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Oil rose to a six-month high after China, the world's second-biggest energy-consuming country, increased crude imports by 14 percent in April.

Deliveries reached 16.17 million metric tons last month, or 3.9 million barrels a day, a statement on the Chinese customs department's Web site showed today. Oil also climbed as the dollar fell to the lowest level against the euro since March, bolstering demand for commodities as an alternative investment.

"The Chinese numbers are pretty stunning," said Bill O'Grady, chief markets strategist at Confluence Investment Management in St. Louis. "The Chinese are looking at prices now as a good value and they are worried about all of the dollar assets they have. They are buying everything, any raw material they can get their hands on."
- Bloomberg
Mints around the world almost doubled their silver coin production in the first quarter in response to a surge of investor interest in the metal.

It follows an extraordinary buying spree for coins and bars by investors last year that was accompanied by a record surge of inflows into silver exchange-traded funds.

Sales of silver coins and medals jumped 63 per cent to a record 2,019 tonnes in 2008 while demand for gold coins and bars reached 837 tonnes, up 93.3 per cent on 2007.

There was a big increase in silver coin minting even before the Lehman collapse, but this turned into an "explosion" of interest in the US and Europe in the last four months of 2008.

- Financial Times

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Why It's Time to Buy REITs

By Porter Stansberry
Thursday, May 14, 2009

Just a few weeks ago, I introduced my new theory of "The Great Re-Leveraging" to readers of my investment advisory. 

What is the Great Re-Leveraging? And how is it going to hand investors 60% in the next six months? 

It all comes down to what's called an interest rate spread. This is a critical concept for investors to understand... 

The constant devaluation of the U.S. dollar via inflation makes it difficult to measure asset prices over time. For example, gas is really much cheaper today (at $2) than it was 10 years ago (when it cost $1.50). That's because the purchasing power of the dollar has fallen by about 50% over the last 10 years. (And it's about to fall a lot more...) 

Inflation makes it difficult to judge the relative value of financial assets. That's why financial analysts spend so much time talking about various ratios – like the price-to-earnings and price-to-book ratios. These ratios are much better measures of value than nominal prices because nominal prices change with inflation. Ratios don't. 

The most important ratio for REITs is the ratio between the dividend yield investors can earn from REITs and the interest they can earn on a "risk-free" Treasury bond. Most investors buy REITs for income. So the Treasury-bond yield heavily influences the prices of REITs. If you could get 10% annually from Treasury bonds, you wouldn't accept the risk of owning a REIT unless you could get at least three or four percentage points more from it. These extra percentage points of income are the "spread." 

REIT Spread

The chart above shows the spread, in percentage points, between the dividend yield of REITs (measured by the DJ REIT index) versus the yield on a 10-year U.S. government bond. 

As you can see, most of the time, investors demand a premium of between two and four percentage points compared to Treasuries. But... from time to time... investors become enamored with real estate. During 2006 and 2007, investors would have actually made more money investing in U.S. Treasuries than in REITs. That was a huge warning sign that real estate was extremely overvalued. 

On the other hand, we'd never seen investors demanding such a large premium over Treasury yields to buy REITs as we saw in early March. Investors wanted more than 7% annually on top of Treasury-bond yields to own REITs. That's the widest spread of all time. 

While it's possible for conditions in real estate to get worse and for investors to demand still more premium in the future, I think we've likely seen the peak of the REIT spread. And that means REIT share prices are likely to continue rallying. 

Why do I think the bear market in REITs is over? Because the floodgates of new capital have opened. 

In March, Simon Property, the nation's largest publicly traded REIT, was desperate to raise new capital to fund operations. It raised $500 million by selling stock – at $31 per share. That offering was only the second time any REIT had been able to raise new equity during 2009. 

But since then, many other REITs have followed. Several billion dollars has been raised in only the last month. This move of capital back into real estate has caused REIT prices to rebound and the REIT spread over Treasuries to decline for the first time since mid-2007. 

Sentiment and access to capital play a huge role in real estate prices. The more capital that's available, the higher prices will move. The higher prices move, the more capital becomes available – because there's more collateral. Sentiment is incredibly important to these markets. It opens the flow of new capital. And sentiment is now completely different than it was in March. 

Simon Property recently announced another equity offering – this time $800 million in new equity. You might expect the market to react warily because these new shares will dilute the existing shareholders. But instead, the stock rallied – almost 10%. The reaction was so strong, the company was able to increase both the price and the amount of the offering – raising $1 billion at $50 per share. 

The fact that REITs have this kind of access to capital tells me the yield spread has peaked and it's time to buy REITs. 

Good investing, 

Porter Stansberry 

Editor's note: Porter Stansberry is a regular contributor to DailyWealth, a free investment newsletter focused on the world's best contrarian opportunities. We write with a simple belief in mind: You don't have to take big risks to make big money with your investments. 

Sign up today to read more investment ideas from Porter Stansberry. 




THE MOST IMPORTANT CHART IN THE WORLD RIGHT NOW

Our inflation hound is barking.

Back in December, we recommended buying gold stocks as one of the best ways to play a market rebound. That position – the gold stock ETF (symbol GDX) – is up 65% since then. But there's something more important happening here than a simple rebound trade...

Gold stocks are also our "inflation hound." Gold stocks rise when folks get worried about government money printing... when inflation threatens to wipe out the value of their bank accounts. Just yesterday, the GDX broke out to a new nine-month high. As you can see from the chart below, this is an important "technical" level for the GDX.

This breakout is a danger sign for folks with lots of paper dollars. The old hound is barking. He knows the problem with socialism is that you eventually run out of other people's money... and more must be printed by government idiots. He knows no country has ever taxed and spent its way to prosperity. Please read this essay for how to protect yourself.