 The Rude Awakening Wall Street, New York Wednesday, July 27, 2005
------------------------- The Rude Awakening PRESENTS: In the midst of war, one of the world's potentially wealthiest countries had been reduced to one of its poorest. --- Advertisement ---
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------------------------- THE SPOILS OF WAR By Tom Dyson One of the bloodiest wars in history has turned a potential economic powerhouse into one of the world's ten poorest nations. Here's the kicker: the fortunes of this country look to have turned the corner, yet the investment community has no idea. This war, which officially ended in 2002, was the world's deadliest since the Second World War: 3.8 million people were killed. Nine nations were directly involved in the fighting, as well as over twenty distinct armed groups, which make this the widest interstate war in this continent's history. For perspective, 300,000 died in the Balkans as Yugoslavia split up. In the second Gulf war, still in progress, the body count is less than 30,000. They call it the African World War and it took place in the Democratic Republic of Congo, formerly known as Zaire. DR Congo is a very rich and fertile country. It is the size of Texas, California and Alaska combined. It's loaded with natural resources, including large deposits of copper, diamonds, tin, silver, gold and tungsten. More importantly, DR Congo's climate is one of the wettest in the world, which means anything will grow, including cash crops like coffee, rubber and cocoa.  But in DR Congo's case, these resources are a curse; they're the only things in DR Congo worth fighting for
I decided to mug up on the DR Congo's history after reading Investment Biker by Jim Rogers again last week. Jim Rogers is a former Wall Street money manager. He was so good at beating the market, that by age 37, he was able to retire with more money than he knew existed in the world - his words - and start traveling. He wrote Investment Biker in 1994. It was his first book and it became an immediate bestseller. In the book, Jim rides around the world on a motorcycle, observing and analyzing every country he visits from an investing perspective. He's very good at this. His analysis is interesting, well thought out and ten years later, many of his predictions have come to pass. Back to the Democratic Republic of Congo
When Rogers rode through there in 1994, the country, then called Zaire, was a mess. He wrote: "The railroads, built back during colonial times, ran infrequently because of a lack of fuel. Most of the roads had fallen into ruin. Schools had no books and paper and very few capable teachers. There was very little equipment, labs or drugs in the hospitals. Commerce had come to a virtual stand still. Zairians along the Congo River were lucky that they could still trade. We passed falling-down barns, houses and water towers, large inland cotton and rubber plantations turning back into jungle. What little rubber and cotton was raised often went unharvested because trucks could no longer reach the village." "We explored many towns
all of which saddened us. Water towers rusted and were falling down. Two- and three-story buildings on either side of once prosperous main streets, in ruins now, boarded up, crumbling. An entire people had spent money, energy and the capital of their souls erecting and maintaining these now-collapsing structures. Not only was city after city in ruins, but also the farms, plantations and ranch houses we passed; vast amounts of capital and energy and lives tossed away by careless Zairians." "Zaire hasn't had its final civil war yet. That horror will come as local chiefs and barons snatch at the country's wealth." Rogers's prediction came true. Zaire plunged. But this wasn't warfare. This was wholesale massacre
these conflicts contained some of the most horrific war crimes ever witnessed. Gang rape, genocide, AIDS, amputations
the weapons of this war were as devastating as any nuclear bomb, if not more so. The first Congo war started in 1996. After two years of fighting, Mobutu, the 30-year dictator, was sent into exile and subsequently died. Rebel leader, Laurent Kabila, assumed power. The second Congo war started in 1998 as Kabila took on the forces of Rwanda and Uganda, among others. In January 2001, Laurent Kabila was assassinated and his son Joseph took power. The second Congo war continued until December 2002, when a comprehensive ceasefire between all parties was signed. In the midst of war, one of the world's potentially wealthiest countries had been reduced to one of its poorest. "As an investor, I wait for until the wars are fought, the borders are redrawn and the newly elected governments are eager to make something of the country's resources," Rogers concludes his chapter on DR Congo, "Here there ought to be a period of stability once the borders are redrawn and Mobutu is gone. That would be the time to pile in." Now Mobutu has gone and the power-sharing administration, agreed to by the different factions in the country's civil war, is about to be replaced by a democratically-elected government. Yesterday, Reuters reported that voter registration has started in two provinces outside Kinshasa, as DR Congo prepares for elections in 2006 and its first democratic government in 40 years
If the DR Congo hasn't already reached rock bottom, it can't be far away. Maybe time to pile in
[Ed. Note: This is the Bull Bunter's manifesto: Travel to places no one else is looking at - like the DR Congo - and find ways for U.S. investors to profit. Tom Dyson will be visiting the DR Congo in the near future, and has promised to publish his findings in the Rude Awakening. For more speculations like this one, make sure you catch the next issue of The Bull Hunter, out the 1st week of August
In the meantime, make certain you catch the trailblazing book that inspired it all here: The Bull Hunter --- Advertisement ---
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------------------------- Did You Notice
? By Tom Dyson Copper just made a new all-time high. We found this compelling bearish argument in June's issue of Marc Faber's Gloom, Boom, and Doom Report
 "[T]hroughout post WWII history, copper has been susceptible to substitution when prolonged price peaks occur. In the 1960s, in Western Europe, copper's market in power cable was threatened by aluminium; in the 1970s and 1980s it was the switch from copper based heat exchangers to aluminium and in the 1990s copper used for DWS purposes has been threatened by plastics.
"Now we hear of plastics making significant inroads into the DWS market in the USA, of new power networks considering the use of aluminium for MV power cables, and of plastics starting to encroach onto copper's market for DWS tube in Western Europe. "Indeed, some brass mills in Europe talk about the 'aluminisation' of the industry. In China, steel is replacing brass in locks, connector producers are beginning to use brass instead of bronze, and auto radiator producers are replacing high copper content brass with low copper content brass
" [Ed. Note: As China explodes it inhales an almost unfathomable volume of resources. Feeding the world's fasting growing economy is one thing, knowing what it is consuming is another. Click here to see what's being eaten in the resource market of late: Resource Trader Alert ------------------------- And the Markets
| Tuesday | Monday | This week | Year-to-Date | DOW | 10,579 | 10,596 | -26 | -1.9% | S&P | 1,231 | 1,229 | 4 | 1.6% | NASDAQ | 2,176 | 2,167 | 8 | 0.0% | 10-year Treasury | 4.24% | 4.25% | 0.01 | 0.02 | 30-year Treasury | 4.46% | 4.46% | 0.00 | -0.36 | Russell 2000 | 675 | 671 | 6 | 3.5% | Gold | $423.30 | $426.00 | -$1.75 | -3.3% | Silver | $7.01 | $7.11 | -$0.09 | 2.9% | CRB | 306.13 | 305.29 | 3.70 | 7.8% | WTI NYMEX CRUDE | $59.20 | $59.00 | $1.30 | 36.2% | Yen (YEN/USD) | JPY 112.52 | JPY 111.42 | -1.59 | -9.7% | Dollar (USD/EUR) | $1.2016 | $1.2070 | 98 | 11.3% | Dollar (USD/GBP) | $1.7389 | $1.7471 | 50 | 9.3% |
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