Sunday, November 22nd, 2009

Why Eric Roseman Is Buying Oil Sector Stocks Now

Sep 23rd, 2008 | By Eric Roseman | Category: Featured, Financial News

On Tuesday, the Reuters/Jefferies CRB commodity index had its best day in history. “Nearly all commodities enjoyed a goosing yesterday,” according to Addison Wiggan and Ian Mathias in the 5 Min. Forecast.

However, Eric Roseman says, “Until the deflation ceases, commodities will remain vulnerable. Never in the history of capitalism have commodity prices rallied during a severe contraction in bank credit.”

Nevertheless, he predicts that inflation is still hard-wired into the global economy. That’s why he’s buying distressed oil companies and oil equipments stocks alongside the best-positioned global insiders. 

This from The Sovereign Society:

If you believe, like I do, that inflation is still very much embedded in the financial system then you must also adhere to hard assets, including gold. There’s absolutely no doubt in my mind that we’ll see much higher inflation as a result of this extravagant spending.

In my Commodity Trend Alert service, we’ve recently raised our hedges against commodities. I anticipate tough markets for most of the sector until clearer signs emerge that the Fed has arrested deflation.

Still, I’m buying distressed oil companies and oil equipment stocks – and I’m buying oil right along side some of the best positioned global insiders. The energy sector remains the only segment of the marketplace heavily accompanied by net insider buying since prices began dropping in July.

Gold, which FDR confiscated in 1933, would probably rally in a deflationary economy. We got a taste of the huge gold rally to come when gold jumped over a US$100 last week after the AIG (NYSE:AIG) rescue.

Also, gold stocks haven’t been this cheap and bombed-out since 2005. In fact, the mining stocks trade at a seven-year low versus physical gold! You should be aggressively buying up this sector now.

Commodity Hayride Hearkens Past Lessons

Investors tend to forget that commodities are an extremely volatile asset class.

Price swings have always been violent and the recent surge lasting through July drew a huge amount of fast money from hedge funds and other institutions – which are all liquidating as I write this. Bank failures and bailouts have also pressured prices as liquidity-starved institutions make a run for hard cash.

But you must remember that commodities plunged in value in the mid-1970s en route to incredible all-time highs by January 1980. That’s happening again in 2008.

The CRB Index surged to an all-time high of 226.80 in September 1974 – at the height of the inflation squeeze, banking crisis and Arab oil embargo – and then commodities crashed to a new low of 175.90 by February 1975, a 22% plunge.

Gold prices, which Nixon set free in August 1971, soared to a high of US$184 an ounce in December 1974 based on the London monthly close. Prices then crashed all the way down to US$109 an ounce by August 1976. That’s a dizzying 41% drop.

Commodities can suffer a major bull market reversal, and that can make new investors nervous. Honestly, it wouldn’t be a surprise if commodities posted a negative year in 2008 after seven spectacular years of consecutive profits.

It is actually a positive development to see speculative money exiting the asset class because it takes policymakers’ attention away from high prices. Case in point: Earlier this summer Congress held special hearings to voice their concern over oil price manipulation. Now that prices are falling, Congress will once again turn a blind eye to the next run-up in the prices.

Credit Crisis Is Our Problem – Not Asia’s

As the United States, Europe, Japan and China all work to reflate the global financial system, the price of commodities will recover. The global economy will not suffer a hard economic recession. In fact, the emerging markets might escape one altogether.

Meanwhile, interest rates are still in negative territory if you adjust for inflation, and the Fed isn’t likely to raise rates anytime soon. That’s not about to change until both the housing and credit markets heal.

Inflation is not dead and commodities remain in a secular bull market as China and other rapidly growing economies continue to boost domestic consumption and increase trade.

The credit crisis is a Western problem, not an Asian one. Balance sheets across Asia are not restricted by sub-prime losses or other mortgage-related write-downs. So the sooner the U.S. finally tackles the credit crisis, the sooner Asian growth will reaccelerate. That’s when I expect commodities to bottom.

The long-term picture remains bullish for these markets and commodities. Over the next 12 months, I see the greatest reflation trade of the century hitting the markets, courtesy of the United States government and the European Union.

Source: The Commodity Bull Is Still Running in the China Shop


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By Eric Roseman

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Eric RosemanEric serves as an editor and Investment Director for The Sovereign Society's Commodity Trend Alert. Eric's talents include blending a dozen or more alternative investment funds to produce consistent returns to traditional asset classes and making commodity based recommendations with huge upside and limited downside.

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