A Buyer’s Market in Water Utilities
A Buyer’s Market in Water Utilities by Chris Mayer The Daily Reckoning Tuesday, July 18, 2006 --------------------- - The conflict in Israel has grabbed people’s attention almost as much as Britney Spears’ pregnancy...
- Life is simple when you are not handicapped by too much reflection - just ask Dubya...there was no joy in Squanderville...
- How ‘bout those homebuilders?...a dear reader set us straight on our charitable reflection on charity...and more!
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War and rumors of war moved the markets yesterday. Prices for oil and gold shot up in the morning, as traders watched TV monitors for news from Lebanon. Then came a rumor that Israel would pull out in a couple of days. The Israelis denied it immediately, but the markets seemed ready for some good news and oil and gold sold off in the afternoon. The dollar rose; worried money must still see it as a safe-haven. Some people fiercely defend Israel. Others take the Palestinians’ part. We have no opinion. What surprises us is that other people have so many of them. And what amuses us is how pointless they all are. But this is the world of endless public spectacles we live in. There is the news on TV and in the newspaper. There is commentary running on the World Wide Web 24 hours a day. Even something as distant, complex, and intractable as Israel’s relationships with its neighbors - a story that began in the Old Testament and continues into the New Era - is something people in Des Moines and Butte feel they need to think about. That...and Britney Spears’ pregnancy. With so much going on in public life, there is little time or energy left for the private, marginal details that make so much difference in a person’s life. Conversations are never had. Proper meals are not cooked...or eaten. Work is left undone. Worse, there is no evidence of any deep reflection about anything. We have no proof for this assertion. It is not even a theory, but a feeling that wells up in us when we read today’s headlines. It’s not that the headlines are so much ado about nothing. It’s that they nothing one can do much about. Take the matter of war in the Levant. Anyone who has bothered to blow the dust off a history book knows that people in the region cut each other’s throats from time to time. What you learn from this history is that when that happens, you’re better off being somewhere else. There is little that the news today can add to that lesson. But, this morning, European and English newspapers are having some fun out of the whole business. One of their lead stories attempts to show that the president of the United States of America is a moron. The evidence they present for this is an off-the-record exchange between George W. Bush and Tony Blair, in which the American addresses the British prime minister by his last name, as if he were a gunnery sergeant talking to a new recruit. “Yo, Blair. How are ya doing,” is the headline in the Daily Mail, accompanied by a series of unflattering photos. The president then gives his opinion of how the trouble in Lebanon could be put to rest - a view untainted by history or reflection. It too might more likely have come out of the guardhouse on Pennsylvania Avenue rather than the Oval Office itself: “They need...to get Syria to get Hezbollah to stop doing this sh** and it’s over.” Yes, and Thomas Friedman’s recipe for ending terrorism in Iraq was just as puerile: Get the Islamic community leaders to delegitimize terrorism. Life is simple when you are not handicapped by too much reflection. Just get someone on the phone for goodness sake. Get him to do something. “I felt like telling Kofi to call, to get on the phone to Assad and make something happen,” Bush continued. This is the very same president who greeted the Lebanese prime minister three months ago, saying, “Lebanon can serve as a great example of what is possible in the Middle East.” He was right about that, though not as he intended. Lebanon does serve as an example of what is possible - the phony war on terrorism could become a real war. Instead of reducing oil to $20 a barrel (“The greatest thing to come out of this [war in Iraq] for the world economy...would be $20 a barrel for oil,”” we recall Rupert Murdoch announcing in February of 2003), the price could easily go much higher. Think the U.S. consumer’s back is breaking now? Just wait to see what happens with oil over $100. We do not blame the president. He is what he is; he is no moron. He has a role to play, just as we all do. On the whole, he does a pretty good job of it. His role is to destroy America’s commanding lead in the world. Nature cannot abide a monopoly for long. Great empires, which monopolize military power, must be brought down...if not from the outside, then from the inside. Mr. Bush is merely an unwitting instrument of history. In this role, the president is fortunate in having a whole coterie of barmy advisors and intellectual scalawags to assist him. William Kristol, Mr. Murdoch’s man in Washington, for example, urges the president to get further involved in the Near East, the Middle East, and everywhere else east of Eden. “Weakness,” he writes as if he were advising the Emperor Commodus, “is provocative.” He suggests a tighter connection between the United States and Israel, and a show of force, including an immediate strike against Iranian nuclear facilities. We don’t know whether that would be good or bad, in the big scheme of things, but if it’s provocation Mr. Kristol worries about, we can hardly think of a worse one. More news from our team at The Rude Awakening... -------------- Justice Litle, reporting from Reno, Nevada: "Getting a nuclear reaction from coffee grinds and banana peels seems a bit of a stretch. In fact, turning the contents of your garbage can into any form of clean energy sounds like a pipe dream...not so." For the rest of this story, and for more market insights, see today’s issue of The Rude Awakening: Trash Talk -------------- And more miscellanies... *** In October of 2003, Fortune magazine ran an article by Warren Buffett titled, “Squanderville versus Thriftville”. As the story goes, the citizens of the “fictitious” Squanderville found that by trading their Squanderbonds (denominated in Squanderbucks) for Thriftvilles’ hard-earned products, they could get the “Thrifts” to do all their work for them. You know how the story goes: The Thrifts start getting nervous about the Squanders ability to pay off the debt that they’ve accumulated, so while “they continue to hold some bonds, they sell most of them to Squanderville residents for Squanderbucks and use the proceeds to buy Squanderville land. And eventually the Thrifts own all of Squanderville.” Buffett’s Dr. Seussian tale wasn’t too far from the truth: we’ve known for a while that foreign companies are slowly buying America - and now they’ve started in on the roads and bridges. “On a single day in June, an Australian-Spanish partnership paid $3.8 billion to lease the Indiana Toll Road,” reports the AP. “An Australian company bought a 99-year lease on Virginia's Pocahontas Parkway, and Texas officials decided to let a Spanish-American partnership build and run a toll road from Austin to Seguin for 50 years.” Unlike the uproar that was heard over the possibility of selling U.S. ports to a foreign-run company back in February, most are seeing the sell-off of our transportation infrastructure as a good thing - after all, the federal highway fund will have a balance of $16 billion by the end of the year, and the fund will most likely run out by 2009 or 2010. We turn back to Squanderville and Thriftville to help explain this further: “Sooner or later the Squanderville government, facing ever greater payments to service debt, would decide to embrace highly inflationary policies - that is, issue more Squanderbucks to dilute the value of each. After all, the government would reason, those irritating Squanderbonds are simply claims on specific numbers of Squanderbucks, not on bucks of specific value. In short, making Squanderbucks less valuable would ease the island's fiscal pain. “That prospect is why I, were I a resident of Thriftville, would opt for direct ownership of Squanderville land rather than bonds of the island's government. Most governments find it much harder morally to seize foreign-owned property than they do to dilute the purchasing power of claim checks foreigners hold. Theft by stealth is preferred to theft by force.” We think that says it all... [Ed. Note: You can read the entire story of Squanderville on our site: Welcome to Squanderville *** If the neocons - who urged the United States into the war on terror and the attack on Iraq - prevail, the price of gold will really fly. But for now, it has bounced back so strongly and quickly from its last correction, it looks to us as though another correction is needed. *** How ‘bout those homebuilders? They almost look like bargains. Pulte is down 31% this year. Centex is down 36%. KB has fallen 45%. And the Ryland Group has almost been cut in half. Ryland is down so far that its stock trades at below four times earnings. Is it time to buy...or sell? We don’t know, but we don’t expect an easy time for the companies who put up houses. They’ve put up so many of them in the last few years that it will take some time to get people moved in. Besides, who hasn’t bought a new house by now? And with consumers struggling to keep up with gasoline prices, we doubt that many more will want to buy. The homebuilders are being forced to provide incentives to try to move the stock. Some are giving away free country club memberships, appliances or helping with closing costs. Meanwhile, the retailers are falling - including the group regarded as “discretionary spending” retailers - such as Home Depot, McDonalds and Viacom, as well as Wal-Mart and the other core suppliers to middle America. *** “San Diego home prices dip,” says a report from the West Coast. Over on the East Coast, “Home sellers push their prices down,” says the Boston Globe. *** Another friend writes to say that she’s having trouble selling her house in Virginia. We know the place. It is a gem, built in the early 19th century. It’s a brick colonial, with large plantation-style columns overlooking the Rockfish River near Charlottesville. It should have sold easily and quickly. Instead, it has been on the market for nearly a year. *** And finally, a dear reader sets us straight on our uncharitable reflections on charity: “I do find Bill Bonner’s editorial piece about charitable giving to be ill informed about the complex problems charities face. Bill and Melinda Gates target their money effectively to bring about the greatest benefit to the most in need. Their methodology is utilitarian and effective, targeting diseases that are preventable, ensuring people can survive to live economically productive lives. Some charities provide micro loans, creating liquidity, which leads to self-sufficiency and growth of local economic infrastructure projects. “I wholeheartedly agree that ‘wealth, honestly earned by sweat and saving’ is the best way for us all, yet in 2006, over 32,000 children die each day from malnutrition and preventable diseases that we in the west overcame a generation ago. Because of these diseases millions of people who survive their childhoods are often too ill and too incapacitated to work and are of no economic benefit to their families, communities and countries. How will they sweat for their wealth? “Aid from Western governments has been an unmitigated disaster for Africa and many other nations, yet I would rather your publication refrains from mocking the benevolence of enlightened wealthy individuals prematurely, they might prove you wrong!” We hope so. --- Advertisement ---
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