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Emerging Market Investing: Why Your Portfolio Should Not Speak English

When Gen. Cornwallis surrendered to Gen. Washington after the Battle of Yorktown, the British band supposedly struck up the tune “The World Turned Upside Down.” After all, such an outcome would have been unthinkable at the start of the American Revolution.

That is in the nature of things, however. No one stays on top forever. Only recently, the mighty US consumer – long the dominant force in world trade – has lost its top seed. There is a brave new world emerging, and it has a brave new consumer. This time, it’s Americans that might want to strike up that old ballad.

Consumers in emerging markets are now the dominant consumer group in the world, surpassing the US. We’ve crossed an important threshold. Emerging Market economies now represent about 33% of consumer spending worldwide. US consumer spending, at 27% of worldwide GDP, trails for behind. As recently as 2006, US consumer spending was greater than that of the Emerging Market economies.

As The Economist notes, “The emerging world is enjoying the most spectacular growth in history.” Some of the growth rates are just blistering. Thailand grew 15% on an annualized basis in the fourth quarter. Taiwan grew 18%. “Multinationals expect about 70% of the world’s growth over the next few years to come from emerging markets,” The Economist adds, “with 40% coming from just two countries, China and India.”

It’s a great time to be an investor as we witness this history-making shift in global markets that will surely create great opportunities for us. Just look around and you can see the impact already.

For instance, Coca-Cola reported a 20% increase in first-quarter profits despite the fact that North American sales declined. Sales in emerging markets, such as India (up 29%) and Turkey (up 18%), made it possible. About 75% of Coca-Cola’s sales are now overseas. This is just one example. There is a whole slew of iconic companies that now generate more sales overseas than in the US. It’s still early.

The next big consumer market to open up might be Indonesia. It’s the world’s fourth largest population, behind China, India and the US, with 240 million people. Ford just opened its first dealership here. Honda says it can’t make motorcycles fast enough. And H.J. Heinz reports that Indonesia is a big part of why its Asia sales rose 41% last year.

So the long-awaited emergence of the emerging markets consumer is at hand. More than that, the emerging markets are also becoming a source of innovative ideas. Fortune 500 companies are happy to set up brainy shops in emerging markets. They already have 98 R&D facilities in China and 63 in India. GE has a vast R&D facility in Bangalore, its biggest in the world. Cisco is spending billion on a second HQ, also in Bangalore. Accenture has a quarter of its work force in India. Microsoft’s biggest R&D center, outside of Redmond, is in Beijing.

And they are enjoying tremendous success. For example, GE’s Bangalore laboratory invented a new hand-held electrocardiogram that sells for 0, instead of the usual ,000. The cost per test is only per patient.

As The Economist put it, emerging markets have become a “fizzing cocktail of creativity.” Moreover, it’s not just Western companies doing the creative work. (Huawei, a Chinese telecom giant, is now the world’s fourth largest patent applicant.) Companies in China, India and other places outside the US are inventing game-changing technologies. A few of the stories The Economist highlights in its report are simply amazing.

In Chennai, a Tata company created a water purifier that uses rice husks – a common waste product. A family can enjoy bacteria-free water for the grand price of . New filters every few months will cost . It’s cheap and portable and will make a big impact on the poor the world over, most of whom lack access to clean water.

Another Indian manufacturer concocted a fridge that runs on batteries! A Chinese company, Mindray, makes a lithium battery for , compared with previously. Bharti Airtel, an Indian company, has the lowest cell phone fees in the world – 2 cents a minute and nationwide coverage. The company is worth billion.

One of the most startling tales was that of Devi Shetty. He is applying Henry Ford’s assembly-line techniques to hospitals. Shetty’s flagship hospital in Bangalore has 1,000 beds. (The average American hospital has only 160.) His team of 40-some cardiologists cranks out 600 operations a week. Open-heart surgery costs about ,000 – compared with ,000-0,000 in an American hospital. Shetty and his team have performed tens of thousands of such operations with results as good as the best of American hospitals. Incredibly, these hospitals even make money! According to The Economist, “Dr Shetty’s family-owned hospital group reports a 7.7% profit after taxes, compared with 6.9% in American private hospitals.”

So where are the opportunities? I believe that the biggest opportunities and the biggest rewards will go to the homegrown companies in these markets. The biggest winners won’t be the multinationals, their present success notwithstanding. (And it hasn’t all been sugar and spice. Ask Google or Yahoo or Black & Decker or a host of others who met defeat in foreign markets.) As in baseball or football, the odds favor the home team, which has more knowledge of local markets, customs and the like.

For example, China’s auto market grew 45% last year to become the biggest in the world. GM, for the first time ever, now sells more cars in China than in the US. But Chinese automakers have made the largest market share gains. As of 2004, Chinese automakers were 21% of the market; today, they are 32% and rising. Of the 89 new models unveiled at the global auto show in Beijing recently, 75 were Chinese brands.

We are now at a point, too, at which we can list a host of companies that are world-class in what they do and call an emerging market home. Mittal as recently as 1990 was an unknown steel maker in Indonesia. Today, it’s the world’s largest steel company. China’s Lenovo didn’t even exist in 1990 and today is the world’s fourth largest PC maker. There are many more examples from Brazil’s Embraer to China’s battery maker BYD. Warren Buffett bought a piece of the latter company in September 2008. BYD went from about to in about 18 months. Needless to say, investors in these kinds of companies have reaped huge gains. And some of the biggest opportunities in the next 10 years will come from the next crop of Mittals and Embraers and BYDs.

The above is just a sampling of the mind-bending changes taking place right now in the Emerging Market economies. As the explorer, Marco Polo, once said, “I have not told the half of what I saw.”

Chris Mayer
for The Daily Reckoning

Emerging Market Investing: Why Your Portfolio Should Not Speak English originally appeared in the Daily Reckoning. The Daily Reckoning, offers a uniquely refreshing, perspective on the global economy, investing, gold, stocks and today’s markets. Its been called “the most entertaining read of the day.”


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Emerging Market Investing: Where the World’s Headed

I’d like to share one anecdote with you that says a lot about how the world is changing.

Last week, Caterpillar, the world’s biggest maker of earthmoving equipment, said it was boosting its production in Brazil and China. It’s building a new facility in Brazil to build things like backhoes. And it is quadrupling its output in China over the next four years. It also plans to base an executive in Asia for the first time.

Think about this: Caterpillar gets two-thirds of its sales outside of the US. It shed 19,000 full-time jobs last year. This year, it will hire 9,000 workers. But more than two-thirds will be outside of the US.

I’ve said it before, but it’s worth repeating: Investors must look abroad for growth.

Chris Mayer
for The Daily Reckoning

Emerging Market Investing: Where the World’s Headed originally appeared in the Daily Reckoning. The Daily Reckoning, offers a uniquely refreshing, perspective on the global economy, investing, gold, stocks and today’s markets. Its been called “the most entertaining read of the day.”


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The 10 Best Investing Blogs

Blogs are everywhere these days. With a few clicks any person can voice their opinions in a public forum on any subject – instantly. They rival newspapers and other professional sources as a source of insight and information, and while many offer little redeemable value there are blogs out there that know what they’re talking about.

With that in mind we searched the web looking for the 10 best investing blogs. We looked for independent finance and investing blogs that operate outside of the mainstream and offer non-biased analysis. We looked for contrarian writing that presents solutions and interpretations of the news rather that simply repeating the headlines.

Here’s a list of some of the 2010 Best Investing and Finance Blogs:

1. Dr. Housing Bubble – Providing a “candid account of what is going on in today’s housing market ,” the writers of this helpful blog analyze the causes, effects, and implications of the housing bubble – one of the largest asset bubbles of all time.

2.  Zero Hedge – “On a long enough timeline the survival rate for everyone drops to zero.” This cynical economic blog writes under the veil of pseudonyms (site founder “Tyler Durden” borrows his moniker from the film Fight Club) as a shield for their dissident opinions. Believing in the power of free speech, the blogs aims, among other things, to “skeptically examine, and when necessary, attack the flaccid institution that financial journalism has become…[to] provide analysis uninhibited by political constraint…[and to] facilitate information’s unending quest for freedom.”

3.  Mark Hanson Advisers – Run by mortgage bank vet Mark Hanson, this informative blog aims to turn the “daily, market-moving real estate and mortgage news flow and events into old news by the time it makes headlines.” His years of experience and training have allowed him to consistently make accurate and timely decisions about the housing and mortgage market.

4. Reggie Middleton’s BoomBustBlog – Using his background in financial analysis, freethinking and independent entrepreneur Reggie Middleton operates his BoomBustBlog outside of mainstream Wall Street. To ensure his research and analysis are of the highest quality, Middleton “assembled his own talented research staff…to pursue, analyze, and capitalize on global macroeconomic opportunities.”

5. Cara Community – Canadian investor and broker-dealer firm founder Bill Cara offers his insight on capital markets and social equity. Despite moments of eccentricity, he consistently presents explanations of the markets and his analysis in comprehensive detail.

6. Mish’s Global Economic Trend Analysis – Mike “Mish” Shedlock, a registered investment advisor representative for SitkaPacific Capital Management, runs this economic and financial blog that features daily commentary. “Mish” has also contributed to The Daily Reckoning.

7. Seeking Alpha – Comprised of over 60 contributors, including financial advisors, portfolio managers, analysts, and traders, Seeking Alpha is actually network of financial blogs. Thanks to its size and resources, this blog has articles and posts on an extensive array of topics that are clearly organized and easy to access.

8. Infectious Greed – Paul Kedrosky is the editor of Infectious Greed and is a renowned financial market analyst for CNBC television. His success as an investor as well as his degrees in economics of technology, finance and engineering color his unique and discerning analysis.

9. The Big Picture – Writing on investing, markets, and the economy for the past 15 years, Barry Ritholtz (with contributors) continues his analysis with The Big Picture, a blog designed to be easily accessible to people without a PhD in economics. He describes it as a “compendium of what a Wall Street money manager is looking at, thinking about, and writing on.” Barry Ritholtz has also contributed to The Daily Reckoning.

10. Peridot Capitalist – Run by the founder and President of Peridot Capital Management LLC Chris Brand, Peridot Capitalist has been touted as one of the best investment blogs on the web since its start in 2004. Specializing in customized personal finance and investment management services, Brand started the site to “open his knowledge base and asset management services to those outside his immediate family.”

Bonus Best Investing Blog Picks

11. Whiskey and Gunpowder and The Penny Sleuth – Both published by Agora Financial, these newsletters deliver the latest market research and advice everyday. The Penny Sleuth is one of the top sources for “actionable independent penny stock analysis, options strategies, and high growth opportunities.” Favoring commodities and opposing market intervention, Whiskey and Gunpowder features “insightful articles that explore a range of topics, including commodities, politics, technology, history,” and offers readers “in-depth analysis that the mainstream media will never give you.”

These are some of the best investing blogs the internet has to offer. Each is written with intelligence, consideration, and a bit of humor. However, this list is by no means exhaustive as there are plenty of other great investing blogs out there, and we’d love to hear from you. Feel free to write in the comment section about the investing blogs you read and trust.

Thanks for reading this installment of The Daily Reckoning Best of Series:  The 10 Best Investing and Finance Blogs

Michael MacLeod
Research Assistant for The Daily Reckoning

The 10 Best Investing Blogs originally appeared in the Daily Reckoning. The Daily Reckoning, offers a uniquely refreshing, perspective on the global economy, investing, gold, stocks and today’s markets. Its been called “the most entertaining read of the day.”


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Investing in China Gets Contrarian

An investment quiz to begin today’s note. Two-part question:

1) Which country has more money to spend than any other?
2) Which nation currently represents the least-attractive investment environment? In other words, where is the one place a true contrarian would love – where no one wants to invest?

The answers lie in our favorite headline of the day: China has agreed to invest billions in Greece’s port system.

After some lousy pre-crash investments in Blackstone, Morgan Stanley and Visa, Chinese state money is finally wising up. Today, China announced 14 separate deals with the Greek government, tourism industry, telecoms, shipping companies and shipbuilders – all designed to give the Chinese virtual control of Piraeus, a mega-port outside of Athens.

Coupled with previous deals, China will now have a huge presence in the vital shipping channel between the Mediterranean and the Balkans. And they’ll likely be getting it all on the cheap… Just this morning, Fitch became the last ratings agency to downgrade Greek debt to “junk” levels, leaving Greece with very few – if any – bargaining chips for negotiations with the Chinese.

Vice Premier Zhang Dejiang is in Greece as we write, striking the deal, which is estimated to be worth billions. Greeks need cash so badly, there’re rumors floating around that a hefty chunk of the national railway is up for sale, too.

“Given China’s consumption of raw materials, the spending binge is not likely to stop,” writes Rich Lee, the latest addition to our squad of analysts (he’ll be helping Rob Parenteau devise investment strategies for The Richebächer Letter).

“Beijing has already secured access to raw materials, metals and crude oil. The next step will be in the areas of real estate and commodity deposits – massive oil fields in Africa, or property laden with copper in Chile and Turkey. One thing is for sure: The Chinese will continue to target components closely tied to the economy.”

But – the ultimate question – will Chinese consumption, both domestic and international, eventually collapse under its own heft? Japan went on a similar global shopping spree in the ’80s…and soon after fell into a bear market that’s still raging today.

“Bubbles are a part of the weather patterns of markets,” writes Chris Mayer. “They appear every so often, like cloudy days. So what about China? In the big cities, apartment prices have doubled or tripled in the last three-five years. Bank lending is up fourfold since 2008, and the government stimulus package means a lot of temporary activity in construction.

“I put the bubble question to nearly everyone we met when we visited China last month: money managers, economists, entrepreneurs, etc. It’s the pressing question everyone wants to know. And I’ve talked about the issue in my weekly e-mails to Capital & Crisis and Special Situations subscribers, so I don’t want to rehash it all here. I could write the whole issue on this question.

“The bottom line about investing in China: There is surely a property bubble in China, though smaller and less leveraged than the US vintage. But it doesn’t change the long-term picture of what’s happening in China. As one hedge fund manager put it to me, ‘China is many mini-economies.’ He is sure there is a bubble too, but I note he’s still investing in basic areas like food and water, which are less connected to the property market.”

For specific investment advice, we’ve got quite an opportunity coming up. Addison, Chris, the hedge fund manager Chris just mentioned and another of our favorite Chinese contacts will be gathering for a conference call this Thursday after the market closes. They will tackle the “China: Boom, Bubble or Bust” debate head-on, and you’ll have a chance to sign up. For more info, check out this short video presentation:

At least half a dozen specific investment ideas will be hashed out on the call, including some of the best opportunities Chris discovered while in China last month. If you want in on this call, you have to let us know…right here. But hurry… Space is very limited.

Ian Mathias
for The Daily Reckoning

Investing in China Gets Contrarian originally appeared in the Daily Reckoning. The Daily Reckoning, offers a uniquely refreshing, perspective on the global economy, investing, gold, stocks and today’s markets. Its been called “the most entertaining read of the day.”


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Crisis Investing

Not long ago, several Outstanding Investments subscribers invited me for a sit-down chat. I told them that I love to talk with readers, but I can only chat general themes. I CANNOT offer personal investment advice in the context of a small group.

That is, when it comes to specific recommendations, I only do that in the pages of my newsletters. Everyone was OK with the ground rules. So after juggling our schedules, we wound up in the beautiful oak-paneled lobby of the old Summit Inn, south of Pittsburgh near Uniontown. It’s right alongside historic US Highway 40 – the road carved by British colonists from the East Coast into the Western frontier.

It was great to listen to the reader questions, comments and concerns. As you can imagine, the ongoing deep-water disaster in the Gulf of Mexico was high on everyone’s list of issues. “Can’t the military do a better job of dealing with this mess than BP (NYSE:BP),” asked one reader?

It’s a fair question. The US spends hundreds of billions of dollars every year on the Department of Defense. Where’s the return on that investment? Can’t any military people or equipment help?

The short answer is that the military is designed to fight wars, not oil well blowouts. And as we all know, much of the military is busy fighting wars right now.

Wars or no, Secretary of Defense Robert Gates recently said that private industry has better deep-water technology than the US military does. Mr. Gates was referring, in part, to the remotely operated vehicles (ROVs) built by the likes of Oceaneering (NYSE:OII) and FMC Technologies (NYSE:FTI). The share prices for these companies are down just now, what with the so-called “six-month moratorium” on deep-water drilling in the Gulf. But over time, the ROV makers will come back strong.

As for the military, it’s good at organizing people and things and then focusing them on a mission. But by definition, it’s a military mission. Sure, there’s military capability to deal with, say, an oil spill during a military fueling operation. But overall, the DOD is not geared to fight a widespread environmental battle, such as what we have in the Gulf.

That said, however, the military is supplying personnel, ships, aircraft, command and control support and much else to the oil-fighting effort. And let’s distinguish the DOD from the US Coast Guard, which IS playing a critical role in all of this.

Indeed, Coast Guard Adm. Thad Allen is the National Incident Coordinator for the oil disaster. Adm. Allen has become a well-recognized presence in the media coverage. Plus, Adm. Allen is a key decision maker in the process of deploying all manner of public and private resources. He signs off on permits for many efforts to deal with the blowout and combat the oil spill. So the Coast Guard is right there, in the thick of things, delivering value.

From this point, the Summit discussion with Outstanding Investments subscribers moved to a different, but related, issue. “Are there things that the government just can’t do?” asked one participant.

It’s an important philosophical question. There’s no denying that “the government” can accomplish great things over time. Given enough time and resources, the federal government can build great edifices like the Grand Coulee Dam or accomplish monumental tasks like landing men on the moon.

But keep in mind that big dams, and even men on the moon, are “deliverables.” They’re technological things you can wrap your brain around. They’re also things that you can design, plan out and throw money at over a period of time.

But what happens when bad things occur abruptly? Natural disasters like earthquakes, hurricanes and volcanoes come to mind. Or in the current case, we have a man-made disaster – a deep-water oil well blowout. People aren’t prepared for really bad things – mentally or physically, if not technologically – and nobody can deal with the consequences. We quickly find the edge of the envelope of government power.

That is, sometimes government just plain lacks ability to control events. The Gulf of Mexico oil well blowout is one of those times. Look at the aura of helplessness exhibited by many of the highest-ranking politicians in the country. The big shots can rant and rave and threaten lawsuits from here to the end of time. But can they plug the oil well? No, they can just sit there and bellyache.

The subscribers at the Summit Inn had their own views of how, exactly, the federal government – as well as BP and the rest of the energy industry – was simply not ready to deal with the oil well blowout.

“The federal government owns the offshore,” said one subscriber. “The government has allowed deep-water drilling for 20 years. Now the politicians and bureaucrats act like it’s a total surprise that there’s a deep blowout. It’s so hypocritical. At Department of Homeland Security, they have people whose job is to think about a nuclear bomb going off in Washington, where THEY live. Isn’t there somebody at Department of Interior whose job is to think up terrible scenarios like a deep-water blowout where they DON’T live and then plan for it?”

Great point. Along these lines, a recent headline speaks volumes: “Gulf Oil Spill Surpasses Scope of Disaster Training.” This headline comes from a well-regarded nationally distributed newspaper. What newspaper? Navy Times.

Wow! Consider the source. Navy Times is privately published by Military Times Co. But over the years, Navy Times has carved its niche as the newspaper of record for the US Navy, with a large readership within the Coast Guard.

That is, Navy Times is a newspaper for sea service insiders. What are people on the inside actually saying? The insiders are admitting candidly that the disaster planning and training was inadequate to meet the ongoing crisis in the Gulf of Mexico. Yes, there was some thinking, planning and training. But not for anything this big.

According to Navy Times, “A month before the BP oil rig explosion in the Gulf of Mexico, more than 50 federal, state, local and private organizations swarmed a simulated oil spill in the Gulf of Maine… The Coast Guard dubbed the event the ‘Super Bowl of exercises.’ But this effort appears dwarfed by the size and complexity of the environmental disaster unfolding off the Louisiana coast.”

Yes, it sure “appears dwarfed.” No Super Bowl rings for this one. Of course, there’s no denying that there’s a gigantic, all-government level of response to the deep-water blowout. And there’s a learning curve evident. So there’s progress out there. But before the explosion on April 20, there sure was a failure of imagination when it came to the dangers of deep water.

The deep-water disaster is – or ought to be – a humbling moment for people who place their faith in the power of government. Especially government people, and particularly politicians.

That is, the deep-water blowout shows that there are things that government can’t control, let alone fix. As environmental damage lingers into the future, it’ll drive home that point about the limits of government capabilities again and again.

One participant at the Summit conference made a terrific point. She said, “Washington was unprepared for the fall of the Soviet Union back in 1991. Washington was surprised by Islamic terrorism, and blindsided by Sept. 11. Washington was caught flat-footed with the housing crash, and the Wall Street meltdown in 2008 and 2009. The government is unprepared for a deep-water well blowout. What’s next? What ELSE doesn’t the government plan for, what other big things? What if the euro fails? What if the dollar crashes?”

That’s quite a way to look at it. Over the past 20 years, the US government has dropped the ball in a lot of areas. Thus, it behooves you, as an investor, to connect these dots. When it comes to big stuff that can change the national direction, and screw up your life in the process, the government may very well fail to anticipate things.

Even if the government does see the asteroids coming, what will your government do for you? Will your favorite politician give up his room in the survival bunker? For you? Are you kidding? The bottom line is that every investor needs to prepare his or her own lifeboat.

Along those lines, the subscribers with whom I met have a stash of physical gold and silver. That’s just the beginning. They “get” Peak Oil and the decline of the dollar.

I won’t get into personal details, but there’s a reason that these particular subscribers live in a semirural area south of Pittsburgh, in the mountains, with spring water, fertile soil and plenty of time to practice their target shooting.

Sure, these Outstanding Investments subscribers may play the stock markets. They may even invest in gold miners and energy firms. But at the end of the day, each one of these subscribers is building his (and her) own measure of personal security in a world where the financial future of America is looking more and more precarious.

Byron King
for The Daily Reckoning

Crisis Investing originally appeared in the Daily Reckoning. The Daily Reckoning, offers a uniquely refreshing, perspective on the global economy, investing, gold, stocks and today’s markets. Its been called “the most entertaining read of the day.”


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