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In
this article, I want to address what stage of the market cycle
resource stocks are in, why, what’s likely next, and what you
should do about it.
For
pretty much all my adult life I’ve been a speculator. That is to
say, someone with an appreciation for the relationship between
risk and reward, an appreciation far too many people clearly
don’t share.
Take
for example, ostensibly conservative investments such as money
market funds and T-bills. To my worldview, these are just bad
jokes being played on the masses. Piling all your assets into
increasingly worthless paper paying next to no interest is the
financial equivalent of a death of a thousand cuts, guaranteeing
that a large swath of the nation’s senior citizens will spend
their golden years sporting paper caps while tossing fries. My
view is that, certainly in today’s world, it’s much more
prudent to risk 10% of your capital with a prospect of getting a
1,000% return than risk 100% of your capital for the prospect of a
10% (or less) return.
This
brings me to the current market in natural resource stocks, a
sector in which I have been an active investor for almost 30
years. That’s enough time to have witnessed all manner of cycles
and market action. As is to be expected, especially in the early
years, I made mistakes, most of them attributable to the hubris of
youth. On one memorable occasion, the error was serious enough
that I felt the need to spend a day in bed pondering the magnitude
of my losses.
But
most humans (politicians and most economists being the exception)
learn from their mistakes, and I learned from mine. As a direct
consequence, I have made considerable money in the resource
sector. Certainly enough to retire and hang out in upscale locales
for the rest of my life, if that were my want. (It’s not… as
you read this, I’ve just returned from a rock-kicking expedition
to a developing gold play in the boondocks of Panama).
Further,
I’m convinced that if I were wiped out tomorrow, I could start
with a small grubstake and recoup most of my losses in a few
years’ time. In fact, I believe I could do it even if I was
airdropped into the Congo, with no money at all. And so could
anyone with an entrepreneurial spirit, who knows the difference
between something’s price and its value, and understands how to
balance risk and reward.
But
there’s no need to do anything exotic, like starting with
nothing. A relatively small amount of money, skillfully deployed
in the right market at the right time, can compound quickly.
With
that in mind, perhaps the most critical thing for people now in
resource stocks is to examine the nature of bull markets. Many
believe that, since resource stocks have had such a big move since
their absolute bottoms in the 2000-2002 period, the bull market
is, if not over, at least long in the tooth.
I
don’t think so. And the reason goes back to an understanding of
the way bull markets work—at least major, secular bull markets.
They generally have three stages: 1) Stealth, 2) Wall of Worry,
and 3) Mania.
THE
STEALTH PHASE
The
best time to buy in any market is when shares can be purchased on
the basis of value alone. Of course that’s generally only
possible when nobody wants to own them because they’ve been so
beaten up in the previous bear market. It’s then, when people
are most bearish, that new bull markets are born—quietly,
unbeknownst to almost anyone. That’s why I term the first stage
the Stealth phase: It’s there, but nobody can see it.
In
the case of mining stocks, the bottom came between early 2000 and
mid 2002, when few investors were even aware that a market in
resource stocks existed any longer. It was so beat up that many
companies were selling for less than their cash in the bank. Every
week, several would change their names, roll back their stock, and
make themselves over as dotcoms, or China telecom parts
distributors, or some other then-fashionable fad business.
In
March 2002, for instance, when the risk-averse investing masses
wanted nothing to do with precious metals stocks, I wrote this in
the International Speculator, (Vol. XXIII No. 3), complete with
the uncharacteristically hyperbolic punctuation:
“Junior
gold stocks are the most volatile securities on the planet, with
the possible exception of lately minted Internet stocks, and the
market is still off about 95% from its previous peak. THIS
CONTINUES TO BE THE TIME TO BACK UP THE TRUCK. If I could call
your broker for you, I would.
“What
we're looking at is a rare opportunity, perhaps twice a decade in
the resource stocks, to make a real killing. The last time it was
this good was Jan. 1993. In fact, now is actually the best time to
buy gold stocks (and they're usually terrible things to hold)
since 1971, when the dollar was devalued. Gold is now, in real
terms, almost as cheap as it was at $35 back then; silver is
considerably cheaper than it was at $1.29.”
Attentive
investors joined me in making a lot of money by buying solid
resource stocks while they were almost being given away. Another
term I use for the Stealth phase is the “Easy Money” phase,
because almost anything you buy in this stage will make you a lot
of money, with little actual risk—although perceived risk is
very high.
Then,
as is the nature of things, word got around and investors began
rediscovering the resource stocks. Two things happened, as they
always do.
One,
a new wave of investors started pouring into the sector, eager to
join in the fun and willing to throw money at any good story (and
most are good stories… whether those stories are fact or
fiction, is another matter).
Two,
a new wave of resource companies were launched to meet the demand.
Conference halls previously suitable for yodel practice filled up
with clamoring hordes of cash-waving investors, who were met in
force by resource company executives happy to relieve them of that
cash.
Predictably,
the tsunami of money—which started hitting the market in the
second half of 2003—floated all boats, pretty much regardless of
merit. The new money, however, put an end to the Stealth market.
Early investors looked like financial geniuses and began to
believe trees grow to the moon. Actually, they will—but not
until the third stage of the bull market.
The
flood of money also did one more thing: it provided the juice
needed by the well-run companies to lock up new properties and
fund the exploration required to come up with a mineral discovery.
WALL
OF WORRY
The
approximate C$12.8 billion of IPO and Private Placement money that
materialized over the last two years acted like a rainstorm in the
desert, causing stock prices to blossom. There were quite a few
that went up 1,000% and more. But stocks—especially mining
exploration stocks—aren’t heirlooms, they’re highly volatile
trading vehicles. Seeing momentum diminish, speculators with
(sometimes) huge profits started selling to realize them. This led
to the second stage of a bull market, commonly called the Wall of
Worry stage. That’s where we’ve been for a little more than
two years.
Periodically
in 2004, and intensively in 2005 and 2006, prices of most resource
companies have been driven down, casting a dark cloud over the
psychology of most investors and market observers.
People
are worried for a number of reasons. Technicians fret about the
huge run-ups and subsequent losses of momentum; they wonder if the
mining stocks aren’t about to go right back where they came
from. Fundamentalists are concerned that (inevitably) higher
interest rates will cause people to buy fewer new houses, cars,
and other consumer goods; as demand falls, so would commodity
prices. They worry that the boom in China will soon come off the
rails. They worry that all the money that’s been raised will
result in gigantic new supplies of metal, depressing prices. They
worry that environmentalists will make it impossible to develop
new properties at any price. They worry that feckless and bankrupt
governments might nationalize good-looking discoveries, or tax
them into unprofitability. They worry that new technologies will
radically reduce the use of some metals, collapsing their prices.
They worry that anything that can go wrong will go wrong. And
they’re right—but their timing is wrong.
As
a consequence, even good news out of a resource company is often
met with selling as investors decide to use any volume to
liquidate positions in order to “watch from the sidelines”.
But
in this stage, despite all the fear and sharp sell-offs, the
market slowly climbs the Wall of Worry. It eventually digests
selling from the profit-takers and the timid, as new buyers
overwhelm them.
As
a speculator, this phase of the market is almost as good as the
Stealth phase, because while the easy money has been made, the big
money is still ahead. It will come once the market enters the next
phase, the Mania stage. That’s when the broad base of individual
and institutional investors become convinced the market is going
to the moon, pile in, and drive it half way to that destination.
By positioning yourself in the right companies before the mania
phase begins—and then having the intestinal fortitude to stay
invested, and even buy more, through any periods of
weakness—your investments can make you rich.
But
you may be asking: Casey, what makes you so sure that this
actually is a major secular bull market for the resource stocks?
There
are lots of reasons. Enough that even a cursory discussion of them
will take another article. But in brief, to refute some of the
current Worries: We’re coming off the longest and deepest
secular commodity bear market since the depression of the ‘30s.
Commodity prices are still far below their historic highs, at
least in “constant” dollars, which is what counts. The world
economy is evolving away from the debt-burdened U.S. and towards
China, India, and numerous smaller countries; their growth will be
volatile, but it’s for real, and they’ll consume unbelievable
amounts of raw materials in the coming years. There’s been very
little mineral exploration for a full generation, the industry has
come nowhere near replacing reserves, and a historic supply crunch
in many commodities is in the making. Governments will always act
stupidly, but the long-term trend is inevitably towards freer
markets, higher standards of living—and higher resource
consumption.
If
I’m right about these things, and I’m confident that I am,
then the current Wall of Worry will be followed by a mania.
MANIA
The
fundamentals—although of a much different sort than we saw in
the Stealth stage—will drive these stocks much, much higher when
the third, the Mania stage hits. And thanks to the 1980-2000 bull
market in the general stock market, everybody (probably even
including most homeless people) now has a stock account. They know
little about stocks except to get on board anything that seems to
be headed up; they’re trend followers. The commodity story tells
well, and a whole generation of investors are going to hear it for
the first time. Remember, even during the secular resource bear
market of 1980-2000, there were three spectacular cyclical bull
markets in exploration stocks that took them up an average of
1,000% each time. The power behind the coming Mania phase will
drive the resource stocks we are currently covering up like the
contents of Hoover Dam trying to fit through a garden hose.
I
expect the Mania stage to resemble what we saw with the Internet
stocks in the late ‘90s.
WHAT
TO DO NOW
If
you are going to be successful as an investor in this phase of the
market, you are going to have to suppress your fight-or-flight
response and take the time to identify those companies with the
goods: adequate financing, great management, realistic market
capitalization, and solid properties in the right locations.
How
long will you have to wait for your payoff? Not long. The typical
exploration cycle lasts about two to three years, and we’ve
already started seeing some important discoveries in 2006 and
early 2007. That stream of news should pick up momentum as a
result of all that money raised in 2003 to 2006—and it is
already delivering the goods. Consider the table below of
recommendations made in June of 2006 and their results as of June,
2007 (note that we would not necessarily recommend the same set of
companies today, so please don’t rush out and buy these stocks):
|
Company
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05/31/06
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05/31/07
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% Gain
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AuEx (V.XAU)
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C$1.32
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C$1.95
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47.7%
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Dynasty (V.DMM)
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C$5.20
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C$6.24
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20.0%
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Esperanza (V.EPZ)
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C$1.65
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C$3.09
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87.3%
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Exeter (V.XRC)
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C$2.35
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C$2.59*
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10.2%
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Mansfield (V.MDR)
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C$2.60
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C$3.49
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34.2%
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N.Peru
Cu (T.NOC)
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C$2.89
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C$10.87
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276.1%
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Sherwood (V.SWC)
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C$3.20
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C$5.99
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87.2%
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Average
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80.4%
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*We sold XRC
because of a political setback with its then-flagship project in
Mendoza, not because anything is wrong with the rocks or with
management performance.
As far as the
Mania stage, that will make mere 80% gains in a year look like
chump change. It will begin once people get over the Wall of
Worry, likely triggered by a resumption of the downward trajectory
of the U.S. dollar. I’d be surprised if it didn’t start
materializing within the next year.
In the final
analysis, it is the worrisome aspects of the current market—when
you and everyone else are feeling on edge about the risk—that
makes this such a good time to invest. People do dumb things when
they are scared. Like sell great companies. Or sit on the
sidelines, keeping their powder dry for a brighter day. And when
the brighter day comes, they will do even dumber things, like
spend twice, or ten times, the current ask for the same shares.
They’ll be buying those shares from me. The key, if you agree
with me that the long bear market of 1980-2000 is over and the new
bull market has only gone through its first stage, is to buy when
everyone is afraid (like now, while the market climbs the Wall of
Worry), and sell when everyone is confident (in the coming Mania).
Finally, for the
record, let me emphasize that if you don’t have a tolerance for
risk, or a willingness to do enough homework to reduce the risk of
falling for a good story without substance, you really shouldn’t
be investing in this sector—any more than you should invest with
money you can’t afford to lose. By definition, any investment
that can turn dimes into dollars can also turn dollars into dimes
if you aren’t attentive. This isn’t an arena for amateurs.
Although I expect millions of complete amateurs will be in it over
the next few years.
But if you can
handle the risk, there is a very serious opportunity—and maybe
the last in this cycle—for you to get well positioned in this
“Wall of Worry” stage. Don’t miss it.

© 2007 Doug Casey
Editor,
The International Speculator
Editorial Archive
Doug
Casey is chairman of Casey Research and publisher of the
International Speculator –now in its 27th year as one of the
nation’s most respected publications offering unbiased
recommendations on high quality, high potential investments in
micro-cap companies involved in the exploration for, or
development of, gold, silver and other natural resources. Learn
more about the International Speculator

www.caseyresearch.com
and www.kitcocasey.com
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