BlackRock BlackRock: Torn Buttons and Restful Nights by Eric J. Fry The Rude Awakening Wall Street, New York Tuesday, July 26, 2005 Eric Fry discusses an intriguing security: the BlackRock Global Energy and Resources closed-end fund. ------------------------
The Rude Awakening PRESENTS: A successful stockbroker who shares our affinity for low volatility mentioned an intriguing security to your New York editor last weekend... --- Advertisement ---
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------------------------- TORN BUTTONS AND RESTFUL NIGHTS By Eric J. Fry Some things just don't go together...like Bermuda shorts and knee socks...or cinnamon and tarragon...or Gregorian chants and Gangsta rap...or Bill and Hillary. Likewise, high volatility and restful nights just don't go together. We like restful nights, which is why we are intrigued by BlackRock Global Energy and Resources Fund (NYSE: BGR). A little bit of volatility is tolerable, perhaps even exhilarating...but a little bit goes a long way. As we noted last week, we do not object to the sort of volatility that might rip open a dress shirt without bothering to undo each and every button. But we DO object to nearly every other form of volatility. Therefore, we are forever in the pursuit of investment ideas that hold out the possibility of producing a positive return, but do not subject investors to harrowing ups and downs. We rarely find them, but we always search. A successful stockbroker who shares our affinity for low volatility - and who is also very accomplished at producing superior returns for his clients – mentioned an intriguing security to your New York editor last weekend. BlackRock: The Angle on BlackRock "Hey Eric," the broker began, "I read your latest Rude Awakening about trying to own resource stocks, while also trying to dampen volatility, and I thought of an idea for you." "What's that?" came the reply. "BlackRock Global Energy and Resources closed-end fund (NYSE: BGR). I've been buying it for my clients over the last few months." "Sounds interesting, what's the angle?" "Well it's a fund with a very heavy weighting in high- yielding resource stocks. So the idea is that it pays a nice current dividend, while also providing plenty of upside to the resource bull market. But I gotta tell ya, the nicest thing about this stock so far is that its volatility has been very low...So most of my clients love this thing." "I think I'd love it too." "Maybe the stock will become more volatile in the future," the stock-broker friend continued, "but it has been behaving admirably so far. Last spring, for example, when all the energy stocks were melting down, BGR held its value relatively well...You might want to check it out." "Sounds good," we replied...And so we checked it out. The more we investigated BGR, the more we liked it. For starters, this seven-month-old closed-end fund trades for a 10% discount to net asset value (NAV). In other words, every 90 cents spent to purchase the stock controls one dollar worth of assets. Although a 10% discount to NAV occurs frequently in the closed-end fund world, we always appreciate availing ourselves out of this "free" leverage. BlackRock: Emphasizing High-Yield Stocks More importantly, BGR pursues a very different strategy than most resource mutual funds. It emphasizes high- yielding stocks. None of its top five holdings, for example, appear in the Goldman Sachs Global Natural Resources Index. The Goldman Index, which trades as an exchange-traded-fund under the symbol "IGE," holds stocks like British Petroleum and ExxonMobil as its largest positions. Not so for BGR. It holds lesser-known securities like Enterprise Products Partners and Teppco Partners among its top five holdings. The fund's marketing materials provide no clue whatsoever about its unique investment approach. "Under normal conditions," the fund's disclosure materials blandly explain, "the trust will invest at least 80% of its total assets in the equity securities of energy and natural resources companies...Companies in the energy and natural resources industry include those companies involved in the expiration, production or distribution of energy or natural resources, such as gas, oil, metals and minerals as well as related transportation companies and equipment manufacturers." A quick peek at the portfolio, however, reveals that the fund gains exposure to the resource sector in very creative ways. It emphasizes high-yielding stocks like "master limited partnerships" and "investment trusts." Both of these structures convert operating assets like pipelines or coal terminals of oil fields into utility-like vehicles that pay high dividends. 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 |
BGR's largest position, Magellan Midstream Partners, L.P., operates pipelines and marine terminal facilities that transport and distribute refined petroleum products and ammonia. The stock yields a hefty 5.7%. The fund's third largest position, Teppco Partners, L.P., operates pipelines to transport crude oil, refined products and liquefied petroleum gases. The stock yields 6.3%. BGR's top five holdings, all of which are limited partnerships, pay an average dividend of 5.8%. Thanks to BGR's heavy weighting in these high-yield resource stocks, the fund pays an annual dividend of 6%. However, despite the fund's many utility-like holdings, it is hardly a stodgy performer. Since May 16, when the most recent rally in resource stocks kicked off, BGR has delivered a total return of 18%, compared to 23% for IGE – a smaller return to be sure, but achieved with much lower volatility. And that's a good thing. We prefer low volatility - both in romance and in finance – which is why BlackRock Global Energy and Resources Fund has caught our eye. [Ed. Note: Why buy stocks the old way and worry as volatility belts it from heady highs to lagging lows? Secure a good night sleep by spreading your money over a range of investments with these super stock ideas: Strategic Options Alert --- Advertisement ---
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------------------------- Did You Notice...? By Addison Wiggin Oil is expensive...Gold is cheap. Today, an ounce of gold buys only seven barrels of oil. Every time, the price of gold has dropped below 10 barrels of oil, it has paid to buy gold. Perhaps we should be buying the shiny stuff again... Gold, oil, housing and even corporate profits have seen massive increases over the last few years... when priced in dollars. But when priced in oil, if we may imagine that, most assets have FALLEN in price. In other words, gold is lagging behind the real-world cost of living. Gold bugs often remind us that the basic commodities of life, priced in terms of gold, have remained the same for thousands of years. An ounce of gold would buy roughly the same number of bread loafs today as the day Caligula and his last concubine sighed deeply together. But in 2005, gold doesn't buy as many loaves of bread...or barrels of oil...as it usually does. Gold is too darn cheap, both in terms of oil and in terms of history. The gold-centric monetary era ended on August 15th, 1971 when then-President Nixon "closed the gold window" to abolish the exchange rate mechanism known as Bretton Woods. On that same day, the Great Dollar Standard Era began. The U.S. dollar, though it would no longer be backed by gold, would pretend to be as good as gold. This faith-based system has not failed completely, but neither has it succeeded completely. As Richard Duncan points out in his superb book, The Dollar Crisis, in the 27 years between 1944 and 1971 that the Bretton Woods regime lasted, foreign central bank holdings of US dollars increased 55%. But during the 30 some odd years since Bretton Woods fell apart, those foreign reserve holdings of US dollars have increased over 2000%. Evidently, dollar bills are much easier to reproduce than ounces of gold. Last Friday, we found ourselves speaking at, of all things, a conference on Internet marketing. We were slated to follow Porter Stansberry, founder of Stansberry & Associates. During his speech Porter relayed a curious feature of the Dollar Standard era.
Since the beginning of the Dollar Standard era, every time an ounce of gold could buy less than 10 barrels of oil, an investor would do well to buy gold. Today, an ounce of gold buys only seven barrels of oil. The message from the markets it clear: Buy gold.
[Ed. Note: When Addison Wiggin walks into the office with a furrowed brow it can mean one of a few things...either he is running through the day's market data, the coffee pot is empty, or Kevin Kerr has just bagged another triple digit profit. Check out what Mr. Wiggin had to say the last time Kevin posted 16 straight home runs: Profit Machine Another possible reason for any vacant stares followed by quick shakes of the head may be the ominous prospect of seeing Dan Denning in a green sarong (readers of www.dailyreckoning.com know what we mean here). You can catch Dan, in more appropriate attire, on Fox News' Your World With Neal Cavuto on Thursday, July 28, at 4:20 p.m., and the following week on CNBC's Wake Up Call, August 2, at 6:50 a.m. ------------------------- And the Markets... | Friday | Monday | This week | Year-to-Date | DOW | 10,596 | 10,606 | -9 | -1.7% | S&P | 1,229 | 1,227 | 2 | 1.4% | NASDAQ | 2,167 | 2,168 | -1 | -0.4% | 10-year Treasury | 4.25% | 4.23% | 0.02 | 0.03 | 30-year Treasury | 4.46% | 4.45% | 0.01 | -0.36 | Russell 2000 | 671 | 668 | 3 | 3.0% | Gold | $426.00 | $425.05 | $0.95 | -2.7% | Silver | $7.11 | $7.10 | $0.01 | 4.3% | CRB | 305.29 | 302.43 | 2.86 | 7.5% | WTI NYMEX CRUDE | $59.00 | $57.90 | $1.10 | 35.8% | Yen (YEN/USD) | JPY 111.42 | JPY 110.93 | -0.49 | -8.6% | Dollar (USD/EUR) | $1.2070 | $1.2115 | 45 | 11.0% | Dollar (USD/GBP) | $1.7471 | $1.7438 | -32 | 8.9% |
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