Bunge Bunge: Jumping on Bunge by Eric J. Fry The Rude Awakening Wall Street, New York Friday, December 16, 2005 Eric Fry explains why oilseed processor Bunge Ltd. is poised to have its fortunes improve. ------------------------- - The company a billion Chinese are literally eating
up,
- What is fuelling this three-way love-fest?
- The secret to traveling the globe the 'untourist' way
and more, more, more...
------------------------- [Joel's Note: We are about to dart off to the annual company meeting, the gateway to the Christmas party tonight, so we'll keep this one short. Below, Eric takes a look at the company mutually adored by Dan Denning, Jim Grant and himself. What is so special about this little gem? What does China's insatiable appetite have to do with it? Read on and find out...then email any bothers, comments of painful Christmas party memories to your fog-headed editor at aussiejoel@the-rude-awakening.com --- Advertisement --- 4 Minutes a Week is All it Takes... to TRIPLE your money over the next 6 months... GUARANTEED! Introducing one special "alternate" investment - which does not involve buying stocks or bonds and even soars when stocks fall apart... Just over the last two years, you could have made at least eight times more buying this secret investment instead of buying traditional stocks... Is that something you are willing to pass up? Learn about this GUARANTEED investment secret NOW! http://www.agora-inc.com/reports/RTA/ERTAFC13 ------------------------- Jumping on Bunge By Eric J. Fry Dan Denning likes Bunge Ltd., the largest oilseed processor in the world. So does James Grant...and so do we. Yet, despite this three-way love-fest for Bunge (NYSE: BG), the stock has gone nowhere for more than a year. For all we know, the stock will go nowhere in 2006. But it does not lack for reasons to go up. "Bunge is a vast, globally integrated middleman between farmers and eaters," Grant explained in a mid-summer issue of Grant's Interest Rate Observer. "The eaters to whom it increasingly caters are the billion or so Chinese who aspire to diets richer in chicken. The commodity in which the company mainly deals is soybeans, which - when crushed into meal - make chicken feed." Soybean meal represents reason #1 why Bunge's fortunes might soon improve. "Meal" prices have jumped 20% over the last few weeks, thereby breaking out of a months-long funk. Although Bunge does not derive much direct benefit from rising soybean and meal prices, rising prices do help animate all of the other activities from which it earns a buck. 
Bunge: Agricultural Buffet "Bunge is a combination resources company, distribution company and brokerage house," Grant explained. "The resources business grows and processes commodities, mainly soybeans; the distribution business hauls the beans (however processed or reconstituted) by training, truck and ship; and brokerage business implements hedging strategies. Among the edible offerings on Bunge's agricultural buffet table are vegetable oil, margarine and mayonnaise. And none of this output is easily confused with Godiva chocolates..." Happily so...Godiva chocolates are loaded with "trans fat," the dietary bad-boy-du-jour. Soybean oil is not. Within this bit of dietetic trivia resides another reason to like Bunge shares, as Dan Denning explains to the subscribers of Strategic Investments: "Starting next year, major food manufacturers will be required to label 'hydrogenated' or 'partially hydrogenated' ingredients in food in more simple language: trans fat. "Trans fat is, in a word, lethal. The main benefit of trans fat, if you're a food producer, is that it adds shelf-life to your products. By adding hydrogen to the chemical composition of fat, hence 'hydrogenation,' you change the chemical composition of fat. You make it thicker and less soluble, preserving the food.
Sign Up for The Rude Awakening Start your mornings off with a dose of Rude news. The Rude Awakening is dedicated to highlighting phenomena in the financial markets that others may not see. Let the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times "break news." Sign up FREE Today! We will not share your email address with anyone else, period. -Andrew Palmer, Director E-commerce Marketing We Value Your Privacy |
Bunge: The Downside
"The downside, if you're a consumer of trans fat, is that it increases the amount of 'bad' cholesterol in your system (LDL, or low-density lipoprotein) while decreasing the amount of 'good' cholesterol (HDL, or high-density lipoprotein, which helps remove cholesterol from your arteries.) "In other words, trans fat increases your chances of coronary heart disease. In fact, some studies show that NO level of trans fat is safe in the diet and that trans fat eaters are twice as likely to have a heart attack as non- trans fat-eaters. That is one reason so many countries are moving to either identify trans fat more prominently on food labels, or in some countries, ban it all together (Denmark). "The food industry sees the intolerant writing on the regulatory wall and is moving to replace trans fat with...soy oils. Kellog's announced its intention to eliminate trans fat by using a genetically modified soybean oil from Monsanto under the name of Vistive. But Vistive has a competitor called Nutrium which is produced by Dupont (DD) and our friends at Bunge (BG). "The problem is, there isn't enough Nutrium or Vistive on the market yet to make it possible for Kellog's to completely switch over from trans fat to soyoil. The benefits are obvious. As Bunge explained when it launched the new product: 'Nutrium oil has a low linolenic acid profile of less than three percent, offering better natural oil stability and increased shelf life. When used in frying, low linolenic oil eliminates the need for partial hydrogenation. The industry has been looking for alternative oils because the U.S. Food and Drug Administration will require the inclusion of trans fats on food nutrition labels in 2006. By the end of the decade, Bunge expects to approach full- scale commercial availability at nearly one billion pounds of low lin oil for the food industry.' "The end of the decade is a long time to wait for 'full- scale commercial availability.' But physics is physics. According to the United Soybean Board, there are about 1m acres of low-linolenic soyabeans planted in the US. Total soyabean acreage is 7 million. "It will be awhile before farmers plant enough of variety of soybean Bunge needs to ramp up commercial production. And that's fine too. Bunge operates in four segments— agribusiness, fertilizer, edible oil, and milling products. It's agribusiness and fertilizer segments are currently the largest drivers of revenue and profits. "In ten years, it could be edible oil products, led by nutrium. That's one reason why if you're going to buy only a handful of stocks for the next years and hold them, this would be one of them." Jim Grant agrees...and so do we. [Joel's Note: Even if you prefer the high-risk taste of Godiva chocolate to soybeans, you can still enjoy the low trans fat profits of Kevin Kerr's Resource Trader Alert. Kevin trades everything from gold to crude to soybeans, making his readers tidy sums along the way. You can learn more about the 'Maniac Trader' by looking here: The Maniac Trader http://www.agora-inc.com/reports/RTA/ERTAFB23 --- Advertisement --- Secrets of the "Untourist" Revealed
Untourists pay the price of an ordinary hotel room but stay in a luxurious spa. They never carry travelers checks. Never stay in typical tourist resorts. They avoid tourist traps. And never suffer mediocre, pricey food with tourists. Some even carry second passports. The secrets to traveling well remain hidden to tourists. But you can use the "Untourist's" Secrets to enjoy a lot more while paying far less...every time you travel. Discover how here. http://www.isecureonline.com/Reports/IL/EILVFC52 ------------------------- And the Markets... | Thursday | Wednesday | This week | Year-to-Date | DOW | 10,882 | 10,884 | 103 | 0.9% | S&P | 1,271 | 1,273 | 12 | 4.9% | NASDAQ | 2,261 | 2,263 | 4 | 3.9% | 10-year Treasury | 4.47 | 4.45 | -6.00 | 4.43 | 30-year Treasury | 4.68 | 4.65 | -5.00 | 4.63 | Russell 2000 | 685 | 691 | -4 | 5.1% | Gold | $503.38 | $505.35 | -$23.03 | 15.0% | Silver | $8.55 | $8.39 | -$0.46 | 25.5% | CRB | 328.62 | 331.39 | 0.81 | 15.7% | WTI NYMEX CRUDE | $59.96 | $60.70 | $0.57 | 38.0% | Yen (YEN/USD) | JPY 116.31 | JPY 117.32 | 4.40 | -13.4% | Dollar (USD/EUR) | $1.1971 | $1.2000 | -161 | 11.7% | Dollar (USD/GBP) | $1.7649 | $1.7727 | -98 | 8.0% |
|