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Russian Roulette: Could Moscow Spread Mayhem?After a relaxing break in the South of France, I've returned to see my portfolio gratifyingly boosted by recent contrarian calls on the dollar (short Euro), equities (long financials and pharma) and commodities (short oil and copper). The CRB index has just had its worst 4 week period in 50 years, losing 16% as the speculative bubble that I've described many times on this blog popped with a vengeance. Nickel is down 46% from the highs, Wheat 41%, and Natural Gas 40%; copper and oil have just entered bear territory, both down 20% so far but copper may easily halve from the peak (see Copper and China post). The flip side of the commodity slump has been the resurgence in the unloved dollar; I suggested on 27 July in Has the Dollar Bottomed? that a major reversal was imminent, but its magnitude and speed has been surprisingly dramatic; last week was the best for the dollar since the Euro's inception in 1999. In these markets, records tumble by the day. Also as forecast in previous posts, emerging markets are underperforming developed (with Russia and China particularly weak while India is bottoming) and Japan is the weakest of the developed markets. Crucially in the US, policy responses to the credit crunch are finally gaining traction just as Europe and Asia slow markedly. The combination of a cheap currency, a positive yield curve, and the recapitalization of bank balance sheets are now speeding the recovery process for US equities. Overall, I see no reason as yet to change investment tack, although I'm closing most of my oil short until the implications of the Russian invasion of Georgia are clear. While I was in France, much local media attention focused on the outrageous sum of $750m paid by a Russian oligarch for a prime mansion on the Cote d'Azur, in a macho bidding war with his equally spendthrift Moscow peers, whose idea of sophisticated entertainment is burning bundles of 500 Euro notes in front of the hired staff (not all of whom work on their feet). Apart from reflecting the corrupt pillage of the Soviet resource economy by a handful of well-placed insiders in the 1990's, this is the kind of grotesque financial excess that has previously marked major turning points in economic history. Indeed, the last time Russian buyers displayed such shameless decadence in France was among the aristocratic elite just before the fall of the Tsar nearly a century ago. Meanwhile, Putin (reputed to be an offshore billionaire himself by some sources; political power in Russia guarantees you serious purchasing power) is encouraging loose talk of basing Russian bombers in Cuba, and sending the tax police heavies to shake down any corporate that incurs his wrath Yukos style. It all smacks of reckless hubris. A commodity crash would have dire implications for the dysfunctional Russian economy, beset by demographic decline, low productivity, 15% inflation and a fragile consumer boom that is vulnerable to a reversal in commodity export prices (resources generate 75% of export revenues; at prices much below $110 the state budget will be back in deficit). I have been bearish of the Russian market for some time (the RTS is 70% weighted in resources and is down 30% since the May peak) given the arbitrary lawlessness that makes long-term investing there a spin of the roulette wheel.
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