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发表于 2009-6-13 02:46 PM
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MARC FABER
Barron's: What a rally, Marc. Are stocks due for a rest?
Faber: The S&P 500 has risen more than 40% from its March 6 low of 666. It could correct soon, maybe from higher levels. If it rallies to 1,000-1,050 by July, that could be the high for the year because the index is not inexpensive. But we don't see new lows. The 666 low is likely to hold, as is the Nov. 21, 2008, low of 741. The market won't fall below 800 for the time being.
It is hard to know what happens in the next year because so much economic and financial volatility has been created by huge fiscal deficits and expansionary monetary policies. Governments can support economic activity through fiscal deficits. What concerns me down the line is the likelihood of much greater inflation because of all this stimulus. At some point the Federal Reserve will have to increase interest rates to combat inflation, and it will be very reluctant to do so.
But that's not today's problem.
Today the economy looks to be stabilizing after falling off a cliff. It probably troughed in February or March. Replacement demand is kicking in, but we won't return to the peak activity of 2006 any time soon.
If things deteriorate, the Fed will print more money. Mr. Bernanke talked a few years ago about dropping dollars from helicopters to stimulate the economy. It would be wrong not to take this statement seriously because that is the thinking among policymakers in the U.S. It is a disastrous policy but it can really make stocks go up -- commodities, too. Since the lows in December, oil is up more than 100%. A lot of liquidity has flowed into commodities, which is a sign investors are concerned about the value of paper money.
Emerging markets have been especially strong. Are the gains justified?
The opportunities are far better than in the U.S. When hedge funds and funds of funds had massive liquidations last fall, Asian markets such as Taiwan, South Korea and Japan fell to generational lows. Investors should use setbacks in these markets to accumulate shares. Many stocks are yielding between 6% and 10%. Secondly, the world is undergoing a major shift in consumption. In March car sales in emerging economies began to exceed those in developed countries. China, Brazil and India have become important simply because of the size and growth of their populations.
Marc Faber's Picks
6/10/09
EMERGING MARKETS Ticker Price
SINGAPORE
Parkway Life REIT PREIT.Singapore S$0.96
ARA Asset Mgmt ARA.Singapore 0.60
Hyflux Water Trust HYFT.Singapore 0.52
Raffles Education RLS.Singapore 0.68
Kingsmen Creatives KMEN.Singapore 0.43
THAILAND
MCOT MCOT.Thailand 18.50 baht
Dynasty Ceramic DCC.Thailand 17.90
Airports of Thailand AOT.Thailand 27.75
Thai Airways Int'l. THAI.Thailand 14.00
JAPAN
Mitsubishi UFJ Fincl 8306.Japan ¥640
iShares MSCI Japan EWJ $9.42
RESOURCE 6/10/09
COMPANIES Ticker Price
Xstrata XTA.Switzerland 13.60 CHF
NovaGold Resources NG $4.66
Natural Gas (per MMBTU) 3.71
6/10/09
SHORT Yield
10-Year U.S. Treasury notes,
when the yield falls to 2.8%-3% 3.94%
Source: Bloomberg There has been renewed interest in asset plays of all types. Stocks like Newmont Mining [NEM] and Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold [FCX] have soared. Along the same lines, there is renewed interest in Asian real estate, which isn't expensive. Prices are lower than they were in 1997. I like Asian REITs [real-estate investment trusts] such as Parkway Life in Singapore and ARA Asset Management, a Singapore property-management company. Hong Kong and Singapore will benefit from greater regulation of the financial markets in the U.S. and Europe. Also, the U.S. has large and highly sophisticated military installations in Singapore, and it doesn't want to antagonize Singapore.
That should bode well for Singapore-based companies.
Demand for water is a big theme in Asia. Singapore's Hyflux Water Trust pays out income earned from operating water-treatment plants. Education is a growth industry, as well, and Raffles Education should benefit. Also in Singapore, I like Kingsmen Creatives, a marketing and communications-design company. In Thailand I like MCOT, a media conglomerate, and Dynasty Ceramic, which makes floor tile, as well as two airline-related companies -- Airports of Thailand and Thai Airways International. In Japan I like Mitsubishi UFJ Financial and the iShares MSCI Japan fund.
You've been a big fan of resource companies. Are you still?
Mining companies such as Switzerland's Xstrata are good trades. The company got hit hard last year because it operates on leverage, but the concern was overblown. I like NovaGold Resources . Barrick Gold [ABX] tried to buy them for about $15 a share a year ago. There was no deal and NovaGold fell below 2, although it has rebounded to 5.50. NovaGold has enlarged its asset base significantly. Today it is even more valuable than $15. Natural gas is a buy here. It is extremely depressed and at a record low compared to oil.
I would short U.S. Treasury bonds when the yield declines to 2.8% to 3% on 10-year notes. |
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