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Posts Tagged ‘Recession’

Timber : A Recession Proof Investment Class ?

January 30th, 2009

timber

Like the search for The Holy Grail, private as well as institutional investors are looking more than ever for an investment which will hold its own during times of market turmoil and downsizing, and whilst gold & other key commodities indeed look like a good investment these days, few seem to have discovered “The Holy Grail of Investment”.

This post, however, identifies one such and the keyword is Forest Land and Timber.

Larry Light of WSJ says in his recent article on the subject of timberland investment, that timber seems to be the ultimate long-term investment and elaborates :

Through Sept. 30, the value of timberland rose 5%. When the National Council of Real Estate Investment Fiduciaries reports 2008’s final quarter this week, this number is unlikely to move much. That marks a slower pace of growth, yet it is growth nonetheless. In 2007, timber appreciation was a towering 15%.

How can positive returns exist in these dark days of shrunken prices for everything ranging from real estate to commodities to stocks? Oil, after a summer price spike, was down 54% in 2008, while corn lost 11% and copper 54%. (Gold, as a refuge commodity, rose 6%.) Prices for lumber, a key forest product, have fallen by 34% over the past year as housing construction has ebbed.

The answer to this riddle is that timberland is the ultimate long-term investment, with relatively little bought and sold each year — and demand still respectable for what does change hands. “As long as the sun shines, the trees will grow,” says Jeremy Grantham, chairman of Boston money manager GMO and a long-time fan of timber investing. “Timber will never be an orphan.”

He goes on to say that whilst timber does generate decent cash returns year on year, the long term dividends is where the real value and ROI lies :

Timber often is likened to high-grade bonds, meant to be held for 10 years or more. The average annual timberland appreciation for the past decade is 4.1% versus minus 3.8% for the Standard & Poor’s-500 stock index. The timberland appreciation figure, which encompasses both the land and the trees, is based on sales and appraisals. After 10 or 15 years, investors cash out when the land is sold.

On top of the appreciation, timber generates regular income. Trees are constantly chopped down and sold for everything from boards to paper mulch, albeit in smaller volumes these days. Cash returns from this “harvesting,” as it’s called, are now 1.5% of the property value, down from 3% in 2007 and about 5% annually the three years before that.

He does, however, also mention that one of few downsides on timber investments is the fact that timber is rather illiquid and also that one needs to have substantial amounts of cash to get in :

“Trees keep growing 4% per year, no matter what happens to inflation, interest rates or market trends,” says Dennis Moon, head of U.S. Trust’s group overseeing timberland, as well as farm and mineral investments. “You don’t have to cut them down this year if that doesn’t make sense.”

On the downside is that, as the ultimate long-term investment, timber is very illiquid. Looking to park your kid’s college tuition someplace for eight years? Forget wood. Plus, timber’s cost of entry is dauntingly high. The best returns, adjusted for risk, come from large, multimillion-dollar partnerships called timber-investment management organizations, or TIMOs, sponsored by the likes of GMO and U.S. Trust. But these require a minimum $250,000 investment, and often many times that.

TIMOs’ overhead can be onerous, too: They may charge from 3% to 5% per year in assets for property management, taxes and insurance.

A cheaper way of investing in timber is via several real-estate investment trusts. Most prominent is Plum Creek TimberCo., the largest private land holder in the U.S. Investors can get in for around $32 per share. Over the past 52 weeks, its price has fallen 26%, better than the S&P 500’s 37% drop. Indeed, Plum Creek’s showing is better than the S&P paper and forest product index, which has slid 50%. The index is focused on board-making companies like Weyerhaeuser, whose fortunes are more closely tied to the housing industry, rather than the slow-growing majesty of a maple.

Chris Mayer of Capital & Crisis also highlights the flexible nature of timber as an investment :

Timberland is a crisis-proof investment because the growth of the trees does not move in step with economic cycles. You don’t have to harvest when demand is soft. Let them grow, and trees will become more valuable anyway. Bigger trees equal more dollars.

Timberland as a timely and crisis-friendly investment might seem odd, given its ties to the housing market. In fact, demand for timber as a building material is weak right now, at least in the U.S.

As the housing market reaches depths not seen in a long time, the end of the deflating housing bubble seems a ways off. Housing inventory in the U.S. at the end of June was 4.9 million homes, or about 12 months of supply – a glut we have not seen since 1981. New housing starts are near 17-year lows. And perhaps most surprisingly, even though housing prices have fallen quite a bit already, there is probably plenty of room to go, based on at least one good historical indicator: price to income.

Mayer explains in detail why it is that despite a weakening housing market globally and no sign of a quick recovery either, timberland value continues to climb :

There are three reasons for this, all making timberland a good investment today. They are scarcity, global demand, and institutional interest. Let’s take a look at each of them…

Growing scarcity of quality of timberlands. The mountain pine beetle infestation had a very real effect on supply. North America will lose about 20% of its spruce, pine, and fir lumber over the next five to eight years. In addition, much of Canada’s boreal forests are not economical, thanks to high costs and Canadian taxes, unless lumber prices rise significantly. Many of these businesses have already shut down.

Also, the U.S. government continues to set aside timberland for conservation – about 1.4 million acres per year. Add up all three, and you have a good case for tight supply.

The other big issue outside of North America is the reduction in Russian logs. Traditionally, Russia has been the low-cost provider of timber, but log export taxes have taken much of its timber off the global market. So as Russian logs withdrew, prices skyrocketed in markets in which Russia was a key supplier. In the frosty Baltic states, for example, lumber prices recently hit 18-year highs. Softwood prices were 57% higher than a year ago.

Global demand should increase. China is a giant here. It is the world’s largest importer of logs. Its appetite has increased 16-fold in the last 12 years alone! As the Chinese build more homes, they’ll need plenty of lumber.

In addition to China, the demand for biofuels has an impact on timberland. The use of wood pellets and cellulosic ethanol for fuel, for example, provides a source of growing demand for wood products. Wood is environmentally friendly, which could become more important as we get into reducing carbon emissions.

Growing institutional interest in timberland. There is a big slug of money in institutional vaults – like pension funds – slated for investment in timberland. By some estimates, there is at least $10 billion in funds seeking timberland investments. All the usual appeal of timberland – steady inflation-beating returns – has caught the interest of these whales. This provides a floor of demand for timberland.

These three factors keep timberland prices strong, even as housing markets stay weak. There is one other interesting point… Lumber has not yet really joined in the commodity cycle. Its pricing lags that of many other commodities.

Lumber pricing lags even competing building materials. The gap among lumber prices and concrete and steel, for example, is as wide as it’s been in 20 years. So timberland – an increasingly scarce resource – ought to participate sooner or later.

So if one assumes and believes that the above three factors remain in play, and this seems likely, timberland should prove to be a gem amongst the many asset classes the investor is considering so maybe it is time to plant a forest somewhere on Mother Earth and harvest the yield in years to come ! Who said eco-friendly investments cannot be the best ?

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2009 Outlook: Continuing Global Downturn Or Major Recovery ?

December 20th, 2008

recession-ahead

With a very troubled 2008 soon behind us and many private as well as institutional investors breathing a short sigh of relief, the big question facing the world is of course: will 2009 be a year of recovery or will the crisis worsen and prolong the Recession or even, as some fear, slide further into a full blown Recession ?

This post looks into what some of the analysts have to say about 2009 and whether to world economies and all its dependants are in for a recovery or if indeed we shall have another very tough year to face up to.

MarketWatchpoints out that whilst the downturn is gathering pace in Europe and The US, the same crisis has now also spread in full to The Far East and Asia with the pace of the economic downturn in China being the most surprising factor to economists and experts.

Quoting experts on the development of the economic downturn in Asia, the article says:

Experts painted a grim picture for the Asian region in 2009.
“Asia is not doing well at all,” said Son Won Sohn, an economist at the Martin Smith School of Business at California State University, Channel Islands.
“Decoupling, which looked for a while like it was going to work — turned out to be a myth.”
Japan is mired in a recession, South Korea will be lucky to reach 2% growth this year and Chinese growth could fall below 6%.
The downturn in global trade has just begun to have a negative impact on China’s economy, but it is pressure that will last for most of 2009, according to Brad Setser, an expert on China at the Council of Foreign Relations in New York.
“The latest data for November was off-the-charts bad,” Setser said.
In addition, China’s own domestic cycle looks to have turned, he said.
“The pace of the downturn has been a little bit of a surprise,” he said.
Many are concerned that the falling US Dollar and the zero US Fed interest rate combined with the below USD 40 / barrel oil prices will not be the right cocktail for an economic recovery as this quote from AFP indicates:

Oil prices fell despite a record drop in the US dollar on Wednesday, a day after the US Federal Reserve slashed its base lending rate to 0-0.25 percent. A weak greenback tends to lift the price of dollar-priced oil for buyers using cheaper currencies.

“If a plunging dollar and a zero interest rate can’t save oil, don’t think that OPEC can. The market is bigger than the cartel and the demand destruction is something that will not be cured by trying to raise prices,” said Phil Flynn, an analyst at Alaron Trading.

“The last thing the world’s consumers need is another advance in oil prices,” oil analysts Cameron Hanover said.

“Any artificial or engineered rise in prices will exacerbate and extend the economic slowdown.”

MarketWatch quotes more doom and gloom from observers of the Euro economies in 2009 :

“I  think that’s going to make itself evident in business investment in the euro zone as well, so that’s going to do a lot of damage through the rest of next year,” Brian Hilliard, head of economic research at Societe Generale said.

The downturn hasn’t only hammered countries, such as Ireland and Spain that have echoed U.S. housing woes. It’s also hit more robust economies, even sending European powerhouse Germany into a recession of its own, noted Jonathan Loynes, chief European economist at Capital Economics in London. The firm predicts euro-zone GDP will contract by 1% in 2009.
Deutsche Bank predicts that a steep near-term fall will make for a 2.5% contraction in GDP in 2009, marking the 15-nation region’s worst recession since World War II. Growth will rebound in 2010, but the recovery will be more tepid than in normal recoveries, said economist Mark Wall, in part due to a lack of a coordinated policy response across the region.
Despite qualms, the European Central Bank will likely have little choice but to drop its key interest rate below 2% for the first time in its decade-long history, economists predict. The central bank has slashed its key rate from 4.25% to 2.5% in a series of rate cuts that began in October.
There is an overall great concern that the world’s economic locomotive, China, will continue to face reduced rates of growth and high unemployment which will affect overall demand from this economic superpower with obvious negative spill-over effects to the rest of the world. Forbes.com reports:

Li Yizhong, Minister of Industry and Information Technology, also warned on Friday that more measures needed to be taken to revive industry, which is a major employer.

Beijing will need to ensure that industrial output expands by 12 percent next year to hit its GDP target, Li said, while cautioning that growth has not yet bottomed out.

“Industrial growth is slowing significantly and downside pressures are increasing,” Li told a work conference, which was webcast on the ministry’s website (www.miit.gov.cn).

But the economy still expanded by 9 percent year-on-year in the third quarter, compared with 11.9 percent in all of 2007.

“It is not a recession, but it will feel like one to the average citizen and will feel like a depression to the 100 million or so migrant workers, many of whom are out of a job and stranded far from home,” economists Ben Simpfendorfer and John Richards said in a note to clients.

“Social tensions are likely to be on the rise.”

The government has launched a series of measures to counter the slowdown, including a massive stimulus package, repeated interest rate cuts and measures to support the property market.

MarketWatch paints a picture of different views by leading experts, some of which are quite optimistic about the recovery of the US Economy :

Bailey, the former top economist for Clinton, sees a 20% chance of an upside surprise in growth in the second half of the year if things start to bottom.
Nothing Obama will do will stop the two negative quarters. But he may instill some confidence to lead to a turnaround.
However, there is a 30% to 40% chance that the economy stays in recession through the entire year, with the unemployment rate rising above 10%, Bailey said.
But some economists are optimistic about a rebound.
Joel Naroff, president of Naroff Economic Advisors, said that U.S. businesses are reacting quickly to the downturn and will be in better shape for a rebound after the first quarter.
“Businesses are reacting so quickly they are not going to need to keep cutting back, which is what typically keeps recessions going longer,” Naroff said.
For Ricchiuto of Mizuho Securities, the biggest test will come quickly next year when the market will expect the Fed to follow up on its promise to keep printing money.
“Are they (the Fed) ready to walk the walk after they’ve talked the talk,” he asked.
The same MarketWatch article finished off by saying that apart from country specific issues and challenges there are also very much global threats at play which could influence the recovery of the world economy as such:
Economists remain very worried about protectionism.
Despite pledges by the G-20 last month to cooperate and avoid protectionism, trade analysts see signs that the opposite may be occurring.
If China moves to protect its export sector, it will likely set off a hostile reaction in the U.S. Congress.
So some experts and and analysts are more optimistic than others and it seems that not all believe we shall slide into deeper recession or even depression in 2009. What does remain an undisputed fact, however, is that 2009 will pose the biggest challenge for politicians and economists alike and the biggest perhaps to the newly elected US President Barrack Obama who inherits a run down US economy, weak consumer demand and a collapsed real estate sector to mention some of the challenges he faces.

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Recession times - Are We Over The Worst Or Has It Just Begun ?

December 10th, 2008

With many key markets and economies now having officially slipped into recession and with deflationary economies looming, many are asking the question if we are through the worst by now or if we have only seen the tip of the iceberg ?

This post looks at some of the expert opinions and where they see it all going.

MarketWatch forecasters, Nigel Gault and Brian Bethune, argue that we are indeed in the worst part of the recession now:

The economy has gotten much worse in the past few months, Gault said. The November payrolls report released last Friday “was a truly awful report,” he said. The news was twice as bad as it looked, because not only did payrolls shrink by 533,000 in November, “but things were an awful lot worse in September and October than we thought.”
“You can’t find any rays of hope” in the November report, Gault said.
Looking ahead the pair of renowned economists predict that:
the December payrolls report will probably be “another very bad number,” although no one’s predicting another 500,000 job loss. “We’ve got to anticipate that firms are struggling to cut back staffing as rapidly as possible,” Gault said.
The job losses are coming from everywhere, from construction and manufacturing, and from financial services and retailing. “The shakeout in financial services will take several more months,” Bethune said. The people losing jobs in financial services industries may have never been laid off before, he said, and many of them don’t have the ability to quickly adapt to the informal sector.
Construction workers may be able to get work that’s paid under the table, or to barter their services, but no one needs the services of an investment banker in exchange for a haircut or a tune-up.

 Those investment bankers will have to think of something, however, because the industry is “permanently downsizing,” Bethune said.

Elsewhere, Deutsche Post CEO, Frank Appel, was quoted recently for saying that he did not see the current crisis going on for long:

“We are pretty confident that the recession will be deep but pretty short,” he said, predicting business and consumer confidence can recover as quickly as it had disappeared in recent weeks. “We don’t have to cut too many jobs.”

Appel said that Deutsche Post’s DHL unit, Europe’s largest express courier company, had invested around $2 billion in Asia in recent years, and “we will see similar numbers in coming years”.

The Reuters article continues with Mr. Appel’s near future predictions which seem more positive than most people’s :

Appel, who spoke at a briefing on a global trade study commissioned by DHL, was more bullish about economic prospects, saying he expected the global economy to recover faster than most people thought.

According to the study by the Economist Intelligence Unit, trade between Asia and the West will shrink by about 4 percent in 2009 before recovering in 2010, recovering faster than cross-Atlantic traffic, which will likely remain in the doldrums until 2011.

Stephen Stanley, chief economist at RBS Greenwich Capital, remains very concerned after the shocking job figures from the month of November where a staggering 533,000 people lost their jobs in the US, and says that :

“The overall picture is the labor market is deteriorating at the fastest pace in decades.” We’re going through the capitulatory stage where everyone is pulling back very sharply,” Stanley said. “We don’t know when it’s going to end, but it could last for a few more months.”

He does see some light at the end of the tunnel i.e. during or at the end of the second quarter 2009 where he belives the economy will start to stabalize, still contracting though but at a slower pace - to read his full predictions and comments from the CNN Money article click here.

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