Energy & Commodities

The Low Oil Price Guts Another OPEC Oil Exporter

The low oil price is negatively impacting another OPEC oil exporter as it continues to liquidate its foreign exchange reserves.  Algeria, like Saudi Arabia, has seen its international reserves plummet by more than 40% as the oil price fell in half since 2014.

Algeria joined OPEC back in 1969 and is currently producing 1.1 million barrels of oil per day (mbd).  While Algeria is not one of the larger OPEC members, it still exports roughly 670,000 barrels of oil per day.  At $50 a barrel, the country receives $33.5 million a day in oil revenues.  However, Algeria’s oil revenues have taken a nose-dive as the oil price declined from over $100 in 2014 to below $50 currently:

Algeria-Net-Oil-Export-Revenues-2005-2016

As we can see in the chart above, Algeria’s net oil export revenues fell from $61 billion in 2012 to $19 billion last year.  Thus, Algeria’s net oil export revenues fell nearly 70% in the past four years.  This has negatively impacted the country’s financial balance sheet.  To make up for declining oil revenues, Algeria has liquidated $70 billion of its international reserves since the end of 2014:

Unfortunately, the liquidation of Algeria’s foreign exchange reserves hasn’t been enough to stem the tide of its falling oil revenues.  According to the article on Zerohedge, Algeria Officially Launches Helicopter Money Amid Sliding Oil Revenue, Budget Crisis:

On Sunday, Algeria’s prime minister unveiled a plan to plug the country’s budget deficit as the the OPEC member state looks to offset lower oil revenue by directly borrowing from the central bank, while avoiding international debt markets. In other words, direct monetization of debt, which bypasses commercial banks as a monetary intermediate, and is better known as “helicopter money.”

According to Bloomberg, the five-year plan presented by Prime Minister Ahmed Ouyahia aims to balance the budget by 2022, and reverse a deficit that ballooned with the plunge in global crude prices, which also cut foreign reserves by nearly half.

“If we turn to external debt, as the IMF suggests, we will need to borrow $20 billion a year to repay the deficit and within four years we will be unable to repay the debt,” Ouyahia said. “This is what made the government look at non-traditional financing.”

Algeria’s Prime Minister has decided to print money directly from its central bank rather than access debt via the international market.  Thus, Algeria is now embarking on the policy of “Helicopter Money dropping” to offset the massive decline in its oil revenues.

I knew more OPEC oil exporting countries would succumb to alternative monetary policies as the low oil price is gutting the entire global oil industry.  Furthermore, the article linked above stated the following:

Incidentally, while other OPEC nations have been rumored to consider such a currency devaluation “nuclear option” in light of oil prices that are far below “budgetary breakevens” for most OPEC nations, it was not until today that it was finally implemented. And now that that the first country has succumbed, the question is who is next.

So, Algeria was the first OPEC member to select the “nuclear option” of outright unsterilized monetary printing.  This could cause serious inflation in the Algerian economy.  If the oil price does not head back up to $70-$80, we will likely see more OPEC members elect to implement additional “monetary options” besides liquidating international reserves to fortify its balance sheet.

The U.S. and global oil industry is in serious trouble… but we have only begun to see just how bad things will get over the next few years.

Check back for new articles and updates at the SRSrocco Report.

John Embry – The Charade Is About To End And The Implications For The Public Are Horrifying

KWN-Zappa-864x400 cAs the world digests the propaganda released from the Federal Reserve about their preposterous plan to reduce their balance sheet, today John Embry told King World News:

 “Eric, at this point the manipulation of all markets has become so blatant and the lying about the economy so intense that one has to wonder what is really going on behind the curtain…

….continue reading HERE

….also from King World News:

DANGER: This Major Warning Indicator Just Hit An All-Time Record, But This Is Truly Shocking!

Home Prices Soar in Disaster-Prone Areas

c40035aa-a8bd-4d4f-b03b-0d1426176e88It’s been a bad few weeks for natural disasters.  A series of hurricanes ripped through Texas, Florida, and the Caribbean, killing hundreds and racking up hundreds of billions of dollars in damage. Wildfires are raging in the Western U.S., and a pair of powerful earthquakes have battered Mexico.

Amid the terrifying recent events is a worrisome finding from a new report: The parts of the U.S. most at risk of natural disasters are also the places where property values are highest and increasing most quickly.

 ATTOM Data Solutions, curator of the nation’s largest multi-sourced property database, today released its 2017 U.S. Natural Hazard Housing Risk Index, which found that median home prices in U.S. cities in the 80th percentile for natural hazard risk (top 20 percent with highest risk) have increased more than twice as fast over the past five years and over the past 10 years than median home prices in U.S cities in the 20th percentile for natural hazard risk (bottom 20 percent with lowest risk).

….continue reading HERE (be sure to view the 2017 Natural Hazard Housing Risk Heat Map) 

Get Ready for an Interesting October Folks – Peter Schiff, Bill Gross, BlackRock

5d98e9a2-4f80-11e7-9d92-41080ba20685 600x400The Federal Reserve Is Now Ready to Blow It All Up

Peter Schiff, CEO of Euro Pacific Capital, said that it’s “impossible” for the Fed to unwind its balance sheet. In turn, he forecasts a recession in the not too distant future. While that may be extreme, Schiff touches on a key point the feel-good-investor must now consider: we have never seen a Federal Reserve try to unwind a balance sheet of this size before, no less against the backdrop of robo-trading and real-time news. Get ready for an interesting October, folks. 

continue reading HERE

Here’s what BlackRock says will happen to interest rates when Fed slims down its balance sheet

 

  • The Fed is expected to begin unwinding its giant $4.5 trillion portfolio, and it should not immediately have much impact on interest rates, according to BlackRock’s global chief investment officer of fixed income.
  • Rick Rieder says the 10-year yield could get to 2.50 percent this year, but will rise more next year as the Fed increases the amount that it is shrinking its portfolio by to $50 billion a month.
  • BlackRock also sees huge demand for Treasurys, and that should keep U.S. yields low.

 

…..continue reading HERE

Bill Gross: “If they followed their plan … which basically projects over the next two years for fed funds to reach 2.8 [percent] or even 3 percent, a 170 basis point increase, then yes a recession is possible,”

 

  • Whether or not the Fed leads the U.S. economy into recession depends on whether it sticks to its fed funds forecast, Bill Gross told CNBC.
  • On Wednesday, the Fed reduced its long-run target for the fed funds rate to 2.8 percent.

 

“They just have to be very careful because it’s a highly levered U.S. economy. It’s a highly levered global economy and currencies and the dollar and other related assets like gold will move substantially if the Fed overstates its case,” Gross said Wednesday.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Contrarian Investing: Make Money the Smart Way

 

  • shutterstock 162221975-1024x819-2The best thing that happens to us is when a great company gets into temporary trouble… We want to buy them when they’re on the operating table. – Warren Buffett

 

A quick history lesson…

In 1963, the world’s largest credit card company, American Express, was involved in the ‘salad oil scandal’.

AmEx had just created a warehousing division to make loans to businesses using inventory as collateral.

A commodities trader (and known swindler) named Anthony ‘Tino’ De Angelis saw an opening for a massive fraud.

He began stockpiling his warehouses with tanks of soybean oil. He then used warehouse certificates from American Express as collateral to borrow heavily from American Express and as many as fifty other lenders.

When American Express sent inspectors to check De Angelis’ inventory, they did not notice that – except for the thin layer of oil floating on top – the tanks were filled with water.

When the fraud was finally exposed, AmEx stock crashed more than 40%. The eventual damage to the company would be US$175 million.

 

At the height of the fallout, an unknown 35-year-old fund manager from Omaha decided to bet big on American Express, putting 40% of his fund’s money into this one stock.

His name was Warren Buffett, now the world’s richest and most famous investor.

Buffett knew the brand power and consumer business of American Express would survive the scandal. The company’s prospects were as bright as they were before the scandal. It was a play on rising affluence levels worldwide.

More importantly, the stock was available at a bargain price. Buffett was only too happy to lap it up.

Within a year, AmEx had rebounded more than 40% and has been a compounding machine ever since.

No wonder Buffett says he likes to buy great companies when they’re on the operating table!

What can we learn from this?

Whenever you find a stock that’s been beaten down due to one specific problem in the business, ask yourself the following questions…

 

  • Will the core business survive? In the case of American Express, the answer was yes. People were still going to use traveller’s cheques and credit cards.
  • Can the balance sheet withstand the hit? Having analysed the financials, Buffett knew American Express could.

 

If the answer to both questions is yes and the stock has already fallen about 40%…then you might just have a big winner on your hands.

Keep the American Express example in mind when you read through this month’s Hidden Treasure report. We believe this could be a case of history repeating itself.

Editor’s Note: Warren Buffett is known as a value investor. And for good reason, as we saw today…

But that bold move back in ’63 would also put Buffett in the category of ‘contrarian investor‘.

Why?

Because he was making a bet few others had the gall to make. As the markets panicked, Buffett loaded up.

This is what smart contrarians like Buffett (and Soros and Templeton and Rogers) do. These guys make it look easy, but contrarian investing…smart contrarian investing…requires a level of discipline and fortitude that most investors simply lack.

Do you think you have what it takes to follow in their footsteps?

Beginning next week…more on how to approach the markets like a smart contrarian.

Stay tuned…