Showing posts with label Rogers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rogers. Show all posts

Thursday, December 22, 2011

Jim Rogers vs Marc Faber: Faber Cautious On China; Rogers Bullish OnAll ... - ETF Daily News

The dog fight between Thailand’s Marc Faber and Singapore’s Jim Rogers is on. The point of contention is:  Which way will commodities prices go now that China’s (NYSEARCA:FXI) bubble economy appears to be headed for some sort of economic slowdown, contraction or crash?  “Well if we define a bubble as a period of excessive growth and artificially low interest rates, then China had a huge bubble,” Faber told King  World News on Wednesday, reiterating his previous calls for a China economic hard landing.  “Usually bubbles are not deflated by a soft landing, but by a hard landing and this concerns me, actually, much more than the European  situation.”

If China’s rapid growth slows “meaningfully” or crashes, “it will have a huge impact on the demand from China for raw materials, for commodities,” according to Faber, which “will impact Australia, Africa, the Middle-East and Latin America” and could create a “vicious spiral on the downside” to one of the  only few outperforming sectors of the world economy—commodities.

The pony-tailed Swiss money manager and 20-year+ resident of Thailand isn’t alone with his grim outlook for China and commodities prices.  Echoing concerns about the implications to commodities prices from a possible China crackup have been expressed by Eclectica Asset Management’s CIO Hugh Hendry and  Kynikos Associate’s President and Founder Jim Chanos, two additional and respected minds on the subject of China.

Hendry, who attended a December 2010 investor conference in Russia, which incidentally was chaired by Faber, said, “There should be a Confucius saying ‘Thou shall not invest in overcapacity.’”  Hendry went on to emphasis that he’s suspicious of China’s growth rate after factoring out it’s behemoth ‘manufactured’ capital spending component, a component which can be directly tied to Beijing’s centrally planned projects.

Chanos agrees with Faber and the fears of a hard landing to the Chinese economy.  Chanos told Bloomberg on two recent occasions, on Oct.  28 and Nov.  24, the real estate bubble has popped and the banking crisis that is most likely to result from drop in real estate prices may rival the financial crisis in the West.

“The Chinese are beginning to realize that property prices can go down as  well as up and this is going to be a very, very troubling development for the Chinese property market,” he said, and will lead to a “hard landing” in  China.

“Most China observers were not talking about any landing three months ago and  now they are confidently talking about a soft landing,” he added.

Pundits to the Chinese hard landing scenario, including Jim Rogers of Rogers Holdings, in particular, took a swipe at Faber on Friday in an email to CNBC regarding Faber’s take on commodities as an investment.

“Marc still does not understand China,” stated Rogers. “There are going to be several hard landings in the next few years, but China’s will be less hard overall than others such as Greece, U.S., et al,” and added that he believes China’s economy will undergo some busts in some sectors but will be offset by booms in other sectors.

According to Bloomberg, Rogers continued his email with references to two great bull markets of the recent past, one in stocks from 1983 to 1999 and the other bull market in gold from 1971 to 1980, that underwent steep consolidations such as the one commodities have been going through today before resuming their climbs.

After stocks took a drubbing during the 1987 crash, the bull market in equities continued for another 12 years, returning approximately 725 percent from the lows of the crash.

Rogers also cited the super bull market for gold (NYSEARCA:GLD), which crashed in price by 50 percent in 1974 following a six-fold move in the  price of the yellow metal to $200 from its pegged price of $35 per the ounce in  1971.  After reaching as low as nearly $100 following the crash, the gold price continued its bull market with a 750 percent gain during that six-year  period.

“Corrections are the normal way of all markets,” stated Rogers, and remains bullish in all commodities, especially silver (NYSEARCA:SLV) and rice in the shorter term.

Roger’s thesis on the outlook for China, with its enormous appetite for commodities during this decade and expectation to continue for at least another decade, has a strong advocate in Steven Leeb, a researcher and author of several  financial books on the subject of bull markets, whose new book, Red Alert:  How China’s Growing Prosperity Threatens the American Way of Life
discusses  this very issue.
When asked about Chanos’ point (adopted by Faber), specifically, about China and his expectations for weak commodities prices and a possible end to the bull market in ‘things’, Leeb told Financial  Sense Newshour’s James Puplava that China’s overcapacity is quite intentional and part of a much bigger plan being implemented by Beijing’s  hierarchy, a plan that includes building out capacity now in anticipation of the global demand for alternative energy products it sees later in the decade.

China intends to dominate the world in the production of alternative energy technologies and products, according to Leeb, adding that China has been “eating  our [America's] lunch” in the competition to gain control of the  world’s mega-trillion dollar market—clean energy products, specifically products  which utilize the sun and wind.

And according to Leeb, the amount of raw materials China will need to roll out its alternative energy industry will be simply “enormous.”

“It’s the height of arrogance for Americans to look at China and say they’re  doing things wrong,” said Leeb, referring to conclusions drawn about the Chinese economy by Chanos’, directly.

“There’s no doubt there was a real estate bubble there, but they’ve gained  control of it.  People tend to view China . . . through the same lens as  they do America; they do it through this kind of monetary lens, through this money lens,” Leeb explained.  “China’s not like that . . . they don’t think  in terms of minute to minute trading bonds day to day.  They think in terms of 10 to 20 year increments.”

Leeb gives an example of China’s impact upon the solar industry, citing the demise of one of America’s darling solar stocks, Evergreen Solar (ESLRQ.PK) as a prime example of what happens to companies which stand in the way of Beijing’s  plans to dominate the alternative energy market.

“This [Evergreen Solar] was the bellwether solar company, no fraud, no  nothing,” Leeb said.  “A few years ago the stock traded at $120, now it’s trading at 3 cents.  And it’s trading at 3 cents because the Chinese have underbid, they’ve under-priced.

“No one can stay in business.  These companies are not competing against other companies; they’re competing against a country that has over $3 trillion in reserves.  They are competing directly against China.”

Leeb ends his point about the misconceptions of Westerners regarding the  Chinese social, political and economic model by referencing a passage from one  of the books authored by former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger.

“There’s that very famous page in Kissinger’s book, I think, on China, in which Kissinger asked Zhou Enlai, who was the former leader of China, do you think the French Revolution was a success?  And Zhou Enlia, after thinking about it for minute said, ‘You know, I think it’s too soon to say.’”

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Jim Rogers: Faber's Wrong About China - CNBC.com

Jim Rogers thinks Marc Faber has got it wrong about China, when he says the country is possibly headed for a hard landing, which would lead to a devastating impact on commodities around the world.

"Marc still does not understand China. There are going to be several hard landings in the next few years, but China’s will be less hard overall than others such as Greece, U.S., et al," Rogers told CNBC in an email.Rogers says some parts of China's economy will have a "hard landing" but other parts will continue to boom. He says the commodity market will have a correction, but rebutted Faber's view that it would be devastating."Yes, there will be consolidations in the commodity bull market just as all markets have consolidations," he said. "In 1987, stocks declined 40-80 percent worldwide, but it was not the end of the secular bull market in stocks."Rogers said he was still long commodities, adding that gold went up 600 percent in the 1970s and then corrected by 50 percent scaring a lot of people. "It then continued its secular bull market and rose 850 percent. Corrections are the normal way of all markets."According to Faber, Rogers' bullish call on commodities is misplaced. "If I was always bullish about commodities and completely missed out on the crash in 2008, then obviously, having tied essentially my reputation to commodities, I'd continue to be bullish," Faber said.But Rogers said Faber had got it wrong when it came to his call in 2008. "I proclaimed repeatedly far and wide that one should not buy commodities in the run up phase. I also explained that I was not selling mine since we were [and are] in a secular bull market," Rogers said."I explained that my shorts of Citibank, Fannie Mae, all the investment banks and homebuilders, plus my long position in the Japanese yen would protect me in any sell-offs. When one’s shorts decline 90-100 percent, it is a good year even when one’s longs decline," Rogers added.

According to Rogers, Faber is the one who has made many wrong calls, arguing that he "totally missed" the secular bull market in commodities that began in early 1999."Also back in those days, he and his friends proclaimed often that China was a mess and would continue to be so," Rogers said. "They all were wildly excited about Russia. Some of his friends even left China to start operations in Russia. We all know how that resulted."

Thursday, December 8, 2011

Marc Faber, Jim Rogers not selling gold, but it’s not all good news forbullion

Investment gurus Jim Rogers and Marc Faber in recent interviews seem to agree on the dynamics in the gold market. Rogers says he’s not selling his gold and Faber says there is no bubble. But that doesn’t mean bullion is not still in a correction phase.

Investment Week quoted legendary global investor Jim Rogers, co-founder of the Quantum Fund with George Soros now based in Singapore, on the outlook for gold on Monday:


“It has been correcting for the past three months so it is overdue for a stronger correction, but I have no idea by how much. It is very unusual for any asset to go up for 11 years in a row with no correction. I own gold and I am not selling my gold.

The price at which I buy will depend on the circumstances. If it is going down because the world is going bankrupt then it would need to be priced at $900 for me to buy it. If there is an artificial occurrence then maybe between $1,200 and $1,400. It depends on what is going on in the world.”

Last week Bloomberg interviewed Marc Faber, fund manager and author of the widely followed ‘The Gloom Boom & Doom Report’ based in Chang Mia, Thailand (the conversation about gold starts around the 11:00 mark):


Faber tells how he recently asked a room full of Asian investors if they owned gold and only a one said yes, which signalled to him that gold was not in a bubble because “if [he] asked the same question about Yahoo! type of stocks ten years ago everybody would have put up their hands.”

Gold’s spike above $1,900 an ounce was a “huge move” and bullion was “still in a correction phase” although it has to be remembered that for the year gold is still up 20%. Faber commented on the record gold price in early September saying at the time “when you buy gold, it’s an insurance against systematic failure and problems in the financial markets.”

Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Jim Rogers to Marc Faber: you are wrong on China (FXI, RJA, EEM)

Legendary investor Jim Rogers claims that noted China bear Marc Faber is wrong about the country and its economic future.  Goldman Sachs ( GS , quote
), Morgan Stanley ( MS , quote ) and JP Morgan ( JPM , quote ) agree with Rogers and are all also calling for a "soft landing" in China, too. In an interview with CNBC, Rogers noted that "Marc still does not understand China.  There are going to be several hard landings in the next few years, but China's will be less hard overall than others such as Greece, U.S., et al."
Rogers' disagreement with "Doctor Doom" seems odd given the fact that Faber is an old Asia hand currently based in Thailand. To be fair, Rogers himself now lives in Singapore.
They agree that at least certain sectors of the Chinese economy were destined for a "hard fall," however.
The correct answer will be reflected in the performance of China funds like FXI  ( quote
), and as China goes, so go global emerging markets funds like RJA  ( quote ).
Rogers, the co-founder of the Quantum Fund with George Soros, remains long on commodities as he states there is "100% chance" of another financial crisis that will be worse than 2008, as detailed in articles
on www.emergingmoney.com .
He does anticipate corrections in commodities, although these will not be devastating,
"Yes, there will be consolidations in the commodity bull market just as all markets have consolidations.  In 1987, stocks declined 40% to 80% worldwide, but it was not the end of the secular bull market in stocks," he says.
Speaking of corrections, the publicly traded portfolio that attempts to replicate Rogers' investment strategy, the Elements Rogers International Commodity Agriculture exchange-traded note ( RJA
, quote ), is off sharply for the year, down almost 20%.
The views and opinions expressed herein are the views and opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of The NASDAQ OMX Group, Inc.

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