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Investing in gold

July 23rd 1999 10:11
I lived in Hong Kong for 16 years until 2007. In 1998 and 1999 I wrote a series of political and social commentaries for a quirky institutional newsletter - quirky in that it was intended to be as much contentious, offbeat and humorous as it was informative. I was working as an editor, and I wrote the articles under the pseudonym Red Inque. I post them here for anyone interested in a look at life in Asia at the time, and in Hong Kong just after its return to Chinese sovereignty.



All that glitters ...

Many years ago, back in the good old days before the Great Asian Discombob­ulat­ion, Red Inque, young, innocent and newly arrived in Hong Kong from Australia, sat in a restaurant with a beautiful Chinese woman and watched her eat a fish head.


She did it with both dexterity and dain­t­iness, and with a relish which almost, but not quite, convinced Red to try the head.

Finally, the meal was finished. The young woman cleaned her hands, fixed him with her beautiful, almond-shaped eyes, ran her tongue across her lips, and murmured, “Do you think the price of gold will rise soon?”

Red went red, but then launched into a nervous discourse, the content of which owed much more to hoped for rewards of a non-fiscal nature than any great knowledge of the subject.
“Sure,” he blustered. “It’s been depress­ed for so long it must rise soon.”

That was eight years ago. Gold never did get it together, and neither did Red and the Chinese enchantress.

Today, of course, Red is older and wiser, and in the same position he would know to smile urbanely, fix those lovely dark eyes with his own, and murmur a seductive reply along the following lines. Gold is now at US$256 an ounce, a 20-year low and just 30% off its US$850-an-ounce peak in 1980. It has very limited downside from here be­cause:


Gold is now close to the global average cost of mining of US$230 an ounce. If gold fell below the cost of mining, new supply would cease.

For 10 years or more, the world’s banks have been driv­ing down the price of gold by borrowing it from central banks at low interest rates (currently about 1%) and then selling the gold on spot markets to gen­erate funds which can earn much more than 1%. Currently, about 8,000 tonnes of gold are on loan from global central banks to trading banks – a figure which represents 3.1x average annual gold product­ion and continues to grow as banks keep rolling over repayment of the physical gold. Now, as the price approaches its production break-even price, this trend will have to reverse. Once production starts to become unprofitable, output will decline, and central banks’ reserves will become the major source. Once that source starts to run low, trading banks will have no choice, as their gold loans fall due, but to go to the spot markets to buy the commodity. As banks start to cover their short positions, the price of gold will rebound.

Negative sentiment towards the gold price has been generated by the stated intention of the IMF, the Bank of England and Switzerland to sell 2,100 tonnes of gold over the next five years or so. In our view, this will give banks the oppor­tunity to cover part of their gold loans, but it will be insufficient to stem the reversal.

Global gold production has lagged final demand for the past five years, the difference being the lending of central bank re­serves. As we have said, we foresee this lending drying up.
There have always been two main reasons to buy and hoard gold. The first is risk insurance: gold is a hedge against any­thing from economic crisis to Y2K meltdown. The second reason to hold is speculation: precious metals are trading at 20-year lows and are overdue for a significant correction.

All of which is a great reason to read our new report on RNA Holdings (0501.HK). Anyone who doesn’t contact us for a copy needs their head read.
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Consumer confidence

April 27th 1999 08:50
I lived in Hong Kong for 16 years until 2007. In 1998 and 1999 I wrote a series of political and social commentaries for a quirky institutional newsletter - quirky in that it was intended to be as much contentious, offbeat and humorous as it was informative. I was working as an editor, and I wrote the articles under the pseudonym Red Inque. I post them here for anyone interested in a look at life in Asia at the time, and in Hong Kong just after its return to Chinese sovereignty.

Tell me Dobkins: How long have you been with us – not counting today? -- David Frost (The Sack and How to Give It)

Posting a recovery

Hong Kong’s most important economic and business confidence indicator hit 70 on Saturday. We are referring, of course, to the number of pages of job advertisements in The South China Morning Post. Back in the good old days, before the Great Asian Myocardial Infarction, the SCMP’s Saturday job ads ran in the high 100s, and for a while there in 1997 it was regularly more than 200 and needed seven folds to present.

Those were the days. The Hong Kong Government used to produce underemployment figures, by sector. The big property developers would line up outside the Legco Building, on their knees, to deliver petitions pleading for more construction workers to be allowed in. There were shortages of people in every white collar area. Accountants and lawyers and analysts would command astronomical wages, and if they didn’t like their job they could always find another, probably at double the wage, in the following Saturday’s Post.

At the time, The South China Morning Post was the most profitable newspaper in the world. Red Inque worked there occasionally, doing casual editing shifts in the business section. One evening the display advertising department rang three times and increased the size of the next day’s section. It had been huge to start. By the end it ran to 24 pages, the most ever. Around 1am, as the paper was being put to bed, the Business Editor announced to the desk that the business section of this one edition of the newspaper was worth HK$17m in advertising revenue. It was a record. We filed out and went to the pub, where we still had to buy our own beer.

But HK$17m was peanuts compared to what those Saturday display ads brought in. Back then, there was a huge picture of the front page of the SCMP splashed on an advertising billboard at the Star Ferry terminal. In the top right corner of the front page, the figure 228 was clearly visible, this being the number of pages of jobs ads that day.

We have no idea how much money 228 pages of job ads represents, but we know it is a lot more than 48 pages, which is what the SCMP got down to a couple of months ago. They stopped putting the number on the front page of the Saturday edition (and about the same time the Star Ferry billboard ad was taken down), but we would check out of interest. It was a weekly reality dose.

And now it is rising again. We cracked the 60 level a couple of weeks ago, and we had 70 on Saturday. The number is even back on the front page, the paper proudly showing how it is going up. We are referring, of course, to confidence.
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Technology asset bubble 2

April 22nd 1999 08:20
I lived in Hong Kong for 16 years until 2007. In 1998 and 1999 I wrote a series of political and social commentaries for a quirky institutional newsletter - quirky in that it was intended to be as much contentious, offbeat and humorous as it was informative. I was working as an editor, and I wrote the articles under the pseudonym Red Inque. I post them here for anyone interested in a look at life in Asia at the time, and in Hong Kong just after its return to Chinese sovereignty.

The pig, if I am not mistaken, supplies us sausage, ham and bacon. Let others say his heart is big – I call it stupid of the pig. -- Ogden Nash

The Sausage or the pillow case?


NASDAQ has taken a tumble, the Internet stock bubble appears to have burst, and the question everyone is asking me, of course, is how is your sister’s Sausage? My sister is the only person in our family with Great Expectations because she works at Goldman Sachs and will become fabulously wealthy if they ever get their listing off the ground and onto the board. Goldman, which doesn’t rely on Asian operations, also paid handsome bonuses at the end of last year so you can see that my beloved little sis has the golden touch at the moment. Wretched child.

Perhaps, knowing that, I should have jumped as soon as she told me about her Sausage. She bought a bundle of this Australian Web design software company at A60 cents or so at the end of March. Two weeks later they were A$1.64. Now they are tumbling again, of course, and my sister has had to change her order to a smaller BMW. It’s hard not to smirk.

If I sound bitter about the fact that everyone except me seems to have been in Internet stocks and made packets of money, then you are misreading me. I am not bitter at all. It’s just that it’s so damn, rotten, stinking, miasmically, putrefaciently unfair.

I speak from harsh experience. The last time I accepted advice and plunged in was 1996 when QPL (0243.HK) was HK$4.50 and a friend said the share price would rise ahead of the announcement of much stronger than expected profits. I bought and away we went on the ride of my life. The share was at $9 the day the profit – indeed fat and above expectations – was announced. Don’t sell, said my friend, because it will continue to rise on fundamentals. I waited and waited and finally baled out at $3.75.

Back in 1996 I told a friend about QPL and he got in at about HK$5. He didn’t sell for a profit either. In fact, he still held his a month ago when QPL hit HK10 cents. At that stage an esteemed colleague and technology analyst cried, “Enough is enough,” and declared the stock a BUY. “Utter piffle,” I replied (under my breath, because she was also my boss). Now they are 90 cents. The only consolations in my misery are that my friend didn’t average down and my boss didn’t heed her own advice.

I have a close friend in San Francisco who bought into Yahoo! two weeks ago. “I’m tired of people forecasting the end of the bull run, Yahoo! is the perfect exposure to Internet stocks, and I just love that cute exclamation mark,” was her reasoning. This friend is no small punter. She has a serious portfolio managed by her ex-husband (they were forced apart by the lack of tolerance in San Francisco for heterosexual relationships – they remain friends but they meet in secret).

I got goosebumps when she told me she was planning to put the equivalent of a few months’ income into Yahoo! I tried to imagine doing it myself, and immediately realised I’d have trouble sleeping. I mean, the very word bubble says it all. I can’t imagine placing large sums of money in something so ephemeral. Call me conservative if you will, but I’d much rather keep my money somewhere very safe. Which is why it’s in my pillow case.

And now the bubble is said to have burst. I’m not sure if Yahoo!’s price has tumbled. I’m not even sure whether the possessive apostrophe should come before or after the exclamation mark. But I hope she’s alright. I hope she hasn’t lost too much. I told her she should have bought Sausage.
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Technology asset bubble 1

February 22nd 1999 04:10
I lived in Hong Kong for 16 years until 2007. In 1998 and 1999 I wrote a series of political and social commentaries for a quirky institutional newsletter - quirky in that it was intended to be as much contentious, offbeat and humorous as it was informative. I was working as an editor, and I wrote the articles under the pseudonym Red Inque. I post them here for anyone interested in a look at life in Asia at the time, and in Hong Kong just after its return to Chinese sovereignty.

It's only when the tide goes out that you learn who's been swimming naked. -- Warren Buffett

[ Click here to read more ]
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Bad press

December 7th 1998 03:16
I lived in Hong Kong for 16 years until 2007. In 1998 and 1999 I wrote a series of political, investment and social commentary articles for a quirky institutional newsletter - quirky in that it was intended to be as much contentious, offbeat and humorous as it was informative. I was working as an editor at the time, and I wrote the articles under the pseudonym Red Inque. I post them here for anyone interested in a look at life in Asia at the time, especially in Hong Kong just after its return to Chinese sovereignty.

Accuracy to a newspaper is what virtue is to a lady; but a newspaper can always print a retraction.-- Adlai Stevenson

[ Click here to read more ]
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