Silver Margin Requirements Hike: A Timeline

Today we had a pretty big decline in the price of silver and gold: almost a 7% decline. And by coincidence the timeline is precisely 5 months between each margin requirement hike.

The first big drop in the price of precious metals came on 02 May 2011.
The second big drop in the price of precious metals came on 23 September 2011 on top of another margin requirement hike and operation twist.
This time, something fishy is happening, but I can’t tell what. Maybe another margin requirement hike?
Maybe because of Bernanke’s testimony?

=> Bernanke Speech
=> Ron Paul at the Bernanke Testimony

The timing of course, is a pure coincidence. I’m wondering if they are trying to manipulate it down for a third time. We’ll see…

Timeline of Margin Requirement Hikes in Silver/Gold (PSLV)

Japan: Equities to outperform Bonds

Marc Faber told us to buy Japanese equities last year, saying that government bonds in Japan would underperform equities. One of his stock picks was Nomura Holdings (NMR), which has a dividend of 2% and price to book ratio of 0.65. Its last quarter net earnings were $US 200 million, but has had big losses in the previous quarters. Nomura is a speculative play on Japanese equities, but I believe Japan is undervalued by investors.

I fully concur with Marc Faber to buy Japanese equities, and the best play for this is Nomura Holdings. If people start loving Japanese equities, Nomura will flourish as it is the primary brokerage service in Japan. To see why equities will outperform bonds, go here: Nomura Holdings: Japanese Equities to outperform Bonds.

Strength in currency: a good thing?

Today I was thinking about the yen dropping against other currencies. Mostly, such things happen when governments print money. But also when countries post deficits in their current account balance.

The mechanics are as follows:
A country exports stuff to other countries and receives money in foreign currency. Let’s say Japan exports Playstations to America and receives US dollars. Japan will of course want yen, and will exchange those US dollars into yen so that they can buy things with yen in their own country Japan.

If Japan exports more to the US as the US exports to Japan, then more money will flow to Japan than to the US. So more US dollars flow to Japan as yen flow to the US. Which means more US dollars need to be converted into yen, which makes the yen rise.

Conversely, when Japan has a trade deficit, like today, then the yen will drop against other currencies out there. So basically you want your currency to strengthen, which indicates that your balance sheet is improving.

Strength in currency:
Strength in currency has other positive effects. If your currency is higher than other currencies then you can buy more stuff. Let’s say the oil price is $US 100/barrel. If the yen goes up against the US dollar, the oil price is still the same, but Japanese people can buy more oil, which means their import costs go down, which is good for their balance sheet.

People will say though, if your currency goes up, you will export less. I think this is a complete baloney! When your currency goes up, you can always reduce the prices of your goods that you sell to foreigners. You will have less revenue (because you sold for a lower price), but your currency went up (which means you didn’t lose any money). You will still have the same real revenue as a company, currency adjusted. Of course, when you reduce the price of your goods sold, you should also reduce the wages of your employees, otherwise costs will go up. But the employees shouldn’t have a problem with this, because they still have the same buying power as their currency just went up against other foreign currencies. And if they had money in the bank, that money just went up in value against other currencies.

Generally, companies will benefit though, because their import costs went down due to a strenghtening currency.

Conclusion:
When your currency goes up you will always benefit:
1) You can buy more stuff (oil, food, gold…)
2) Exports will NOT go down as you can always reduce prices of your goods sold, and reduce wages of your employees. Import costs will go down as the currency went up against other currencies.
3) Employees aren’t affected as their reduced wages are compensated by a higher currency. Their buying power stays the same.
4) Savings in their own currency will appreciate in value.

I would love to have a discussion with anyone who doesn’t concur with this thesis.

Allana Potash: Lowest Cost Producer

Agricultural prices have been bottoming out since 2012 after a large decline in 2011 as I already pointed out here. Similarly, many potash producers have seen a huge decline in their stock prices. Once the trend changes, it will be time to buy back into the potash sector. One of the best speculative investments out there is Allana Potash (ALLRF.pk).

To see why this is go to: Allana Potash: Undervalued Potash Producer of the Future

Vista Gold: Concordia turns into a catalyst

Vista Gold (VGZ) has been in the spotlights because of Eric Sprott’s involvement in the company (5 million shares or 7% of the company). Recently Sun Valley Gold invested quite a big amount in Vista Gold (6 million shares).

Vista Gold’s market cap is $US 250 million. The company has no debt and has a working capital of $US 25 million. Its management is very experienced (all around 30 years of experience).

To see my analysis go to: Why Vista Gold is Extremely Undervalued

Vista Gold (VGZ)

US Real Estate a Bargain?

On 20 January 2012, the National Association of Home Builders showed confidence in the housing market rose for a fourth month in January to the highest level since June 2007.

There are many reasons why I follow Marc Faber’s market outlook and this is one of them. He is mostly right in his predictions.
A few months ago, Marc Faber told us that US real estate was a bargain. And look what happened, the housing market index improved. Housing starts also improved more than forecasted.

Housing Market Index

As a result the iShares Dow Jones US Real Estate (IYR) has been doing quite well over the last years.

iShares Dow Jones US Real Estate (IYR)

There has been evidence of houses in the US with multiple bedrooms, swimming pools, etc… that can be bought for only $US 150000. That is a real bargain if you compare that to where I live (Belgium), where you can only buy a medium sized appartment for $US 200000.

I don’t recommend buying US real estate as I know interest rates in the US will go up. But compared to other countries (housing bubble in Belgium), real estate in the US is certainly not overpriced.

China: How Real Estate, Reserve Requirements, Yuan and US Treasuries interact

Real estate in China, which accounts for 13% of the Chinese economy, has been bottoming out since the beginning of 2012. China has been actively directing the bank reserve requirements and deposit rates since many years. What China is doing is not to be underestimated and I’ll show this in this article: China: How Real Estate, Reserve Requirements, Yuan and US treasuries interact