Hot
Commodities
by
Doug French
by Doug French
Talk
to any financial advisor or read a book about saving for retirement
and the word diversification comes up time and time again. Diversify,
diversify, and diversify. Like your mom told you: don’t put all
of your eggs in one basket.
For
too many people, diversification means putting a certain percentage
of your money in stocks and the rest in bonds. But, what’s a person
to do when stocks are overvalued on a historical basis and bond
yields are near all time lows? Clearly neither asset class is a
bargain and retirement is just around the corner.
World
traveler and legendary investor Jim Rogers says the next bull market
will be in commodities and provides a primer for those who really
want to diversify with his new book, Hot
Commodities: How Anyone Can Invest Profitably in the World’s Best
Market.
Rogers
was the big idea man behind the Quantum Fund. While the other co-founder
George Soros did the trading, Rogers provided the history and economic
knowledge for Quantum and the fund generated a 4,000 percent return
in the 1970’s, allowing Rogers to retire.
Despite
his prescient market calls and success, Rogers is generally viewed
as a maverick at best and just plain crazy at worst. On the Saturday
morning FOX investment shows he is typically ridiculed for both
his investment and political views. While the other guests are providing
the same warmed-over stock recommendations, Rogers tells viewers
to stay away from stocks and start investing in things.
"Nearly
every time I strayed from the herd, I’ve made a lot of money,"
writes Rogers in the books introduction. "But, when you make
some money going against the grain, you’re no longer crazy; you’re
just ‘lucky.’"
Why
commodities now? Well, actually commodities have been doing better
than stocks, bonds and even real estate for the past few years.
But, commodity bull markets take a couple of decades to play out,
so Rogers thinks there is still plenty of time to get in.
First
of all, when the government prints money incessantly, its value
falls and the price of things goes up. As Rogers points out: "With
the White House in a race with the Federal Reserve to spend money
faster than the Fed can print it, the dollar is shakier than ever."
Unfortunately, Rogers sees no other currencies that are any better
than the dollar.
But
most important, when the demand for commodities like oil, sugar,
lead and coffee increases due to new demand from China for instance,
increasing the supply of any of these commodities is far from a
snap. It takes years to gain approvals for mine construction and
then more time to build the mines and start producing. It takes
years before a coffee seedling begins to produce. Oil production
has peaked in Rogers’ view. And, the primary producer of sugar Brazil devotes
much of its supply to the production of ethanol when oil prices
are high.
China
is the primary force on the demand side of the commodities equation
according to Rogers. The twenty-first century will belong to the
Chinese and they will dominate the world economy. As the predominately
rural Chinese population becomes more urban, their consumption of
commodities will skyrocket. China is already the number one consumer
of: copper, steel, iron ore and soybeans, and, number two in oil
consumption.
It
will be a bumpy ride for China, but the upside is enormous. Only
four percent of the Chinese people own cars, the population's sugar
consumption is less than one sixth that of the US, and the annual
per capita coffee consumption in China is less than half a pound
while Americans drink 20 gallons a year.
Goldbugs
will be disappointed with Rogers who feels that "following
an obsession is not the best investment philosophy." In fact,
Rogers would like to stand the Alchemist’s Dream on its head and
turn gold into lead. While lead production continues to go down,
"the search for gold reportedly accounted for 75 percent
of the total ongoing exploration for the world’s largest mining
companies," Rogers writes. "It is as if mining professionals
were as gaga over gold as the general public." And, at the
same time demand for the yellow metal is tepid, demand for lead,
an essential component to SVI vehicle batteries, is growing.
While
most of the book is devoted to the big picture of why commodities
are in a bull market and will continue so, Rogers spends a couple
of chapters on the various vehicles available to investors and the
arcane terminology used in futures trading.
Rogers
scoffs at the old canard that commodities are risky and backs his
opinion up with results from a 2004 study from the Yale School of
Management’s Center for International Finance. According to the
study, not only do commodities have less risk than stocks and bonds,
they provide better returns, are negatively correlated to stocks
and bonds and positively correlated to inflation. The study also
found that commodities futures returned triple the gains that investing
in the stocks of commodities companies did.
Rogers
cautions the reader that one can’t invest in commodities blindly.
Research is required to get "lucky." Hot Commodities
is the best place to start your research into how to truly diversify
your assets and ride this decades bull market.
January
18, 2005
Doug
French [send him mail]
is executive vice president of a Nevada bank and a policy fellow
of the Nevada Policy Research Institute.
Copyright
© 2005 LewRockwell.com
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