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Bullish investors betting on a V-shaped recovery for the global stock markets
are convinced the worst of the global economic crisis is over, and furthermore,
expect the emerging economic giants, - Brazil, China, India, Russia, and Korea,
(BRICK) to become the locomotives of global growth. With China and India leading
the way, the notion of decoupling, - emerging markets advancing faster than
developed markets, - and even pulling the G-7 economies out of recession, is
making a comeback.
Global speculators plowed a record $35.5-billion into emerging-market stock
funds in the first half of this year, faster than at any other comparable time
on record. By contrast, traders withdrew $61-billion from developed stock market
funds over the same period. After all, its simple logic to invest in a stock
market index with a faster expanding economy, such as China and India, rather
than invest in a contracting economy, such as Japan, experiencing its worst
downturn since WWII.
Attracted to faster growth, global traders are chasing stocks in emerging
markets at higher and higher prices, in a parabolic fashion, which often end-ups
in a high stakes game of musical chairs. In Shanghai, the world's wildest casino,
the average Price /Earnings Ratio reached 38-times in July, compared with the
MSCI Emerging Markets Index which trades at 18-times earnings, the highest
level since late 2007, when the global stock markets peaked, before the big
crash. Brazil's Bovespa index trades at 23.5-times profit, near the highest
in five-years.

Emerging markets are more volatile than the G-7 markets, because "hot money" flows
from foreign investors are often behind the exaggerated price movements. But
when "hot money" decides to make a quick run for the exits, and speculators
seek to convert paper profits into cash, the corrections on the downside can
be violent. Total returns are also impacted by currency fluctuations, often
moving in the same direction, due to simultaneous unwinding of leveraged carry
trades.
According to IMF data, the BRIC countries accounted for nearly half of global
growth in 2008 - China alone accounted for a quarter, and Brazil, India, and
Russia were responsible for another quarter. Furthermore, the IMF notes that
these economies accounted for more than 90% of the rise in consumption of energy
and metals, and 80% ofthe rise in consumption of grains since 2002.
Canada is strengthening its trade ties with China in order to reduce its dependence
on the US-economy. Canadian exports to China increased 6.8% in the five months
through May, while exports to the US fell 26-percent. Thus, the gyrations of
the emerging BRICK stock markets are of great interest to speculators in the
Toronto Stock Exchange, the gateway to the world's seventh largest economy.

One middle of the road approach to investing in global markets, between the
high-flying BRICK acrobats, and the tortoise like markets in Europe, Japan,
and the US, is the Toronto Stock Exchange, (TSX) which contains a wealth of
natural resource and high-tech companies, and a sound financial sector. So
far this year, the Toronto Stock Index is up 20.5%, nearly double the +11%
gain for the benchmark S&P-500 Index, but trailing behind Brazil's +50%
gain, and Shanghai's +70% increase.
Canadian indices have outperformed their US-counterparts this year, energized
by a rally in natural resource shares, which were supported by massive stockpiling
of crude oil, copper, iron-ore, and aluminum by China's Reserve Bureau. For
foreign investors in Toronto stocks, there's been an extra bonus, a foreign
currency gain, due to the Canadian dollar's advance against the Euro, yen,
and US-dollar, on the back of surging base metal and energy markets. Still,
the Brazilian real's 25% gain against the dollar leads the commodity bloc currencies,
while the Chinese yuan has gone nowhere, locked by Beijing at a fixed rate
of 6.84 per US-dollar.
Roughly 45% of Canada's gross domestic product (GDP) is linked to foreign
trade, and 77% of its exports are sold to the United States. Each day, more
than US$1 billion worth of goods crosses the US-Canadian border. So it's not
surprising that the Toronto Stock Index (TSX) usually moves in the same direction
as the Dow Jones Industrials, most of the time. However, the TSX outperforms
when commodities are rising, which in turn, pushes up the Canadian dollar.

Because Canada holds the second largest oil reserves in the world, foreign
capital inflows into and out of TSX energy companies are key drivers moving
the Canadian Petro-dollar. Output from Alberta's oil sands region, the largest
crude reserves outside the Middle East, will rise to 3-million barrels per
day (bpd) by 2018, more than double over the next nine years, from about 1.3-million
bpd last year.
Canada has roughly 180-billion barrels of oil reserves, with all but six billion
barrels locked in Alberta's oil sands, a mixture of sand, water, clay and bitumen
that's too heavy to use without being heated. Oil must be priced at $65 a barrel
for new oil sands projects to be viable,
according to the Canadian Assoc of Petroleum Producers. Petro-Canada and Suncor
Energy have joined forces to create Canada's biggest oil company, a merger
expected to save C$1-billion a year in capital costs and C$300 million annually
in operating expenses.
But Canada also controls huge resources in iron ore, nickel, copper, zinc,
gold, lead, silver, timber, fish, coal, petroleum, natural gas, and diamonds.
Ironically, Canada's minerals industry, including smelting and refining, only
contributes about 4% to Canada's GDP, yet lately, it's the direction of base
metals, especially copper, that's increasingly influencing the direction of
the Canadian dollar, subtlety dethroning crude oil, as the Loonie's key lynchpin.
Canada is the third largest copper producer in the world, after Chile and
the USA. It is also the world's largest zinc and second largest nickel and
lead producer. A small number of producers, including Noranda, Inco, Falconbridge,
Teck Cominco, Boliden and Hudson Bay Mining, dominate base metal mining in
Canada. Inco, owned by Brazil's Vale, supplies a quarter of the world's nickel,
and also produces copper, gold and cobalt. Falconbridge and Noranda, owned
by Xstrata Mining, mine nickel and copper at the world class deposits at Sudbury,
Raglan and Kidds Creek.

Over the past decade, Canada has also emerged as one of the leading nations
in the high-tech and computer industry, mostly located in Ontario and Quebec.
There is also a large industrial base which includes companies that produce
pharmaceuticals, aerospace products, and telecommunications equipment. About
half of all Canadian manufactured goods are produced in Ontario, second only
to Michigan, as the largest producer of automobiles and car parts in North
America.
So while capital flows into base metal miners and oil company shares, lifted
the Canadian dollar 20% higher, the larger population of Canadian exporters,
the backbone of the economy, are hard hit by a stronger Loonie, since they
receive most of their sales revenue in US-dollars. Canadian exports rebounded
only slightly to C$29.3-billion in June, standing -36% lower than a year earlier.
The Canadian central bank thinks the Loonie has run ahead of the trade weighted
fundamentals.
On August 4th Canada's finance minister, Jim Flaherty raised the possibility
of central bank sales of Loonies, for the first time since 1998, if the Loonie's
sharp rise puts the fragile economic recovery at risk. "We are concerned with
any rapid changes in the valuation of the Canadian currency vis a vis the US-currency.
We watch that. There are some steps that could be taken to dampen that. There
are, from time to time, indications of some speculation in the Canadian currency
that is not justified in market terms," Flaherty warned, blocking the Loonie's
advance at 94-US-cents.

Last month, Bank of Canada (BoC) chief Mark Carney hinted at stronger action
if the Canadian dollar remained persistently higher than 87 US-cents, projected
in the central bank's quarterly report. The BoC retains "considerable flexibility
in this regard, and will use that flexibility if necessary," he warned. The
central bank has already slashed its overnight loan rate to a razor-thin 0.25%,
and could resort to experimenting with the hallucinogenic drug, - "Quantitative
Easing," - the printing of vast quantities of Loonies, in order to buy government
bonds.
The BoC could engage in a combination of QE and sales of Canadian dollars,
which in turn, has put a floor under the gold market in Toronto, at near C$950
/ounce. Interestingly enough, the threat of intervention has provided a temporary
lifeline to the ailing US-dollar, which is crippled by massive budget deficits
for years to come, and nearly $1.75-trillion of QE injections by the Fed. Thus,
the Fed and the BoC are playing the old familiar game of competitive currency
devaluation, where the appreciating currency is the least ugly.
Although the base metals have captured the attention of "hot money" traders
in recent months, one should not overlook the hibernating Toronto gold market.
The explosive growth of the Canadian M2 money supply, combined with an ultra-low
0.25% BoC loan rate through mid-2010, the possibility of unsterilized currency
intervention, and QE injections, provide reasons for Canadian traders to buy
gold on dips near support at C$950 /oz in the weeks ahead.

Trading in the Canadian dollar could become more hazardous if China's central
bank (PBoC) continues to issue more T-bills and restrains banks from lending
recklessly. Beijing has guided the 5-year T-Bond yield about 65-basis points
higher since early June, to the psychological 3-percent level, and is warning
of a slowdown in bank lending in the second half of the year. In doing so,
Beijing has sliced 600-points off the Shanghai red-chip market over the past
two weeks!!
For speculators in base metals and crude oil, it's hard to believe that the
PBoC would prick the Shanghai bubble, after working so tirelessly to re-inflate
it. Chinese banks opened the flood gates this year, and are taking on more
credit risk. China's chief banking regulator Liu Mingkang said at a closed-door
meeting in Tianjiin in April that the maximum Chinese banks should lend out
a year is 6-trillion yuan ($878-billion), anything above that would be deemed
as risky. During the first seven months alone, they lent out a whopping 7.7-trillion
yuan ($1.2-trillion).
On August 14th, Mingkang urged the country's top banks to closely monitor
the flow of capital to prevent credit risk.New loans plunged to 356-billion
yuan ($52-billion), less than a quarter of June's level. "We should be clear-headed
that the current situation remains very grim," Liu warned. China
Construction Bank, the nation's second-largest bank, agreed to cut new
lending by 70% in the second half to avert a surge in bad debt, President Zhang
Jianguo said last week.

Of course, opinions in the schizophrenic currency and global stock markets
can suddenly turn on a dime. After a doubling of the Chinese red-chip index,
any unexpected bad news or signs of a deflating bubble can quickly trigger
havoc in equity markets throughout Asia, rattle base metal miners and commodities
worldwide, and in turn, trigger knee-jerk sales of Canadian dollars.
Yen carry traders operating in Toronto, keep a close eye on commodity markets,
and perhaps, noticed the appearance of a "Hanging Man" candlestick pattern,
- an important reversal top pattern, in the Shanghai index on August 4th.
Canadian MoF chief Flaherty's threat to sell Loonies on August 5th blocked
the Canadian dollar's advance at 90-yen. News that the Canadian economy lost
44,500 in July, with the jobless rate stuck at an 11-year high of 8.6%, helped
to knock the Canuck buck towards 85.50-yen. The next shoe to drop was the TSX.
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