Markets north of the border are closed Tuesday in observance of
Canada Day,
a federal holiday marking the joining of the British colonies of Nova
Scotia, New Brunswick and the Province of Canada into a federation of
four provinces (the Province of Canada being divided, in the process,
into Ontario and Quebec) on July 1, 1867.
(
Here’s a less-official, more-entertaining explanation.)
Canada can also celebrate what’s been a great first six months of 2008.
Two
weeks ago, we wrote of an emerging disparity between North America’s
major equity markets, noting that Canada’s economy will never decouple
from the US but that the major indexes tracking the respective
financial markets are reflecting economic realities. The S&P/TSX
Composite Index, about half of which constitutes energy-leveraged
stocks, has basically held its ground in US dollar terms in 2008,
posting a first-half gain of 0.8 percent. The S&P 500, reflecting
the relative dominance of US financials in its composition, is off 13.4
percent.
Meanwhile, the marker we’re most cheered by and the
source of our own Canadian celebration, the S&P/TSX Income Trust
Index, is up 15.3 percent during the first six months of 2008.
Source: BloombergIt,
too, is heavily weighted to oil and gas stocks. The difference maker
thus far in 2008, as far as Canadian energy trusts are concerned, is
the rebound in the price of natural gas. Natural gas-focused trusts
Advantage Energy Income Fund (NYSE: AAV, TSX: AVN.UN) and
Paramount Energy Trust (TSX: PMT.UN, OTC: PMGYF) have both generated 2008 returns in excess of 50 percent on the strength of natural gas.
Advantage,
weighted 67 percent to gas, peaked well before the Halloween 2006
income trust tax announcement and continued to slide; Paramount, which
is 100 percent focused on gas, traded above CAD23 before hitting a
bottom around CAD6 at the end of 2007.
Source: BloombergThis
year’s gains are heartening, but at the same time, they raise the
question of when the celebration will end. It’s a question raised in
the June 2008 issue of
Canadian Edge: How do you treat an investment that’s really taken off?
You Can Still Make Money Even if the Stock Market Is Falling
Our portfolio is up 22.3% so far this year, and that’s before you count the dividends, which average over 10%!
This is no fluke –– I have consistently given my readers double-digit returns since 1987 in some of the safest investments around.
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That
query is best framed by two interrelated megatrends: Asia’s emergence
and the concomitant energy bull market. Emerging markets and developing
economies have accounted for nearly 95 percent of the increased demand
for oil since 2003. Commodity prices are tightly linked to
globalization; rapid growth in emerging-market economies, particularly
in Asia, is driving most of the gains.
The emergence is best
described by sustained growth in per-capita income, rapid
industrialization and more intensive use of commodities in production.
A 2007 Bank of Canada working paper concluded that “industrial activity
in Asia now appears to be the dominant driver of oil-price movements.”
And China alone will be the world’s largest energy consumer by 2010.
We’ll
know soon enough the impact of slowing G7 growth on the emerging
economies. But the forces at work in Asia—and in other emerging
regions—will be difficult to contain. At any rate, Canada will be a
critical supplier of energy.
How to Be a Billionaire
Stephen Schwarzman is the co-founder and chairman of The Blackstone Group, a featured speaker at elite events such as the annual World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland and, in 2007, one of Time magazine’s 100 most influential people in the world.
In
a post kicking off the second half of 2008, self-described foolish
idealist Barry Ritholtz yearns for a return to rationality won hard by
thorough, unforgiving self-appraisal.
Then he points us to Schwarzman’s diagnosis of the current market malaise: It’s the accountants, silly! Here’s Barry:
You see, those persnickety bean counters forced banks and brokers to actually write down paper for which there was no market.
Therein
lies the foible of Schwarzman's Folly, for if you own marketable
securities for which there is no market, then by definition, these are
not really marketable securities.
How then to price all of
this paper on the books? Why, just rely on the people who bought them
in the first place! Never mind that they don't understand what they
own, they failed to do their due diligence before buying this garbage
in the first place. Do not acknowledge these folks have an enormous
personal incentives NOT to mark this junk down.
You can trust them! They're good people.
(Italics are his.)
FAS 157
took effect Nov. 15, 2007, still in the early stages of the global
credit crisis brought on by the meltdown of the US subprime mortgage
market. It requires that certain assets held by financial
companies—including those among the alphabet soup of complex,
structured products such as collateralized debt obligation (CDO)—be
marked to market. The company holding such assets must value the assets
at the price it could sell the asset on the open market.
Water Wars –– Georgia Invades Tennessee?
When Atlanta’s Lake Lanier all but dried up, Georgia’s Governor threatened to move his state’s border 2 miles north so he could divert water from the Tennessee River.
Water wars are legendary and water is once again becoming a very valuable resource. Take a look:
Last year Bloomberg’s Asia Pacific Water Index was the #1 performing index out of all 2,111 indexes it tracks — up an astounding 237% and 64% ahead of #2.
Click here for details on my top water pick and your chance to cash in on this dwindling resource.
FAS
157 disallows, in most cases, the valuing of an asset based on a
theoretical, computer-generated price. But the market for CDOs, for
example, has dried up. So banks must mark the value of such assets
down, perhaps all the way down.
The billionaire’s argument is that it just isn’t fair. Click
here for the rest of the story.
Barry for PMWere an election held today,
Barack Obama would be the next prime minister of Canada.
Speaking Engagements
“The coldest winter
I ever spent was a summer in San Francisco,” a saying that’s almost a
San Francisco cliche, turns out to be an invention of unknown origin,
the coolest thing Mark Twain never said.
The natural setting is,
however, among the most exciting in the US. Venture west for the San
Francisco Money Show Aug. 7-10, 2008, and conduct your own field study.
Neil
George, Elliott Gue and I will discuss infrastructure, partnerships,
utilities, resources and energy, and tell you what to buy and what to
sell in 2008.
Click here or
call 800-970-4355 and refer to priority code 011362 to attend as our guest.
I
also have a special invitation for readers to join me and my colleagues
Elliott Gue, Gregg Early and Neil George aboard an exciting 11-day
investment cruise Dec. 1-12 through the Caribbean and Panama Canal.
This
will be a unique opportunity to step away from your daily routines,
relax in one of the most beautiful parts of the world and share
analysts’ knowledge and passion for the markets. During the sail,
you’ll not only explore the cerulean splendor of the Caribbean, but
you’ll also delve deep into current markets in search of the most
profitable opportunities for your portfolios. You’ll also have the rare
chance to sail through one of the world’s engineering marvels, the
Panama Canal.
It’s always a special treat to meet and talk with
subscribers in person, and we couldn’t have picked a better setting
than aboard the six-star Crystal Serenity. This is sure to be an
especially memorable experience. We hope you’ll join us.
For more information, please call
877-238-1270.
Roger Conrad
Roger S. Conrad is
editor of Utility Forecaster, the nation’s
leading advisory on essential services stocks, bonds and preferred stocks. His
proprietary safety rating system evaluates the prospects of every significant
electric, natural gas, telecommunications and water company, including
utility-based mutual funds and foreign utilities. Roger’s penchant for detailed
research and his studied insights into utilities markets have garnered him a
wide audience of subscribers—not to mention a bevy of industry awards for his
perceptive reporting, commentary and investment advice.
He brings the same
enthusiasm and intelligence to Roger Conrad’s Canadian Edge,
an Internet-based publication devoted to uncovering lucrative investment
opportunities in Canadian royalty trusts. Roger’s exhaustive coverage of how
recent changes to Canada’s tax laws will affect these companies has earned him
a reputation as one of the leading authorities on Canadian trusts. Subscribers
and the national media often contact him for information on the latest economic
developments and investment opportunities north of the border.
Roger is also
associate editor of Personal Finance and co-editor of Vital Resource
Investor, a subscription-based service that seeks opportunities for equity
investors in the natural resource markets across the world.
He holds a bachelor’s
degree from Emory University and a master’s degree in international management
from the American Graduate School of International Management (Thunderbird). In
addition, he is the author of Power Hungry: Strategic Investing in
Telecommunications, Utilities and Other Essential Services and coauthor of The
Agile Investor and Market Timing for the Nineties with Stephen Leeb.
He is also an avid outdoorsman and baseball fan.
View all articles by Roger Conrad