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Sell now and then what?
I
think over again my small adventures, my fears, these small
ones that seemed so big. For all the vital things I had to
get and to reach. And yet there is only one great thing, the
only thing. To live to see the great day that dawns and the
light that fills the world.
Inuit
Song
If you dump everything you own now, perhaps you will be able
to sleep better in the short term. You will however be
selling at probably the low end of the range and taking a
huge loss. You will also be giving up long term value for
the short term illusion of peace. Putting this money in the
bank to earn 2% a year is not going to provide you with any
opportunity to recoup these losses; holding on and taking
small bites will definitely offer you the chance to recover
this money and more. History has shown that investing in the
stock market over the long haul has beaten every other form
of investing
It is quite clear to those who are long term commodities
bulls that the world is not finding massive new supplies of
oil, or massive new fields of gold, copper, Uranium, etc.
One cannot just go out and decide that today they would like
to find a new oil field, or build a new nuclear power plant,
or open a new coal mine; these things take time. Thus if
you sell everything now, basically as an investor you are
stating that you believe that the commodities bull is over
and that supplies of energy will be endless in the years to
come. In essence for short term peace of mind, (can it
really be peace of mind when you are forced to bail out of
your positions because of fear) you are sacrificing long
term value and long term profits.
Margin; one of the main culprits
Well the ones dumping everything are the ones who invested
on margin. The main culprits here are hedge funds, large
speculators and investors who have lost control of their
money and now are giving into fear. The biggest sellers are
those that are getting margin calls; investing on margin is
a very dangerous game and it is something we are strongly
against. If used, it should be used sparingly and with tight
stops and with pre determined exit points as you are using
money that does not belong to you. Some of the biggest
investors in the commodities sector, especially the energy
sector were hedge funds and these hedge funds are also some
of the biggest sellers; essentially clients are asking for
all their money back. In order to give the clients what
they want, these firms have to raise cash and that means
selling everything and anything in order to meet these
redemption calls. Now do you really want to be selling when
these massive funds are dumping everything? In terms of fear
no one can state that they have not experienced some moments
of uncertainty (even we would not be so stupid and arrogant
to state that we felt nothing during this hard correction),
but if you are not using margins and this money is not
something that you need for your daily expenses, then it
does not make sense to sell now and offer someone else a
bargain of a life time. One thing all the sellers have in
common is lack of patience; they want a solution to the
problem right now, even at the risk of selling tomorrow
in order to feel better today.
Opportunity
This credit crisis has actually been going on for over 12
months now; it just picked up speed when companies were
forced to tell the truth and investors responded by
panicking. As this credit crisis started a quite sometime
ago, on the same token we could be closer to a turn around
then most anticipate. Note that there are already signs that
the credit markets are easing; 3 month Libor rates have
started to drop once again.
If you are not someone who needs the money right away, then
the most prudent thing you can do is to take a long term
view. Note what Warren Buffet had to say on this subject
not too long ago.
"So ... I've been buying American stocks. This is my
personal account I'm talking about, in which I previously
owned nothing but United States government bonds. (This
description leaves aside my Berkshire Hathaway holdings,
which are all committed to philanthropy)." "If prices
keep looking attractive, my non-Berkshire net worth will
soon be 100 percent in United States equities.” The
reason, he said, is a key maxim in his outlook: "A simple
rule dictates my buying: Be fearful when others are greedy,
and be greedy when others are fearful.”
Most certainly, fear is now widespread, gripping even
seasoned investors. To be sure, investors are right to be
wary of highly leveraged entities or businesses in weak
competitive positions. But fears regarding the long-term
prosperity of the nation's many sound companies make no
sense," Buffett said.
Full Story
So here we have it, Mr. Buffet openly stating up to 100% of
his personal net worth (non Berkshire net worth) could soon
be invested in United States Securities; this is not just
any simpleton talking, it just happens to be the world’s
richest man.
The future
There are 6.5 billion people on this planet and rising; all
these individuals need food and basic necessities that
cannot be cut back on; some examples are rice, wheat, sugar,
cocoa, oil, natural gas, copper, zinc, silver, coal,
electricity, and the list goes on. Hence there is simply no
way long term demand for commodities is going to dry up.
Right now one could state that the entire world is
essentially on sale; in fact we have a fire sale going on
right now, where everything is being sold at a huge discount
to its true intrinsic value. Take TCK for example, it is
·
The world’s leading zinc
miner
·
The world’s second largest
nickel miner
·
Through its interest in Elk
Valley Coal, the world’s second largest producer of seaborne
hard coking coal
·
The world’s largest indium
producer; this metal is a rather rare meal
·
A Major producer of copper,
gold, silver, platinum, palladium, cobalt and molybdenum
·
It is also a decent sized
player in the oil Tar sands sector
This company right is now selling for going for less than 10
bucks; a few months ago it was trading around 52 dollars.
Does anyone think that this company will be selling for this
price 3, 6, or 10 years from now? We would ask the same
question of many other top companies in the commodities
sector.
One does not only have to invest in resource based
companies, there are many companies out there that are flush
with cash, with low P/E’s and whose share prices have been
unfairly punished; in the long run these companies are going
to be trading significantly higher.
|
Stock |
P/E |
Cash at
hand |
Cash per
share |
|
XOM |
9.20 |
39.7billion |
$7.63 |
|
HPQ |
11.8 |
14.5
Billion |
$6.06 |
|
CSCO |
13.8 |
26.2
Billion |
$4.44 |
|
AET |
6.85 |
1.27
billion |
$2.63 |
|
APA |
6.67 |
1 billion
|
$3.05 |
|
IBM |
11.4 |
9.8 billion
|
$7.26 |
|
VLO |
4.09 |
1.64
billion |
$3.14 |
Conclusion
It’s not only about fear now, for no one can honestly state
that they have not experienced moments when it looked like
fear would completely overwhelm them, with the possibility
of transforming into the even more sinister emotion Panic.
What we are dealing with now is blind panic and panic only
stops when it has run its course. Fear can be fought but
panic cannot be controlled. It is not easy to look at the
long term picture in the midst of all this negativity, but
go back in history and try to find out one time the majority
was right in the long run and you will find it almost
impossible to spot even one event.
Finally this 700 billion plus stimulus plan is going to have
huge inflationary effects in the not to distant future; one
cannot create so much money and expect nothing to change.
To add even more fire to the flames, Bernake has hinted at
the possibility of even more interest rate cuts. We were
bullish on the dollar when almost everyone else was bearish
but this does not mean we are forever bulls; (current upside
targets on the dollar are in the 90-92 ranges and a possible
spike to the 93-96 ranges); this rally will eventually end
and the dollar will start to decline again. The one
difference this time is the possibility of all Major
currencies falling down in unison, for the entire world is
now inflating its money supply at an unbelievable rate.
When you couple this effect with normal demand, the
implications for commodities are extremely bullish. At this
point in time traders should consider buying rather than
selling into weakness; take small nibbles instead of big
bites.
Traders have to remember that commodities are dug out of the
earth or produced as in growing them (agricultural
commodities) and not just created out of thin air. The more
severe this crunch gets the more mines will scale back their
operations (it takes a long time to re open mines that have
shut down) and when demand surges again, as it will, it will
take time to re open these mines and in the meantime prices
will soar. In the gold sector, supplies have been declining
for several years in a row and no major new fields have been
discovered. The uranium sector has been beaten down so much
that many companies will soon start to shut down operations
and if the current trend continues many might be put out of
business; this is going to take place just when firms should
be deploying huge amounts of money into exploration in order
to be in a position to meet long term demand. In the oil
sector, OPEC will probably over react and cut down supplies
a lot more than they should. When one couples this with the
fact that worldwide production of oil is falling it is a
long term recipe for significantly higher prices and believe
it or not, the high of 147 will look like a joke in the
years to come. We remember how everyone thought we were
nuts when we predicted oil would trade past 45, when it was
trading under 30 dollars and then past 90 and then 120. Our
conservative high end estimate for oil is still 300 dollars
per barrel.
Finally one needs to talk about the “fear
factor”
Fear
is feeding of fear and then it accelerates and turns into
blind panic; individuals who really have no need for the
money right now are selling top assets at rock bottom prices
because they feel the markets are going to crash to Zero.
This same theme has repeated itself for generations and in
the end the result has always been the same; the majority
have lost, they have never been right and the chaps that
looked at disaster as an opportunity are the ones that did
well. We are not advocating that one should just run out
there and dump all their money into stocks now that they
have dropped so far, but starting to nibble at certain
sectors would not be a bad idea.
These
viewpoints are not our own subjective ones but viewpoints
that are gleamed from examining history and other remarkable
individuals, who all had one thing in common; they resisted
the urge to follow the masses at any cost. As we have
stated again and again, times are not easy and it is hard to
sit down and calmly examine the situation when you are in
the midst of chaos and extreme negativity. If one does
nothing to fight fear, it is impossible to overcome. One
has to make sure that one does not allow oneself to be
constantly bombarded with negative news and negative people;
remember misery simply loves and adores company, while
peace and happiness are usually solitary players.
Is
it easy to do this? No it is really hard, at times you
really have to battle the desire to give in for it feels
good to have company, but in such moments company can be
very dangerous unless it is the right company. The easiest
way to do this is to simply ask your self the following
questions? Do I need this money to eat and survive now? Will
I get a terrible price if I sell now? If the answers are no
and yes, then avoid constantly following the news, do your
job, and when you have free time, perhaps consider reading
some good books or doing something other than looking at the
markets. Fear has never ever led to anything good. Go back
and examine all your actions and then look at the ones that
were based on fear, 9 out of 10 times you will find that
those actions led to further problems; the only time fear
can be somewhat helpful is when one is physically in danger
and needs to act fast.
Whenever the
situation goes out of control, experts come out and state
things are different this time and the situation is going to
get a lot worse and that there is no light at the end of the
tunnel. However has anyone paid attention to how they come
out and make exactly the opposite comments the moment the
markets are putting in new highs and when everyone is happy,
they find ways to justify these extreme values by saying
things are different this time. One clear recent example is
the current housing bust. Whenever the phrase “it is
different this time” is used try not to pay attention,
for history clearly illustrates that those that reacted when
they heard this phrase, were always left holding an empty
bag.
Fear is fear
and it will always produce the same reaction; left
uncontrolled it turns into panic. Panic knows no limits,
works with no logic, is completely uncontrollable and only
ends due to exhaustion; this has happened before, this is
what will happen now and this is what will happen in the
future. Humans are wired to react adversely to panic; the
only way to defuse this time bomb is to prevent fear from
turning into panic. The only way to do that is to knock fear
down the moment it raises its head; it’s not an easy thing
to do, for if it were, everyone would be rich.
''Come to the edge,'' He said. They said, ''We are afraid.''
''Come to the edge,'' He said. They came. He pushed them...
and they flew.
Guillaume Apollinaire, 1880-1918, Italian-born French Poet,
Critic
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