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Sean Brodrick

Buddy, can you spare a planet?

According to a report from The WorldWatch Institute, if China and India were to consume resources at the current U.S. per capita level, it would require two planet Earths just to sustain their two economies.

And by my own figuring, if everyone else in the world wanted to live like us big ol’ Americans, we’d need yet ANOTHER Earth. That makes four.

We don’t have any spare planets lying around, and that’s why a global struggle for resources is likely to define the 21st Century.

To be sure, commodities got hammered flat in 2008. But steep corrections are even more part and parcel of commodity bull markets than stock bull markets.

Investment guru Jim Rogers, one of the world’s best-known commodity investors, recently told reporters to get a sense of history.

“We have had 8-9 periods of forced liquidation over the past 100-150 years wherein everything was liquidated without regard to fundamentals,” Rogers said. “This is such a period.”

I agree. We are probably seeing a pause between the 3rd and 4th innings of a “Commodity Super Cycle,” a period of rapidly rising prices for the earth’s basic resources.

The boom is being fueled by growth in India and China, which are both furiously building out their infrastructures, and by billions of new consumers lining up to buy everything from clothes and cutlery to air conditioners and cars.

Research by Morgan Stanley indicates that commodity markets tend to move together. Take a look at this chart from Morgan Stanley …

Commodity prices are cyclical and move in unison

This chart shows the cyclical trends in commodities prices. The upswings, or commodities super cycles, can last 20 to 25 years, according to Morgan Stanley’s research. And if the current one follows the pattern, we have many years to go before it plays out.

The fact is, commodity bull markets can see corrections that will make your head spin.

Other commodity bull markets in modern history — roughly spanning 1906 to 1923, 1933 to 1955 and 1968 to 1982 — lasted more than twice as long as the current run. They included some sharp corrections before they ran their course, suggesting that the current drop, however sharp, could be temporary.

And that means you could be on the cusp of the buying opportunity of your lifetime!

A commodity super cycle is the rare but oh-so-powerful kind of event that saw America turn from a sleeping giant of the 19th Century into the powerhouse of the 20th Century. India and China may be making that transition right now.

If so, look out! Commodity prices could go higher, longer and faster than most people dream possible.

This is very exciting. And rarely do you get a chance to witness this kind of rush first hand. Has this happened before? You bet it has!

Let me take you on a trip through time and space, to the other side of the world over 200 years ago, to another commodity rush. Because it holds lessons for commodity investors today.

Heroes, Villains, Disconnects and Riches

Looking back in time, rarely have I encountered a story with more heroes and villains, stunning disconnects or staggering riches than in the saga of the Australian Gold Rush.

When Britain’s Lieutenant Cook discovered Australia in 1770, he raised his flag on Possession Island off the coast of Queensland.

Ironically, though, it wasn’t until the next century that prospectors digging on the same island — since renamed Tuined — found a fortune in gold. Just imagine how Australia’s history might have unfolded differently if Cook had dug a little deeper to plant his flag!

In fact, Australians actually went to some lengths to avoid finding gold. The continent was settled by farmers and ranchers seeking a bucolic paradise (although the convicts sent there in chains might have had a different opinion). So, discoveries of gold were quashed time and again for fear of being overrun by scum and riffraff. But by 1851, that changed drastically.

Delusional and Darned Lucky

One Australian in particular, Edward Hargraves, had sought his fortune in the California gold rush and didn’t find it.

Not a tall man, he was 258 pounds of roly-poly adventurer.

To read his diaries is to read delusions of grandeur. But one thing he had right was the similarity between the geology of the California goldfields and his homeland. So, back in Australia, he went prospecting in Lewes Pond Creek near Bathhurst, New South Wales.

Somehow, he said, he felt surrounded by gold. So he panned vigorously for the yellow metal. And sure enough, he found it.

Leaving his partners to continue mucking about in the creek, he rushed off to Sydney to break the news to the authorities. If this is gold country, said the astonished Colonial Secretary, it comes on us like a clap of thunder, and we are scarcely prepared to credit it.

In grand gold miner tradition, Hargraves cheated his business partners out of their share. He then glory-hogged his way into being appointed Crown Commissioner of the Goldfields, and the Australian gold rush was on!

Within a few days, 100 miners (or diggers as they are called in Australia) were frantically digging for instant wealth in the new gold field, called Ophir. Within a couple months, there were 500. And they kept coming. It seemed as if the entire population of Australia was on the move.

From Sheep Pen to
Gold Miners Bonanza

New South Wales neighboring state, Victoria, was hit particularly hard by gold fever. Melbourne, the capital, emptied out. Schools were deserted; businesses, shuttered. All but two members of the police force quit.

Even the city’s most senior officials abandoned their offices and dashed for the gold fields.

In the California gold rush, crews deserted their ships and headed for the gold fields, leaving the ships to rot in the harbor. They did the same in Australia.

Whole families traipsed off for the mining camps. And as hard as conditions were for women and children, they were the lucky ones. In many other Victoria families, fathers deserted when the gold bug bit.

Finally, desperate to avoid seeing his state turn into a ghost town, Charles J. La Trobe, the Governor of Victoria, offered a $200 reward to anyone who found payable gold within 200 miles of Melbourne.

Well, remember how I told you that the bucolic-loving ranchers of Australia had been keeping gold quiet? A bunch of them showed up to say, sure, we have gold out at our place. The rush shifted into higher gear!

In 1851, goldfields were discovered in Victoria in Ballarat, Buninyong and Bendigo, some of the richest goldfields in the world.

Bendigo was a sheep pen until gold was discovered. Then it became a tent city. Next it was a row of wooden false-fronted buildings that sprung up overnight. And soon it was a goldfield 11 miles wide with 20,000 miners digging in a wild frenzy.

A 148-POUND Gold Nugget

Enormous nuggets were discovered — more than 1,200 of them, each weighing over 20 troy ounces!

In 1858, a gold nugget weighing 138.6 pounds — that’s POUNDS, not ounces — was discovered in Ballarat.

Then, in 1869, the biggest nugget of them all, tipping the scales at 148.75 pounds, christened The Welcome Stranger Nugget, was discovered near Moliagul. That’s 2,284 ounces of gold in one piece!

Wealth from the gold fields poured into Melbourne. Saloons and less reputable establishments lined the muddy streets, while drunken diggers lurched from one party to the next, scattering gold dust in their wake and fending off Biddies, unattached young women looking for miners to marry.

Merchants of all kinds flourished in the boom town, especially the kind that specialized in fleecing the unsuspecting.

Death, Taxes and Bushrangers

Instant wealth eluded most on the New South Wales and Victoria gold fields. The work was backbreaking, and crime was common.

The outlaws of Australia, Bushrangers, were originally escaped criminals. But the forced transport of criminals to Australia ended in about 1853. That’s when gentlemen started paying their life savings for the same voyage just to buy a chance in Australia’s gold fields.

The bushrangers went by colorful names like Captain Moonlight and Captain Thunderbolt.

Australia
Initially, Australians resisted the gold fever. But once it caught on, it quickly transformed the demographics, the economy and the society. Today, we see a similar transformation WORLDWIDE, with Australian mining companies and engineers playing a pivotal role.

One, Owen Suffolk, robbed his victims smartly dressed in a black suit of fashionable cut and black kid gloves. But while some of these men were proud of their gallantry, the rest were by and large among the most desperate and cruel scumbags ever to walk the earth.

Sometimes they’d tie their victim to a tree and leave him to the ants, mosquitoes and hunger, goes one account. Very rarely is the unfortunate found in time. More often one finds a skeleton tied to a tree.

Brutality aside, one thing they were very good at was robbing the gold escorts, teams of horses and armed men that made the way from the far-flung fields to the banks.

Sometimes their own greed did the bushrangers in. One-Eyed Tom Wilson robbed several thousand ounces of gold at Mt Alexander. He bought a pub in Hobart and began robbing diggers who were his guests, and eventually landed back in the stir.

Hang ‘em, Drown ‘em,
Shoot ‘em or Flog ‘em

Claim jumpers were rampant, and ownership of claims was settled by brawls or a pick-axe in the back. Vigilante committees were organized to decide what to do with the more wretched lawbreakers: hang ‘em, drown ‘em, shoot ‘em or flog ‘em.

Yet despite toil and mayhem, immigrants with gold in their eyes continued to flood into Australia, many making the 2-month journey by clipper ship from Britain. They weren’t complaining. Before the ultra fast clippers came along, the journey could take up to seven months!

The impact on Australia’s population and economy were far-reaching:

  • At the beginning of 1851, the population of Victoria stood at around 80,000. By Christmas, new arrivals with gold fever had swelled it to over 97,000. By Christmas the next year, over 168,000 people packed the city. A decade later the town’s population had risen to over 500,000.

  • In 1852 alone, 370,000 immigrants arrived in Australia.

  • The total population of Australia increased from 430,000 in 1851 to 1.7 million in 1871 — a THREEFOLD increase in 20 years.

In short, Australia’s gold rush shaped the country.

The First Chinese in Australia

One large group of immigrants came from China — a shocking turn of events for a country that had Whites Only immigration laws until 1973.

The vast majority were men who came to work, not to stay.

And their reception was as jagged as the rocks of the Victoria coastline: They were treated with all the graciousness one expects of a Victorian-era colony — racism, poll taxes, muggings and mob action.

The Chinese were resented because they seemed to be very good at finding gold (A Chinaman’s Chance), and used innovative techniques to get it.

For instance, the gold region of Western Australia is a bone-dry desert that gets rain only seasonally, meaning there isn’t enough water to separate the gold from the dirt. So the Chinese would dig up ancient, gold-rich creek beds and pile the sod up vertically. Then they’d wait for the seasonal flooding rains to come and do their work for them.

But even more resented than the Chinese was the Miners License which was required to work a claim. The monthly fee of 30 shillings for each claim was tough to pay in hard times and the claims were only 12-foot square on the surface, which made them difficult to work. The licenses were strictly enforced, and had to be on the diggers person at all times. Violators were chained to a log until their cases were decided.

The miners actually resented this so much it led to rebellion. An Irish engineer named Peter Lalor and some companions organized 120 miners at Bellarat and built the Eureka Stockade.

The government promptly marched in troops and shot the place up. Over two dozen died or were seriously wounded, and the survivors were hauled off, their leaders charged with treason.

But in a stunning display of democracy in action, the jury refused to convict, and popular sentiment forced the government to agree to all the miners’ terms.

Within a year, Peter Lalor was elected to the Victorian parliament minus an arm he’d lost at the battle of the Eureka Stockade. The shots fired at Eureka echoed throughout the Australian government, sparking a move toward less taxation and more freedom from government control. In this sense, gold even shaped the Australian democracy.

And that same gold also helped pay for the industrialization of England and Europe: During its gold rush heyday, Victoria produced 25 million ounces of gold, representing 87% of the total Australian production and a whopping 35% of world production.

But Victoria wasn’t the end of Australia’s gold rush. One Australian state after another had its own gold rush. And the gold rush in Western Australia didn’t start until June 1893; 42 years after Hargraves found the first glimmers in a pan in New South Wales.

The Energizer Bunny
Of Gold Rushes

This, to me, is the big lesson of the Australian gold rush: Under the right circumstances, a bull run can go on and on and on — like the Energizer Bunny!

From Victoria, the gold fever spread to other parts of Australia. Many Australian gold discoveries were worked well into the 20th Century.

Since then, new finds have continually been made. Australian gold miners and engineers spread out into silver, copper, zinc and uranium. And in recent years, they’ve been exporting their expertise — leading the hunt for gold in Asia and even Africa.

But what’s really got me pumped up is not the distant or recent past. It’s the immediate future: My strong hunch is that Australia’s next rush for riches is starting right now, and that you can make a fortune on it.

The more I look at Australia and Asia, the more excited I get. We are in a commodity super cycle, and the companies that are going to feed it for the next decade or more are like diamonds in the dust bin, waiting to be picked up for pennies on the dollar.

A Perfect Storm is Forming
In Commodities

Though the prices of many commodities tanked in 2008, that’s forced liquidation brought on by all the major institutions in the world trying to deleverage at the same time. This kicked the global economy into recession.

Central banks are responding by opening the fire hoses of liquidity — throwing trillions of dollars at the markets. While this can’t stop short-term deflation, it stokes the fires of longer-term inflation. And that should be very bullish for commodity prices down the road.

But producers, squeezed by the plunge in prices, are shutting down mines around the world. If this cycle follows historical patterns, in time we should see prices shoot higher again as supply dries up.

Meanwhile, the flood of money creation, combined with drops in year-over year production, are already giving precious metals relative strength. Longer-term, the supply/demand squeeze in precious metals has the potential to send gold to $1,110 … $1,500 … and beyond.

It’s all part of a bigger trend that should lift many commodities out of their ordinary cycle and into a new “super cycle.”

A super cycle does not come every year or even every decade. In fact, we’ve only seen three in the last 150 years.

In the past few years, we’ve already seen the milder, Phase I of the super cycle.

It was during that phase that big names in the natural resource sector — Newmont Mining, Conoco Phillips, BHP Billiton, Rio Tinto — saw their share prices soar.

Many on Wall Street are eager to pronounce the commodity boom “dead.” This is not the first time they’ve responded to corrections with that kind of rhetoric nor do we believe it will be the last.

Quite to the contrary, we see forces at work that could send the prices of these commodities far higher and sooner than most on Wall Street now believe likely.

Emerging Markets Are
Driving the Super cycle

Yes, China is one of the driving forces in the commodities super cycle. But it’s not just China. It’s India and Brazil … everywhere that business is booming, and people are becoming more wealthy.

The more wealthy people become, the more products they consume. People who lived in shacks are moving to cinderblock houses. People who had thatched roofs are able to buy aluminum roofs. If it’s hot, people buy air conditioning. That increases demand for steel, copper and energy. The commodity super cycle cranks even higher.

Cars … refrigerators … air conditioners … all require steel. If you want galvanized steel, you’ll need zinc. And if you want to make stainless steel, you’re going to need nickel … lots of it!

Let’s crunch some numbers …

  • Today, China has per-capita income of $5,300 per year — about 14% of U.S. per-capita income. China’s economy is growing rapidly and sowing the seeds of a massive consumer economy.

  • If China were to have the same number of cars per people as the U.S. — three for every four people — it would have close to a billion cars. Currently, there are only 800 million cars in the entire world.

  • The U.S. burns 2.2 tons of coal per person per year. If China used that same amount of coal per capita, it would use three billion tons of coal per year!

  • China is already the world’s largest consumer of iron ore, steel and copper. It sucks up half of the world’s supplies of cement, a third of its coal, more than a third of its steel, and a fourth of its aluminum.

  • And don’t get me started on China and energy. China has accounted for 40% of global growth in the oil demand in the last four years, according to the U.S. Department of Energy, and its consumption is growing at a double-digit rate.

Now imagine the same story playing out in India, where an IT and industrial boom is helping to lift millions out of poverty … in Brazil, where the commodities boom is fueling a rip-roaring economy … and in virtually every developing country on the planet.

Over 1.3 billion people in China and another 1.1 billion in India are making the transition from bicycles to scooters to cars. They’re buying new homes, kitchen appliances and electronics. They have more spendable money in their pockets. Many are suddenly taking a giant leap from the 19th century to the 21st.

Where Does China Invest Its Money?

I talk to international investors a lot. Many of them have questions about investing in China, a place where they’re eager to put their money to work. So I have a question for them: Where is China investing its money? If I wanted to get rich off China, that’s what I would want to know.

And the answer is that China puts most of its overseas investments (outside of buying U.S. Treasury bonds to prop up the ailing greenback) not in Japan … or Thailand … or anywhere in Asia. It’s Latin America.

I can attest to this from personal experience. Not long ago, I stood at the edge of the Panama Canal and watched one container ship after another parade through, stuffed with Brazilian raw materials on their way to the Far East. China buys huge quantities of Brazilian bauxite, iron, zinc, soy and lumber.

Overall, China’s imports of raw materials from South America are expected to reach the $100 billion-per-year mark by the end of this decade. China is already Brazil’s third-largest overall trading partner and Argentina’s fourth largest.

The fact is, Latin America is going to ride the global commodities boom for many years to come, and a lot of stocks in Latin America are cheap, cheap, cheap!

Now for the good news: There are plenty of companies listed in the U.S., Australia and Asia that are making money on the China natural resource story.

Latin America, Asia and Australia are just some of the arenas where the race for resources will play out. And there are plenty of U.S. stocks that will ride the wave of the global commodity boom.

Energy — The Great Game is On

There is a “great game” between China, India and the U.S. — a three-way race for energy resources — that promises to send select energy stocks soaring … and potentially make nimble investors very wealthy. That’s the good news. The bad news is that Uncle Sam, once a heavy favorite to win this race, is in danger of losing.

  • Our relations with the Muslim world seem to be getting worse by the day. A shooting war with Tehran seems like a real possibility. Meanwhile, India and China are strengthening their ties with Iran and other nations in the Middle East.

  • Projects are being canceled. First, it was the oil sands projects and deepwater projects in Canada, Brazil, and elsewhere around the world shutting down. Many of these projects had costs at over $50 a barrel. Now, we’re seeing unconventional oil projects shutting down left and right. Unconventional reserves account for 18% of all liquids used, according to the International Energy Agency. And that represents 15.6 million barrels per day.

  • The major independent oil companies have a cash cost of about $40 a barrel. As their projects start to fall off, we could see global oil production, currently over 86 million barrels per day, fall to 80 million barrels a day … 70 million barrels a day … and lower.

Less supply should bring oil into balance with lower demand. At the same time, if demand goes higher and new supply gets canceled, the next run-up in prices could be fast and furious.

A Real Crisis May Be Closer
Than Any Are Ready to Believe

Low oil prices are a gift brought on by weakness in the global economy, a weakness that is masking a decline in oil reserves all over the world. Mexico, one of America’s biggest suppliers of imported oil, has seen its oil production go into what is probably a permanent decline. In the North Sea, production is falling off a cliff.

Iran’s oil production is in trouble, too. All nine of Iran’s major fields, which produce 90% of its oil, are past their peak.

At the same time, domestic oil consumption is growing.

As a result, Iran’s oil exports — which were 4 million bpd during the reign of the Shah — have slumped to about half that today.

Iran can’t even keep up with its own OPEC production quota!

Another former OPEC exporter, Indonesia, has seen its production fall so sharply that it’s now an oil importer.

And other OPEC members are seeing their major oil fields, discovered 40 or 50 years ago, come under increasing strain to keep up.

Private companies are coming up short, too, and downgrading their reserves. There is new oil out there to be found, but it is expensive. The days of cheap oil are disappearing in the rear-view mirror.

Is the Big Enchilada Running Dry?

And then there’s Mexico. South of the Border is an oil field called Cantarell. It is the world’s second-biggest-producing field after Saudi Arabia’s Ghawar. And it is in deep, deep trouble.

Cantarell

Experts say Cantarell’s output could drop sharply in the next few years, as water leaks into the oil field, making pumping much more difficult. Cantarell produces two million barrels of oil a day, or six of every 10 barrels produced by Mexico. Mexico, by the way, is the United States’ third-biggest international supplier of oil.

Is there more production coming online? Sure. But the world’s top oil companies have been finding only about half as much crude as they pumped out in the last three years. Where are they going to get all the oil they’ll need to fuel a thirsty world as oil prices march higher? By snapping up the stocks of resource-rich mid- and small-cap stocks all around the world!

These small- and mid-cap companies will be the big winners — cleaning up as their assets are bid through the roof.

Base Metals — After the Bust,
Get Ready for the Sonic Boom!

Base metals cratered in 2008. But that should be temporary, because falling prices forced companies to shut mines, so supply and demand will come into balance again.

And when the global economy starts to heat up again, you can’t get those supplies back online right away. It’s not like flipping a switch. In fact, many discouraged miners will have been absorbed or gone out of business permanently.

And that means even tighter supplies down the road. It won’t be just a boom, it could be a sonic boom. Like energy, we’ve already seen major economic powers compete for resources, and they will do so again.

In 2008, China announced the start of a $586 billion infrastructure build out, and it is adding more and more projects to that plan. India, which has no decent infrastructure to speak of, is planning to build or rebuild EVERYTHING.

By the way, iron is one of India’s biggest exports, and their biggest customer is China. But even with new supply coming online, we have the ingredients for a price squeeze as the global economy heats up again …

Ingredient #1: We’re slowly exhausting the metal deposits in Western countries. When you remove a mineral from a mine, it doesn’t grow back. And many of the West’s major deposits were discovered 30, 40, even 50 years ago.

Ingredient #2: The governments of the countries where there are new deposits don’t like mining companies much. There are exceptions, and hopeful signs that attitudes may be changing, but all it takes is a riot by the locals to disrupt a multi-billion-dollar investment for a long, long time.

Ingredient #3: The bear market scarred the mindsets of mining companies’ executives like nucleic acid, leaving them very cautious. I may think we’re about to embark on the second leg of the commodities super cycle. But I don’t sit on the board of BHP Billiton. Those guys will believe it when they see it.

When they do come around, they’ll want new resources in a hurry. And the easiest way to get them is to buy up the stocks of small- and mid-cap miners. That should send the shares of those smaller stocks through the roof.

Nuclear Energy Is Gearing Up Around the World

There are 439 nuclear reactors operating around the world, with 39 others under construction another 376 planned or proposed.

Uranium demand runs at roughly 80,000 metric tonnes per year, while mined output is about 60,000, leaving a shortfall of around 20,000. The rest is made up by stockpiles, mainly converted Russian warheads, which are dwindling fast.

Even if new mines come online, supplies will have trouble keeping up with supply.

One thing that is not in short supply in the nuclear fuel market is speculation. In 2008, a price pullback caused speculators to dump their stockpiles into the market; this turned a correction into a rout. However, this is already causing future projects to be delayed and abandoned, and probably worsening a supply/demand squeeze that will hit again in 2010 to 2013. Within the next decade, that demand for uranium could outpace supply by 20 million pounds.

Canada has long been a very investor-friendly environment for uranium. The long-dormant U.S. uranium industry is also reviving. And Australia recently overturned its restrictive 25-year-old policy that capped the number of working uranium mines in the country.

This opens the door for Australia, home to the world’s largest proven uranium reserves, to become the major source of uranium that will fuel Asia’s growing appetite for nuclear power generation.

There are plenty more Australian uranium stocks just waiting to be scooped up by savvy investors … stocks that could ride an atomic rocket of profits to the moon!

Precious Metals: Shine On!

Unlike energy and base metals, precious metals aren’t so much of an organized competition as a free-for-all. Everyone wants gold and silver, but supplies are tight and will stay that way.

Gold: The yellow metal is pushing toward multi-year highs as demand rises, fueled by a number of forces, including: inflation fears, geopolitical unrest, rip-roaring demand from Asia, and more.

Remember, it wasn’t too long ago that gold was in a 20-year bear market. Companies stopped looking for new resources. Now, they’re playing catch-up, but the easiest way for the big boys to get new gold resources is to buy up small- and mid-cap companies.

Silver: Silver has the same drivers that gold does. Just like gold, silver has its own supply/demand squeeze.

Platinum: Platinum could go either way. On the one hand, palladium is substituted more and more often for platinum, and now silver is being substituted as well. On the other hand, platinum mines are shutting down left and right. The price of platinum dropped to parity with gold in the last quarter of 2008. This may indicate a buying opportunity.

Bottom line: The share prices of companies that deal in commodity resources have the potential for explosive price growth. The next phase of the super cycle should send buyers flush with cash, snapping up resource-rich small-caps by the armload.

Red-Hot Global Small Caps: Tap the Motherlode
of Powerful Profit Potential

The profit party in natural resources is just getting started. Phase I of the natural resource boom was driven primarily by smart institutional money that got in very early.

Now we’re in Phase II. This is the phase that’s being driven by massive buying from industry, from the general public, and from the forces driving countries like India and China into the 21st century.

You can see it everywhere: In gold, copper, oil, platinum, silver, aluminum, zinc, iron, coal, lead … and uranium.

In my opinion, every one of these is in a powerful, long-term bull market, with Phase II just beginning.

Red-Hot Global Small-Caps is focused primarily on companies that are best positioned to feed the global commodity super cycle. We will also go to Canada, Australia, Latin America and Asia to find the best opportunities for you.

And no matter where we go, you can still invest through your existing broker — no option, no futures contracts — just shares, and without ever leaving the comfort of your living room.

Are profits guaranteed? Of course not. As with any investment, you can lose money. But you have five things going for you right now …

First, all of our indicators are signaling that Phase II of the natural resource boom is just in its beginning stages. That puts you right at the starting gate.

Second, Asia’s boom still has a long way to go.

Third, the downside risk which is strictly limited to the amount you invest.

Fourth, there’s no expiration date. You can hold them as long as you want. Provided the company remains solvent, no one can place a time limit on your opportunity.

Fifth, these companies offer huge leverage! Their mining and processing costs are cheap, and the prices of the commodities they deal in keep climbing.

Here’s What You Get with The Service

#1. As soon as you join, we will send you the Operating Manual, designed to give you a broad understanding of the big picture plus all the specific details you need to help maximize your chances for success.

#2. As soon as possible, I will send you my hottest recommendations. It may not be on the day you join because I want to get you in at the best price I can.

#3. You’ll also get 20-25 recommendations per year — all undervalued companies either directly based in Asia, or serving the Asian resource boom.

Many will be small caps, which, as a rule, are more speculative investments and have the greatest profit potential. But for balance, I’ll also include mid-caps. And considering that the market has beaten down even the biggest companies into the dirt, we may do large-caps as well. In other words, I’ll find the best values for you, no matter their size or location in the world.

#4. You’ll get everything you need to know about the companies, including our reports from on-site visits to their offices and properties when we travel to meet with them.

#5. You’ll get occasional special trading opportunities I feel could pop at any second, giving nice profit potential over a few weeks time.

Plus …

You get our iron-clad guarantee: If you’re not satisfied with the service — for whatever reason — you can write us at any time and cancel the service. We will immediately give you a refund on the pro-rated amount of your subscription.

Plus, to save you time and trouble, we’ll automatically renew your membership before it expires until you tell us to stop. That way, you’ll never have to worry about renewal notices or missing a single reco!

Warning: Because of the high level of interest in Asia — and in natural resources — we think this service is going to sell out very quickly.

Your Downside Is Strictly Limited.
Your Upside Profit Potential Is HUGE!

Many of these Red-Hot Global Small-Caps are dirt-cheap. That, in itself, helps to reduce your downside risk. The smaller the amount invested, the smaller amount you have at risk.

You’re getting tremendous profit potential without risking a penny more than you invest, without buying options or futures contracts, and without opening a special brokerage account!

To get on board … to secure your membership … to get your first recommendations in Red-Hot Global Small-Caps … call us at 1-800-898-0819 and be sure to mention your personal code of P509-93192. Or you can order online at our secure website.

Best wishes,
Sean Brodrick
Sean Brodrick
Editor, Red-Hot Global Small-Caps

P.S. There are only a few membership slots left in this service. I expect them to sell out soon. I strongly suggest you act now, before it’s too late.



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Mega-Profits from the Commodity Super cycle

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