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THE 6
GIANTS OF GLOBAL PROFITS
by Martin D.
Weiss, Ph.D.
Editor, Safe Money
Report & MoneyandMarkets.com
April 24, 2007
The
U.S. dollar is falling so quickly
And so many of our favorite investments
are moving up so broadly
I've gathered the wisdom of our entire
team this morning to give you a full run-down on the
six giants of global profits.
I won't keep you guessing as to who the
giants are. They're China, India, Japan, Brazil, Australia
and
Canada.
There is nothing, I repeat nothing,
that you do every day that is not connected to, or dependent
upon, these six countries.
They make the clothes you wear. They
answer the phones when you call customer service.
They supply the gas for your car. They
build your car. They make the paste in your toothpaste. Some of them
even examine your CT scans instead of
your doctor.
Quietly, invisibly,
they have penetrated every
corner of your daily life
except perhaps one: Your
portfolio.
If you do not hold significant
investments related to these six global giants, you are already
missing out on an opportunity that comes along (maybe)
once every 100 years.
We've told you how China's stock market,
for example, rose 131% last year nearly
ten times more than ours.
We've
told you how even Brazil's market, despite a relatively slower economy
last year, delivered double the
gains of the S&P 500.
And we've explained how fifty-five
different foreign stock markets beat the U.S. last year.
Well, now, those markets are soaring even
further, still widely outperforming the Dow. China is
trumping the U.S. markets. So are Brazil and every other country we've
been recommending.
Safety
First
Mike Larson warns us that the housing
woes in the U.S. are not over. They're getting worse.
And no matter what the profit potential
may be overseas, we all feel strongly that your first priority must be
capital preservation. That means putting SAFETY first.
That means keeping a good chunk of your
core holdings in the most conservative investments you can find.
At the same time, if you're like most
investors, the idea of global investing often sounds like a crapshoot.
But that's just not true.
If you've got all of your money invested in U.S. stocks, you've got all
your eggs in one basket.
So you could be exposing yourself to more
risk.
And you could be missing some of the
largest, most sustainable
profit opportunities in the world today.
So let's embark on a quick, 10-minute
global excursion to review where we've come from and where we're going.
It may not be the first time you've taken a tour with us. But no matter
what, you're likely to see some refreshingly new sights along the way.
China:
"To Get Rich is Glorious"
When Chinese Premiere Deng Xiaoping spoke
these words back in 1993, Larry was among the first to let us know.
And indeed, that's when China unleashed
an economic force unprecedented in modern history. That single, but
pivotal, change in philosophy marked the beginning of China's relentless
march to prosperity.
And along the way, we are seeing a series
of largely untold economic
miracles:
- Chinese consumer
spending has recently jumped from virtually zero to nearly $1
trillion.
- There are now over 100
cities in China with a population over 1 million. The
U.S. has only nine.
- China currently
boasts 1.3 billion consumers.
Plus, to stimulate foreign investments, Beijing is pulling out all
the stops.
China plans to boost natural gas
consumption by as much as 500 percent
invest nearly $4 billion in
information technology and infrastructure
expand fiber optic
networks
beef up mobile communications capacity
establish
digital capable HDTV transmission
and use GPS technology for traffic
control.
China is building massive skyscrapers,
highways, city expressways, subway lines, and an intra-city light rail.
It's expanding the Beijing airport,
improving water, electric, gas, and heating facilities. All across
China, the equivalent of a city the size of San
Franciscois being built every two weeks. This year alone,
Shanghai (with 17 million
people) will complete towers with more square footage than
all the available space in Manhattan combined.
Even more significant is that China just
launched a rural initiative
for over 800 million citizens.
It plans to spend over $11 billion a year
on rural education, irrigation, and medical services.
And it's investing tens of billions to
build 112,000 miles of
rural roads enough to circle the globe four
times over.
Gobbling
Up Global Natural Resources at a Frightening Rate
Imagine, just
imagine, the raw materials and natural resources like cement,
asphalt, tar and steel required to feed that kind of growth. That's why
consumption of just about every imaginable resource is flying off the
charts.
Gold is surging again, nearing the $700
level.
Silver is near the $14 level, within
striking distance of last year's highs.
Ditto for copper which has been going
nearly straight up since early February.
Aluminum prices are skyrocketing.
Demand for zinc, lead, nickel and
tungsten is roaring. Thanks to surging demand from countries like China
and India, the price of uranium has tripled
in two years. Oil has zoomed from $20 to as high as $70 a
barrel in three years.
Look at platinum
close to $1,300 an ounce!
And never forget uranium, which just smashed clean through the $100 per
pound barrier!
Even the price of water
is rising rapidly around the world.
The
Relentless Rise of India: "It's
Like China 15 or 20 Years
Ago."
Those are the words of a renowned
emerging-markets investor that appeared in a recent issue of Time
magazine. But that's just a tiny glimpse
of India's almost unlimited potential:
- India is currently
home to more than 1 billion people
and projected to surpass China as the most populous country on Earth
by 2015.
- India's economy is
growing 8 percent a year the second fastest rate in the world.
- The Indian stock
market has tripled in
three years creating a record number of billionaires. One
reason: Foreign investors have poured $30 billion into India's stock
market in 36 months.
Just like China, India needs massive
amounts of natural resources and commodities to feed its
booming economy.
And this is not just a passing trend.
It's an economic appetite that could last for a long time. But where
will China and India find the commodities, natural resources, and
consumer products to feed their unbridled expansion?
A
"Back Door" to Asia: Brazil!
I
recently returned from Brazil. We were honoring Elisabeth's mother for
her upcoming 90th birthday. At the reservoir on our farm, her
grandchildren and even their dog join the festivities.
Ever since Luiz Inแcio Lula da Silva
("Lula") was elected Brazil's president five years ago, she's
been saying he'd wreck the economy.
Lula has done precisely the opposite.
He's implemented the most disciplined
fiscal and monetary policy the country has seen in half a century.
He has boosted Brazil's currency by 69%
since he took office in January 2003. He has increased the trade surplus
by 225% from $14.1 billion to $45.8 billion. And he has paid off 100% of
Brazil's debts to the International Monetary Fund.
To achieve all that, however, Lula had to
pay a stiff price: Spartan government spending, sky-high interest rates
and, consequently, a relatively slow economy last year.
So it's only now, in his second term
which began almost four months ago, that he feels he's got a firm enough
financial foundation in place to go for the real prize: Big growth.
With that goal in mind, the Bank of
Brazil (the equivalent to our Fed) has already slashed its benchmark
interest rate 14 times, to the lowest level in recent history.
And sure enough, the economy is
responding:
Retail sales have jumped 8.5%. Capital
goods production jumped 18%. And Brazil's key stock index, the Bovespa,
which rose 32.9% last year, is making new highs again.
In just four years, Brazil's president,
Luiz Inแcio Lula da Silva, has transformed the Brazilian economy and
forged monumental deals with China.
Brazil's trade balance has gone from an
$8 billion deficit to a $46 billion surplus.
Just recently, Brazil's state-owned oil company has inked a
deal to sell China 12 million barrels of crude oil.
How do you get all that oil out of Brazil
when its infrastructure is not up to par? No problem for China.
They've offered many billions to improve
Brazil's port and railway infrastructure so they can extract natural
resources more efficiently. China is also building the world's second
largest dam in the Brazilian Amazon.
And energy from that dam will power mines
that send raw material to
China.
Brazil's natural resources are equivalent to those of the
U.S. and Canada combined. But
even those resources alone can't feed the needs of China, India, and all
of Asia.
So these resource-gobbling giants are
looking elsewhere too.
Canada:
The Strongest, Most StableNatural Resource Nation in the World
Sean
Brodrick tells us that, unlike emerging nations, Canada has all the
technology and expertise it needs to exploit its vast resources.
Even more important, Canada has modern
deep-water ports on both the Atlantic and Pacific coasts giving it
easy access to both European and Asian markets.
Best of all, Canada is sitting on massive
deposits of gold, uranium, coal, oil and other vital resources.
And they're already cashing in. Canada
recently recorded its fifth-best trade surplus in history.
The reason? China.
Chinese importers are buying all the raw
materials that Canada can sell them. That, plus a boom in mining
projects and fattening margins, helps explain why the TSX-Venture
exchange (Canada's small-cap market) has outperformed the S&P 500 by
153% over the past five years. Meanwhile
- China has bought one
of Canada's largest oil companies.
- China has blanketed
the country with a vast network of scouts (armed with truckloads of
money) to scoop up coal mines, oil sand fields, natural gas
pipelines and metals.
Remember: Canada is the most modern and
technologically advanced of the world's large natural resource nations.
Exploration spending for mining in
British Columbia alone hit a record high of $230 million dollars in
2006, and should keep ramping up in 2007.
A New
Chinese "Gold" Rush in Australia?
In the 1800s, Chinese miners flocked to
Australia for the great gold rush. Today,
it's happening again.
Only the Chinese aren't looking for gold;
they're after uranium. And
they're not coming with picks and shovels.
They're coming with mountains
of money. Why? Because Australia happens to sit on the
world's largest known deposits of uranium with more reserves than
the United States, Canada, Russia and Brazil combined.
And with more than 900
new nuclear plants now being planned, the hunger for uranium
is just beginning.
Australia's abundant natural resources
including iron ore, nickel, coal, uranium, and more are in such
huge demand in nearby Asia, it's no surprise then that
- Australia's economy
is now in its sixteenth consecutive year of expansion.
- Job growth has been
the strongest in 17 years, dropping the jobless rate to the lowest
level in more than three decades! Result: Consumer spending is
growing and consumer confidence recently hit a 19-month high.
- There's no better
indicator of a country's future than its currency, and the Aussie
dollar recently reached its highest level since 1996.
Japan:
The Sun is Rising Again
Japan is now enjoying its longest,
non-stop, sustained expansion since World War II.
Automakers are soaring. Banks are
thriving. Unemployment just hit a record low.
And the stock market has doubled
in 24 months. So what's the mega-force behind Japan's
remarkable recovery? You guessed it China.
Japan's trade with China jumped to $189
billion last year, the seventh
straight annual record. This year, it should easily top $200
billion.
Look. Just when most people were giving
up on Japan a few years ago, the country was cleaning up its balance
sheet and starting to capitalize on China's economic boom.
At the same time, Japan is also
solidifying trade and security links with Australia. It's currently the
biggest buyer of that country's coal, natural gas, oil, and agricultural
goods. And if the two countries hammer out a free trade agreement, both
economies will get an additional boost.
Tony
Sagami, who's recently revisited his native Japan, puts it this way:
"Everybody I talked to from the
fish vendors at Tsukiji market to the Shiseido clerks at luxury
Takashimaya department store says their companies are making more
money and they're much more optimistic about the future.
"But investors aren't quite as
bullish. So valuations on Japanese stocks are still among the lowest in
the world."
This
Worldwide Growth and Expansion Represents the Greatest Wealth-Building
Opportunity in the Last 100 Years.
I hope I've managed to communicate the
colossal magnitude of the expansion that's now happening. I also hope
you understand that opportunities like these come along maybe once every
hundred years. The time is now.
You can stand pat with a narrow-minded
investment strategy that focuses on the USA. Or you can intelligently
diversify with these exploding markets and watch your portfolio
multiply.
How To
Invest Overseas
Years ago, investing in foreign stocks
was cumbersome. You had to start with substantial sums. You had to open
special brokerage accounts in Honk Kong, London or elsewhere. And you
often had to pay very substantial commissions. Today, it's far more
convenient because
- You
can buy American Depository Receipts, or ADRs, a
certificate issued by a U.S. institution representing a specific
number of shares of a foreign stock. Favor ADRs that are liquid,
trading hundreds of thousands of shares daily on major U.S.
exchanges like the NYSE.
- You
can buy foreign stocks through a U.S. broker with a strong
international desk such as Euro-Pacific Capital or Schwab. And
most convenient of all
- You
can buy exchange traded funds (ETFs) that invest in overseas stocks
for you. There are actively traded ETFs for China (FXI)
Brazil (EWZ)
Singapore (EWS)
Japan (EWJ)
and many,
many more.
But never forget: Don't overinvest.
Allocate your money prudently. Stay on top of it regularly. And do your
best to wait for normal corrections before adding new funds.
Good luck and God bless!
Martin

ฉ 2007 Martin D. Weiss,
Ph.D.
Editorial Archive
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15430 Endeavour Drive
Jupiter, FL 33478
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