 The Rude Awakening Wall Street, New York Thursday, July 21, 2005
------------------------- The Rude Awakening PRESENTS: The Chinese do not have all the answers, but many Chinese companies certainly have the right ideas, capitalistically speaking. --- Advertisement ---
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------------------------- WHAT RED MENACE? By Chris Mayer The Chinese are stalking American companies
and some Americans resent the trend. We investors, however, cannot afford to indulge in such nationalistic urges. Identifying the winners and losers of the global economy is far more advantageous than identifying their nationalities. The recent CNOOC-Chevron-Unocal affair is a good case in point. The Chinese National Offshore Oil Company, dubbed CNOOC, is competing with Chevron for ownership of Unocal, the pride of El Segundo, CA. Even though CNOOC's bid is at least 10% higher than Chevron's, many Americans consider the Chinese suitors to be predators - a kind of "Red Menace." But the Chinese executives who oversee CNOOC seem to be darn fine capitalists, which is the aspect of this saga that interests us the most. Perhaps this particular menace is also a worthy investment. But first, let's dispense with a few misconceptions. This entire affair has perpetuated a number of myths, as I recently discovered while conducting several radio interviews. Invariably, the radio hosts portray CNOOC as a big, red menace that is threatening to swipe U.S. oil supplies for itself. The facts show a very different picture. For starters, CNOOC is not very menacing. Very few people realize that the company is actually SMALLER than either Chevron or Unocal. Chevron's $151 billion in annual revenues are more than 20 times larger than CNOOC's $6.7 billion in revenues. Even little old Unocal generated revenues of $8.2 billion, or 22% more than CNOOC's. Secondly, Unocal is little, which is another fact that gets lost in the discussion. In terms of its U.S. production, Unocal's output is a pittance - only 57,000 barrels a day. Compare that to the entire U.S. production of oil, which comes in at over 7.3 million barrels a day. Unocal's output is less than 1% of total U.S. production. This seems hardly worthy of the hysteria surrounding the potential acquisition. Even though Unocal is as an American enterprise, 70% of its reserves lie close to the Asian markets they currently serve, particularly in Indonesia. In this day and age, it sometimes rings hollow to pin nationalistic badges on global enterprises. This would seem to be one of those cases. The market for oil, especially, is a global market. Does the fact that Chevron operates its headquarters in California mean that American consumers will receive preferred access to its oil? Doubtful. Chevron will sell its oil to the highest bidder, just like every other oil company would do. The fact that a few Chinese companies are buying up American companies stirs up nationalistic responses that bear no connection to economic realities. For example, the U.S. economy did not suffer for having sold innumerable assets and companies to the Japanese during the 1980s. Our economy is still here and it seems to be doing just fine, thank you. Secondly, Chinese investment-to-date in U.S. companies has been negligible. In 2004, Chinese firms invested only $490 million directly in U.S. companies and assets. Comparatively, U.S. multinationals invested $15 billion in China. So again, American fears of a Chinese takeover seem irrational in light of the facts. Another myth has also sprung from the flurry of recent Chinese acquisitions of American companies. It is said that the Chinese are interested in purchasing American brands and securing outlets for their cheap goods. Chinese appliance maker Haier has made a bid for Maytag, for example. Yet, a fascinating piece in the Wall Street Journal earlier in the month by two Boston Consulting Group advisers based in Hong Kong argues convincingly to the contrary. The advisors note that Haier "has spent ten years building its own brand in the U.S. and now has its name on 10% of new U.S. refrigerators." Refrigerators are too large to be made in China. They are made right here on U.S. soil. What Chinese companies bring to the party, the Boston Consulting duo argues, is management skill and savvy. "Chinese management is an under-rated asset in American discussions of China's global strategy. Almost all large successful companies in China are turnarounds of formerly politically managed state-owned enterprises." These management teams took the reigns in the 1980s and learned the art of the turnaround specialist - they cut costs, leveled corporate organizational charts, and pruned losing businesses. "The CEOs of Haier," the authors continue, "all started and spent their entire careers on the factory floor." The CNOOC management team is no different. Fu Chengyu, CNOOC's CEO and Chairman, earned his master's degree at the University of Southern California and spent 13 years working with international and U.S. oil companies. CNOOC shareholders have enjoyed the benefits of Chinese managerial skill. Since its listing four years ago, CNOOC's market cap has grown four-fold amidst an energy boom. It maintains an investment grade rating, with net cash on the balance sheet and solid profits. As the chart below illustrates, CNOOC's earnings have nearly tripled over the last four years - or more than twice the results that Chevron and Unocal delivered over the same time frame.  Clearly, this team has accomplished much in a short period of time. Perhaps it has not occurred to the protectionist members of Congress, but maybe Unocal's shareholders DESERVE both CNOOC's higher bid and the future leadership of CNOOC's management team.
The Chinese government owns 70% of CNOOC, with the rest in the hands of public shareholders. Shares can be purchased on the New York Stock Exchange (the ticker symbol is CEO) at a modest 12 times trailing earnings and with a 3.4% yield. John Pomfret, the Washington Post's former Beijing bureau chief recently made a thought-provoking observation. He wrote, "Too often, when people are writing about China, they are actually using its successes as a way to mourn perceived problems back home. American is becoming complacent, uneducated, slow and bureaucratic, they say. Look at China; it's got all the answers. It's the future. But is it?" Our guess: The Chinese do not have all the answers, but many Chinese companies certainly have the right ideas, capitalistically speaking. CNOOC may be one of them. [Ed. Note: When Chris turns out picks for his readers, he pays particular attention to the figures that tend to fly under other's radars. Oh, and he has also mastered a 100- year-old trading system that has averaged 22.6% gains for 50 years straight. Read on here: Crisis Point Trading System --- Advertisement --- Why Alan Greenspan's Retirement Might Put Yours in Jeopardy The only thing standing in the way of a complete devaluation of the US dollar is Alan Greenspan
and on January 31, 2006, he retires. Find out exactly how the combination of 18 years of Greenspan's loose monetary policy, $7.78 trillion US national debt, and the revaluation of China's currency is forming the 'perfect storm' that will destroy the US economy - and the one investment that will keep you afloat when the storm hits
www.agora-inc.com/reports/MTR/WMTRF715 ------------------------- Did You Notice
? By Eric J. Fry Yesterday, the American Petroleum Institute (API) surprised many investors by reporting a "smaller than expected" drawdown in crude oil inventories. Immediately after the news crossed the wires, the price of crude oil tumbled more than $2 a barrel. Most oil stocks also dropped sharply. Interestingly, however, oil-shipping stocks bucked the trend. Teekay Shipping (NYSE: TK), a core holding of the Outstanding Investments portfolio, jumped more than 2% on four times the stock's average daily trading volume. Other industry bellwethers, like Frontline Ltd. (NYSE: FRO) and General Maritime (NYSE: GMR), also chalked up nice gains. Why the renewed interest in shipping stocks? The "Imports" component of the API report may provide a partial answer; production trends in the Middle East may provide the rest of the answer. Yesterday's API report revealed that US crude oil imports last week totaled a near-record 11.1 million barrels per day, continuing a years-long trend of rising imports. Oil product shipments also continue to increase, as the chart below illustrates.  Elsewhere around the globe - and much to the delight of oil-shipping companies - the thirst for imported oil cannot seem to quench itself.
"Supertanker bookings for oil exports from the Middle East reached their highest monthly level this year in July, as OPEC increased output," Bloomberg News reports. These vessels, known as very large crude carriers, or VLCCs, carry about 80% of the Persian Gulf exports. Since, therefore, VLCC shipping rates are rebounding, Middle Eastern oil production must be picking up. And if Middle Eastern oil production is rising, global oil demand must be holding steady, if not rising somewhat. Shipping rates for voyages to Asia have doubled in the past three weeks. So somebody over there must want the stuff. "With today's oil price, all producers and refiners have an incentive to pump and refine as much as possible," explains Ole-Rikard Hammer, managing director of Oslo-based shipbroker P.F. Bassoe AS. "This is very promising for the tanker market." We deduce, therefore, that what may be a bad thing for the oil price - rising supplies - might not be bad thing for oil shippers, especially if those rising supplies are arriving in an oil tanker.
[Ed. Note: As the world gorges itself and devours what is a finite - let us repeat that, FINITE - energy source, some keen investors are putting their money elsewhere. When the oil finally dries up, the world will find its fuel in these investor's pockets. Join them here: Energy = Wealth ------------------------- And the Markets
| Wednesday | Tuesday | This week | Year-to-Date | DOW | 10,689 | 10,647 | 398 | -0.9% | S&P | 1,235 | 1,229 | 44 | 1.9% | NASDAQ | 2,189 | 2,173 | 143 | 0.6% | 10-year Treasury | 4.17% | 4.19% | 0.26 | -0.05 | 30-year Treasury | 4.40% | 4.43% | 0.20 | -0.43 | Russell 2000 | 678 | 669 | 49 | 4.0% | Gold | $423.05 | $420.20 | -$16.95 | -3.3% | Silver | $7.07 | $6.96 | -$0.14 | 3.7% | CRB | 303.37 | 304.79 | -8.00 | 6.8% | WTI NYMEX CRUDE | $56.72 | $57.46 | -$3.82 | 30.5% | Yen (YEN/USD) | JPY 112.75 | JPY 112.72 | -3.44 | -9.9% | Dollar (USD/EUR) | $1.2150 | $1.2036 | 11 | 10.4% | Dollar (USD/GBP) | $1.7408 | $1.7395 | 881 | 9.2% |
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