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How to Profit from Fannie's Troubles
By Dr. Steve Sjuggerud

September 3, 2008

If the government takes over Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, shareholders will be wiped out...

But I've found a nifty investment that could profit handsomely from the takeover. Better yet, it's a win-win investment for you. Even if the government doesn't take over Fannie and Freddie, you can still make a lot of money here. Let me explain...

Earlier this year, U.S. Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson "virtually guaranteed" the debt of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. In essence (though not specifically), he said shareholders are not protected... but bondholders are.

Paulson's position makes sense politically... You see, countries like China and oil-producing nations hold huge piles of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac debt. To save face on the international stage, Paulson vowed – with the might of the U.S. Treasury behind him – those bonds are good.

So the play for us is in stocks like Annaly Capital Management (NLY)...

You see, Annaly only holds bonds guaranteed by government-sponsored entities like Fannie and Freddie. And Annaly has weathered the financial storm just fine...

Take a look at the company's dividends. By law, Annaly must distribute nearly all of its earnings directly to shareholders. So if Annaly had any trouble, it'd appear in the dividends. But what do we see? Annaly's dividends increased every single quarter of the credit crunch:

Annaly's Quarterly Dividends

March 2007

$0.20

June 2007

$0.24

September 2007

$0.26

December 2007

$0.34

March 2008

$0.48

June 2008

$0.55

While the Citigroups of the world were gasping for air, drastically cutting their dividends – if not suspending them altogether – Annaly was increasing its dividend.

Truth be told, the credit crunch is actually good for companies like Annaly...

Annaly makes money on "the spread." It borrows money at one rate and invests it at another rate... hopefully a higher one.

Right now, that spread is awesome... The Fed has cut short-term rates to 2%. Annaly borrows at close to that rate. Meanwhile, Fannie and Freddie bonds, which Annaly holds, are yielding closer to 5% – a full three percentage points higher than the fed funds rate!

Annaly can't quite capture all that. But it can capture a two-percentage-point spread out of it. (At least that's the spread it was earning at the end of its most recent quarter.) The last time Annaly saw spreads like that was late 2001 to late 2003. Between capital gains and dividends, investors made safe, easy, triple-digit returns in Annaly.

Right now, Annaly uses seven times leverage. So if you multiply that seven times the 2% spread, Annaly is earning a 14% return on equity (this math is rough, but you get the basic idea).

Traditionally, Annaly's only traded close to its book value when there has been no spread to earn, like in late 2000 and late 2005. But now, it's trading close to book value. So it should be able to cover a 14% dividend yield. Fourteen percent!

It's so cheap now because people were worried about Fannie and Freddie. I think, with Treasury Secretary Paulson's guarantee, Annaly should be OK. Stockholders of Fannie and Freddie may be in trouble. But bondholders (like Annaly) are fine.

Surprisingly, we don't have a real defined uptrend here yet. So it's possible I'm missing something. But here's the way I see it...

Related Articles

The Best Investment in the World, When the Time is Right...

Read This for Your Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac Survival Plan

If the government takes over Fannie and Freddie, that will reassure investors. It'll cause the interest rates on those bonds to fall, and Annaly will have an instant capital gain in its portfolio.

If the government doesn't take 'em over, you earn a safe 14% dividend. That's worth considering to me!

Good investing,

Steve

Editor's note: Steve Sjuggerud 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 Steve Sjuggerud.

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IT'S STILL A BULL MARKET IN CRUDE OIL

Early last month, something unusual happened to the price of crude oil...

It fell over 20% from its July peak... which qualifies the current weakness as a bull-market "correction."

Corrections happen to all bull markets. They shake out the latecomers and restore valuations to sober levels. Corrections in oil bull markets tend to last just over a year. And as our colleague Ian Davis pointed out, they tend to shave over 30% off the price of crude. How long, or how far, will this one go?

The slowing global economy will reduce demand for raw materials like copper and crude... So you're likely to see this correction last a while longer. That's the short term.

But looking at the five-year view below, we say $70 is a "line in the sand" for crude oil's uptrend. Until oil breaks this level, we're still well within the confines of a bull market.

Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.

Escalating production costs and cooling commodity prices are dragging down once-mighty mining and metals companies. But high costs could eventually force another price rally.

Traders are watching for the point where supply tightens thanks to a shakeout among producers that can't profit amid lower prices.

Some of the miners in the most pain are on acid – lots of it. Sulfuric acid is used extensively in mining to extract nickel, copper and uranium. But miners must compete for sulphur with the booming fertilizer industry.

After a period when you could hardly give it away, sulfuric acid has gotten exceedingly scarce, rising some 1,000% in the past year. Some nickel mines consume $10,000 of acid just to extract a ton of nickel, now selling for about $20,000, down from $50,000 last year.

Mines and smelters also consume massive amounts of coal and oil to power blast furnaces, fuel trucks and process ore. Oil is up about 57% over the past year, while coking coal has tripled.

– Wall Street Journal

The dollar rose to the highest level against the euro in almost seven months as oil fell and Federal Reserve rate cuts raised speculation that the U.S. economy will outperform Europe and Asia.

The pound fell to a two-year low versus the greenback on evidence a recession in the U.K. is looming.Australia's dollar fell to the weakest level in almost a year after the country's central bank cut interest rates for the first time since 2001 and said economic growth will slow.

The greenback's 6 percent gain versus the euro in August was its biggest monthly advance since the 15-nation currency was introduced in 1999.

– Bloomberg

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