006 that agriculture would be the next
news for investors in
commodity bull market. It was clear to us that steadily-increasing demand
agricultural stocks.
for higher protein diets was inevitable. Since total hectares under cultivation
worldwide were increasing almost imperceptibly, what was needed was
sustained increase in per-hectare output. Needed: genetically-modified seeds,
more fertilizer (and more precision in its usage), and greater use of advanced
farm machinery.
For a while, that concept became a financial cornucopia for clients. And then
came the Crash, and suddenly the surpluses were back. This year’s global
grain crop of corn, soybeans and wheat looks like a record, and it comes at a
time of carryovers reminiscent of the grim old days.
This is profoundly good news for the human race. The last thing we need
would be a major food crisis that sent prices of basic grains to levels that
drove millions into starvation and derailed the powerful economic recoveries
in China, India and Indonesia.
But what is good for the human race and for investors in other commodities
is bad news for investors in agricultural stocks.
17
15
13
11
5
Jan-09 Mar-09 May-09 Jul-09 Sep-09 Nov-09 Jan-10 Mar-10
50
45
40
35
30
25
Jan-09 Mar-09 May-09 Jul-09 Sep-09 Nov-09 Jan-10 Mar-10
April 39
A Slow Boat to China
The ethanol story, which has long been a colorful tale of politics, mendacity
and greed, has recently taken a new twist. Look, Ma, it’s for real!
However, we are modifying that view slightly. First, we realize that not all our
investors share our passionately-held views about the evils and false pricing
of ethanol. Secondly, low corn and natural gas prices now combine with
high oil prices to create a market for ethanol that is at least partly based on
honest economics—a remarkable novelty for ethanol.
How?
April 41
A Slow Boat to China
next only to money from unions, the Democrats’ biggest funding support
comes from tort lawyers. Obama did nothing to cut off such a rich vein of
support for him and his party, and for health care’s contribution to making
America the most over-lawyered economy in the world, and its health care
...the Hollywood system the costliest in the world.
glitterati who
Actually, he did a lot to make the situation worse—by introducing hundreds
supported him...
of new rules and claim categories that will be fertile future fields for litigation
could doubtless have
against doctors, hospitals and health insurers. History may conclude that
warned him of a
this was among the more successful job-growth-creating laws he sponsored.
digital incompatibility
that could trigger Meanwhile, as fighting the health care battle was forcing the President to
some other kinds of cancel trips abroad to see allies fighting with his troops in Afghanistan, the
incompatibility. world was reviewing the President’s various foreign policy initiatives and
drawing its conclusions.
The clearest pattern, as so many critics have noted, is Obama’s urge to ignore,
rebuke and/or be openly rude to long-time friends and allies of America,
while playing up to nations that have been long-time problems to America.
His treatment of Gordon Brown and Britain has received the widest press
coverage. It began when Obama sent back to London the bust of Churchill
Tony Blair had presented to America. He didn’t offer it to any other
government offices—or even to any major universities or foundations. He
just sent it back. He made no attempt to rebut press reports that this was
because his Kenyan father, who may have had Mau-Mau connections, was
badly treated by British officials during the long Kikuyu-led rebellion.
When Brown visited the White House, and presented him with some well-
chosen gifts, Obama responded with 25 DVDs of popular American movies.
Brown returned to Number Ten and tried the first, and found they were
unplayable on British TV sets. Had Obama made any effort to contact any
of the 90% or so of the Hollywood glitterati who supported him, they could
doubtless have warned him of a digital incompatibility that could trigger
some other kinds of incompatibility.
Other long-time friends and allies of the US have been complaining about
coolness or rudeness from Obama.
In sharp contrast, he has actively and almost slavishly courted some of the
most troublesome nations and odious leaders in the world. He nearly fawned
on Ahmadinejad of Iran and then stayed silent as the regime was beating,
gassing and torturing demonstrators against its brutalities and usurpations.
He was seen smiling with Russian Premier Medvedev, as they signed a nuclear
arms reduction agreement in which the US gave up far more than Russia.
April 43
A Slow Boat to China
His eloquence and glamour make him a unique global force in transmitting
America’s peaceful intents and support for basic human values.
But then, during some of these gauzy and glorious effusions, he becomes
unable to resist overenthusiasm for inclusiveness, and mixes both his
metaphors and messages.
His Easter message was typical: he pointed out that Easter time has always
been an important part of American traditions, because of its Christian and
Jewish associations.
But then he said, “But Islam also always been part of American traditions.”
April 45
A Slow Boat to China
Conclusion
Obama’s policy of disarming hostile nations with his charm and with
apologies for everything “bad” the US has ever done, and his oft-repeated
protestations of peaceful intent have undoubtedly delighted many people
abroad who have been raised on the intellectual fodder that the US is to
...while Obama tries to
blame for all the misery in the world that hasn’t been caused by Israel and
make hostile nations
the former colonial powers.
see the light of sweet
reason, he is reducing He has, in his policies toward Iran and Syria, and, to a lesser extent, North
American strategic Korea displayed the faith in the sense and restraint of nations with long
arms, and cutting back records of hostility to the US that characterized Neville Chamberlain’s late-
on testing of missile 1930s policies toward Hitler’s Germany. Indeed, some of his most vocal
defense systems... American critics compare him to Chamberlain.
Some people might think there is far greater evidence that Islamic terrorism
(a phrase he has banned from acceptable locution) and a nuclear Iran are
greater threats to American survival than “climate change.”
Are these thoughts relevant for investors, or just for foreign policy wonks?
Warren Buffett has said publicly that a successful terrorist attack on America
is almost inevitable.
We can presume that the insurance companies in his portfolio are factoring
in that probability.
April 47
A Slow Boat to China
INVESTMENT ENVIRONMENT
1. The Improved Global Outlook
The thrust of this essay is that the US is probably emerging from the black
India’s economy barrenness of recession into a relatively unknown territory, with hostile
keeps surprising on presences in the form of unmanageably high debt loads on Washington, the
the upside, as does states, many key corporations, and millions of homes and consumers.
Indonesia’s. There are other, more terrifying hostile presences, but there is little investors
can do to hedge themselves against a drastic US foreign policy and/or
homeland security breakdown.
2. How to Play It
Clients may find it very hard to accept a revised investment strategy aimed at
participation in global economic growth that leaves exposures to US equities
at the minimal levels that we have been recommending right back to the
recession.
We missed the most recent leg of the S&P rally, but our commodity emphasis
has served investors well.
3. Geo-Political Risk?
The combination of a strong rally in both the dollar and gold, accompanied
by a strong rally in spot oil, without follow-through in the distant years of
the futures curve, suggests to us that many investors and strategists have been
analyzing President Obama’s strategic policies and believe that he has made
Israel believe it’s alone facing Iran.
Which would presumably be good news for holders of gold, crude oil, and
near-term oil futures.
April 49
A Slow Boat to China
For our story we just need the US and non-PIIGS Europe to putter along. The
global scarcity statistics, heavily driven by the double-digit growth of China,
will virtually guarantee good performance from well-chosen commodity-
oriented equities.
Stage #2 of the Great Commodity Bull Market—in which China and India
remain strong exporters but become even greater commodity importers—has
begun.
This month we are introducing a new portfolio for Canadian pension funds because we see
the divergence between Canadian and US financial assets as a longer-term phenomenon.
April 51
A Slow Boat to China
RECOMMENDED ASSET ALLOCATION
Bond Durations
Years Change
US 5.25 unch
Canada 5.00 unch
International 4.50 unch
Change
Precious Metals 32% –1
Agriculture 25% –5
Energy 22% unch
Base Metals & Steel 21% +6
Bond Durations
Years Change
US 5.25 unch
Canada 5.00 unch
International 4.50 unch
Change
Precious Metals 32% –1
Agriculture 25% –5
Energy 22% unch
Base Metals & Steel 21% +6
April 53
A Slow Boat to China
INVESTMENT RECOMMENDATIONS
1. Increase your equity-equivalent exposure through commodity stocks,
emphasizing the mining stocks at the expense of agricultural and oil &
gas stocks.
5. The accounting wheeze that equates six units of natgas to one of crude
oil makes Big Oil in general and most oil and gas producers look like
better commodity investments than their true product mix would justify.
Overweight oil production and underweight gas production.
6. The oil sands companies are moving from open pit mining to Steam-
Assisted Gravity Drainage (SAGD) production methods, using natgas as
fuel for melting the bitumen. Result: they are long oil and short natgas,
which is a splendid strategy for investors. This week’s Sinopec purchase
of Conoco Phillips’ 9% interest in Syncrude confirms the strategic value
of that treasure trove that fashionable Greens love to deride. Continue to
overweight the oil sands companies.
7. The combined strength of the KRE and BKX is more than mildly reassuring.
We believe investors should feel quite safe in their equity commitments
as long as that relative strength holds. The test may come when Bernanke
withdraws the heroin, but most economists think that remains far off. This
is a good time to emphasize cyclical equities within US portfolios—and
to add to commodity exposure.
9. Gold and silver have held up well in the face of strength in the dollar.
Remain overweighted in the precious metals. The royalty and streaming
stocks offer special attractions, because relatively few investors understand
the companies’ beautiful business models, and the excellent execution of
those models by shrewd managements.
April 55
THE COXE STRATEGY JOURNAL
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