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How to Buy High-Profit Corn
By Tom Dyson

May 7, 2008

Last night, I had dinner with Gary, an Iowa commodities broker...

As we sat down to steaks, Gary told me two large hog businesses had gone under this week in Sioux City. "I saw the banker down at the farm counting [livestock] heads," he said. "The banker in this town never leaves his office. It's the first time he's ever had to get s**t on his shoes."

Gary lives in one of Iowa's most productive farming counties. He helps local farmers sell their harvest using the futures and options markets in Chicago. He also makes million-dollar speculations of his own.

Gary really knows the "ag" markets. He used to be the head stock buyer in a cattle yard, he's traded ag commodities every day for the past 40 years, and he spends all day talking with farmers.

The last time I met Gary – in November 2006 – he told me this:

"Corn is going to $5 a bushel, up from its current price of $3.33. Soybeans are going to $9, from their current $6.45. And Iowa farmland is a bargain at $5,000 an acre."

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Today, corn is $6 a bushel, soybeans are $13, and prime Iowa farmland is $10,000 an acre.

Back then, it was obvious grain prices had to rise. They were too cheap, and with the ethanol boom in full swing, it was plain to see corn and soybean prices would rise. Now it's not so clear...

Gary says a bad crop could send corn to $10. But that's not likely. The farmers are planting their fields right now, and Gary thinks there's going to be a big crop this year. That could push grain prices down.

Gary wouldn't predict a fall or a rise in the grain markets. He can't know the future. But he did tell me he had sold all the grain production from his own farm, locking in corn prices at $5.80 and soybean prices at $12.80.

While it isn't clear what's going to happen to the grains... Gary said hog and cattle prices have to rise. Here's why:

A knife is made out of steel. The knifemaker simply turns a raw material into a more expensive "value added" product. The hog and cattle farmer does the same thing. Corn is the raw material. Hogs and cows are a value-added corn product. Think of livestock as corn bins with four legs.

When steel prices rise, the knifemaker has to raise his knife prices or he'll go out of business. Farmers haven't been able to raise hog and cattle prices. Years of cheap corn have built up large inventories of meat.

Now the hog and cattle farmers are going out of business. Soon there's going to be a shortage and prices will rise. "There's going to be drastically higher meat prices when all this washes out," Gary said.

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Dinner With An Iowa Commodities Broker

How to Invest in the Most Efficient Way To Feed the World

To invest directly in hog and cattle prices, you have three choices: You could make friends with a farmer and ask him to buy livestock for you. You could open a futures trading account and buy live hog or feeder cattle futures. (Prices are volatile. Make sure you use plenty of margin and retain a broker who knows the agriculture markets well.)

Finally, you can buy a publicly traded meatpacker like Tyson, Hormel, or Smithfield. But be careful... other "corporate" variables may influence the prices of these stocks and ruin the trade, even if livestock prices rise.

Good investing,

Tom Dyson

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THE MARKET LIKES COMMERCIAL REAL ESTATE AGAIN

On July 16, 2007, we sounded the alarm on commercial real estate stocks... aka REITs. We cited record low yields and high valuations as reasons for avoiding – or even shorting – the sector.

It didn't take long for the market to prove us right... After that column, REITs in general fell 25% in six months. Shares of America's largest REIT fund manager, Cohen & Steers, were cleaved in half during the drop. After all, if folks don't want to own REITs, they don't want to own the guys who own REITs either.

As today's chart shows, investors are warming back up to the sector. C&S has built a solid "floor" in the $25 area and sits at a six-month high. Rallies come on strong volume, corrections come on weak volume. CB Richard Ellis, the world's largest real estate services company, sports a similar chart.

We can't know what the future holds for U.S. commercial real estate. Times could get worse. Times could get better... The renewed strength in Cohen & Steers tells us the forward-looking stock market likes the "times are getting better" thesis.

Cohen & Steers Inc. - NYSE

Sport utility vehicles and pickup trucks – symbols of Americans' obsession with horsepower, size, and status – are falling out of favor as consumers rich and poor encounter sticker shock at the pump, paying upward of $80 to fill gas tanks.

The sale of new SUVs and pickup trucks has dropped precipitously in recent months amid soaring gas prices and a weakening economy: SUV sales for the month of April alone fell 32.3 percent from a year earlier and small car sales rose 18.6 percent. This fundamental shift comes against a backdrop of relentless gas increases, and growing concerns over the environment and US oil consumption, according to auto analysts and car dealers.

"The SUV craze was a bubble and now it is bursting," said George Hoffer, an economics professor at Virginia Commonwealth University whose research focuses on the automotive industry. "It's an irrational vehicle. It'll never come back."

– Boston Globe

Commodities guru Jim Rogers says the supposed bubble in commodities is actually a bull in disguise – and that he expects years of price rises ahead.

"The only bull market I know of right now is in commodities," says Rogers, developer of the Rogers International Commodities Index.

Rogers acknowledges that some commodity markets might seem to be at their peak. But, he says, commodity prices typically rise over 15 to 20 years.

"There are only five or six commodities that have made all-time highs, and most are not even above the old all-time highs," Rogers said in a recent interview.

Since the current round of rises began in 1999, that puts us about halfway to the next peak, which should occur sometime between 2014 and 2022.
NewsMax

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Penny Stock set to drill Canada's largest oil sands field.

Canada's single largest oil sands holding - over 707,700 acres - is now controlled by a tiny $4 stock

They're conducting tests to determine how much oil is buried beneath their land... Preliminary estimates are 60 BILLION barrels of oil.

The results are due back in any day... that's when I expect this tiny company's share price to rocket to $20... $30... possibly even $50 a share.

To read more on the story, click here.

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