The First Half
Thus far, the high-return standouts
have been volatile Russian steel magnate Mechel
(NYSE: MTL) and our gold plays. (See VRI,
June 26, 2008, Still Glittering.) As we’ve pointed out in previous issues, Mechel
has a major advantage over its rivals: the ability to control costs with its
control over supplies of metallurgical coal, iron ore and even electricity.
That’s allowed it to benefit from surging demand for steel in Russia and Eastern Europe,
particularly with its solid connections to authorities in those countries.
Gold, meanwhile, took a
tumble earlier in the year, largely on the rebound in the US dollar. Over the
past couple of weeks, however, our trio of plays has bounced back strongly on
the chaos and inflation fears in the market, particularly major producer Goldcorp (NYSE: GG), which finished
June up by more than 50 percent year to date.
The year has also seen strong
performances from diversified miner Rio
Tinto (NYSE: RTP), which remains a takeover target of Australian giant BHP Billiton (NYSE: BHP). Anglo American (NSDQ: AAUK) and Xstrata (OTC: XSRAF) benefited from takeover
rumors as well as continued strength in the price of copper and other key
commodities.
Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold (NYSE: FCX) also had a huge run back from early-year
weakness on takeover talk, as did the giant that could make an attempt to
acquire it in the second half of 2008, Companhia
Vale do Rio Doce (NYSE: RIO, CVRD).
Our stake in agricultural
resources was a mixed bag, reflecting the ups and downs in that sector.
Overall, however, it was a major plus. The far-and-away winner was biotechnology
leader Syngenta (NYSE: SYT). But we
also captured respectable gains from China
Green Holdings (Hong Kong: 904, OTC:
CIGEF) and enjoyed a massive one-day comeback from The Andersons (NSDQ: ANDE), which in late June announced a
dramatically improved outlook for full year 2008.
We also realized a healthy
gain in PowerShares DB Agriculture Fund (AMEX: DBA), an exchange traded
fund of four major commodities. That more than offset the small losses we saw
in Sino-Forest (Canada: TRE, OTC: SNOFF) and water play Hyflux (Singapore: HYF, OTC: HYFXF).
Our largest losses were in Alumina (NYSE: AWC), China Molybdenum (Hong
Kong: 3993, OTC: CMCLF), Du
Pont (NYSE: DD) and Posco (NYSE:
PKX). Alumina and Posco were affected by rising commodity input prices. China
Molybdenum’s drop, meanwhile, appears to have more to do with the overall
pullback in Asian markets, while as a major US
blue chip Du Pont has been something of a casualty of overall US weakness.
Moving On
Volatility is the nature of
vital resource markets, and we’ve certainly seen that this year. On the one
hand, prices of a full range of commodities have relentlessly pushed higher, as
it’s become increasingly obvious global demand is relentless and cheap supplies
ever more elusive. On the other, any hint of global economic weakness has been
enough to send producer stocks crashing, and we saw that this week in
abundance.
We don’t see any reason not
to expect more of the same in the second half of 2008. In fact, this past week
we saw clearly that investor sentiment can turn negative even if commodity
prices rise, as worry increases that the economy will be unable to bear the
strain.
We’re clearly on dangerous
ground here. And any market that rises in parabolic fashion is prone to a
nearly equally gut-wrenching reversal.
Regardless of what daily
volatility brings, however, we do have two very big advantages. First, the
foundation of this bull market in vital resources is wholly intractable: insatiable
demand from developing nations–particularly in Asia–that’s
been growing for decades and will for years to come, accompanied by the fact
that easy-to-get-at sources of key commodities are increasingly scarce.
Second, as is the case for
any market, the best stocks will always outperform. Our top-performing picks
have definitely shown their stuff in a tough environment, and will do even
better when recession fears subside. And even the weaker performers remain
extremely solid and ready to surge.
Media hype notwithstanding,
the first nine months for Vital Resource
Investor haven’t been particularly noteworthy for commodities in general.
That’s evidenced by the basically flat performance of the indexes we benchmark
against.
Rather, what we’ve been able
to realize in profits is the result of outperformance of individual companies
we’ve analyzed from the ground up. We’ve done well, not because of an overall
bullish trend, but rather because individual selections have far outperformed.
Looking ahead to the second
half of 2008, we can see plenty of risk to global markets for vital resources,
in general. Economic weakness in the US, for example, is likely to worsen, as
businesses and consumers wrestle with rising costs and the US financial
system’s excessive leverage continues to wash out. Meanwhile, China and other
developing nations will increasingly work to get a grip on inflation, which
will almost surely have a negative impact on demand for vital commodities.
A rebound in the US dollar–however
short-lived–could also have a significant impact. And of course, any time
investors get fearful of recession, they’re going to dump any perceived to be
economically sensitive en masse. And as we saw this week, vital resource stocks–no
matter how solid they are–are the first targets.
These are reasons why we’ve
periodically advised taking profits in positions. But the long trend is as much
in our favor as ever. As we said at the outset of this advisory, our goal is to
take the maximum advantage of the call on resources that’s coming from emerging
Asia, central and eastern Europe, the Middle East and Latin America, as well as
the increasing scarcity of economic supplies due to logistical challenges and
resurgent resource nationalism.
That remains our primary goal
with Vital Resource Investor. And
doing that means riding out the day-to-day turbulence that’s so much a part of
this market.
We’ve advised taking profits
on several positions during the past nine months and have made a handful of
sells besides. This we’ll continue to do going forward. And we’ll occasionally
sell a company that doesn’t appear to be measuring up to our standards.
The best way to profit from
this bull market will be the same as it’s been the last nine months. That’s
choosing good businesses with strong growth prospects in a wide range of areas
and holding as vital resource prices rise and the market recognized their true
value. That’s where our focus will continue to lie.
Our four areas are as
follows. For the complete list of our recommendations, see the Portfolio table.
Note that original recommendations can be accessed from the Web site archives
by looking at the issue matching the date of the original recommendation.
- Base Metals–The building blocks of all development and economic growth.
- Precious Metals–Particularly gold, which has emerged as the world’s fourth currency of note, after the US dollar, the euro and the Swiss franc.
- Agriculture and Water–This business is winning from growing global demand for food as well as rising energy demand.
- Steel and Other Raw Materials–Infrastructure investment is crucial for supporting global growth.
Stock Talk
Add New Comments
You must be logged in to post to Stock Talk OR create an account