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Ryaz Shariff Remains Bullish on Commodities



-- Posted Thursday, 30 July 2009 | | Source: GoldSeek.com

Primevest Capital Corp. President Ryaz Shariff reaffirms his long-held status as a commodity bull in this exclusive interview with The Energy Report, telling us to expect significant upticks in the markets once demand resumes. Having shifted somewhat from the mining sector last year, he also talks about some of the energy plays he likes these days—from natural gas in India to oil in South America to uranium in East Africa.

The Energy Report: When we interviewed you back in December 2007, you mentioned an analytical tool and techniques that you felt would apply not only to small caps but also the international marketplace. Have those served you well since then?

Ryaz Shariff: I don’t think anything really served well in the later part of 2008, unless you were heavily short. We certainly felt the pain by being involved in some of the smaller stories and the hedging vehicles we’d typically used in the past didn’t compensate for the immense erosion of value in the small stories. These analytical tools and techniques have given us long-term opportunities to make significant money. They are intact and will make us money in the future, but last year was definitely an aberration.

TER: We should note, of course, that as of June 30 this year, your year-to-date was 29.2% return, and 19% since the fund’s inception.

RS: That’s right.

TER: In reading your online commentaries, you are very bullish on commodities and have been for several years.

RS: I travel the world to solidify my thesis on being long-term commodity bull and I’ve always maintained that this market is really characterized by the lack of supply and the focus should be on the supply side situation and not necessarily the demand side. Where I went wrong last year was in expecting the emerging markets, China in particular, to pick up the slack on the demand side from the Western world. I was clearly wrong on that. But having said that, I still believe strongly that we continue to have a supply-side issue, both from under-investment over the past decade and aging technical expertise on the human resource side, so I expect that when demand returns—which, of course, it will—we will have significant upticks in the commodities.

TER: Do any particular commodity sectors interest you?

RS: We typically focus on copper, oil and, to a lesser extent, zinc. We have done very well in the oil and gas sector in the last six months or so. I also am reasonably bullish on the uranium sector. There is certainly a case to make for the agricultural commodities as well, but historically we focus most on base metals.

TER: As a long-term bull on commodities, what do you consider long term?

RS: I’m looking at longer term as two years plus. In the short term, we’re seeing a strong tug-of-war between the bull case and the bear case over the economic situation on a worldwide basis, but when demand returns and the recession is over, the supply-side fundamentals will come into the spotlight. Again, that’s where the real opportunity lies on the commodity front.

TER: How do you take advantage of that opportunity now, though?

RS: We’ve never been forecasters of where markets go or actual prices of products, but we look and ask how we can make money in a particular time. We’ve been taking a longer-term approach with some of our catalyst-driven situations and then hedging out some of the systematic risk of the markets to receive benefit from those situations if markets go up and when those catalysts are realized, but also protecting downside by eliminating some of the systematic risk in our portfolio.

TER: So you’re putting hedges into your portfolio.

RS: Absolutely.

TER: One of your commentaries mentioned that as of May your portfolio was about 25% shorting and in June you felt more comfortable adding positions for a longer-term outlook. What happened that made you willing to put something down for a long term?

RS: We went into second quarter with a 25% short position, intending on keeping that stance for the near future. But when the markets rallied, we adjusted that position upward to about 35%. I felt more comfortable taking longer-term positions because risk tolerances over the last three or four months returned to the markets and we were in a position where—whether the markets were up or down—specific catalysts on the individual companies were being rewarded. So we were out of the panic-selling mode where fundamentals were irrelevant at the end of last year and into an environment where fundamental catalysts were absolutely being realized and reflected in the share prices. That was a big change.

TER: So you basically returned to a more value-driven investment model, where if something happens, you see an increase in price rather than all up and all down.

RS: Yes, and we do feel comfortable taking positions for a longer-term view. Basically we believe we can get doubles and triples in many of our positions in a six- to eight-month timeframe. But, having said that, we have our hedges in place because those positions might be at risk of loss in the short term. We have to be cautious in this type of environment.

TER: Interesting to hear that you’re in natural gas because we’re hearing that’s there’s more natural gas than we know what to do with.

RS: Keep in mind that, unlike oil, which is a global market, the natural gas market is regionalized. So when you talk about natural gas pricing, typically we’re talking about the North America market.

TER: What’s the outlook for uranium? We had a huge run-up two summers ago. It fell down and has been kind of flat since.

RS: Uranium is a commodity that effectively there’s only one use for, so you can easily paint its demand-supply pictures. The demand side, of course, is nuclear energy, which seems to be getting more and more popular as a cleaner form of energy that has the base load capacities to take care of demand for energy in various parts of the world. I think we will continue to see reasonable prices.

Do we go over the levels we were two years ago? That’s a tough call. There certainly was speculative activity when uranium hit its high at that time, but I think a number of these projects will provide reasonable operating margins and that at $60-plus uranium, these companies make good cash flows and will command reasonable multiples in the marketplace when they are producing.

TER: What has kept the prices of these companies down?

RS: I think it’s been broad market issues and the U.S. dollar certainly has played a big role in all of the commodities. When the U.S. dollar goes up, these commodities go down. I think the U.S. dollar safe-haven trade that occurred late last year affected all of the commodities and, as a result, all of the underlying equities.

TER: Ryaz, what advice would you have to individual investors who may want to invest in commodities?

RS: You have to realize that it can be a very volatile investment strategy. You need a long-term vision and to basically back companies that have good assets, but particularly good management teams with track records of creating value. If individual investors can’t stomach that volatility, they should be making sure professionals manage those strategies for them.

TER: Any other parting words you’d like to give to our readers?

RS: Happy investing.

Ryaz Shariff, based in Vancouver, B.C., is President of Primevest Capital Corp. and Portfolio Manager of its Primevest Fund, which focuses on catalyst-driven investing. An entrepreneur whose background includes experience in M&A, restructuring, financing and business management, he has held senior management positions in early-stage companies. A graduate of Simon Fraser University and a Chartered Financial Analyst, he also spent part of his career as a broker specializing in retail and institutional sales as well as corporate finance.

Streetwise - The Energy Report is Copyright © 2009 by Streetwise Inc. All rights are reserved. Streetwise Inc. hereby grants an unrestricted license to use or disseminate this copyrighted material (i) only in whole (and always including this disclaimer), but (ii) never in part.

The Energy Report does not render general or specific investment advice and does not endorse or recommend the business, products, services or securities of any industry or company mentioned in this report.

From time to time, Streetwise Inc. and its  directors, officers, employees or members of their families, as well as persons interviewed for articles on the site, may have a long or short position in securities mentioned and may make purchases and/or sales of those securities in the open market or otherwise.

Streetwise Inc. does not guarantee the accuracy or thoroughness of the information reported.

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Participating companies provide the logos used in The Energy Report. These logos are trademarks and are the property of the individual companies.


-- Posted Thursday, 30 July 2009 | Digg This Article | Source: GoldSeek.com




 



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