Monday, December 14, 2015

Sparking tension: Baltic electricity plan turns tables on Russia

With Russia accustomed to wielding energy supplies as a political weapon, the possibility that its westernmost outpost of Kaliningrad could become reliant on the West to keep the lights on has Moscow seething, straining already tense ties over Ukraine.
 
The undersea cable to Sweden will bring in cheaper Scandinavian power, while the line to Poland has the added significance of being a key piece of infrastructure that could eventually be used to integrate the three Baltic states into the European electricity grid. 
Lithuania broke Gazprom's politically-charged monopoly for gas supplies by building a liquefied natural gas terminal that opened at the beginning of this year and is now on the verge of reducing its dependence on Russian electricity. 
That is because electricity grids are much like a symphony -– they need a conductor to be in harmony. As long as Lithuania remains synchronised to the Russian grid, Moscow can easily supply electricity to Kaliningrad.
DYI Comments:  The geopolitical game is afoot as U.S./U.K./NATO/EU solidify their gains in the Baltics and place heavier costs onto Russia in order to hold onto their outpost Kaliningrad. There is no direct route into Kaliningrad so in the end this outpost will be dependent upon Swedish and Polish electricity.

This is the smaller tactics of the overall grand strategy of the U.S. led U.K./NATO/EU in their attempt to first deny Russians naval access to the worlds oceans and long term plan to break Russia to a fraction of its size.
DYI 

Bank of Canada Crushes Loonie, Creates Mother of All Shorts

It got clobbered by the commodities rout, given their importance to the Canadian economy, the multi-year decline in the prices of metals, minerals, and natural gas, and then starting in mid-2014, the devastating plunge of the price of oil.
DYI Comments:  Until recently commodity prices were flying high since the low in 1998.
As I write oil prices are $35.13 per barrel as report by Yahoo Financial down even further from where the above chart ended.  Canada when oil/gas and all of the other commodities were flying high propelled their economy forward at a sizzling rate.  The economic downturn of 2008/2009 ended up being only a "bump in the night" for the average Canadian.  Add on world wide decline of interest rates Canadians were off to the races in forming a credit bubble.  The debt went predominately into real estate creating a massive mania.
  
  Fast forward to today Canada is in recession and many cities especially in the province of Alberta(oil patch) real estate prices are tumbling.  As the recession spreads from province to province real estate prices will go soft.  If oil prices become a teenager expect the Canadian central bank to drop rates into negative percentage and massive QE.  If oil stays down at that level for a year or more Canada will go into outright depression along with a real estate smash far greater than the U.S(40% to 70%).

The Harper administration in their short sightedness made a big bet on commodities and when they crashed so did his recent reelection bid.  Justin Trudeau is now Prime Minister.  Hopefully Trudeau will work at providing the ground work to diversify their economy such as Texas has done many years ago.  Pushing for a full spectrum from finance, banking, insurance, health care, high tech high end manufacturing, consumer services, tourist trade,and commodities etc.  A difficult task but with political will it can be done just ask any Texan who are now no longer at the whim of oil prices.

Best of luck Canada(you are going to need it!)

DYI

In the end Mr. Market will have his due relining asset valuation with the real level of U.S. economic performance.

Based on the moving average, today's age 25-54 cohort would require 2.9 million additional people in the labor force to match its interim peak participation rate in 2008 and 4.2 million to match the peak rate around the turn of the century. This is unchanged from the previous month.
LFPR Ages 25-54
Why are so many more labor force participants needed for a complete LFPR recovery? When the economy is moving at full speed, as in the late 1990s, jobs are abundant, which encourages the population on the workforce sidelines to join the ranks of the employed. Today's economy doesn't offer that sort of encouragement.
DYI Comments:  Stocks are highly correlated to prosperity, however as the chart above depicts has been anything close to prosperity.  What happened?  1.) Central bank intervention.  2.) Geopolitics control of oil prices.  3.) Demographic induced savings.

Central bank intervention:  The Fed's along with the major central banks have flooded the world with excess reserves to deal with the world wide down turn of 2008/2009 driving down interest rates to sub atomic low levels.  The chase is on for yield, so much so market participants are willing to borrow heavily to purchase stocks or bonds at a higher yield.  The amount of margin debt is sky high.

Geopolitics control of oil prices.  In a nut shell Saudi Arabia became tired of their member nations who were always cheating on their quotas and to deal with American fracking.  The Saudis have decided to pump oil at maximum rate driving down the price in order to increase their market share from the other OPEC members(and none members as well) and at the same time put the U.S. fracker's out of business(at least for a few years).

The U.S. State Department became the Saudis cheerleaders as an opportunity to play brinkmanship with Russia in their decades long pursuit of shattering this huge country by two thirds allowing western nations through their multinationals to extract her natural resources as the spoils of economic warfare.  

So.....
When the price of oil drops this acts as a tax deduction through western societies plus their respective central banks will be very aggressive without causing consumer goods/services price inflation.  To put it simply:  The reflation trade for assets is on(stocks, bonds, real estate).

Demographic induced savings:  There are approximately 120 million Boomers of 1st world countries and for those who are able to save/invest are aggressively saving large percentage portions of their paychecks.  This is NOT greed it is DESPERATION as the majority are underfunded for retirement.  The kids are out of the house and in many cases out of college(along with the tuition bills) so they can and will save.  Typical savings rates of 25% to 40% is normal for this group.  Again for those who can save.  This has the effect of dropping interest rates combined with central bank intervention, you end up with sub atomic low rates.

Conclusion:  This is why the U.S. market has soared despite any real move towards prosperity. These three conditions of rate intervention, oil prices, and savings are not forever but will be transitory.  In the end Mr. Market will have his due relining asset valuation with the real level of U.S. economic performance.
DYI's expectations is a 45% to 60% drop in this market.  With valuations at these lofty levels a drop of that magnitude would be "run of the mill" "garden variety" drop.  The question of course is when? We all know, is that we don't know.

While everyone else is losing their heads don't go and lose yours.

THE GREAT WAIT CONTINUES
Updated Monthly

AGGRESSIVE PORTFOLIO - ACTIVE ALLOCATION -  12/1/15

Active Allocation Bands (excluding cash) 0% to 60%
78% - Cash -Short Term Bond Index - VBIRX
22% -Gold- Precious Metals & Mining - VGPMX
 0% -Lt. Bonds- Long Term Bond Index - VBLTX
 0% -Stocks- Total Stock Market Index - VTSAX
[See Disclaimer]

 This blog site is not a registered financial advisor, broker or securities dealer and The Dividend Yield Investor is not responsible for what you do with your money.
This site strives for the highest standards of accuracy; however ERRORS AND OMISSIONS ARE ACCEPTED!
The Dividend Yield Investor is a blog site for entertainment and educational purposes ONLY.
The Dividend Yield Investor shall not be held liable for any loss and/or damages from the information herein.
Use this site at your own risk.

PAST PERFORMANCE IS NO GUARANTEE OF FUTURE RESULTS.
DYI

Sunday, December 13, 2015


 While the global market is currently oversupplied with crude, Rystad Energy research shows that investment decisions for only 8 billion barrels were made in 2015, even though the oil industry needs to replace 34 billion barrels of crude every year. This amount is less than 25 percent of what the market requires long-term. 
“We see that for most new developments oil prices are below life cycle costs. As oil companies need to pay dividends and have incompressible taxes and royalties, the majority of upstream players are destroying value as we speak and do whatever they can to cut costs. 
As a result, billions of barrels of crude are not being matured while global consumption growth is still very robust. Thus, a new shortage of crude is likely to come a few years down the road. 
When this happens, the oil service capacity will not be there to support the growth at the pace needed. There is then a risk that we will face a new era of steep cost inflation which again will drive up oil prices too much and negatively impact the global economy. 
“I am concerned that current job cuts could lead to a severe shortage of oil service capacity in a few years. It is very easy to get rid of people, but it will take a lot of effort and cash to bring people back to the industry. A responsible action from petroleum nations would be to stimulate the oil price in the short term in order to incentivize drilling and field development globally and stop downscaling of oil service capacity.”
DYI Comments:  Geopolitics are dropping the price of oil/gas(as explained in earlier posts) and it appears that a world wide recession is in the offering.  This could very easily drop oil to the 10 to 20 Dollar range knocking out capital expenditures for exploration and development.  A few years from now oil will experience a ramp up of prices, along with possible price spikes.  Vanguard's Energy is DYI's favorite and is a great time to dollar cost average lowering your cost basis for shares.  Position yourself by dollar cost averaging for the rebound in prices a few years from now.

Indonesia Exploring Liquid Fuel Nuclear Power Plants to Cut Reliance on Coal

Martingale and three Indonesian companies signed the MOU in Washington DC on the occasion of Indonesia President Joko Widodo’s visit to the US President Barak Obama. PT Industry Nuklir Indonesia (INUKI) is the state-owned nuclear fuel processing company. PT PLN is the state-owned power generation company. PT Pertamina is the state oil and gas giant which is now looking at nuclear and other forms of energy. Together these companies have formed the Indonesia Thorium Consortium whose purpose is the development and implementation of thorium molten salt reactors based on the ThorCon design.
The ThorCon thorium molten salt reactor design promises clean energy competitive with the cost of coal. The low-pressure liquid-fuel technology provides intrinsic passive safety. ThorCon expertise in shipbuilding design enables low-cost, high-precision, scalable manufacturing by ship yards. Mass production of nuclear power plants is possible with ThorCon technology. The ThorCon liquid-fuel nuclear reactor design is detailed at thorconpower.com.
 Silo Hall looking starboard

Safe

ThorCon is a simple molten salt reactor. Unlike all current reactors, the fuel is in liquid form. If the reactor overheats for whatever reason, ThorCon will automatically shut itself down, drain the fuel from the primary loop, and passively handle the decay heat. There is no need for any operator intervention. In fact there is nothing the operators can do to prevent the drain and cooling. ThorCon is walkaway safe.
The ThorCon reactor is 30 m underground. ThorCon has four gas tight barriers between the fuelsalt and the atmosphere. Three of these barriers are more than 25 m underground. Unlike nearly all current reactors, ThorCon operates at near-ambient pressure. In the event of a primary loop rupture, there is no dispersal energy and no phase change. The spilled fuel merely flows to a drain tank where it is cooled. The most troublesome fission products, including strontium-90 and cesium-137, are chemically bound to the salt. They will end up in the drain tank as well.

No New Technology

ThorCon is all about NOW. ThorCon requires no new technology. ThorCon is a straightforward scale-up of the successful Molten Salt Reactor Experiment (MSRE). The MSRE is ThorCon’s pilot plant. There is no technical reason why a full-scale 250 MWe prototype cannot be operating within four years. The intention is to subject this prototype to all the failures and problems that the designers claim the plant can handle. This is the commercial aircraft model, not the Nuclear Regulatory Commission model. As soon as the prototype passes these tests, full-scale production can begin.

Rapidly Deployable

The entire ThorCon plant including the building is manufactured in blocks on a shipyard-like assembly line. These 150 to 500 ton, fully outfitted, pre-tested blocks are barged to the site. A 1 GWe ThorCon will require less than 200 blocks. Site work is limited to excavation and erecting the blocks. This produces order of magnitude improvements in productivity, quality control, and build time. ThorCon is much more than a power plant; it is a system for building power plants. A single large reactor yard can turn out one hundred 1 GWe ThorCons per year.

Fixable

No complex repairs are attempted on site. Everything in the nuclear island except the building itself is replaceable with little or no interruption in power output. Rather than attempt to build components that last 40 or more years in an extremely harsh environment with nil maintenance, ThorCon is designed to have all key parts regularly replaced. Every four years the entire primary loop is changed out, returned to a centralized recycling facility, decontaminated, disassembled, inspected, and refurbished. Incipient problems are caught before they can turn into casualties. Major upgrades can be introduced without significantly disrupting power generation. Such renewable plants can operate indefinitely; but, if a ThorCon is decommissioned, the process is little more than pulling out but not replacing all the replaceable parts.

Cheaper than Coal

ThorCon requires less resources than a coal plant. Assuming efficient, evidence based regulation, ThorCon can produce reliable, carbon free, electricity at between 3 and 5 cents per kWh depending on scale.
DYI Comments:  If this proves to be workable look for Indonesia to use excess electricity to crack coal into liquid fuels using another old technology called Fischer-Tropsch process ending their need to import transportation fuels.  Over the months ahead I'll keep my eye out for updates on Indonesia's progress and hopefully successful outcome.  It goes without saying the U.S. needs to develop a pilot plant for feasibility.  There are other options besides so called green technologies Mr. President.
DYI

Venezuela’s election

Reasons to celebrate

It was a crushing one. Venezuelans voted furiously against the left-wing regime and for an opposition coalition, the Democratic Unity alliance (MUD), that is determined to bring its increasingly authoritarian and incompetent rule to an end. Nearly three-quarters of the electorate turned out, some despite fears that their ballots would not be secret. The MUD won the popular vote by a margin of 15 percentage points. It captured just over two-thirds of the seats in the National Assembly, which gives it broad powers to challenge the government. Even the district of 23 de Enero, the bastion of chavismo where Mr Maduro made his broadcast, fell to the opposition.
DYI Comments:  Let's hope this beginning  has staying power to where the citizens of Venezuela throw off the socialist policies of the past and move into free markets and an honest currency.  The current president Nicolas Maduro is still in power til the 2018 elections.  Hopefully the citizen will vote a more open markets leader who rejects socialism.

DYI 

Single most extreme point in history for the median stock, where valuations are well-beyond 2000 levels...John P. Hussman


John P. Hussman, Ph.D.

Over the past several years, yield-seeking investors, starved for any “pickup” in yield over Treasury securities, have piled into the junk debt and leveraged loan markets. 
Just as equity valuations have been driven to the second most extreme point in history 
(and the single most extreme point in history for the median stock, where valuations are well-beyond 2000 levels), 
risk premiums on speculative debt were compressed to razor-thin levels. 
By 2014, the spread between junk bond yields and Treasury yields had fallen to less than 2.4%. Since then, years of expected “risk-premiums” have been erased by capital losses, and defaults haven’t even spiked yet (they do so with a lag). 
From an economic standpoint, the unfortunate fact is that the proceeds from aggressive issuance of junk debt and leveraged loans in the past few years were channeled into speculation. 
Excess capacity in energy production was expanded at the cyclical peak in oil prices, and heavy stock buybacks were executed at obscene equity valuations. 
The end result will be unintended wealth transfers and deadweight losses for the economy. Since the late-1990’s, the Federal Reserve has actively encouraged the channeling of trillions of dollars of savings into speculation. Recurring cycles of malinvestment and crisis have progressively weakened the resilience and long-term growth prospects of the U.S. economy.
DYI Comments:  The Fed's have blown another bubble this time to biblical proportions as the median stock valuation is now greater than the year 2000.  Below is GMO's(which is in line with DYI) forecast for prices over the next 7 years.  The only asset category that I disagree with is emerging markets during any U.S. major melt down will drop those markets as well to deliver negative 7 year returns.

Prices today for main stream stocks and bonds have been so marked up our formula has "kick us out of the market" and rightfully.  Don't take the Fed's bait as this market no longer has any investment merit (except for Oil/Gas/Service and/or Precious Metals Mining Companies).  So while everyone else is losing their heads don't go and lose yours.

THE GREAT WAIT CONTINUES...
 Updated Monthly

AGGRESSIVE PORTFOLIO - ACTIVE ALLOCATION -  12/1/15

Active Allocation Bands (excluding cash) 0% to 60%
78% - Cash -Short Term Bond Index - VBIRX
22% -Gold- Precious Metals & Mining - VGPMX
 0% -Lt. Bonds- Long Term Bond Index - VBLTX
 0% -Stocks- Total Stock Market Index - VTSAX
                                                               [See Disclaimer]
DYI

Saturday, December 12, 2015

Who is “middle income” and “upper income”?
The middle class has long been considered the American dream and is "at the heart of the economic platforms of many presidential candidates ahead of the 2016 election." 
"Policymakers are engaged in debates about the need to raise the floor on wages and on how best to curb rising income inequality," Pew researchers Rakesh Kochhar and Richard Fry said in the report. "Meanwhile, President Barack Obama uses the term 'middle-class economics' to describe his economic agenda. And a flurry of new research points to the potential of a larger middle class to provide the economic boost sought by many advanced economies."
DYI

Oil producers prepare for prices to halve to $20 a barrel

 The world’s leading oil producers are preparing for the possibility of oil prices halving to $20 a barrel after a second day of financial market turmoil saw a fresh slide in crude, the lowest iron ore prices in a decade, and losses on global stock markets. 
Alexei Moiseev, Russia’s deputy finance minister, told Reuters: “If oil goes to $20, we will need to do additional [spending] cuts. Clearly we have shown that we are very willing to cut fiscal spending in line with an oil price at $60, for example. In order for us to be long-term sustainable [with the] oil price at $40, we need to do additional cuts, but if the oil price goes to $20 we need to do even more cuts.” 
Russia and Saudi Arabia – the world’s two biggest oil producers – both increased spending when oil prices rose to well above $100 a barrel. The fall from a recent peak of $115 a barrel in August 2014 has left all Opec members in financial difficulty, but Saudi Arabia has refused to relent on a strategy of using a low crude price to knock out US shale producers. Hopes that Opec would announce production curbs to push prices up were dashed when the cartel met in Vienna last Friday, triggering the latest downward lurch in the cost of oil.
DYI Comments:  DYI has been pounding the table for some time regarding natural resource mutual funds.  An excellent opportunity to dollar cost average into your favorite funds; ours of course, is Vanguard Energy Fund symbol VGENX  and Vanguard Precious Metals & Mining Fund symbol VGPMX.  Both have been hit hard by declining oil/gas or precious metals prices.  Please note prices for these funds could very easily bottom form for as long as 2 or 3 years.  At this time dollar cost average only.  Unless oil drops to the teenager level then lump summing is a go.  Recommend Adams Natural Resource Fund symbol PEO a closed end fund.

Our model portfolio remains very conservative due to massive overvaluation for stocks and bonds. Only recommend up to 22% in gold/natural resource funds.

Updated Monthly

AGGRESSIVE PORTFOLIO - ACTIVE ALLOCATION -  12/1/15

Active Allocation Bands (excluding cash) 0% to 60%
78% - Cash -Short Term Bond Index - VBIRX
22% -Gold- Precious Metals & Mining - VGPMX
 0% -Lt. Bonds- Long Term Bond Index - VBLTX
 0% -Stocks- Total Stock Market Index - VTSAX
[See Disclaimer]

 This blog site is not a registered financial advisor, broker or securities dealer and The Dividend Yield Investor is not responsible for what you do with your money.
This site strives for the highest standards of accuracy; however ERRORS AND OMISSIONS ARE ACCEPTED!
The Dividend Yield Investor is a blog site for entertainment and educational purposes ONLY.
The Dividend Yield Investor shall not be held liable for any loss and/or damages from the information herein.
Use this site at your own risk.

PAST PERFORMANCE IS NO GUARANTEE OF FUTURE RESULTS.
DYI 

Friday, December 11, 2015

Defense alliance to help create growth industry

TOKYO -- Japan will build its space sector into a driver of economic growth, leveraging the 

defense alliance with the U.S., according to a newly adopted 10-year policy road map.


DYI Comments:  As the U.S. pivots from Europe to Asia Japan is on track to secure it own

defense due to growing Chinese ambitions along with the possibility that space 

technologies will drive economic growth.

Over time the U.S. Air force Space Command will spin off, just as the Air Force broke away 

from the Army Air Corp.  Space Command will end up being in charge of all other branches

(much to the chagrin of the Navy) as their look down, intelligence coordinating & gathering

plus space delivered weapons will become the obvious choice for command of military

assets world wide.

For men or women in their 20's pursuing or achieved education at the Ph.D level for STEM

(Science, Technology, Engineering, Mathematics) a career in Space Command is where

the action is.


DYI   


If Germany is Unable to Bail Out Europe...Who Will?

German birth rate grows, but population shrinks

Aug 21 Germany's birth rate rose last year to its highest level in 12 years, helped by years of economic growth and government support, but not enough to offset the death rate, and its overall population continued to decline.
Fertility Rate 
Country200020012002200320042005200620072008200920102011201220132014
Germany1.381.38 1.39 1.371.38 1.39 1.39 1.401.41 1.41 1.42 1.411.41 1.42 1.43

Definition of Total fertility rate: This entry gives a figure for the average number of children that would be born per woman if all women lived to the end of their childbearing years and bore children according to a given fertility rate at each age. 

The total fertility rate (TFR) is a more direct measure of the level of fertility than the crude birth rate, since it refers to births per woman. This indicator shows the potential for population change in the country. 
A rate of two children per woman is considered the replacement rate for a population, resulting in relative stability in terms of total numbers. Rates above two children indicate populations growing in size and whose median age is declining. Higher rates may also indicate difficulties for families, in some situations, to feed and educate their children and for women to enter the labor force. Rates below two children indicate populations decreasing in size and growing older.  
Global fertility rates are in general decline and this trend is most pronounced in industrialized countries, especially Western Europe, where populations are projected to decline dramatically over the next 50 years.

DYI Comments: Germany's fertility rate has been under replacement since 1971 and at the low level as seen by the chart above since 1975.  When the 2015 numbers come in Germany's fertility rate will have increased, at best, in the 1.5 range which continues to be way below replacement.  Germany's population will continue to decline.  This does not bode well for the EU as Germany is the money maker for central Europe.  This population bust has reduced significantly Germany's youthfulness that are one of the building blocks for a dynamic economy for Corporate, government, and entrepreneurs. Also heavier tax loads is placed on those still working to support Germany's much larger older population.  And lastly there is simply less Germans(pop. in decline) to tax.  

These demographic economic pressures and a possible world wide recession will be another test for the EU.  DYI's opinion that unless the EU forms a federalized system (centralized taxation) which I believe is a slim possibility, then the EU in its present condition will fly apart.  Most likely ten years from now the Euro currency will be gone replaced by each country's original moneys.  The trade agreements will most likely endure, along with the open borders concept (EU citizens only) will most likely stand as well.  This will end central Europe's dream of a currency that will compete with the U.S. Dollar.

DYI