'The most terrible time in India'...
'The most terrible time in India'... The best values in 15 years... Two major catalysts... An update from Ukraine... A Cinco de Mayo travesty...
"The last three years have been the most terrible time in India," Indian hedge-fund manager Rahul Saraogi recently told our Steve Sjuggerud.
"India has endured corruption scandals, political scandals, high interest rates, lower investment, a weak currency, inflation..."
Steve turned bullish on India in February... His friend Rahul – whom Steve calls the "Warren Buffett of India" – thought the country presented a huge opportunity.
Rahul runs a small-cap Indian fund in Chennai. He has made huge profits after Indian stocks have gotten hammered. From the February issue of True Wealth...
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Steve invested with Rahul in late 2008 after Indian stocks had fallen 80%. In early 2010, Steve withdrew his money with a triple-digit gain. And today, Rahul says the values are even better...
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Rahul appeared on an episode of Stansberry Radio with Porter and Steve last week... And he says India is the cheapest he has seen in his career...
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The strong leadership Rahul referred to is India's likely new Prime Minister, Narendra Modi. Modi is the current Chief Minister of the Indian state Gujarat. Since Modi took the helm, Gujarat has led India in GDP growth, with around 16% of the country's total industrial output and 22% of exports. That's impressive, considering Gujarat is responsible for just 5% of India's total population.
That's because Modi is business-friendly... He convinced Indian billionaire Raja Tata to build a car factory in Gujarat by removing the typical red tape. He has heavily invested in the state's infrastructure. And he has shunned the typical backroom dealings and bribery in India and the country's socialist ideals (for example, bidding for government contracts in Gujarat is done online). And he supports privatization of ports, water, and power.
In addition to a potential change in government, India is also growing like crazy... And its people are getting richer. As David Nadel – portfolio manager of the Royce Funds' International Smaller Companies Fund – told Barron's...
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Thanks to government subsidies, rural land values are rising, giving the 70% of India's population that lives in rural areas more wealth. As Nadel said...
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Barron's cited a report from a local Indian brokerage house saying the penetration rate for cars, computers, laptops, and air conditioners is less than 5%. It's less than 15% for refrigerators, washing machines, and motorbikes.
Meanwhile, Steve's True Wealth subscribers are up nearly 20% on the Market Vectors India Small-Cap Fund (SCIF) in less than four months.
Continuing on today's internationally themed Digest, S&A Global Contrarian editor Kim Iskyan sent us another update on Ukraine, which is spiraling into a civil war...
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As Kim explains, Russian President Vladimir Putin will do whatever it takes to keep Ukraine under Russian influence...
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So far, Kim says, Russia's approach has been to undermine Ukraine's western-friendly interim government. But the problem is, Ukraine's top two presidential candidates are also likely to continue to push Ukraine toward the west (rather than toward Russia)...
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We'll end today's Digest with a note you should consider while sipping your Cinco de Mayo margaritas today...
Prices for limes, a major component in margaritas, have more than tripled over the past two months... Mexican farmers, who supply around 97% of limes to the U.S., agreed to set prices higher after a disease nearly destroyed the crop.
And consider this... Americans spend nearly $3 billion a year on margaritas, about 14% of all U.S. cocktail sales.
New 52-week highs (as of 5/2/14): Alcoa (AA), BP (BP), Dorchester Minerals (DMLP), Flinders Resources (FDR.V), Travelers (TRV), and W.R. Berkley (WRB).
A quiet day in today's mailbag. Are you selling in May and going away? Let us know at feedback@stansberryresearch.com.
"Steve says we are in the 7th innings of the bull run. How many innings are there left to go??" – Paid-up subscriber Roy
Goldsmith comment: Two...
"I may be able to retire before I drop over dead at work! You guys are worth every copper plated zinc penny that I pay for my subscription. Many thanks." – Paid-up subscriber Bruce
Regards,
Sean Goldsmith
Baltimore, Maryland
May 5, 2014
The cost to rent hits an all-time record...
Editor's note: Rent prices in the U.S. just hit another record high.
In today's Digest Premium, Stansberry's Investment Advisory research analyst E.B. Tucker explains why the trend is going to continue... and shares one company set to benefit from it...
The U.S. Census Bureau collects all kinds of data. And one of those data points is the average amount of money people are paying to rent a house or apartment.
This year's first-quarter numbers came out last week. Rents hit another record high. The average renter pays his landlord 16.2% more than he did in the first quarter of 2007, during the peak of the housing boom.
That's because there are more renters. And the trend of increasing renters will continue for a long time.
I (E.B. Tucker) started buying single-family homes in Florida in 2009 and 2010, when prices had collapsed. But price wasn't my only concern. As I explained in the October issue of Stansberry's Investment Advisory, we had reached an all-time high in the percentage of people who could buy a house. Going forward, I knew we'd see more renters.
In that issue, we published a chart of the U.S. homeownership rate. As you can see in the following chart, it has continued to fall ever since...
Like I said... fewer homeowners means more home renters. This is a long-term structural trend. And as it plays out, the pressure on rents will march upwards...
Renting houses is a "boring" business. And most landlords overpay for their properties. That makes the whole process more difficult. Home prices have risen for the last few years. Today, there aren't many values.
One of the companies we hold in the Stansberry's Investment Advisory portfolio – American Homes 4 Rent (AMH) – bought up more than 22,000 single-family homes when prices were lower. The company aims to own 30,000 homes.
But because the average list price for homes has risen so quickly, AMH formed a partnership with Johnson Capital Residential Investments, which specializes in buying distressed mortgages. AMH's new partnership will allow it to control property before it enters the real-estate-owned process, when the bank forecloses and is responsible for selling the home on the open market.
This partnership is yet another way AMH is trying to keep its costs low. If AMH can't find attractive homes on the market, it will buy distressed debt and hope to take control of the property in the case of foreclosure.
This focus on low costs comes from founder B. Wayne Hughes, a pioneer in the self-storage rental business, where cost control is critical.
On May 1, AMH collected more than 22,000 rent checks. It will do it again in June. Most importantly... it doesn't matter what happens in the stock market. That rent check comes in or the tenant goes. With a long-term trend of more renters entering the market, AMH shouldn't have any problems finding replacement tenants for a long time.
– E.B. Tucker
The cost to rent hits an all-time record...
Rent prices in the U.S. just hit another record high. In today's Digest Premium, Stansberry's Investment Advisory research analyst E.B. Tucker explains why the trend is going to continue...
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