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Historic Low Interest Rates Making US Property Attractive

By +Peter Mindenhall Monday 15 April 2013 Those considering property investment will have noticed a change in the US real estate market recently. The tide is turning and conditions are becoming favourable for buyers. This is thanks in part to historic low interest rates, making owning property more affordable than ever. In fact, according to research from Zillow, American homeowners paid almost 37 per cent less per month on their mortgage in the final quarter of 2012 than they did before the housing bubble. This is despite homes actually fetching 14.5 per cent more in Q4 than the historic average relative to US median incomes. These figures are based on current and historic median home values on the Zillow Home Value Index, and median income data from the US Census and the Bureau of Labor Statistics. This was then used to create an affordability index, measuring the portion of monthly income homeowners spend on mortgage payments and a price-to-income ratio. Zillow found that US homeowners now have more purchasing power, bolstered by favourable interest rates. This is contrast to the 1985 to 1999 pre-bubble period, when rates for 30-year fixed mortgages ranged from between six per cent and 13 per cent. During this time, Americans spent an average of 19.9 per cent of their median monthly income on mortgage payments. In the final quarter of 2012, this was much changed. Mortgage rates stood in the three to four per cent range and homeowners paid 12.6 per cent of their monthly income on mortgage payments. This is considerably less than the historic 36.9 per cent average. As the real estate market has rebounded, home values have also increased. In Q4, buyers across the country were spending three times their annual incomes on the purchase price of a typical home. This means investors were buying homes 14.5 per cent more expensive relative to their incomes than during the pre-bubble period. Stan Humphries, Zillow chief economist, commented: “The days of historically high levels of housing affordability are numbered. Current affordability is almost entirely dependent on low interest rates, and there’s no doubt that rates will begin to rise in the next few years. This will have an undeniable effect on demand for housing, as homebuyers will have to spend more of their incomes to buy a home. Home values will have to either remain stagnant while incomes catch up or, quite possibly, home values will have to fall in some markets.” Continue reading

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Rising Ethanol Prices Another Blow to Viability of Biofuels

April 15, 2013 By Robert Potts Ongoing drought in Midwest America is driving up the price of ethanol and threatening the long term sustainability of the biofuels industry. Heavy water shortages across the “corn belt,” the major maize producing region of the United States, have damaged the supply of corn bushels, driving up the price of ethanol fuel. This is another blow to the biofuels industry at a time when it is facing sustained criticism from politicians and environmental groups worldwide. Many people claim that ethanol is not a long term alternative to fossil fuels due to associated rises in global food prices and changes in land use. This latest blow, however, even casts doubt over ethanol’s ability to provide a short term fuel solution. According to the USDA , record-high corn prices are likely to continue throughout 2013, rising up to 19 per cent higher than the last two years; in some cases, farmers in Missouri have seen their annual crops fall to up to 5.5 percent of their normal yield. Nearly 10 per cent of the US’s ethanol plants have ceased production in the past year, unable to cope with rising resource costs and shrinking demand. Government intervention and bloated supply Only five years ago, ethanol was hoped to be the savior to the long term depletion of fossil fuels. As a wholly renewable source of energy, the fuel can be blended with traditional gasoline and sold at gas stations across America. For the last 10 years the US government has mandated that gasoline must contain at least 10 per cent biofuel. Ethanol production was subsequently supported with a tax credit of 45 cents per gallon, although this deal expired at the end of 2011, making it a lucrative trade for farmers and producers. As a result, the number of ethanol plants has grown to hundreds in US states like Missouri, bringing huge economic gains to small towns. Farmers have been able to find a new market for their corn crops, while ethanol producers reacted by building new plants and creating thousands of new jobs. However, recent economic conditions have since exposed weaknesses in the government’s biofuel policy. The original 10 per cent ethanol mandate assumed that overall demand for gasoline would grow over time. However, the current recession has seen overall demand for gasoline, and ethanol, shrink, exposing a bloated ethanol industry overly reliant on state subsidies. Over supply of ethanol has now created thousands of barrels of ethanol which are sitting in storage plants across the Midwest unused; these barrels will remain idle until there is enough gasoline available to blend with them. The current supply side crisis has therefore served to compound pre-existing structural issues within the industry. “It’s a more sombre mood,” said Todd Sneller, the administrator of the Nebraska Ethanol Board. “The growth opportunity that existed some years ago is still out there in theory, but the reality is that it’s going to take an awful lot of time, money and political battles to realise that opportunity.” “Blend wall” creating demand side difficulties With most cars and service stations only able to cope with a fuel blend of 10 per cent ethanol, known as the “blend wall”, demand restrictions clearly exist; the hope that demand will rise for higher percentage ethanol blends has not yet materialised. “Flex-fuel” vehicles, which can operate on 85 per cent ethanol, are also yet to be taken up by the mass market, and technological advancement in electric vehicles will only add further pressure to the industry’s long term competitiveness. In the EU, discussions are currently under way to limit the production of first generation biofuels, like ethanol, to half of Europe’s renewable fuel target, as a result of concerns over their long term environmental sustainability. Underdeveloped second generation fuels With ethanol under pressure, many hope that in the longer term, developments in second generation biofuels, synthesised from non-food sources, will provide a more viable alternative. Although cost advances are being achieved in these ‘cellulosic’ biofuels, productive capacity is still very small in comparison to ethanol. Whether these crops can be commercialized without requiring similarly high levels of water and changes in land use is open to much debate. Whether the biofuels industry can dust off this recent blow also remains unknown. Idle plants and unused barrels could clearly be short term side effects of changes in the economic cycle, but could also be a sign of longer term decline: “Is that going to be temporary or permanent? It’s hard to say,” said Eric Lee, Citibank commodities expert. However, with producers hoping to produce an extra three-tenths of a gallon of ethanol per bushel of corn, technological development could yet save an industry merely bruised from a particularly tough year. Robert Potts is owner of RPM Fuels, providers of tanks and pumps to the fuel industry. RPM Fuels supply oil tanks as well as specific equipment for biofuels and bio diesel. Continue reading

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Investing In Water Will Make Some Extremely Rich: Jim Rogers

Bloomberg  |  Singapore April 16, 2013 Jim Rogers, the investor who foresaw the start of a commodity rally in 1999, said he was “extremely optimistic” about investing in water amid a scarcity of supply in countries from India to the US. “If you can find ways to invest in water, you will be extremely rich because we do have a serious water problem in many parts of the world like India, China, the southwestern part of the US, and west of the Red Sea,” Rogers, chairman of Rogers Holdings, told reporters at his home in Singapore today. The world’s growing food demand will create a progressive shortage in supplies, according to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization. Water used in farming will rise 70 to 90 per cent through 2050 as food demand doubles over the same period in emerging countries, Pasquale Steduto, principal officer of the FAO’s water development and management unit, said in March. “There are some companies out there that clean and transport water,” Rogers said, adding that he has owned shares in Singapore’s water-treatment company, Hyflux Ltd, for a few years. “Find one with good management and invest in it and you’ll be rich.” Continue reading

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