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THE NEXT CHINA-LIKE MIRACLE
by Martin D.
Weiss, Ph.D.
Editor, Safe Money
Report & MoneyandMarkets.com
January 22, 2007
Just
a few years ago, suppose you had known that China, a backward, deeply
impoverished communist country, would quickly transform itself into the
fastest-growing capitalist economy on the planet.
And
suppose you had invested $10,000 in the leading Chinese companies.
That
single insight alone — plus a dose of standard due diligence — could
have been sufficient to transform your initial investment into $50,000,
$100,000, or as much as $200,000 today.
Even
if you could go back just 19 months ... and even if you made no effort
whatsoever to pick a better-than-average Chinese company ... your
$10,000 invested in the Shanghai Composite Index would be worth $28,372
at the close of trading this past Friday.
Needless
to say, you can’t turn back the clock. But you can do the next best
thing:
You
can find a country that’s almost as big as China ... boasts even
more natural resources ... enjoys a broad, modern industrial base ...
and is closer to the U.S. culturally, politically and geographically
...
but
...
is
still on the launch pad, in the pre-take-off stage, giving new
investors an opportunity to catch a ride without overpaying and
without a long wait.
That
country is Brazil.
Indeed,
a few years ago, my staff and I looked at the world’s four largest
emerging economies: Brazil, Russia, India, and China (the BRIC
countries).
We
saw the amazing profit potential offered by their vast natural and human
resources.
We
knew that, despite serious social and political hurdles, they would
start to grow by leaps and bounds.
And
we picked the one that had the highest level of new investment pouring
into the economy — from the government, from domestic enterprises and
from foreign investors: China.
Sure
enough, China took off. So did India and Russia. But Brazil, despite
major fiscal improvements, lagged behind the other three.
Now,
I believe that’s about to change.
Hard
to Imagine Brazil
Growing Like China?
Then
just look back to recent history: In the 1970s, Brazil was expanding at
the China-like clip of about 9 percent. Each year, Brazil was boosting
exports by approximately 20 percent. And within less than a decade,
thousands of early investors became multi-millionaires.
But
the party came to a premature end for one simple reason: Inflation.
The
primary difference today: Brazil’s inflation monster has been tamed
...
Twelve
years ago, Brazil stopped rampant inflation in its tracks by introducing
a new currency, the real.
Ten
years ago, it passed a law preventing federal and local governments from
spending beyond their means.
And
starting four years ago, Brazil’s President, Luiz Inácio Lula da
Silva (“Lula”), transformed the country from one of the world’s
most fiscally shaky nations into a model for fiscal responsibility.
Lula
was born in a dirt-poor family in one of the most godforsaken regions on
Earth — the parched and semi-feudal northeast of Brazil. With his
mother, sisters and brothers, he fled to the industrial state of São
Paulo on the back of a truck. And five decades later, he was swept into
the presidency with a landslide victory.
In
his first term, which just ended ...
He
reduced consumer price inflation from 12.5% in 2002 to under 3% in 2006.
He
paid off every penny owed to the IMF.
He
slashed Brazil’s total domestic debt load.
He
boosted the value of the real from $0.28 to $0.47.
And
he transformed Brazil’s trade balance, formerly a deficit, into a $46
billion yearly trade surplus.
The
market’s response:
•
When Lula first took office four years ago, Brazil’s finances were
so shaky and foreign creditors so frightened, Brazilian businesses and
governments had to pay through the nose to borrow money — a whopping
twenty-four percentage points in interest above U.S. Treasury rates.
Today,
thanks largely to Lula’s conservative fiscal policies, Brazil’s
finances are so sturdy and foreign creditors so encouraged, Brazilian
borrowers are being charged less than two percentage points
above U.S. Treasury rates.
•
When Lula came to power, the São Paulo stock market was plunging. But
now, it has been booming. Brazil’s Bovespa Index rose 15% in 2004,
30% in 2005, 35% in 2006. And over the past five years, the most
widely traded Brazil ETF (EWZ) has surged from $13.35 per share to
$45.77 at Friday’s close, a rise of 243%.
But
from everything I can see, this is just the beginning.
Next:
The Take-Off Phase
I
have deep roots in Brazil.
My
first trip to Brazil was in 1953, when I was six years old. I attended
primary school in the central state of Goiás, where the capital city of
Brasília would later be built. I attended high school in the southern
state of São Paulo, the industrial powerhouse of Brazil. And I married
Elisabeth, whose family owns a sugar plantation in São Paulo.
I’ve
lost count of how many times I’ve returned to Brazil over the years.
But I’ve been going almost every year since I was 20. So that’s
easly over 30 trips.
I
know the country well. I am in close touch with its strengths and fully
aware of its weaknesses. And I can tell you flatly: But Brazil is
about to take off.
Not
someday in the future! Not if and when this or that problem is resolved!
This year!
The
clincher: Lula’s second term in office, which began this month,
helping to kick off a whole new series of economic reforms.
Until
now, for example, Brazilian entrepreneurs had to plow through endless
amounts of red tape to start a new business and then pay at least eight
different taxes to operate one.
But
starting this year, they will enjoy vastly simplified rules for
incorporation ... just one, lower tax instead of eight ... plus double
the supply of credit.
Also
starting this year, investment in Brazil is likely to accelerate.
Already, new projects approved by the national development bank have
surged 36%. Ford and GM have committed billions to launch new auto
models in Brazil. And most significant of all ...
Investments
in new Brazilian projects will reach 25% of GDP this year, similar to
the levels that have prevailed in China and India!
This
investment explosion is key. Without it, China and India would not be
where they are today. With it, Brazil is, right at this very moment,
revving up for an economic take-off that could rival China’s and
India’s.
It
won’t happen overnight. Even Lula’s forecast of 5% GDP growth in
2007 is being questioned by some analysts. But with surging investment,
Brazil’s economy has the potential to steadily accelerate to
China-like growth levels by the end of the decade.
Your
Next Steps
You
can either wait for Brazil to take off ... and pay much higher prices
for Brazil-based investments.
Or
you can act now ... and pick up Brazilian companies that are selling for
lower price-earnings ratios than the equivalent companies in other
emerging markets.
Brazil
is best known for its production of agricultural commodities — first
coffee ... then sugar ... then soybeans ... and, most recently, ethanol.
(For details, see my free report “Ethanol
Explosion! How to Profit.”)
But
Brazil is also among the leading exporters of aircraft ... mineral ores
... metals and steel.
Brazil
makes more automobiles than the U.K., Italy, Mexico or India ... and it
is the world’s largest maker of cars with flex engines (that can run
on either gasoline or ethanol).
No
investment is without risks, and Brazil certainly comes with its fair
share. But consider some of Brazil’s leading companies traded on U.S.
exchanges:
Embraer
(ERJ) is a $7 billion company which has steadily risen to the #3
spot among the world’s largest aircraft manufacturers — ahead of
Canada’s Bombardier and surpassed only by Boeing and Airbus.
The
company is especially strong in the fast-growing market for regional
aircraft — like the 50-passenger twin-jet ERJ 345 and the 37-passenger
ERJ 135.
And
it makes military aircraft for transport, training and light attack —
sold not only to the Brazilian Air Force but also to 16 countries in
Europe and Latin America, including the United Kingdom, France, Greece,
and Mexico.
Since
January 2002, while the Dow Jones Industrials has risen by 24.7% through
last Friday’s close, Embraer is up 102%, rising four times faster than
the Dow.
Petrobrás
(PBR) has done even better, rising twelve times faster than
the Dow in the past five years.
The
company has achieved Brazil’s long-yearned-for self-reliance in oil
and is leading the country’s drive to expanding ethanol exports.
It
supplies oil and natural gas to refineries in Brazil and sells surplus
production in foreign markets. It refines, transports, exports oil ...
buys crude oil and oil derivatives ... owns petrochemical companies and
fertilizer plants ... plus invests in natural gas transportation and
distribution, as well as electric companies.
But
Companhia Vale do Rio Doce (RIO) puts both Embraer and Petrobrás to
shame:
Its
shares have skyrocketed 591% over the past five years, rising
twenty-four times faster than the Dow.
It
recently bought Canada’s INCO copper mines, becoming the largest
mining and metals company in the Americas; the second largest in the
world.
It
is the world’s largest producer and exporter of iron ore and pellets,
the world’s second largest producer of nickel, manganese and
ferroalloys, and one of the world’s lowest-cost integrated producers
of aluminum.
Brazil’s
banks have also been growing by leaps and bounds. And the three key
Brazilian-owned banks traded on the New York Stock Exchange — Bradesco
(BBD), Itaú (ITU) and Union of Brazilian Banks (UBB) — have also beat
the Dow by a wide margin. Bradesco leads the pack, up 362% since January
of 2002, or over 14 times more than the Dow.
When
I was growing up in Brazil, it was almost impossible for individual
American investors to buy these companies. Today, it’s as easy as
buying U.S. shares: Each is available for purchase as American
Depository Receipts (ADRs) right here in the U.S.
Or
you can use the widely traded Exchange Traded Fund linked to Brazil’s
stock market index: iShares MSCI Brazil Index (EWZ), up 243% since
January of 2002 (nearly 10 times more than the Dow).
A
Final Word
Normally,
I spend the holidays with Elisabeth’s family on their farm in the
interior. But this year, it was their turn to come to Florida. And since
Elisabeth’s mother doesn’t understand English, we subscribed to the
Brazilian channels on satellite TV.
That
gives her direct access to her favorite soap operas. And as an extra
bonus, it also gives me direct access to local news and live events —
including Lula’s inaugural address this month. I missed most of the
speech. But I caught his final words:
“God
has been generous to me; more than I deserve.
“I asked for strength, God gave me difficulties to make me strong.
“I asked for wisdom, God gave me problems to solve.
“I asked for prosperity, God gave me brains and muscles to work.
“I asked for courage, God gave me dangers to overcome.
“I asked for love, God gave me people in difficulty to help.
“I asked for blessings, God gave me opportunities.
“I received nothing that I asked for, but I received all that I
needed.”
Let’s
all pray for the same.
Good
luck and God bless!
Martin
P.S.
Today’s your last day to sign up for Sean’s new uranium report, and
the timing couldn’t be much better: A couple of his favorites have
surged 17% - 20% just in the last two trading days, and he believes his
new picks are likely to follow very soon.

© 2007 Martin D. Weiss,
Ph.D.
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15430 Endeavour Drive
Jupiter, FL 33478
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