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George Soros Involved With New Chinese Airline

Wednesday, June 11th, 2008

Yesterday, Reuters reported that Grand China Air, which is part-owned by billionaire investor George Soros, has agreed to form an airline in partnership with the Yunnan provincial government in China, according to a company executive. Reuters’ Fang Yan wrote:

Grand China Air, the largest shareholder of Hainan Airlines Co, will hold a controlling stake in the new carrier, the executive said, without providing financial details.

The new company, which is pending regulatory approval, will initially be limited to flights within the province but will apply for long-haul domestic and international routes in the future, he said.

The new carrier would be in direct competition with the Yunnan unit of China Eastern Airlines Corp, which controls more than 50 percent of the highly profitable market for flights in Yunnan, a popular tourist destination with striking mountain and river vistas.

yunnan-china.jpg

Yunnan, China
Photo by Erica Law, stock.xchng

Source:

“Grand China Air, Yunnan govt to set up new airline”
Fang Yan
Reuters, June 10, 2008

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Jim Rogers Says Commodities Bull Market To Continue

Friday, June 6th, 2008

Jim Rogers, the chairman of Rogers Holdings, spoke to Bloomberg’s Betty Liu from Singapore on Thursday on a number of topics. Below are some notable excerpts from their conversation:

Financial Sector

LIU: All right. Jim, first, talk to us about the story of the week that we’ve seen so far, Lehman Brothers, you know, you’ve been very critical so far about what’s been going on on Wall Street, the accounting, all of that. Do you believe, I mean this is relevant - do you believe that Lehman Brothers is in fact in so good shape that they’ve got no liquidity problems or what’s your view on this right now?
ROGERS: Well, okay, I am still all - short all of the investment banks on Wall Street through the ETF. I know they are all in trouble. I know most of them have phony accounting. And you know, in bear markets, they all go down to eight. So, I just presume they are all going to go to eight before it’s over, before the bear market is over.
LIU: Do you believe that we could another Bear Stearns as we did in March?
ROGERS: Oh, why not, sure. There are certainly - and I’m also short Citibank and I’m also short Fannie Mae. So, you know, some of these companies have - have horrendous balance sheets and if the bear market has a ways to go, which in my view, it does, then you are going to see some really, really low prices. But, Betty, there’s nothing unusual about this, just go back and look at any previous bear market. Financial stocks sell at unbelievably low prices during bear markets. This was not going to be any - well, this one may be a little different because it’s just going to be worse for the financial companies during this bear market, because the excesses during the past five or ten years have been so horrendous in the financial communities.

The co-founder of the Quantum Fund with George Soros and Bloomberg’s Liu revisited the topic of financials later on in the interview:

LIU: All right. And Jim, you know, I want to turn back to, of course, the Fed and the banks and all of that. You were talking before about some of the stocks that you’re short on. Are you short on Lehman Brothers?
ROGERS: I’m short the ETF, Betty, the investment bank ETF, which means I’m short all of them. I am not short any specific investment banks. First of all, I have too many friends at all of those places, I don’t want to short any of them specifically. So, I am just short at the ETF, which means I am short all of them, I mean some would do well, some will do probably too badly, but the ETF in my view is going to go down a lot more.
LIU: Well, does what happened with Lehman Brothers over the past week, does it perhaps stoke your interest in shorting Lehman along with Citigroup? And Fannie, I believe is the one you talked about as well.
ROGERS: I’m already short Fannie Mae and Citibank, and have been for sometime. I’m just going to kind of stay with the ETF. It’s easier for somebody like me, who’s too lazy to spend a lot of time on any specific one, except for Citibank and Fannie Mae.

Monetary Policy

LIU: All right, Jim. So, tell us, you have also been very critical of the Fed and Ben Bernanke. I want to ask you first one thing. How do think the Fed has handled so far what’s been going on on Wall Street? You think that they helped situations or actually made things worse?
ROGERS: They made things worse, Betty. They printed huge amounts of money, which has caused great inflation which could cause the dollar to go down, and the Federal Reserve has taken on something like $400 billion of bad assets on to its balance sheet. Now, you and I as American taxpayers are going to have to pay off that debt some day. What’s Bernanke going to do? Get in his helicopter, and fly around, collecting bad debt? Is he going to start repossessing cars, repossessing houses that go bad? I mean, this is insane Betty, the Federal Reserve has $800 billion on its balance sheet. They have already committed $400 billion to bad debt. What then they are going to do next? Where are they going to get the money the next time things start going wrong?

Investment Strategy

LIU: Okay. Okay, well, given that scenario, Jim, as an investor, where are you going to put your money right now?
ROGERS: I own commodities, I have been buying agriculture, I bought airlines today. I bought a lot of airlines around the world today, both stocks and bonds. Swiss franc, Japanese yen, renminbi, these are the few things I have been buying recently.

singapore-airlines.jpg

Airlines

LIU: You bought airlines? A lot of people are very bearish on the airlines, talking about the fuel cost. Why are you buying airlines?
ROGERS: Well, Betty, you just got through the same why, everybody is very bearish. No, I don’t buy things just because people are bearish, but I fly a lot, and the planes are full. You cannot buy a new – if you order a new plane today, you couldn’t get it for several years. This Boeing and Airbus have problems. You read every day that the airlines are cutting back their capacity. Fares are going up. I mean, Betty, everybody knows about the fuel cost. Is there any airline left that doesn’t know we have fuel problems? They are adjusting for all of it.
LIU: Well, that’s true. But there’s also talk about bankruptcies in the airline industry. And you think some could go bankrupt?
ROGERS: How much more bullish in the news do you want? Twenty-four airlines have gone bankrupt this year. That’s great news. You know, five out of the seven largest American airlines went bankrupt during this decade. So, fine. Bankruptcies are signs of bottoms, not signs of tops.

Commodities

LIU: Right. You know, staying with oil and commodities, we’ve seen a pullback in some commodities in recent months. But which commodities do you like right now, Jim, and which don’t you like?
ROGERS: Well, I mean, yes, a lot of commodities have come down pretty hard. If people are talking about a bubble, I’d like to know what they’re talking about. I mean, many commodities, nickel, zinc, lead are down 50 percent. Silver is down 80 percent from its all-time high. Sugar is down 80 percent from its all-time high. What kind of bubble is that? Cotton is down 40 percent from its all-time high. Coffee is down 60 percent from its all-time high. I have been buying agriculture recently, I’m holding off a little bit right now because it looks like Congress is determined to do something to drive down commodity prices. If they do, it’ll be a fantastic buying opportunity and I’ll buy more.
LIU: Jim, you - .
ROGERS: But what I bought most recently is more agriculture.
LIU: More agriculture? In China, did you buy?
ROGERS: I bought agriculture stocks in China. It’s not legal for - I mean, it’s almost impossible for foreigners to buy commodities - commodities and sales in China.
LIU: Right. Okay, also, you’ve said before that we’re half- way through the commodity bull run. You still think that, or I mean how long can this bull run last for?
ROGERS: Well, Betty, there are number of acres devoted to wheat farming. It’s been declining for 30 years. The inventory of food is at the lowest level in 50 or 60 years. We are burning a lot of our agricultural products in fuel tanks now, as fuel. That’s useless, that’s hopeless. Talk about a bubble, that’s a bubble. It’s crazy that we’re spending so much money burning our agricultural products as fuel. But you can go on a long time, nobody has discovered any major oil fields for over 40 years. Betty, all the oil fields in the world are in decline. I mean, there’s been one lead mine opened in the world in 25 years. The last lead smelter built in America was built in 1969. Unless somebody starts bringing on a lot more capacity soon, that bull market has got a ways to go.

Oil

LIU:All right. Jim, also talk to us about oil. You know, you’ve been very bullish on oil. We’ve had a lot of people talk about, you and I had a debate about whether or not there’s speculation in oil markets right now. You say no, others say yes, like Soros, he says it’s going to bubble. What do you know that others don’t about the oil market?
ROGERS: Look, look, Betty, there are always speculators in every market. Look at the New York Stock Exchange right now. You think there aren’t any speculators down there on the floor of the stock exchange? There are always speculators. That’s what business is all about. I submit to you that most of the people and - I don’t know about most of the people, I shouldn’t say that, but we know that the IEA, the definitive authority on oil has said that the world has an oil problem. The Saudis have told Bush that we have an oil problem. Betty, if there is lot of oil, please, would somebody tell us where it is, so we can all invest in it? The world has a serious oil problem. Now, Betty, that does not mean that oil cannot go down 50 percent. During this bull market since 1999, oil has gone down twice by 50 percent, going down by 50 percent in 2001 and again, in 2000 whatever it was, ‘05 or ‘06. So sure, you can have big reaction in any bull market. But that’s not the end of the bull market. There is no supply of oil unless you - somebody can tell us where the oil is, the bull market in oil has years to go despite new corrections which may or may not come.
LIU: Well, but you know, and I know you always hate having me ask you about - about limits or caps and all of that. But, given the supply/demand situation that you’re talking about, how high can oil go?
ROGERS: Betty, I know you - how you’re paid to ask questions like that, but I don’t know the answer. I’m not smart enough. I know that unless somebody discovers a lot of oil, the price of oil can go to $150, $200. You pick the number.

U.S. Dollar

LIU: All right, Jim. And I’ve got to turn to the dollar very quickly. What do you make of the comments by Bernanke earlier this week, noting the dollar slide, you have been very, very critical of Bernanke on this.
ROGERS: It is astonishing. Now, this is a man that under oath in Congress said, “If the price of the dollar goes down, it doesn’t affect ordinary - it doesn’t affect most Americans.” So, I almost fell out of my chair when I saw him say that. We know the man doesn’t know about markets, we know he doesn’t know about the currencies. Now, we know he doesn’t even understand civil economics, simple economics. So, I was astonished to see him, what, two or three days -
LIU: Right.
ROGERS: - suddenly said, “Well, if the dollar goes down, it affects us all.” It’s called inflation. So, somebody’s been teaching him economics. It’s about time, he should go back and take Economics 101.

The 11 minute 49 second Bloomberg interview can be viewed here.

Source:

“Rogers Says Bull Market in Oil Has ‘Years to Go’ (Transcript)”
Bloomberg, June 6, 2008

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Jim Rogers Buys Chinese Shares, Likes Currency

Monday, April 28th, 2008

This weekend, Bloomberg reporter William Bi reported that legendary investor Jim Rogers is bullish on Chinese shares and currency. China’s stock market, the world’s fourth largest, surged from 2005 to 2007, but has plunged as much as 39% this year. According to Bi, Rogers told a seminar in Beijing on April 26 that:

“All my new money goes to commodities and China. All the panic looks like a bottom. I have bought in the last four to five weeks. I’ve been buying shares in China for the first time in a long time.

The Bloomberg reporter wrote:

Rogers said he bought shares related to tourism and education, which “in China will continue to be a major industry.” Other investments include those of airlines, water companies and agricultural producers, he said.

“China has a huge agricultural problem,” Rogers said. The “government is doing everything it can to revive the agriculture industry.”

chinese-agriculture.jpg

The co-founder of the Quantum Fund with George Soros also spoke positively of the yuan (or renminbi), China’s currency. Rogers predicted the currency could eventually rise to 2 yuan per dollar, and said:

“Don’t sell your renminbi, because it will go a lot higher in the next 20 years.”

According to Bloomberg, the yuan has gained more than 4% against the greenback in 2008, after climbing 7% last year.

Source:

“Investor Jim Rogers Buys Chinese Shares as Market Hits ‘Bottom’”
William Bi
Bloomberg, April 27, 2008

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George Soros, Hainan Airlines Buying Oasis Hong Kong Airlines?

Thursday, April 10th, 2008

Yesterday, Hong Kong-based budget airline Oasis Hong Kong Airlines announced it had cancelled all flights and would go into liquidation after just 17 months of air operations. However, Joanne Chiu and Joseph Chaney of Reuters wrote the following Wednesday:

Sources close to Hainan Airlines Co—China’s No. 4 carrier, partially controlled by billionaire George Soros — said its parent HNA Group is interested in buying Oasis to muscle into the Hong Kong market, which is seeing strong growth as personal and business travel to and from China booms.

Those sources with knowledge of the matter told Reuters the firm had been in discussions for months to buy control of Oasis, and had approached the city’s government about the deal.

Oasis, which flies to London and Vancouver, accumulated losses of around $128 million over two years, which analysts attribute to high fuel prices and stiff competition. MarketWatch Asia bureau chief Chris Oliver wrote yesterday:

Oasis operated four Boeing 747-400 aircraft. The airline earlier said it was planning to expand and had applied for licenses to serve San Francisco, Chicago, Bonn, Berlin and Milan.

oasis-hong-kong.jpg

Oasis Hong Kong Boeing 747

In addition to Hainan, Hong Kong airline Cathay Pacific is also rumored to be interested in acquiring the carrier. Oasis CEO Stephen Miller told a news conference Wednesday, “We are confident that someone will step forward.”

Sources:

“Lone HK budget carrier Oasis halts flights”
Joanne Chiu, Joseph Chaney
Reuters, April 9, 2008

“Hong Kong carrier halts operations as losses swell”
Chris Oliver
MarketWatch, April 9, 2008

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George Soros May Invest In Brazilian Airline, Italian Football Club

Monday, April 7th, 2008

On Friday, Bloomberg’s Romina Nicaretta reported that billionaire investor George Soros is among those acquiring a stake in a new Brazilian airline being planned by JetBlue Airways founder David Neeleman. According to the newspaper O Estado de Sao Paulo on Friday, the San Francisco-based investment company Weston Presidio and Brazilian investment company Companhia Bozano are behind the venture. Fundo Gavea, the private equity fund managed by former Brazilian central bank president Arminio Fraga, is also on board, and will put up a third of the $150 million being pooled for the new budget carrier, according to the paper. Alastair Stewart from the Dow Jones Newswires wrote Friday:

Neeleman plans to start operations in January 2009, running regional routes away from the busiest airports. He says a group of investors have put up $150 million to start the project, which includes the purchase of E-195 regional jets from local plane maker Empresa Brasileira de Aeronautica (ERJ), or Embraer.

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Stadio Olimpico: Home of AS Roma

It appears the Hungarian-born Soros may also be targeting the famous Italian football (soccer) club Associazione Sportiva Roma, or AS Roma. According to Alessio Alexis from Goal.com today, there have been reports in the Italian media for several weeks now that AS Roma would be sold due to the fact that the club’s parent company, Italpetroli, is approximately $581 million in debt. Alexis wrote:

A number of American businessmen, including John Joseph Fisher, and Liverpool FC co-owner Tom Hicks, have been heavily associated, however a new name has entered the fray in recent days.

His name is George Soros, and he is a billionaire, philanthropist and political activist.

Soros’s representatives, Rothschild Bank, will meet with the Sensi family’s legal team, straight after Roma’s Champions League tie in Manchester on Wednesday.

If the talks go well, Soros is then expected to launch an immediate takeover bid.

Sources:

“Soros Among Neeleman’s Backers in Brazil Airline, Estado Says”
Romina Nicaretta
Bloomberg, April 4, 2008

“Soros Among Investors In New Brazil Airline –Report”
Alastair Stewart
Dow Jones Newswires, April 4, 2008

“Roma Set For American Take-Over This Week?”
Alessio Alexis
Goal.com, April 7, 2008

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‘All Commodities Are In A Bull Market’ Says Jim Rogers

Friday, March 28th, 2008

Jim Rogers appeared as the featured guest on “The Gold and Silver Review” on Wednesday. The CEO of Rogers Holdings talked to Chris Waltzek about his economic outlook and investment strategy:

Federal Reserve & U.S. Monetary Policy

America’s had three central banks. The first two failed. Looks like this one’s going to fail, too. So I think it’s better to close it before it fails, rather than after it fails.

Banks are designed to bail out bankers. They’re not designed to bail out you and me. And this central bank is doing exactly that. It’s bailing out Wall Street. What it’s doing is bad for you, me, 300 million Americans, bad for the world. It’s good for a few guys on Wall Street who can keep their Maseratis. It’s not good for you and me.

Interest Rates

They could go to very low interest rates. They probably will. You know, they went to 1% not very long ago.

The Seventies

Unfortunately, the central bank in America is making the same mistakes which they made in the 1970s. The head… was Arthur Burns. He kept printing money as fast as he could, trying to prop everything up, and as you remember, the seventies were a pretty bad economy.

In the 1990s, the Japanese made the same mistake… And as you know, in Japan they talk about the 1990s as the “lost decade.” America’s making exactly the same mistake, and we could have a “lost decade.”

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“Remember me?”

Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke

Look, it’s going to get worse, if you ask me… He has panicked, he’s an academic, he doesn’t understand markets, or currencies, or finance. He doesn’t even understand economics we now know, and unfortunately, in the end, you and I are gonna pay for it.

Inflation/U.S. Dollar

It’s certainly too late for inflation and the U.S. dollar. That’s for sure.

Currencies

Chinese Renminbi/Yuan:

China’s on the rise, whether we like it or not. There’s a billion, three hundred million of them, and that currency has to rise over the next several years.

Japanese Yen:

It’s one of the safer investments that I can see… I’ve been buying the Japanese yen from all the speculators… I’m not sure I’d rush out and buy it today… If the yen goes down for a while, I plan to buy more yen.

Commodities

The commodities bull market has another 10 or 15 years to go.

All commodities are in a bull market, a secular bull market, which has several more years to go.

Gold:

I do know it’s going to go a lot higher… I’m sure it will go over $1,500, $2,000. Not this year, probably, but certainly during the course of the bull market.

Crude Oil:

Is crude oil a place to have money? Yes. Is it going to be much higher in the next decade? Yes.

Other Buys

• Agriculture
• Swiss franc- “I’ve been buying it”
• Taiwan- “I’ve been buying Taiwan… I’ve never bought Taiwan before.”
• Airlines- “I’ve been buying airlines… I own those, and periodically I buy them when they go down. I think my big play will be later. But I did pick up some last week, as a matter of fact.”

You can listen to the GoldSeek interview here.

Source:

“The Gold and Silver Review”
GoldSeek.com, March 26, 2008

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Jim Rogers: Fly Away From Friendly Skies

Monday, March 24th, 2008

In today’s New York Sun, Dan Dorfman wrote about a phone call he made this past weekend to Jim Rogers, chairman of Rogers Holdings, in response to a reader’s e-mail asking, “Since Jimmy Rogers has been so right, why not ask him what he thinks now?” Here’s what Rogers had to say about U.S. stocks, monetary policy, and his investment strategy:

U.S. Stocks

The trend is still lower and I wouldn’t buy any American stock now. Unless you’re a very good trader, you’re not going to make money on the long side. I don’t know if the market is going down another 10% or 50%, but it’s going down. Washington is making loads of mistakes.

U.S. Monetary Policy

In the end, the Fed’s action will produce much higher inflation, a weaker dollar, hgher long-term interest rates, and the worst recession we’ve had in years.

Investment Strategy

Dorfman wrote:

Although extremely bearish, Mr. Rogers thinks a near-term rally could occur, given the recent decline. As a result, he has covered some shorts and stopped selling the dollar, which he says is ultimately headed considerably lower. Still, he remains short Fannie Mae, which he says he thinks is going broke, the home builders, and the investment banks.

Despite some analysts calling for a bottom in financials, Rogers feels otherwise:

In fact, while many bargain hunters have been snapping up the bloodied shares of investment banks following the Fed’s efforts to bail out Bear Stearns, Mr. Rogers has gone the other way, shorting more of them through an exchange-traded fund, Amex Securities Broker/Dealer, which is traded on the American Stock Exchange under the symbol XBD.

The Quantum Fund co-founder talked about some recent purchases of foreign airlines:

On the other hand, he has bought some airline stocks in China, Taiwan, and Europe, citing very little new capacity coming online, sold-out production at Boeing and Airbus, and rising fares. Mr. Rogers said he wouldn’t touch the stock of an American airline because “they’re so hopelessly managed.”

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The legendary commodities investor, who called the beginning of the current bull market in 1999, discussed the market in “hard” assets:

Mr. Rogers is a long-term bull on commodities, which have recently been hit by a wave of selling pressure, and he reiterated his enthusiasm for them, though he says he wouldn’t be a buyer now because they could be subjected to further weakness from forced hedge fund liquidations. For the year ahead, he expects agricultural commodities to be the sector’s best performer.

Dorfman also talked about Rogers’ currency plays:

An active player in currencies, he favors the Chinese renminbi, which he bought recently and sees on a rising trend for years to come, Swiss francs, and the Japanese yen.

The New York Sun columnist wrote that Rogers was forecasting a grim situation for the next President of the United States:

As far as the national election goes, Mr. Rogers views it as a nonevent for the market, although he notes the next president will inherit an economic mess.

Source:

“Money Manager Says No to U.S. Stocks”
Dan Dorfman
New York Sun, March 24, 2008

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