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February 22, 2012

Jim Rogers Blog: If I Could Put All Of My Money Into Myanmar, I Would

If I could put all of my money into Myanmar, I would. Myanmar is in the same place China was in early 1979, when Deng Xiaoping said we have to do something new. Myanmar is now opening up. - at a conference in Singapore yesterday

Jim Rogers Blog: If I Could Put All Of My Money Into Myanmar, I Would

The MasterMetals Blog

February 21, 2012

Is the PBoC really gold`s mystery buyer? - INDEPENDENT VIEWPOINT | Mineweb

Here is an excerpt:


Our guess? No doubt China is buying gold direct from its miners. That metal is then lacking for retail consumption. So to ensure lots of supply for what proved another strong Chinese New Year, importers booked early and often. But following that trebling of gold imports in 2011, the timing of SAFE's move, immediately after New Year - and only two weeks after India doubled its gold and silver import duties - suggests Beijing is live to the trade-balance risks posed by Chinese households' soaring demand.

"IMF slashes forecast for China current account surplus," announced the Wall Street Journal last week.

"China's current account surplus for 2011 shrank to $201.1 billion ($187.37bn), from $305.4bn in 2010. More important, as a ratio of gross domestic product, the surplus fell to about 2.7%...close to a decade-low."

Now, "as China's trade surplus declines dramatically," reports University of Peking professor Michael Pettis, "more and more people within the country are calling for interventionist steps to halt the decline, including depreciating the [Yuan], or at least halting its appreciation."

Pettis' comment should remind us that Beijing is a big bureaucracy, with lots of divergent views and voices. Devaluing the Yuan would look a highly aggressive decision to its would-be friends in Washington, especially those US politicians talking up China's "violations" of international law. But trying to stem - or rather slow - the pace of import growth wouldn't look quite so rude.

This new rule is already frustrating those banks importing gold, but it's likely only to delay, rather than deter, the flow of bullion. Still, it's a hat-tip to the potential drain on China's foreign currency holdings which gold has become for India - still the world's No.1 consumer, and importing twice as much as bullion as China in 2011 because it has no domestic mine output to help feed its consumption, whether central-bank or private.

India's hunger for a metal it does not produce is plain to see in its trade balance. The only current-account deficit in the region as Morgan Stanley notes, this gold-heavy outflow of cash also weighed on the Rupee's exchange rate in 2011, down 15% versus the Dollar as the currency markets tried to force an adjustment.



The MasterMetals Blog

Vitol warns crude could pass $150 - FT.com

Another record year for Vitol - in revenues, if not in profits...

The Geneva-based trading house, which is owned by 360 of its employees, said that revenues rose last year to a record $297bn, up 44 per cent from $206bn in 2010, on the back of rising volumes and prices. Commodities trading houses achieve tiny margins and industry executives believe that the difficult trading conditions of last year mean that Vitol earned between $1.5bn and $2.0bn in the year, below its record high of $2.3bn set in 2006.

Vitol said that its total trading volumes reached 457m tonnes, up roughly 14.5 per cent from 399m tonnes in 2010, as the trading house boosted some of its non-oil businesses, including emissions and coal. Vitol traded 135m tonnes of crude oil, equal to roughly 2.8m barrels a day, little changed from 134m tonnes in 2010.

Vitol warns crude could pass $150

The world’s largest independent energy trader has warned that oil prices could surge this year to a record high due to growing geopolitical tensions in the Middle East.

Ian Taylor, chief executive of Vitol, said on Tuesday as he released results for the commodities trading house that his main scenario envisaged oil prices remaining at “around current levels for the balance of 2012”, but he warned: “Geopolitical risk, especially in the Middle East, creates potential material risk to the upside.”

In a separate interview with the Financial Times, Mr Taylor said that oil prices could even surpass the record high of nearly $150 a barrel set in mid-2008. “It is unlikely, but it is possible,” he said when asked whether prices would surge to a fresh record.

Even if oil prices remain just at current levels, as Vitol is predicting, it would mean that 2012 would set a record annual average. Brent crude oil averaged $109 a barrel last year, setting an all-time high above the previous average record of $98.4 a barrel in 2008.

The comments came as the Switzerland-based trading house reported record revenues and volumes in 2011. Vitol, which is privately owned, does not disclose profitability.

...

“The supply side of the market is a mess,” Mr Taylor said. “Demand, even if not great, continues to grow. So its difficult to see much price downside from current levels.”

Moreover, oil inventories remain at historically low levels, particularly in Europe, due to the impact of the civil war in Libya on oil supplies. The International Energy Agency earlier this month said that crude oil inventories in Europe fell in December to a 15-year low.

...

The forecast by Vitol comes as oil executives, traders and policymakers gather for International Petroleum Week, the annual meeting of the industry this week in London. For the second year in a row, the risk of supply disruption is the dominant theme for IP Week. In 2011 Libya was the main worry. This year it is Iran.

...

The Geneva-based trading house, which is owned by 360 of its employees, said that revenues rose last year to a record $297bn, up 44 per cent from $206bn in 2010, on the back of rising volumes and prices. Commodities trading houses achieve tiny margins and industry executives believe that the difficult trading conditions of last year mean that Vitol earned between $1.5bn and $2.0bn in the year, below its record high of $2.3bn set in 2006.

Vitol said that its total trading volumes reached 457m tonnes, up roughly 14.5 per cent from 399m tonnes in 2010, as the trading house boosted some of its non-oil businesses, including emissions and coal. Vitol traded 135m tonnes of crude oil, equal to roughly 2.8m barrels a day, little changed from 134m tonnes in 2010.

read the whole story online here: Vitol warns crude could pass $150 - FT.com

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