DailyWealth Investment Newsletter  

About DailyWealth Premium Content DailyWealth Archive
DailyWealth Investment Newsletter DailyWealth Contributors DailyWealth Resources DailyWealth Market Window
 
DailyWealth Print Edition Print Edition | Sponsored Link:
True Wealth Login

Why Australia Could Become the Next Stock Mania
By Dan Denning, editor, Australia Resource & Mining Report
May 24, 2008

Nathan Tinkler is a pawn in the strategic chess match for Australia's resource wealth.

But he's a pawn as rich as a king. And he owes it all to coal.

In November 2006, Tinkler, a 32-year old former electrician, bought the rights to a relatively unknown coal deposit in Northwestern Australia. He paid $1 million for it.

Last year, Australian producer Macarthur Coal bought a majority stake for $270 million. Tinkler celebrated by spending $19 million on 56 racehorses at the Magic Millions horse auction on the Gold Coast. Turning coal into horsepower... what a trade, eh?

The story doesn't end there. Tinkler just got a $400 million payout when ArcelorMittal, the world's biggest steelmaker, spent $632 million on a 14.9% stake in Macarthur last week.

The move surprised at least two other predators in the Aussie coal sector. Global mining giants Xstrata and China's CITIC Resources have also been trying to acquire stakes in Macarthur Coal.

You see, steelmakers need huge amounts of coal to fire their furnaces. And these firms have the same basic strategy: secure access to Australian commodities by buying the companies that own them. You could call it "mining in the stock market."

For Chinese companies, this is part of a larger "Grand Strategy" to source raw material needs from Australian companies. The strategy for the rest of us is simple... Buy resource shares before China does.

Here's what former Goldman Sachs VP Kenneth Courtis told the Australian Financial Review just a few weeks ago:

China wants everything you've got, everything. And we still can't fathom the demand that China is going to generate in the years to come... Imagine another 250 million people urbanising China over the next 20 years. What do you think that does to copper prices, iron ore prices, even given the levels they are at today?

Over the next two, three, four years, Australia could become really hot. You could see your stock market move a little bit like the Japanese market did in the 1980s or like the tech market did in the 1990s.

The first-ever hostile bid by a Chinese company for an Australian miner is nearing the finish line... Steelmaker Sinosteel recently raised its bid for iron ore junior MidWest from A$5.60 to A$6.38 per share.

But for months now, the big story in the Aussie market has been China Inc.'s stealth invasion of Australia through the stock market...

The Australian newspaper reported "Chinese interests" are considering a bid for 9% of BHP Billiton, Australia's largest resource company. The direct strategy would be to knock on the front door and ask for a chunk of stock.

That's not exactly subtle, and not likely to be well received. (You might recall the backlash when the Chinese National Offshore Oil Corporation tried to buy U.S.-based Unocal. The U.S. government blocked the bid.)

But it looks like China is taking the indirect approach, partnering with an Australian fund and a large foreign company (probably American) in the deal. If only one of the three parties to the bid is Chinese, then it looks less hostile, and it's more likely to get the approval of Aussie regulators.

If you look carefully at this statement from China's National Development Reform Commission (NDRC), the "Grand Strategy" comes into focus: "With iron ore prices rising explosively, many domestic firms are very enthusiastic about investing in overseas mines, which needs strengthened macro guidance from the country."

In other words, commodity prices are soaring. China desperately needs them. And the state government will support nearly all Chinese attempts to buy assets. That includes backing takeovers in Australia.

We'll see how far the Australian government will allow China to "infiltrate" its commodity sector... but it's clear both countries need each other. As long as the China boom continues, the Aussie resource boom will continue.

Related Articles

The Last Secret Left in the Mining Industry

The Coming Boom in Australian Resource Stocks

The right move for the rest of us is to get acquainted with Australia's resource shares. They are the object of a large global bidding war – one that could shoot this stock market into mania mode.

It's the kind of crossfire you want to be caught in... And the next four or five years may be the best time you'll ever see to make money in resource stocks.

Good investing,

Dan Denning

P.S. I've just completed a full report on the best opportunities in Australian mining stocks. I guarantee you won't find in-depth research on these companies in the U.S., which makes them an outstanding, undiscovered way to make money in the resource bull market. Click here to read more about this report.

Email a Friend

Delicious
Reddit

Digg

RSS

33%

Increase in subcompact car sales in the U.S. this year, over the same period last year. Sales of large SUVs are down 29%. Figures from Autodata.

You've Never Considered the Next Great Emerging Market...
By Tom Dyson

May 23, 2008 8

The scene in Ciudad Del Este is pure raucous capitalism... and I couldn't wait to see where the taxi driver took us to buy guns. I was hoping for an illegal warehouse or some cinderblock shack in the shantytown...

Read On...

Three Reasons You Need to Invest in Tar Sands Today
By Matt Badiali
May 22, 2008

Fort McMurray isn't a big town. It has just three exits on the only highway within 100 miles. Forty years ago, there wasn't much here at all. Now it's one of the fastest-growing towns in Canada... and the extra $50,000 or so a year those miners earn puts a lot of juice into the local economy.

Read On...

The Largest Electricity Exporter On Earth
By Tom Dyson

May 21, 2008

I can't explain in words what a beast this dam is. It stretches four miles across and 65 stories high. The iron and steel used to build it would give you 380 Eiffel Towers. It's one of the seven modern wonders of the world, alongside the Panama Canal and the Golden Gate Bridge.

Read On...

This Indicator Has Great News About Stocks
By Dr. Steve Sjuggerud
May 20, 2008

In early 2000, the Big Number "called the top." It hit its all-time high (based on more than 50 years of data) in January 2000, two months before the dot-com peak in March 2000. That was the end of one of the greatest stock-market booms in history...

Read On...

John McCain Hates These Stocks
By Tom Dyson

May 19, 2008

VeraSun Energy, the largest ethanol stock, trades below book value. In other words, you can buy this company for less than the cash invested in it. VeraSun Energy's stock price is down 68% in the last six months. Pacific Ethanol – another large ethanol stock – has fallen from $45 a share to $3 a share in the last two years.

Read On...

Oil - Light Crude -Continuous Contract (EOD)
THE BIGGEST CHART WE COULD FIND

We considered getting "fancy" with this week's chart... We thought about showing you another ratio of gold vs. landfill stuffing... or how housing starts may signal a bottom in homebuilder stocks.

But there's simply no bigger chart in the market right now than crude oil. As you can see, crude has more than doubled in the past year. We attribute this incredible gain to three factors:

There are no easy barrels left.
Asia is entering its golden age of
resource consumption.
The U.S. government has steadily
eroded the value of the dollar.

Of the three, the last one is by far the worst offense
to the American public. Instead of vilifying Big Oil, we
recommend vilifying the nitwits with the printing press.

Home | About DailyWealth | Premium Content | DailyWealth Archive | Contributors
DailyWealth Resources | Research Reports | Privacy Policy

Customer Service: 1-888-261-2693 – Copyright 2008 Stansberry & Associates Investment Research. All Rights Reserved. Protected by copyright laws of the United States and international treaties. This e-letter may only be used pursuant to the subscription agreement and any reproduction, copying, or redistribution (electronic or otherwise, including on the world wide web), in whole or in part, is strictly prohibited without the express written permission of Stansberry & Associates Investment Research, LLC. 1217 Saint Paul Street, Baltimore MD 21202