Situation: Commodity producers have a dismal record. Spot prices fall whenever mining (or drilling or harvesting) becomes more efficient. To make matters worse, supply-chain management and investment has become increasingly global and professionalized. Nonetheless, copper sales remain the best barometer of fixed-asset investment, particularly the ongoing proliferation of industrial plants and equipment in China. Silver has a growing role, thanks to the buildout of solar power. And gold remains a check on the propensity of government leaders everywhere to finance their dreams with debt, as opposed to revenue from taxes.
Mission: Use our Standard Spreadsheet to highlight the largest companies producing gold, silver, and copper.
Execution: see Table.
Administration: Gold and silver prices remain stuck where they were 35 years ago but are characterized by high volatility. Commodity prices (in the aggregate) trace supercycles that last approximately 20 years. The most recent came from a 1999 low and fell back to that level in 2016; since then it has ever so slowly risen from that low.
Bottom Line: The basic rule for commodity producers is that 3 years out of 30 will be good years, and you’ll make a lot of money. But over any 20-30 year period, you’ll lose money (measured by inflation-adjusted dollars). Our Table for this week confirms these points but does show that copper (SCCO) is worth an investor’s attention. But beware! That company’s share price is falling because of a falloff in trade with China and could fall further if a trade war takes hold.
Risk Rating: 10 (where 10-Yr US Treasury Notes = 1, S&P 500 = 5, and gold bullion = 10).
Full Disclosure: I do not have positions in any commodity producers aside from Exxon Mobil (XOM), but do dollar-average into the main provider of mining equipment: Caterpillar (CAT).
"The 2 and 8 Club" (CR) 2017 Invest Tune Retire.com All rights reserved.
Post questions and comments in the box below or send email to: irv.mcquarrie@InvestTuneRetire.com
Invest your funds carefully. Tune investments as markets change. Retire with confidence.
Showing posts with label silver. Show all posts
Showing posts with label silver. Show all posts
Sunday, September 9
Sunday, July 29
Week 369 - High Quality Producers & Transporters of Industrial Commodities in the 2017 Barron’s 500
Situation: Here in the U.S., debt/capita is growing at an alarming rate and is now greater than $60,000. U.S. Government debt is almost $20 Trillion and has been growing at a rate of 5.5%/yr (i.e., twice as fast as inflation) since 1990. By 2020, the Federal budget deficit will start to exceed $1 Trillion/Yr and the dollar’s status as the world’s reserve currency will be threatened. The gold reserves that stand behind the U.S. dollar (currently worth ~$185 Billion) would have to be increased on a regular basis, as would foreign currency reserves (currently worth ~$125 Billion)
The US economy is no longer capable of growing fast enough to balance the budget for even a single year, without introducing draconian measures. Nonetheless, it is worth noting that those can be effective given that Greece appears to have emerged from that process successfully. But the U.S. could not go through that process and still remain the “top dog” militarily. So, the trade-weighted value of the U.S. dollar will fall at some point, and we will no longer be able to afford imported goods and services. Before that happens, U.S. citizens will need to gradually move their retirement savings into commodity-related investments, as well as bonds and stocks issued in reserve currencies other than the U.S. dollar.
Mission: Use our Standard Spreadsheet to highlight large U.S. and Canadian companies that produce, refine and transport raw commodities, i.e., materials that are extracted from the ground. Select such companies from the 2017 Barron’s 500 list, but exclude any that issue bonds with an S&P rating lower than A- or stocks with an S&P rating lower than B+/M.
Execution: see Table.
Administration: The S&P Commodity Index has the following components and weightings:
Natural Gas (17.66%)
Unleaded Gas (12.16%)
Heating Oil (12.13%)
Crude Oil (11.41%)
Wheat (5.15%)
Live Cattle (4.87%)
Corn (4.48%)
Coffee (3.88%)
Soybeans (3.84%)
Sugar (3.80%)
Silver (3.67%)
Copper (3.39%)
Cotton (3.22%)
Soybean Oil (2.98%)
Cocoa (2.79%)
Soybean Meal (2.57%)
Lean Hogs (2.04%)
53.36% of the index represents petroleum products, 32.71% represents row crops, 7.06% represents industrial metals, and 6.91% represents live animals. Ground has to be mined, drilled, or planted & harvested with the help of heavy equipment to yield raw commodities. Those have to be transported by barge, rail, truck, or pipeline before being processed for market.
We find 8 companies that warrant inclusion in this week’s Table. Seven are obviously appropriate, but the presence of Berkshire Hathaway (BRK-B) needs some explanation (unless you already know it owns the Burlington Northern & Santa Fe railroad). Berkshire Hathaway is the largest shareholder of Phillips 66 (PSX), which has 13 oil refineries and supplies diesel for the largest marketing outlet of that fuel: Pilot Flying J Centers LLC. Berkshire Hathaway purchased 38.6% of that company’s stock on October 3, 2017, and plans to increase its stake in 2023 to 80%.
Bottom Line: Commodity futures haven’t been a good investment, given that their aggregate value is back to where it was 25 years ago, given that the most recent 20-year supercycle recently finished and another is just starting. Nonetheless, the companies that produce, process, and transport those commodities did well over those 25 years (see Column AB in Table). The problem is the volatility of their stocks (see Column M in the Table), and the extent to which their stocks get whacked when commodities become oversupplied relative to demand (see Column D in the Table). If you choose to own shares in these companies (aside from CNI, BRK-B and perhaps UNP), you’d be flat-out gambling.
Risk Rating: 7-9 (where US Treasury Notes = 1, S&P 500 Index = 5, and gold bullion = 10)
Full Disclosure: I dollar-average into UNP, ADM, CAT and XOM, and also own shares of CNI and BRK-B.
"The 2 and 8 Club" (CR) 2018 Invest Tune Retire.com All rights reserved.
Post questions and comments in the box below or send email to: irv.mcquarrie@InvestTuneRetire.com
The US economy is no longer capable of growing fast enough to balance the budget for even a single year, without introducing draconian measures. Nonetheless, it is worth noting that those can be effective given that Greece appears to have emerged from that process successfully. But the U.S. could not go through that process and still remain the “top dog” militarily. So, the trade-weighted value of the U.S. dollar will fall at some point, and we will no longer be able to afford imported goods and services. Before that happens, U.S. citizens will need to gradually move their retirement savings into commodity-related investments, as well as bonds and stocks issued in reserve currencies other than the U.S. dollar.
Mission: Use our Standard Spreadsheet to highlight large U.S. and Canadian companies that produce, refine and transport raw commodities, i.e., materials that are extracted from the ground. Select such companies from the 2017 Barron’s 500 list, but exclude any that issue bonds with an S&P rating lower than A- or stocks with an S&P rating lower than B+/M.
Execution: see Table.
Administration: The S&P Commodity Index has the following components and weightings:
Natural Gas (17.66%)
Unleaded Gas (12.16%)
Heating Oil (12.13%)
Crude Oil (11.41%)
Wheat (5.15%)
Live Cattle (4.87%)
Corn (4.48%)
Coffee (3.88%)
Soybeans (3.84%)
Sugar (3.80%)
Silver (3.67%)
Copper (3.39%)
Cotton (3.22%)
Soybean Oil (2.98%)
Cocoa (2.79%)
Soybean Meal (2.57%)
Lean Hogs (2.04%)
53.36% of the index represents petroleum products, 32.71% represents row crops, 7.06% represents industrial metals, and 6.91% represents live animals. Ground has to be mined, drilled, or planted & harvested with the help of heavy equipment to yield raw commodities. Those have to be transported by barge, rail, truck, or pipeline before being processed for market.
We find 8 companies that warrant inclusion in this week’s Table. Seven are obviously appropriate, but the presence of Berkshire Hathaway (BRK-B) needs some explanation (unless you already know it owns the Burlington Northern & Santa Fe railroad). Berkshire Hathaway is the largest shareholder of Phillips 66 (PSX), which has 13 oil refineries and supplies diesel for the largest marketing outlet of that fuel: Pilot Flying J Centers LLC. Berkshire Hathaway purchased 38.6% of that company’s stock on October 3, 2017, and plans to increase its stake in 2023 to 80%.
Bottom Line: Commodity futures haven’t been a good investment, given that their aggregate value is back to where it was 25 years ago, given that the most recent 20-year supercycle recently finished and another is just starting. Nonetheless, the companies that produce, process, and transport those commodities did well over those 25 years (see Column AB in Table). The problem is the volatility of their stocks (see Column M in the Table), and the extent to which their stocks get whacked when commodities become oversupplied relative to demand (see Column D in the Table). If you choose to own shares in these companies (aside from CNI, BRK-B and perhaps UNP), you’d be flat-out gambling.
Risk Rating: 7-9 (where US Treasury Notes = 1, S&P 500 Index = 5, and gold bullion = 10)
Full Disclosure: I dollar-average into UNP, ADM, CAT and XOM, and also own shares of CNI and BRK-B.
"The 2 and 8 Club" (CR) 2018 Invest Tune Retire.com All rights reserved.
Post questions and comments in the box below or send email to: irv.mcquarrie@InvestTuneRetire.com
Sunday, May 21
Week 307 - Silver Is Perhaps The Most Interesting Alternative Asset
Situation: Stocks and bonds have been at or near the tops of their historic valuations for over 5 years. No corner of those markets has been overlooked; “crowded trades” are everywhere. In such circumstances, investors will reach for value by looking at alternative asset classes. Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) are my favorite (see Week 274). The goal is to find assets that are a) “non-correlated”, i.e, have low Beta because price-action is often out-of-sync with the market, and b) have enough economic utility to occasionally generate Alpha, which is a high “return on investment that is not a result of general movement in the greater market.”
Why is silver interesting, given that it has only gained 3.9%/yr in value over the past 30 years? For comparison, the lowest-cost S&P 500 Index fund (VFINX) has gained 9.4%/yr and the lowest-cost investment-grade bond index fund (VBMFX) has gained 6.0%/yr. Reason #1: A key use for silver is growing exponentially, which is the build-out of solar power toward a United Nations goal of generating 30% of the planet’s electricity by 2030. Copper and aluminum can be used in solar panels instead of silver, but those substitutes are less efficient and have not proven to be commercially viable, partly because the amount of silver needed per solar panel continues to decrease.
Silver has a fascinating history. For example, in 1979 the Hunt brothers attempted to “corner” the silver market and were able to borrow enough money to buy 1/3rd of the world’s supply outside government hands. This resulted in more than a 700% price increase but brought attention to the high leverage used in purchasing commodities. After the commodity exchange (COMEX) adopted “Silver Rule 7” on January 7, 1980 (to restrict the ability of speculators to purchase commodities on margin), the price of silver promptly fell 50% and the Hunt brothers were unable to meet their bank’s margin call for $100 million. They ultimately declared bankruptcy.
Could this happen again? Yes. Silver prices fluctuate more dramatically than gold prices, since silver has greater industrial demand and lower market liquidity. The rapid proliferation of solar panels will no doubt aggravate that problem; sovereign wealth fund managers will be tempted to hoard silver. Let’s do the math. World silver reserves are just under 600,000 tons. Solar panels in currently contain ~2/3rds of an ounce of silver: A ton of silver is consumed to make ~44,000 solar panels, and 4 panels are needed to make a kilowatt-hour (kWh) of electricity. So, a ton of silver generates 11,000 kWh. A billion kWh = 1 TWh (terawatt-hour). Currently, ~21,000 TW are used every hour on our planet (https://yearbook.enerdata.net/electricity-domestic-consumption-data-by-region.html). A goal of producing 30% of electricity from solar panels by 2030 implies that those panels would need to generate ~11,000 TW per hour (after allowing for population growth). A ton of silver generates 11,000 KW per hour, so a billion tons of silver is needed to generate 11,000 TW per hour. Assuming that an ~10-fold increase in efficiency will be achieved by then, only 100 million tons of silver will be required. World silver production in 2015 was ~31,000 tons. Multiply that by 13 yrs and you get ~400,000 tons. Adding that to the current reserve of 600,000 tons, you’d have one million tons available for all industrial uses on the planet through 2030. Where are the remaining 99 million tons going to come from?
Mission: Examine ways to invest in silver, using our standard spreadsheet analysis.
Execution: (see Table).
Administration: There are 4 ways to invest in silver:
1) Purchase ingots, coins, or shares in a silver ETF (SLV).
2) Purchase stock in a silver mining company, the largest and most successful being First Majestic Silver (AG).
3) Purchase stock in a financial company that loans money to silver miners in return for claims on the “stream” of the silver produced. The main silver-streaming company is Silver Wheaton (SLV) but the dominant company for financing both gold and silver mines (in return for gold royalties or a stream of silver production) is Franco-Nevada (FNV).
4) Purchase shares of a gold mining company that produces large amounts of silver as a by-product. Both companies having the largest reserves are based in Canada: Goldcorp (GG) and Barrick Gold (ABX).
Bottom Line: This is gambling, on steroids. To be successful, you’d need to have infinite patience and have enough time to update information on silver inventories every week, as well as work-in-progress for solar panels relative to demand. You can probably do well by gradually building a position in silver or the silver ETF (SLV). Professional stock pickers who focus on natural resources like to stick with the companies that a) have the largest reserves and b) develop new reserves at least as fast as they consume reserves. Barrick Gold (ABX) wins on both counts.
Risk Rating: 10 (where 10-Yr Treasuries = 1, S&P 500 Index = 5, and gold bullion = 10).
Full Disclosure: I have no silver-related holdings.
Post questions and comments in the box below or send email to: irv.mcquarrie@InvestTuneRetire.com
Why is silver interesting, given that it has only gained 3.9%/yr in value over the past 30 years? For comparison, the lowest-cost S&P 500 Index fund (VFINX) has gained 9.4%/yr and the lowest-cost investment-grade bond index fund (VBMFX) has gained 6.0%/yr. Reason #1: A key use for silver is growing exponentially, which is the build-out of solar power toward a United Nations goal of generating 30% of the planet’s electricity by 2030. Copper and aluminum can be used in solar panels instead of silver, but those substitutes are less efficient and have not proven to be commercially viable, partly because the amount of silver needed per solar panel continues to decrease.
Silver has a fascinating history. For example, in 1979 the Hunt brothers attempted to “corner” the silver market and were able to borrow enough money to buy 1/3rd of the world’s supply outside government hands. This resulted in more than a 700% price increase but brought attention to the high leverage used in purchasing commodities. After the commodity exchange (COMEX) adopted “Silver Rule 7” on January 7, 1980 (to restrict the ability of speculators to purchase commodities on margin), the price of silver promptly fell 50% and the Hunt brothers were unable to meet their bank’s margin call for $100 million. They ultimately declared bankruptcy.
Could this happen again? Yes. Silver prices fluctuate more dramatically than gold prices, since silver has greater industrial demand and lower market liquidity. The rapid proliferation of solar panels will no doubt aggravate that problem; sovereign wealth fund managers will be tempted to hoard silver. Let’s do the math. World silver reserves are just under 600,000 tons. Solar panels in currently contain ~2/3rds of an ounce of silver: A ton of silver is consumed to make ~44,000 solar panels, and 4 panels are needed to make a kilowatt-hour (kWh) of electricity. So, a ton of silver generates 11,000 kWh. A billion kWh = 1 TWh (terawatt-hour). Currently, ~21,000 TW are used every hour on our planet (https://yearbook.enerdata.net/electricity-domestic-consumption-data-by-region.html). A goal of producing 30% of electricity from solar panels by 2030 implies that those panels would need to generate ~11,000 TW per hour (after allowing for population growth). A ton of silver generates 11,000 KW per hour, so a billion tons of silver is needed to generate 11,000 TW per hour. Assuming that an ~10-fold increase in efficiency will be achieved by then, only 100 million tons of silver will be required. World silver production in 2015 was ~31,000 tons. Multiply that by 13 yrs and you get ~400,000 tons. Adding that to the current reserve of 600,000 tons, you’d have one million tons available for all industrial uses on the planet through 2030. Where are the remaining 99 million tons going to come from?
Mission: Examine ways to invest in silver, using our standard spreadsheet analysis.
Execution: (see Table).
Administration: There are 4 ways to invest in silver:
1) Purchase ingots, coins, or shares in a silver ETF (SLV).
2) Purchase stock in a silver mining company, the largest and most successful being First Majestic Silver (AG).
3) Purchase stock in a financial company that loans money to silver miners in return for claims on the “stream” of the silver produced. The main silver-streaming company is Silver Wheaton (SLV) but the dominant company for financing both gold and silver mines (in return for gold royalties or a stream of silver production) is Franco-Nevada (FNV).
4) Purchase shares of a gold mining company that produces large amounts of silver as a by-product. Both companies having the largest reserves are based in Canada: Goldcorp (GG) and Barrick Gold (ABX).
Bottom Line: This is gambling, on steroids. To be successful, you’d need to have infinite patience and have enough time to update information on silver inventories every week, as well as work-in-progress for solar panels relative to demand. You can probably do well by gradually building a position in silver or the silver ETF (SLV). Professional stock pickers who focus on natural resources like to stick with the companies that a) have the largest reserves and b) develop new reserves at least as fast as they consume reserves. Barrick Gold (ABX) wins on both counts.
Risk Rating: 10 (where 10-Yr Treasuries = 1, S&P 500 Index = 5, and gold bullion = 10).
Full Disclosure: I have no silver-related holdings.
Post questions and comments in the box below or send email to: irv.mcquarrie@InvestTuneRetire.com
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