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It’s a Scavenger’s Market
by Tom Dyson

January 10, 2006

In last Friday’s column, I wrote about the filthy activity of dumpster diving.

I called it “the perfect model for an investment strategy.” In today’s issue, we’ll look at a real world example of a dumpster investment you can make some serious money in.

This weekend, I rifled through the archives at the National Hurricane Center. From whatever angle you look at it – cost, death, intensity, frequency – 2004 and 2005 is the most severe two-year period of hurricane activity since records began in 1841.

As a result:

Stock prices of catastrophe insurance companies have collapsed. Some of the stocks I follow are down as much as 50%. Companies with insurance exposure to hurricanes are among the most unpopular stocks on Wall Street.

At the same time, there are two very strong reasons to be bullish on the stock prices of catastrophe insurance companies. On the demand side, everyone wants insurance. They’re scared that hurricane activity in 2006 and 2007 will be as extreme as it was 2004 and 2005. They will pay premium prices and high deductibles for coverage.

On the supply side, catastrophe insurance is an unfashionable business. There’s little competition in the industry, so prices are high and margins are wide.

If 2006 is a costly year in terms of hurricane damage, we’ll break even. The insurers have already covered their exposure by selling expensive policies with high deductibles. Besides, stock prices already expect the worst.

But if hurricane activity reverts back to normal – and I bet it will – catastrophe insurers will keep all the profits.

Steve and I always look for investments using the same framework… they have to be cheap, so the downside risk is limited. The position has to have enormous upside potential … a spark to ignite the price. And we don’t want to compete with others to enter the trade. These are the investments found at the bottom of dumpsters, where no one else is looking.

If you are prepared to do something that no one else is, you’ll be handsomely rewarded. It’s why I keep writing about dumpster diving. Dumpster diving is the perfect model for a contrarian investment strategy.

Here’s an example: In the USA, the quantity and quality of loot in dumpsters is high. America is the most wasteful society ever. People can afford to throw away perfectly good stuff.

At the same time, Americans are obsessed with germs, cleanliness and fear of looking poor - so there is little competition in the market from new scavengers.

In other word’s, it’s a scavengers’ market. I guarantee it… if you have the nerve to poke around in the dumpster behind your local Wal-Mart tonight, you will be rewarded.

The same “trade” wouldn’t work in Mexico. The attitude is totally different there… poverty is greater, so people waste less and scavenge more. You could say margins in the Mexican dumpster diving business are thinner. I’ve even come across entrepreneurial Mexicans who cross the border to just scavenge in American dumpsters north of the border. They sell the loot in local flea markets back in Mexico.

Right now, it’s a scavengers’ market in the catastrophe insurance sector. There’s hardly any risk – even if we see one of the worst hurricane seasons on record – the insurance companies are covered. Yet there’s potential for a powerful rise in stock prices if hurricane activity reverts back to normal.

Problem is… like those dumpster divers, the opportunity is only there for contrarian investors with the nerve to hold insurance companies through a hurricane season.

Have you got it?

Good Investing,

Tom Dyson

Editor's note: Tom Dyson 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 Tom Dyson.

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THE BULL MARKET IN SMALL STOCKS CONTINUES

With gains of 82% since the beginning of 2003, small cap companies (as measured by the Russell 2000) have clobbered their large cap competitors. The large cap benchmark S&P 500 is up 46% in the same time.

Last week’s all-time high of 700 in the Russell 2000 shows the long rally in small stocks is still going. Below is look at the big run in small stocks that began in 2003:

Although small caps are powering higher, their outperformance of large caps is beginning to stall. Both the S&P 500 and the Russell 2000 gained about 3% in 2005.


“Gold scaled new heights on Monday, gaining 1% to a near 25-year peak in early trade, driven by news of China’s initiative to explore diversification options for its foreign exchange holdings.

Spot gold rose to $544 an ounce, its highest price since January 26 1981 when it hit $579.50.”

- Financial Times

“Banks across the European Union (EU) are being robbed at a rate of one every 90 minutes, according to the European Banking Federation trade body.”

- BBC


“At current prices, Brazil can make ethanol for about $1 a gallon, according to the World Bank. That compares with the international price of gasoline of about $1.50 a gallon. Even though ethanol gets less mileage than gasoline, in Brazil it's still cheaper per mile driven.

As a result, ethanol now accounts for as much as 20% of Brazil's transport fuel market. The country's use of gasoline has actually declined since the late 1970s. The use of alternative fuels in the rest of the world is a scant 1%.”

- The Wall Street Journal

“If you look at all the federal land in the U.S…. the estimate is for 635 trillion cubic feet of [natural] gas. About 60 million homes use natural gas now. That could supply them for 120 years.

We’re not running out of resources. What we don’t seem to have is the decision-making to open up the resources.”
- Betty Anthony, American Petroleum Institute, as quoted in Investors Business Daily

Google Enters The Hunny Club

In the November 16 edition of DailyWealth, we warned that search engine giant Google Inc. (GOOG) was in danger of entering the Hunny Club.

What’s the Hunny Club?

To qualify for membership, a company must have a market value of over $100 billion and a price-to-earnings ratio greater than 100 . In short, it’s a list of the most over hyped, overvalued big companies in the stock market. Stocks usually get hammered after joining

After moving sideways for the month of December, Google’s recent price jump has brought it into the club. Investors beware.

How Do I Explain This One To My Wife?
January 09, 2006

The Ultimate Contrarians
January 06, 2006

Make Money on Gold in ’06… Even If It Goes Down
January 05, 2006

Alchemy In The New York Times
January 04, 2006

The End Of The New York Stock Exchange As We Know It
January 03, 2006

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