Thursday, February 4, 2010

Yamana Gold Target 14.50 Buy Low To Sell Much Higher Later

Oil, commodities approach bubble?
Christopher Johnson

London — Ultra low interest rates are bringing a wave of speculation to commodities, inflating a bubble that will inevitably burst some markets, the head of a London-based fund management company said Thursday.

Jonathan Compton, managing director of long-only equity investment group Bedlam Asset Management, which has around $620-million (U.S.) assets under management, said oil, copper and some other commodities were vulnerable to sharp corrections.

Disappointed by losses in stock markets and bonds during the recession, investors had turned to commodities in the hope of better returns, many borrowing at very low interest rates.

“You will see a fantastic unwinding of the speculative longs the moment rates move up,” Mr. Compton told Reuters in an interview. “Commodities most vulnerable will be the ones that are most widely held: copper and oil ... and some very funny financials.”

Pension funds and money managers have tripled their holdings in commodities markets since 2007, industry data show, with $250-billion to $300-billion now invested by passive long-only funds.

Hedge funds and other actively managed units also hold huge stakes in commodities and together buy-side investors control as much as half of the open interest in some commodity markets.

This has made some commodities, inflated by speculative, short-term capital, vulnerable, some analysts say.

Mr. Compton is particularly scathing of some exchange-traded products, some of which he said were “structurally odd” or administered in several countries, preventing proper oversight.

ETPs and exchange-traded funds (ETFs) are listed vehicles allowing buyers to hold securities that move up and down with a commodity or other investment. Most gold ETFs are backed by bullion and seen as almost risk free. But other ETPs are more exotic, based on futures or derivatives or are highly geared.

“The industry is probably 95 per cent clean, if not more. But you only need a couple to go off and you have a domino effect. Then you get real panic and commodities get dumped,” he said.

Mr. Compton said copper and oil could both be vulnerable to downward corrections, and the fall in copper could be serious.

“Copper stands out because it is the absolute bellwether proxy industrial metal. My concern is the very long positions in ETFs ... there is rampant speculation.

“World copper stockpiles are rising and more and more ETFs are being sold,” he said. “If a commodity price is rising along with reserves, there is clearly a mismatch. ETFs are temporarily taking supply off the market -- but it is very temporary.”

He estimated the cost of mining at “well below $3,000 a tonne” compared with current futures of over $6,500.

Bedlam holds no oil shares, having sold them in the run up to the record high near $150 per barrel seen in 2008.

“With oil, stockpiles are high, while demand is basically flat and supplies are plentiful until there is a political upset somewhere and it very widely held,” he said.

But Bedlam does like some commodities.

It owns four gold miners, all of which are in its top-20 holdings: Goldcorp , Yamana Gold , Agnico-Eagle Mines and Lihir Gold. Together, these make up 9-11 per cent of the value of the funds that can hold them.

Mr. Compton says that although western central banks have been cutting gold reserves, Asian banks will increase their holdings.

He also likes grains, cocoa and the outlook for farmland.

“With grains you have quite clearly a structural bull market for many years to come,” he said. “If you could store grains for 10 years, then you would buy them and put them away.”

Yamana Gold Target 14.50 Buy Rating Dundee Securities


Post says Yamana upgraded on higher bullion prices

2010-01-21 09:28 ET - In the News

The Financial Post reports in its Thursday edition that new and improved forecasts for gold, silver and copper will bolster upside in Yamana Gold shares over the next year, says Dundee Securities analyst Ron Stewart.

The Post's David Pett, writing in Trading Desk, says Mr. Stewart upgraded Yamana to "buy" from "neutral," raising his price target on the miner 50 cents to $14.50. "We recommend investors consider YRI as a relatively stable and liquid precious metal equity based on the current outlook," the analyst said.

The update comes in the wake of Dundee's revised metals forecast that now anticipates gold bullion to average $1,200 per ounce in 2010 versus its previous estimate of $1,065 and $1,325 per ounce in 2011, up from $1,000 (all metal prices in U.S. dollars).

Silver prices are expected to hit $20 this year and $22 in 2011, up from prior forecasts of $17.50 and $16.50, while copper price expectations increased to $3.25 per pound from $3 in 2010 and to $3 from $2.75 in 2011. Mr. Stewart also raised his recommendation on Goldcorp Inc. to "buy" from "neutral."

He said, "Given the increase in our valuation and the recent dip in the share price, we now consider [Goldcorp] to be undervalued."


Globe says Yamana, others top ranking at Sentry Select

2010-01-19 09:32 ET - In the News

See In the News (C-IMG) Iamgold Corp

The Globe and Mail reports in its Tuesday, Jan. 19, edition that Sentry Select Precious Metals Growth manager Kevin MacLean sees opportunity in Iamgold and other gold miners.

The Globe's Shirley Won writes in the Number Cruncher column that Mr. MacLean invests in companies that have what he calls a "high wealth-creation yield."

He says, "These are companies that are adding to their reserves and resources at very meaningful rates relative to the size of the company, and have a high cash-flow yield." He shies away from miners during the construction phase because of concerns about things going wrong. Mr. MacLean sees gold rallying for the next few years.

He says the gold market does not need a weak U.S. dollar to rise because the supply of gold has been declining for a decade now.

"This is a commodity, which has had a persistently declining supply, and now the central banks have backed away from selling it. We are at the lowest level of supply in at least 15 years." Top holdings in Mr. MacLean's Sentry Select Precious Metals Growth fund are Iamgold, Yamana Gold, Jaguar Mining, Allied Nevada Gold, Alamos Gold and Aurizon Mines.

Search The Web