Peter J. Cooper’s Weblog

June 29, 2008

Oil to gold ratio means $1,400 gold is close

Filed under: Gold & Silver, US Stocks — peterjcooper @ 7:53 am

Gold prices have lagged behind oil’s recent surge above $140 a barrel and are over due to play catch up as the US stock market officially enters bear market territory leaving investors in search of downside protection.

Long term the gold to oil ratio averages around 10, so that means that $1,400 an ounce gold is close as this ratio returns to its normal level. Of course, if oil shoots higher to say $170, as top officials suggest this weekend then gold should follow proportionately higher.

I think some long time precious metals watchers are in danger of missing the big call. It must be hard after so many disappointments over the years. But I am no gold bug or lover of precious metals, just a reader of markets.

That Wall Street is overvalued and heading for a crash is just so blindingly obvious it makes my heartache to listen the bulls. Look at housing, jobs, a recession and the financial sector. The market should be 40% down not 19.9%.

It will get there. On Thursday I noted that only gold shares seemed to be going up while everything else was going down.

Gold has the twin drivers of a catch up with oil and a safe haven asset in a falling stock market, and as a currency hedge against the still falling dollar. For precious metals the time has come – and silver looked strong too.

No wonder the Russian oil funds are looking at precious metal diversification, as reported in yesterday’s Moscow Times. The world and his wife is about to buy into precious metals.

June 28, 2008

Russian oil funds set to invest in gold

Filed under: Gold & Silver, Oil Prices, US Stocks — peterjcooper @ 6:34 pm

Russian state oil funds are preparing to invest in gold for the first time, according to a report in The Moscow Times today citing a senior Finance Ministry official.

Deputy Chief of the ministry’s international finance department Pytor Kazakevich said that gold funds were not interested in precious stones and alternative investments: ‘But gold, why not?’

The Russian State has a long history as an investor in precious metals, and has one of the world’s greatest collections of jewellery and artefacts in the Kremlin. Even in Stalin’s time be-jewelled gold and silver items were added to the collection as part of the national foreign exchange reserves.

With oil past $140 a barrel this month Russian oil funds are overflowing with cash for investment. The commodities boom is leading to many investments, for example the $1.25 billion purchase of US steelmaker Esmark by Severstal last week after winning a competitive bid.

It is not clear when and how much gold Russian oil funds will buy. However, the obvious logic expressed by Mr Kazakevich is clear: buying assets that are rising in value in a commodities boom makes sense for any diversified fund.

Gold looks to be heading back to $1,000 an ounce and could well have $1,200 in its sights. After all funds will not have failed to notice that as global stock markets plunged last week the yellow metal closed sharply up.

Gold & silver end the week on a high note: what next?

Filed under: Gold & Silver, Oil Prices, US Stocks — peterjcooper @ 8:28 am

Gold took a pummelling to $880 on Monday morning but recovered mid-week to close the week at $927 an ounce. Silver dipped into the mid $16-17 but finished around $17.28.

The Plunge Protection Team was in action on Monday and managed its task well in dampening the market, and absorbing the shock of the Fed’s non-statement on rates on Wednesday. However, the PPT could not prevent a sharp down-pull on Wall Street to its lowest for two years, and a resumption of dollar weakness.

Oil also crucially broke above $140 a barrel and is clearly heading higher. Remarks from Gazprom suggest that much higher oil prices are in the pipeline.

Yesterday I arrived in Moscow on the first leg of a summer grand tour around Europe, and immediately noted inflation. The train ticket to St Petersburg is double what it was a year ago. But far from looking like a city under siege from inflation Muscovites seem wealthier than ever.

It is the same story in the United Arab Emirates where I live. Residents complain about inflation but still seem to dine out in style and pay up for whatever increases they find. And to be fair many are putting through high wage rises to fund this spending.

Inflation is now with us and not about to go away anytime soon. Indeed, it will feed on itself, just as it did in the 1970s when I labelled goods in a shop for a weekend job and used to have to update the prices on a monthly basis. Eventually there will be one humdinger of a recession that will bring the party to a close.

But who will be the party pooper? We have not met him or her yet. From here I can only see the US recession getting much worse and radical action to contain inflation proving impossible.

In this environment gold and silver are the best assets to own and over the next week I will be presenting more detailed thoughts about exactly how to go about this over the next week. Watch this space!

June 26, 2008

Gold, silver bounce back after meaningless Fed statement

Filed under: Gold & Silver, US Stocks — peterjcooper @ 7:35 am

The predictable holding of US interest rates at two per cent yesterday and a lackluster statement from Fed chairman Ben Bernanke saw gold and silver recover quickly from a brief dip after the announcement.

The now familiar refrain from commentators is that the Fed is stuck between a rock and a hard place on rate levels. It can not cut more because of inflation. It can not move rates higher because of the recession.

Remarks by the Fed that the economy showed some signs of improvements brought the only ripple of controversy with commentators immediately pointing to job cuts, gas price rises and food inflation as making this highly doubtful.

And that is really the problem, the Fed is trying to bluff the dollar higher but it lacks the ammunition necessary in the form of a strengthening economy. Meanwhile, across Asia interest rates are going up and the ECB is expected to raise rates next month.

This leaves the relative value of the dollar falling as money flows to where it will earn the best return or is at least protected against inflation. Yesterday I had lunch with Nicholas Thornton, ANZ’s new man in Dubai where the bank is opening again after a poorly timed exit in 2001, and noted the bank’s prediction that the Australian dollar will rise to $1.04 from 95 cents.

The closeness to my own $2 euro forecast is clear. And this will be the pattern going forward, a weakening US dollar and with its inverse correlation to precious metal prices well established, higher prices for gold and silver, alongside oil. But this will occur against the background of much rougher waters ahead for global capital markets.

June 25, 2008

RBS chooses gold to beat inflation in new expatriate fund

Filed under: Gold & Silver, Oil Prices, UAE Stocks, US Stocks — peterjcooper @ 7:34 am

The Royal Bank of Scotland has given gold a 25 per cent weighting in its latest Autopilot capital guaranteed deposit account targeted at expatriate customers. Performance is weighted equally across four sectors: emerging equities, developed equities, property and gold.

The role of gold in this new account is bound to raise eyebrows and comes as the bank is warning customers to expect turmoil in equity and credit markets over the next three months, an unusal statement for the second largest UK bank. The new fund will track performance of the four sectors when rising and divert to cash when a falling trend is identified.

Investors around the world are seeking to protect their assets from inflation yet in many cases these assets are suffering from deflation. It is a painful and expensive dilemma. How can inflation and deflation exist at the same time? Are they not supposed to be like matter and anti-matter, and not bedfellows?

Is it not bizarre for British citizens that the price of food, petrol, essential services and rents are spiraling upwards, while the value of their beloved homes is falling like a stone? Even in the Emirates stock market prices are weak while consumer prices are spiraling upwards, although real estate here still remains the best hedge against inflation at present.

The answer to the inflation versus deflation conundrum is that the two are part of the same phenomenon: the expansion of the money supply above levels of real economic growth.

It is easiest to explain this in practice with reference to the US situation. The Federal Reserve has been pursuing a low interest rate monetary policy off-and-on for more than a decade. This fanned the dot-com boom and bust of the IT sector in the late 1990s. Then the US housing bubble followed on the back of the low interest rates to bail out that bust.

Now the housing bubble has burst and the Fed is again applying low interest rates, this time to rescue the injudicious lending practices of the financial sector and to put a floor under falling house prices.

The problem now is that the financial sector is raising mortgage rates and keeping the profits from low interest rates to repair its own tattered balance sheet. Indeed, banks are not keen to lend to a sector that has just gone bust, and are instead providing money directly and indirectly for commodity speculation.

This is driving up the cost of oil, food, metals and an entire range of commodities. Even in China the government is no longer able to afford energy price subsidies and last week hiked prices at gas stations by 17 per cent. We still have the knock-on, secondary impact to come on consumer price inflation.

The so-called second-round effects of this primary inflation are two-fold. First, manufacturers face a surge in raw material costs and have to pass this on in final prices, whether they are making cars in Luton or ships in Shanghai. Secondly, workers rebel against rising prices and demand higher wages as they see manufacturers hiking their prices.

At the same time, companies find their profits under pressure. Many are in competitive markets and are not able to pass on rising costs fast enough to offset the impact on profit margins. And as profits are squeezed then the market capitalization of such companies on stock markets will fall, and share prices suffer deflation.

So in a curious cycle we can see inflation of house prices resulting in a deflationary bust that causes a policy response that leads to inflation in consumer prices which causes a further deflation of asset prices. In the case of housing, consumer price inflation reduces disposable income available for financing the purchase of homes and induces a deflationary downward spiral, the opposite of a real estate boom.

Where does this leave investors? If you sit on cash then inflation will erode the spending power of your money. If you invest in deflating assets then you are losing money.

What you require in this environment is a way to protect the value of your money. It is only going down in value because the central banks are printing more and more money in a necessary but vain attempt to shore up asset prices, at least in nominal terms. The answer is to convert to a currency which is not subject to an inflating money supply. It will then rise in value while other currencies sink, and will still be available when asset prices bottom out and look a good buy again.

Step forward precious metals as the only true money and repository of value. The supply of gold and silver is relatively fixed, and only inflating by the amount of annual production which is around two per cent of total available supply.

But hold on a minute. Prices of any commodity are determined by two essential factors: supply and demand; and speculative flows of money. If asset markets weaken further and investors gradually abandon them – or all suddenly jump for the exit door in another Wall Street crash – then the relative attractiveness of gold and silver will become apparent.

There are also considerable short positions in gold and silver which would amplify the price movement in the event of a sudden shift of money into precious metals. Therefore gold and silver are not only likely to prove highly defensive assets in an inflationary environment for general prices, and a deflationary one for stocks and real estate.

A big price spike like that seen in the late 1970s is perfectly likely. How high could prices of precious metals go? The Schroder Alternative Solutions Gold and Metals Fund launched last week predicted $5,000 an ounce for gold in the next few years.

Silver has arguably greater potential for price gains, with the largest short position and tightest supply situation and could top $100 from $17 an ounce today. That is why more and more smart money is choosing precious metals as an asset class. The cycle will later turn and real estate and shares recover their appeal once a recession has beaten inflation. But that is a several years away and not yet even on the horizon.

June 24, 2008

Trump cashes in on the Dubai property boom

Filed under: Dubai Property, Oil Prices — peterjcooper @ 11:10 am

Donald Trump may be counting his losses in New York but in Dubai the sale of a penthouse in the Trump International Hotel and Tower for $3,000 a sqft brought a predictably quiet and understated reaction from the reclusive billionaire (pictured above with his daughter Ivanka whose been handling Dubai with her brother).

‘My project with Nakheel will be one of the most impressive undertakings that I have ever been a part of,’ he told The National. ‘I am thrilled with the early sales of the residences’.

Unless you have been living cut off from the outside world you may have heard that Dubai has a property boom, and with the Middle East benefiting from record oil prices to the tune of $500 billion a year, this boom is getting stronger and not weakening with the global economic slowdown.

The startling statistics from Colliers International showing Dubai house prices rising by 78 per cent in the year to the end of the first quarter raise an obvious question. Why are Dubai house prices increasing at this near exponential rate when in the rest of the world real estate markets are crashing? And how much longer can this rate of increase continue?

House price increases since Colliers International completed its field work suggest that this very high rate of growth in prices has been sustained into the early summer. The usual seasonal pattern is for a lull, particularly in July and August when many people are on vacation, and for a sharp pick up in prices in September.

Yet the 78 per cent annual price surge has shocked even the most optimistic commentators on Dubai property. It has the appearance of the dramatic price spike that marks the end of a boom period. But calling the top too early is a typical error in booming property markets which tend not to behave like stock markets, and are slow to gain momentum and slow to lose it.

The Dubai real estate market has been gaining momentum, with some quiet periods usually over the summer, ever since the then Dubai Crown Prince General Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum gave his approval for freehold sales in May 2002. More and more projects have been launched since then, and more than 1,250 are registered today with the Real Estate Regulatory Authority.

But the problem has been, and remains, that supply has not kept up with demand, and this has forced the price of completed units higher and higher, and the off-plan market bases its prices on the price of secondary sales.

At the same time, the demand for property in Dubai has escalated on the back of the Third Oil Boom. Dubai is not earning much directly from oil these days but as the business and financial hub for the Gulf States the city has seen its GDP treble in this period. This huge surge in business activity has produced a massive increase in demand for real estate of all types.

Now in the particular case of real estate available for foreign ownership this is still a small market in absolute terms. How many units have been delivered by developers to date? Only some 20,000; and for a market that needs 26,000 units per annum on one forecast.

Given the bottlenecks in the construction sector in men and materials, and the competition for these scarce resources from new building sites in Abu Dhabi and Ras Al Khaimah, there is little sign that actual delivery of projects in Dubai is likely to improve anytime soon.

The big numbers of the headline development portfolios should always be compared to work actually in progress. And in the UAE less than five per cent of projects announced are actually under construction. Vision and reality is not the same thing, and the difference between the two gives you the explanation for why Dubai house prices are hurtling upwards.

Unless the Third Oil Boom comes to an abrupt end it is therefore reasonable to conclude that the Dubai real estate boom will continue and that prices will rise to, or even exceed prices that real estate achieves in other global cities. It requires some imagination, not to say vision, on the part of observers to understand what is happening.

But this is really nothing new. A new Hong Kong apartment sold for a record $28 million last week, yet thirty years ago Asia’s financial capital was a port with many people living on junk sailing boats and paying even $1 million for an apartment would have been unthinkable.

Dubai today is making an even more rapid transition from a regional port into a global city, and this is the new benchmark for property prices. Eventually there will be a correction but only to a price level still far above where the freehold market started in 2002.

For a more precise indication as to when the market might stop soaring upwards and instead pause for breath before heading down a little, it is necessary to consider the local property cycle in relation to global markets.

If we look at the US market then residential property started to soften in the summer of 2006 and began to crash last summer. The UK was about 12 months behind and suddenly came unstuck with the sub-prime shock last August, although prices had been perilously high for a couple of years.

You could argue that Dubai is still several years behind this curve. Negative real interest rates are being set to very low levels because the dirham is linked to the US dollar. House prices while higher are not yet among the highest by global standards. Local rental yields are high, particularly in comparison to deposit account rates. And demand from a constant inflow of new immigrants remains well above available supply.

This is a very strong bull market case, and the momentum in the market with price rises of 78 per cent is clearly enormous. If you liken a real estate market to an oil tanker then it will take a long time to slowdown. But actually all the pressure is for more price rises, and the first thing to watch for will be a slowdown in the rate of price increases. Don’t hold your breath for falling prices anytime soon.

Sudden gold and silver drop on Monday suspicious

Filed under: Gold & Silver, US Stocks — peterjcooper @ 8:10 am

You only have to look at the gold and silver charts for Monday to sense that more than market forces have been at work. The chart slumps suddenly at the 8 am Eastern Time opening of trading and then flat lines.

It is true that German business confidence slumped to a two-and-a-half year low. But have markets forgotten that interest rates in the euro zone may go up next month, while Fed hints at rising rates for the US dollar are both priced into the market and likely to disappoint as hot air?

This still left precious metals as the victim of the dollar’s immediate resurgence. Gold prices fell back three per cent although rebounded from a floor of $880 an ounce. Silver dropped five per cent before rebounding to $16.75.

Yet this is a very suspicious movement. All the traders decided at 8am on the first day of the week to buy the dollar? It seems more likely that the hidden hand of the Plunge Protection Team is at work.

The PPT will have noted that the Dow is perilously close to key support levels and that if these are broken then a plunge to 9,000 or all the way back to 7,000 is likely. You do not need to be an expert to notice this. It was all over financial TV at the end of last week.

Preventative action has followed. Comex traders have now squared their positions ahead of the Fed interest rate decision on Wednesday. But the unrealistic expectation of higher US interest rates before the end of the year is still in the market.

When that comes to nought then the dollar will fall and precious metals rebound, and that realization will come into sharp focus as soon as the ECB rate rise next month. Abandoning precious metals in this environment, and with inflation surging throughout the world, would appear foolish.

June 23, 2008

Oil to spike to $150 after inconclusive Jeddah conference

Filed under: Oil Prices, UAE Stocks, US Stocks — peterjcooper @ 8:38 am

Lack of commitment to new supply, a halt to Nigerian oil production and bitter divisions among oil producers are expected to deliver the reverse of the intended consequences to the Jeddah energy conference: a spike in oil prices to test the $150 a barrel market this week.

The Daily Telegraph this morning quotes OPEC president Chakib Khelil as sweeping aside Saudi Arabia’s promise to increase oil production by 200,000 barrels per day. He said it was not a lack of supply that was driving prices up but speculators, and that prices would not fall after the meeting in Jeddah which was attended by British Prime Minister Gordon Brown and US energy secretary Sam Bodman.

Venezuelan finance minister Ali Rodriguez, a former head of OPEC, told journalists he expected prices to rise further now. Venezuela, Libya, Algeria, Iran and Qatar stood opposed to an increase in oil production, blaming speculators for high prices. Libya even said that it would consider reducing production in response to Saudi Arabia’s increase, while only Kuwait pledged to follow Saudi Arabia and raise output.

The Jeddah conference held over the weekend comprised 35 countries, seven international organizations, and 25 oil companies. British Prime Minister Gordon Brown offered to host a follow-up meeting later in the year.

However, commodity markets this week will likely seize on this inconclusive and divided conference as a signal that the collective will to increase supply is just not there among the oil producers. Russian and UK oil production has been in decline this year offsetting marginal increases in production by other producers.

It is this immediate supply and demand imbalance that concerns markets, which are unlikely to be swayed by Saudi Arabia’s promises to expand its capacity by the end of 2009 and beyond.

Indeed, in a real sense the conference in Jeddah has served to flag up the significant problems of the oil market while not delivering any concrete solutions. In any market such uncertainty is usually a signal for higher prices.

With oil prices having already touched $140 a barrel, the final $10 surge to the once fantastic prediction of $150 a barrel from Goldman Sachs now looks in sight.

What next for the economies of the Gulf States?

Filed under: Dubai Property, Oil Prices, UAE Revaluation, UAE Stocks — peterjcooper @ 8:10 am

With just days to go until the end of the first half of 2008 Wall Street analysts are suddenly waking up to the realization that life for financial firms is still bad, is getting worse and that any thought of a recovery in the second half of the year is looking problematic. This continued weakness in the financial system of the world’s biggest economy is going to have further implications for business, even in the Gulf States where record high oil prices have so far insulated economies from the global downturn.

The writing is on the wall everywhere you look. The IMF is forecasting no growth in the US economy this year with 3.5 per cent inflation. Bond insurers saw their credit ratings slashed last week and will now have to report huge losses. And financial analysts are warning of further substantial write-offs at Merrill Lynch and Citigroup, while question marks over the long term future of Lehman Brothers remain after the departure of top management.

At the root of the problem is the deteriorating US housing market which is not realistically expected to bottom out until the end of 2009. Until that time, and probably for a fairly long period afterwards, there will be a drip feed of bad news as firms try to get the market to adjust slowly downwards to the ongoing destruction of capital.

The big risk, of course, in such an adjustment by capital markets is that markets decide to suddenly re-price risk with a crash, and overshoot on the downside. So far Wall Street has remained remarkably buoyant against a background of swelling bad news, and has confined its discounting of bad times to the financial and property sectors.

But as the financial crisis continues – and typically three years is the length of such a period of market deterioration – then more and more sectors of the US economy will be affected. Car sales, for example, are already well down. Surveys show that consumer confidence is falling away as fears about potential job losses and recession mount. Indeed, as firms actually do fire more and more staff in the second half of 2008 the decline in consumer spending will get worse.

What will this slowdown or recession in the world’s biggest economy mean on the other side of the world for the Gulf State? Is this the foot coming off the accelerator of the global economy? Will oil prices tumble as US consumers cut back on traveling and buy less Chinese products?

For business analysts in the Gulf the difficulty is the same as for their compatriots on Wall Street, there is a major issue of time lags. If you hit a man on his leg his reflex reaction is quick. But if you slow the US economy this is more like putting the breaks on an oil tanker – it takes a long time to stop.

There is a whole pipeline of orders between the US shop selling a Chinese made pair of shoes and the manufacturer producing it in China, for example. But just like investment banks are now suffering as much from the fall in ongoing business as sub-prime write-offs, the inexorable economic slowdown will eventually have an impact on oil demand.

But at the same time the Gulf States are likely to benefit from the offsetting impact of emergency measures designed to keep the US economy afloat. This year we have already seen the effect of seven interest rate cuts by the Federal Reserve on local inflation rates because of the dollar peg. If the financial crisis continues, as I think it almost certainly will do then the next stage will be a major correction on Wall Street for equity and credit markets.

The dilemma for the Federal Reserve will then be acute: will it risk higher inflation by further cutting interest rates? Or hold fast and bankrupt some financial institutions and cause a systemic financial collapse? Put like that there is only one choice, and that will be to lower interest rates again and suffer the inflationary consequences. Interest rates rises will be discussed but never implemented for the same reasons. And the US might end up with a decade of zero growth like Japan in the 1990s.

Where does this leave the Gulf States? Probably still with high oil prices and even lower interest rates, and that will allow the real estate boom to rage onwards and keep inflation very high. Eventually the US economy will most likely recover sufficiently to allow the inflation genie to be put back into the bottle, as Fed chairman Paul Volcker did in the early 1980s. But it is very hard to see how any rational policy maker could attempt this in the middle of what many observers characterize as the worst financial crisis since the Second World War.

For it is the loose monetary policy of the Federal Reserve in response to the US housing crisis and its financial counterpart the sub-prime crisis that has fanned oil prices higher and ratcheted up the economic boom in the Middle East with low interest rates, and until there is a decisive change in that policy stance the region will continue to enjoy its best economic growth since the 1970s.

Even a serious geopolitical event would only serve to spike oil prices higher and further undermine the Fed’s ability to reset interest rates to the level needed to deliver stable prices. For the time being the US economic slowdown remains a positive for the Gulf States, and only a much deeper economic recession will seriously dampen oil prices and impact regional prosperity.

June 22, 2008

Flying First Class on an Emirates A340-500

Filed under: Video — peterjcooper @ 2:40 pm

While the arrival of the A380 superjumbo next month is eagerly awaited in Dubai, this video is a nice reminder of the level of comfort already achieved on the airline. Is is not bad in economy either!

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