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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: pezz who wrote (64518)7/4/2010 3:05:38 AM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 217588
 
Hello Pezz, last week’s report, part 1 of 2, where I went:

<<Is China really slowing down!?>>

... no, just taking a respite.

I was absent from Hong Kong for a few days earlier in the week. I visited a remote island in the Philippines supposedly to investigate a possible speculation but really just to catch up on three true friendships, some megabytes of readings, and laps of swimming.

We of the earlier Boracay Island league (circa 1989-1991, Philippines, post TianAnMen Incident) ...







... comprised of 2 Australians, 1 American, and 1 French Creole Hakka Chinese Trinidadian, now 240 months less foolish and twenty years more handsome, had gathered together this past week to discuss and ponder the opportunity on another wild island (“… just like Boracay once was 15-20 years ago”) ...





where the best resort on the beach is for sale by a rather serious but not yet sincere “don’t wanter”. The resort is actually more a private home than a resort, situated on 6 hectares (65,818 sq meters, or about 700,000 square feet) with a central infinity pool, master house, chef house, staff dorm, garages and support workshops, and twelve guest (steel, teak, marble, tile and glass) bungalows.

Our team had internalized and organic complement of skills: architecture, law, hospitality, Philippines political relationship development and management, security enforcement, currency barricade running, capital control circum-navigation, financial management, i.banking, and brochure writing.

The Swiss Architect-owner (age 65) and his Filipino wife have been troubled by too much bothers and were packing even as we toured. They had suffered from local unionization problems and do not know how to deal against wastrels. They have neither the wherewithal with private armies nor the inclination for bribes, and they do not have access to Supreme Court justices. They must de-camp. A mistake made in haste was that the couple fired all staff, hired security, and hot-stopped the resort operations, and thus forfeited “going-concern designation.

The infrastructure of the entire place was built like a precision Swiss watch with German bunker know-how, Japanese detailing, and Russian sense of scale. The cement work is laser sharp, roofs are made of huge pieces of well-treated hardwood, pipes are over-sized and of polyurethane material, fixtures are either stainless steel or brass, solar water heating technology is of the no-sediment accumulation sort, and swimming pool equipment are the sort that generated a bit of chlorine from filtered and diluted (10:1) sea water, and the water tower is as large and tall as needed for 60 bungalows. The seriously leak-proofed 3-stage septic process and huge rain water aggregation-storage system are good for 80 bungalows. The appliances and furniture are the best of the best, heavy duty and maintenance lite.

In a word, “incredible”.

The owner-operator imported his own French chef. The man was drawn to the place by his own tropical abode on the premises that featured an adjoining golf driving range.

The proprietor outsourced security, massage, and transport services and kept in-house food and beverage, and cleaning and landscape services.

The land was acquired for dirt 15 years ago, meant to be a private owner-occupied home, took four years to complete construction, and still, given the character and material selection, looks brand new. The cost of construction was about 3.5 million. The land is now valued at around 7.3 million (25% of the land @ peso 8k/sqmt, 50% @ peso 5k/sqmt, and 25% at peso 2k/sqmt, netting to usd 8m @ 45:1). As a hobby hotel, it was 95 % occupied year round, and generated about 500k of tax-free profit. The land and existing infrastructure (pool, kitchen, back office, staff quarters, …) can easily support an additional 50 bungalows.

Alternatively, the 110 meter long beach frontage can be divided into 3 equal stretches to be assigned to three fancy private homes, and the back lots can be either sold as bespoke building lots or just kept as a buffer against the riff raffs.

Or, the whole place can be re-configured to serve as a compound style home for 6 homes, all sharing a central facility, co-owned by friends and family seeking refuge from whatever is coming our way.

Given the Swiss owner’s work, we are already clear on who from where can do what for how much by when for whatever needs doing, and the global feeding network for my friend’s place on Boracay can be easily seconded to keep the new place at 95% occupancy whatever our final room / bungalow count.

The idea is that the place should turn into a mini version of Boracay w/i 10 years, with the land going to peso 80k/sqmt for the front (25%) and peso 20k for the back lots, netting to 73 million current usd.

We believe the place, all-in, due to dire eagerness to de-camp, lack of buyers, and large commitment required of the buyer, might be purchasable for 2,500 pieces of gold. Such an amount of capital can be raised amongst friends of like-mind in small dollops and large tranches; it is not as if anybody has any better ideas to do a 10x w/i 10 years or less, besides going all-in to gold.

The neighborhood had enough interesting beach restaurants and drew folks from all over the world (40% local Philippines, including expats, and 60% in-bound from the region and Europe/America, China, and Japan) and also attracts girls from all over the planet, not that this particular fact are important in any way what so ever.

I like. I want one. I am hungry.

But, given all the risks and plenty of hassles (believe the wastrel unionization effort can be pacified for 30k of carrots or 50k of sticks, or a mix of both, calibrated), I think we must either wait for the time when such good Philippine places can be exchanged for 500 gold pieces or seek same in other nearby domains featuring at least less visible risks.

You see, we must not fear deflation. We must ready ourselves to engage with and embrace it, and then we must wolf it down as one would a still-twitching lobster, sashimi style.

What do you think?



To: pezz who wrote (64518)7/4/2010 3:21:08 AM
From: TobagoJack1 Recommendation  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 217588
 
Hello Pezz, last week’s report, part 2 of 2, what I thought about and miscellaneous matters:

(i) We made definitive arrangement to welcome son Jack on August 21st, and so I must short some puts on GDX between now and then to pay for the expected expenses of the following days, else I would be long responsibilities and short on expenses. Conveniently, the market is either believing in diaper deflation or not yet convinced of hyper inflation. Speaking of which, we must do a check on YTD GLD vs QCOM ... aha, up 10% against down 30% YTD ;0/

BTW, do you have a guess as to why Maurice MQ did not sell QCOM and buy Gold?

(ii) I dined on Friday night with 11 folks including the VIP host and hostess from the State of Israel and partook in good food (roasted lamb, Mediterranean salad enhanced with elsewhere beets and whatnot, couscous, pita bread, very extremely good Israeli boutique red wine, … home-made dates-filled cake with geewhizbangohwhoawee ice cream, and all chased down with yummy mint leaf infused boiling water ‘tea’) and lots of fascinating conversation. Other than the guest of honor and my wife and myself, the other 3 pairs of guests were all true Chinese and Jewish tycoons of the greater china region, representing the pinnacle of global trading, Asian gaming, and Greater China industry. Each of the weighty players and their equally material wives are also substantive Hong Kong political king-makers, controllers of listed companies, and otherwise savvy observers of the real world. Of the 11 folks around the table, 4 were of the Jewish faith and one of whom is in his late 70s.

I reflected on the delicious and civilized meal, the humorous and cultured conversations, and I note to having learned quite a bit, much more so than when I was a member of the ZBT fraternity and acted as its astutely observant steward.

I observe that:

- The globalized conflict of the middle east will last a long time, arraying a rag tag counterparty loosely associated by the Moslem religion, progressively radicalized by USA actions to Islam reactions which in turn is action-ed … ad infinitum since a whole lot of eons ago;

- The conflict has only one reasonable but to one side and the other side totally unacceptable solution, and so can only continue until exhaustion or much worse;

- There are good, bad and ugly fellows and innocent as well as guilty fellowettes on both sides of the equation, and all for good enough reasons. The determination of righteousness is at best a thankless task, and the judgment of the guilty at worst an impossible work;

- For the one truly fragile but very strong side, there is no strategic depth unless one takes into account of global Diaspora, and certainly no room for errors. For the other massive but so far very disorganized side, there is the luxury of time, but the clock may well run out once the money spigot flows dry;

- For the Great Powers, they do what they need to do, and would always do so, even as needs change and imperatives impact; and

- For both sides of the middle east equation, they must engage with other friends today, or fight alone tomorrow, as they seem unable to make friends of each other.

- The bottom line? I do not have a good feeling about the conflict that in truth is an open sore which one day may well get massively infected.

- Should infection happen, we will have to choose sides, else we all could go down for the count. Ready or not, on 3, 2, ...

(iii) On macro, imo, it is all about diaper deflation and hyper inflation, the choreographed sequencing, elapsed time, and the possibilities for exogenous shock laying waste to what must burn to cinder.

(iv) On diaper deflation, it will happen, terribly.

(v) On hyper inflation, it will also happen, and horribly.

(vi) On real estate, committed to a land consolidation and redevelopment opportunity on co-investment basis, where success depends on continuing China renaissance, and happiness depends on sustained Hong Kong one-country-two-systems. The project is situated in Causeway Bay of Hong Kong, one of the most expensive retail real locations of the planet.

(vii) Given that the timing can only be guessed at on all possible happenings, and so we must compensate for lack of timing feel by way of positioning.

On positioning, I marked to market on rentals so as to give myself a undistorted picture; and I left private equity at give-away 50% below cost so as to manage my expectations, and am at

Cash: 28% (Cad 8%, HKD/USD 17%, Chf 3%)
Metals: 27% (58:42 physical / paper)
Rental and speculative RE: 38%
Equity: 7% (mostly energy and paas and some this and some that)

(viii) Must travel to Europe this coming Wednesday, midnight departure, and plan to be back in Hong Kong the immediate Saturday, afternoon arrival, so the week should go by quickly, I plan to catch up on reads, and catch up on sleep.

Cheers, tj



To: pezz who wrote (64518)7/6/2010 7:13:18 PM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 217588
 
hello pezz, today's report

(i) i have a busy day today, two docs to formulate, and then shall travel to europe later this evening, read, feed, watch movies and / or sleep along the way, and, after arrival, rest up for 8+ hours, have dinner with host, sleep some more or watch tv, participate in morning meeting, then get on afternoon flight in time to get back to hk before end of saturday.

(ii) given that i have a predisposition to panic (i.e. i like it), that the stars are now aligned, the marked crowds all over this planet have been set up with several generations of paper obligations, and we have a clear view that both hyper inflation as well as diaper deflation must happen, sooner the better, later the more dire (it is like saying we shall be struck with sinkhole and then a tsunami), so it may be time to panic, calmly, but panic now

in the mean time, just in in-tray,

"Latest from Arch (see attached). Highest rated forecaster according to Hulbert in the past decade. Cardinal Cross.Very rare.Not good. ... He presented along with Jim Grant to the anti-Fed faithful. Impressive, if he's nuts he hides it even better than Grant. My advice-sell everything. Except gold. And bottled water.

It's rare the most brilliant forensic economic minds (D. Roche,N. Ferguson,K. Rogoff) entirely agree with the 'lunatic fringe' (A. Crawford, R. Prechter, R. Russell) on the immediate future direction of equity asset prices.

Proceed with great caution."


cheers, tj



To: pezz who wrote (64518)7/16/2010 10:29:34 PM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 217588
 
<<Is China really slowing down!?>>

Hello pezz, this week’s report: to answer your question, No. But america is, again slowing down, and so China does a hiccup, but should soon be go go go again, once america sees the light of quantitative easing, part two, and appreciates the wisdom of purchasing power dilution, part three, and ad infinitum, until ad nauseam

(i) Regarding China labour, I mentioned Message 26687876 , from which we must conclude, while tragic, China labour, even in foxxconn’s case, is better off on the psyche amongst those most affected, than usa general society, even amongst the fortunate users of foxxconn products google.com ;

(ii) Gold’s future looks bright, because the next layer, still plenty smart money Message 26681639 is starting to engage even as more substantive usa institutions Message 26687787 are starting to opt-in;

(iii) In the mean time, I am amazed by the news flow in my in-tray, that in america the absurdities continue to pile up, above obama and beyond palin

pajamasmedia.com

JULY 16, 2010
YOU CAN’T MAKE THIS STUFF UP: To Protest Hiring of Nonunion Help, Union Hires Nonunion Pickets: Jobless Recruits Get Minimum Wage ‘To March Around and Sound Off’. online.wsj.com
Meanwhile, here’s a scene from Knoxville. The 21st Century labor movement: Not much labor, not much movement.



To which my reaction must be, and I quote myself, labour disputes can also be outsourced to china, if wishing to engage with one party state that works, or contracted to india if wanting to embrace multiparty nation, or

better still, for more efficiency at accomplishing nothing, outsourced to china to be subcontracted to india, to deal with the worst of both one party state and multiparty nation


(iv) And so ”i remain bullish on china, hong kong, and gold, therefore platinum, and so i remain bearish on the rmb, usd, and equity markets” Message 26690066

And this below, just in in-tray, from USA expatriate visiting family in Knoxville on summer holiday, where the family is in biz that includes real estate development, and I quote, ” Discussed local office/retail development that is now 60% occupied. Yet some 45% of investors failed to meet at least the last 2 capital calls. The problem is that the loan on the development is full recourse to the investors.

I suggested diluting / forcing out those that were in breech and to refinance to a new loan with no recourse. Surely with 30% equity, you could get a non-recourse loan on the balance with 60% occupancy? No way. 40% equity? No way. Banks are simply unwilling to make any real estate loans of any type that do not have full recourse back to the borrower. Insurance companies maybe. But the fact is that banks are unwilling to lend on any terms that are not very onerous to the buyer. And the tenants in the new building are all very high quality tenants with 5-10 year leases...

I asked about forcing out the investors that haven't paid up on the capital calls, and the lawyer is afraid that they might counter-sue for infringing on their "minority rights." What an insane country when you can be in default and feel that you could win a lawsuit. They're hoping that they can get it 80+% filled and then sell out at a profit, at which time they'll pay up on their delinquent payments as it would pay to do so. But until that point in time, they'll simply stay in default as they have other fires to fight as most are very over-leveraged elsewhere.

Asked about another friend who usually was aggressive, especially with leverage, and asked how he was holding up. No one knew of course, but suspected that he was probably in default, but that the bank didn't want the development property, so that they are playing "pretend and extend." Given that East Tennessee is much more conservative than most of the US, that means that the banks are no way out of the woods yet, and neither are many of the "perceived rich." I suspect that many that projected an image of being "well-off" were merely "well-leveraged."

The vacancy rates here are such that it will take "many, many years" for things to fill up. Bad news for a very long time for construction firms, architecture firms, etc.....


(v) Leading me to suspect that 2008 q4 to 2009 q1 was neither the warm-up nor the rehearsal, but just the much less formal practice run.

Cheers, tj