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Berkshire and Dow Chemical Complete Deal

Here are the final details and full SEC filing between Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.A) and Dow Chemical (DOW).

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Purchase.
On the terms and subject to the conditions set forth herein, the Investor agrees that upon the furnishing of a written notice to it by the Company as set forth in Section 1.2(a) it will purchase, or will (upon giving written notice thereof to the Company) cause one or more direct or indirect subsidiaries of the Investor of which the Investor beneficially owns at least 80% of the equity interests (measured by both voting rights and value) (each, a “Permitted Transferee”) to purchase, from the Company an aggregate of 3,000,000 shares of the Company’s Cumulative Convertible Perpetual Preferred Stock, Series A (the “Convertible Preferred Stock”) convertible into shares of the common stock of the Company, par value $2.50 per share (the “Common Stock”), and having the powers, preferences and rights, and the qualifications, limitations and restrictions, as specified in the Certificate of Designations in the exact form attached hereto as Annex A (the “Certificate of Designations”), at a price per share of $1,000 (an aggregate price of $3,000,000,000).

Purchase for Investment.
The Investor acknowledges that the shares of Convertible Preferred Stock and the shares of Common Stock into which they are convertible (the “Securities”) have not been registered under the Securities Act or under any state securities laws. The Investor and each Purchasing Permitted Transferee (1) is acquiring the Securities pursuant to an exemption from registration under the Securities Act solely for investment with no present intention to distribute any of the Securities to any person in violation of the Securities Act, (2) will not sell or otherwise dispose of any of the Securities, except in compliance with the registration requirements or exemption provisions of the Securities Act and any other applicable securities laws, (3) has such knowledge and experience in financial and business matters and in investments of this type that it is capable of evaluating the merits and risks of its investment in the Securities and of making an informed investment decision, and has conducted an independent review and analysis of the business and affairs of the Company that it considers sufficient and reasonable for purposes of its making its investment in the Securities, and (4) is an Accredited Investor (as that term is defined by Rule 501 of the Securities Act).

Lock-up Agreement.
Until the earlier of (i) the fifth anniversary of the Closing Date or (ii) the announcement of a Make-Whole Acquisition involving the Company, the Investor shall not, without the prior written consent of the Company, directly or indirectly (x) offer, transfer, hypothecate, sell, contract to sell (including any short sale), grant any option to purchase or otherwise dispose of the Convertible Preferred Stock, any Common Stock received upon conversion of the Convertible Preferred Stock or its economic exposure to the Common Stock (“Lock-up Securities”), (y) enter into any Hedging Transaction (as defined below) involving Lock-up Securities, or (z) publicly announce any intention to do any of the foregoing. The foregoing restrictions shall not apply to any (m) transfer by the Investor and its Permitted Transferees of the Lock-Up Securities among themselves or (n) any offer, transfer, hypothecation, sale, contract to sell (including any short sale), grant of any option to purchase or other disposal of any Common Stock received in the form of dividends on the Convertible Preferred Stock or received in lieu of cash for Past Due Dividends in the event of Conversion at the Option of the Holder pursuant to Section 7 of the Certificate of Designations. “Hedging Transaction”, with respect to any Lock-Up Security, means any short sale (whether or not against the box) or any purchase, sale or grant of any right (including any put or call option, swap or other derivative transaction whether settled in cash or securities) to obtain a “short” or “put equivalent position” with respect to the Common Stock, or any other agreement or transaction that reduces, in whole or in part, directly or indirectly, the economic consequence of ownership of such Lock-Up Security. For the avoidance of doubt, a Hedging Transaction shall not include a transaction that is deemed to reduce the economic consequence of ownership of a Lock-Up Security only because the Investor is acquired by, or merges with or into, or transfers all or substantially all of its assets to, another person pursuant to such transaction.

Misc.
● The Company will pay dividends on the Convertible Preferred Stock, quarterly in arrears, at a rate of 8.5% per annum, in either cash, shares of Common Stock, or any combination thereof, at the option of the Company.

● Holders of Convertible Preferred Stock may convert all or any portion of the Convertible Preferred Stock, at their option, at any time at the conversion rate of 24.2010 shares of Common Stock for each share of Convertible Preferred Stock, subject to anti-dilution adjustments as specified in the Certificate of Designations. In addition, if holders of Convertible Preferred Stock elect to convert the Convertible Preferred Stock in connection with the occurrence of certain changes in the ownership of the Company (as specified in the Certificate of Designations), they will be entitled to receive additional shares of Common Stock upon conversion under certain circumstances as further described in the Certificate of Designations.

Each preferred share has a value of $1000. At the conversion rate it equates to a $41.32 share price for Dow.

Simply put, let’s compare a buyer of the stock today vs Buffett. For the example lets say in 4 years Buffett convert and the stock site at $42.

Warren has earned 8.5% per year on his yield and today’s common buyer has earned 7.3% (assuming no dividend growth for 4 years, which has ever happened in almost 100 years). Warren now holds common shares that have appreciated 1%, the buyer of the common today has seen his holding appreciate 86%.

Risk?
The common share price falls. In this case the holder of the common suffers a loss and Buffett keep his 8.5%. But, Buffett is sitting on dead money in the conversion price. At this much of a discount, the common holders buying today have a far better risk reward than Buffett. Even if the common only rallies 50% from here, Buffett is still sitting on a conversion loss and the common holder is far better off.


FULL FILING


Disclosure (“none” means no position):Long Dow , None
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Dow Chemical Earnings Call: Large Buybacks Coming

Based on the comments by management, one should expect large buybacks from Dow Chemical (DOW) to begin early next year.

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From the Q&A:

PJ Juvekar – Citigroup
“Thank you. And quickly, Geoff, you didn’t talk about stock buyback when you talked about your financial strategy. If you look around… many industrial companies are suspending stock buybacks to conserve cash. Can you just tell us how you’re thinking about buybacks?”

Geoffery E. Merszei – Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
“Well, sure. As you know… thanks for the question, PJ. As you know, during the course of the third quarter, we completed our $2 billion program and we spent about $50 million on that The only reason why we haven’t announced yet another programs is because we have two very large transactions that are about to close plus, of course, your last point, which is on cash preservation.

But let me reiterate what our financial policy has been over the last two years and will continue to be is that at a minimum we’re going to cover dilution. This is on an annual basis. And you can count on a new program following the two transactions that we are about to complete.”

Peter Butler – Glen Hill Investments
“Andrew, wouldn’t Carl Gerstacker be backing up the proverbial truck right here to buy shares cheap? Gerstacker would say, “My God, if you can buy at a 7% yield, then you’re looking at good news from Kuwait and Rohm and Haas. Why wait for the stock to go higher?”

Andrew N. Liveris – Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
“Yes. Look, Peter, as Geoffery answered because we have these two or three moving parts that are close in two or three months. But I think Geoffery indicated, I don’t know backing up the truck is a colorful way of explaining it. But I said this morning, the dividend is safe. This CEO is never going to cut it. I’m not going to be the first. The yield is unbelievable. The stock is undervalued by a long mile. I mean, so clearly, your analysis is our analysis.

We’re just going to get through the two transactions. Let us go on the other side of it. And then obviously, stock buyback is going to be top of mind. And these values hang in there in equity markets for the next several months. I think Mr. Buffett said it, well, Buy American. Well, we’re American.”

Robert Koort – Goldman Sachs
“Andrew, I think you said on one of the shows this morning that you don’t think a $3 trough number is reasonable anymore. I was wondering if you could tell me what the path to the trough looks like? Is it a demand erosion trough in ’09? Or do still think ’10 or ’11 is the trough?

And then, secondly, in your performance business particularly Performance Plastics obviously a pretty horrific margin partly influenced by the hurricanes, but what do you see in terms of the progression of your performance business margins as you go through the next couple of years? Thanks.”

Andrew N. Liveris – Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
“Yes, I think, Bob, firstly on the trough. We’re going to spend a lot of November analyzing our view of ’09, ’10 and ’11 given these new market conditions. Clearly, ’09 now is going to be a tough demand year, everything we’ve just talked about. So we see an economic trough in ’09. The industry trough that we were forecasting for ’10 and ’11 is going to be impacted by both sides of that discussion.

One is the new demand forecasts are going to speak… stop projects happening. So people who are early in their project calibrations are going to delay projects compared to… this is on the commodity stuff in particular and the petrochemical stuff. In addition, there is going to be a lot of competitors out there who don’t have our leverage ratios, who are not going to make it. I mean people who are… with their debt ratios in the 90s who leveraged up in the good days are going to suffer. You pick your favorite companies, I’m sure you can find them in the commodity chain in particular.

And then, on top of that you’ve got frankly the other side of the coin, which is the people who have got low-cost feedstocks and now can negotiate better EPC contracts because everything is coming off… the price of steel, the price of copper, the price of engineering. You can start to bring these projects more in line with the better returns in the low feedstock cost regimen.

And so actually companies like Dow, who have put these joint ventures in place should benefit from the ‘010, ‘011 scenario compared to what we were before. And last point I’ll make, in a declining oil and gas environment, we have feedstock flexibility that we can bring to bear in our developed economies now, which we didn’t have up until a month or two ago.

In other words, naphtha, LPG, ethane… we’ve got flexi-crackers that we can bring to help us out in the ’10-’11 industry trough. So these are the sorts of things we’ll be discussing deeply in November and we’ll come out on the other side of that and give you guys a better view. Second question, Bob?”

So, here we are in October and in the next three months (give or take) the company will be fundamentally changed. The 7% yield is safe and starting next year, assuming the share price does not rally much from here, will feature large share repurchases.

Another point that I think is being lost here was Liveris’s comment about the competition and some of it falling by the wayside during the next year or two due to leverage ratios. Market share increases due to this need to start getting factored into estimates going forward. Along with the market share increase, the reduction in competition also give Dow enhanced pricing power with customers.

It is going to be a very interesting winter for shareholders…and an exciting one


FULL TRANSCRIPT


Disclosure (“none” means no position):Long DOW
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Dow Chemical Reports:

EPS affected by $.12 from the September hurricanes. Good news? Oil prices fell. Bad news? Couldn’t produce anything when it dropped.

Highlights:
– Sales for the quarter increased 13 percent from the same period last year to $15.4 billion.

— Price increased 22 percent, with double-digit price gains in all operating segments and all geographic areas. This was the largest year-over- year percentage increase in price since the first quarter of 2005.

— Volume was down 9 percent globally, reduced by the impact of Hurricanes Gustav and Ike, further weakening of demand, and the Company’s focus on implementing price increases in the quarter. Excluding the impact of acquisitions, divestitures and the hurricanes, volume was down 5 percent.

— Earnings for the quarter of $0.46 per share were unfavorably impacted by certain items such as the hurricanes ($0.09 per share in costs and $0.03 per share in margin on lost sales), purchased in-process research and development charges of $0.03 per share, and acquisition-related expenses of $0.02 per share (see supplemental information at the end of the release for a description of these items).

— Purchased feedstock and energy costs surged 48 percent, an increase of $2.6 billion over the same quarter last year, the largest year-over-year increase in the Company’s history and the third consecutive quarter in which these costs reached new highs. Margin expansion was not achieved in both Basic and Performance segments, as the hurricanes idled approximately 80 percent of the Company’s North American capacity in September, when feedstock costs were declining.

— Agricultural Sciences set a new third quarter sales and EBIT(1) record, with sales up 24 percent to $976 million. Price was up 16 percent and volume up 8 percent compared with the same quarter last year.

— Equity earnings were $266 million for the quarter. This was the seventh consecutive quarter that earnings from joint ventures exceeded $250 million.

CEO Andrew Liveris: “The global economy is now feeling the full effects of the same economic issues that have plagued the U.S. for the past several quarters. These issues have now been exacerbated by the lack of credit, resulting in a drop in demand not only in the U.S., but around the world. In our view, we will likely see a global recession through most of 2009.

“Dow is well positioned, however, to weather this increasingly difficult economic downturn. We have a strong balance sheet, we have a track record of strong financial discipline and we are accelerating our focus on what we can control, namely costs and capital, asset restructuring, and other interventions. In addition, we will continue to implement our transformational strategic actions, such as closing our petrochemicals joint venture with PIC of Kuwait and closing our announced acquisition of Rohm and Haas (ROH).”

Here is how it breaks down. Ag and Performance Chemicals saw earnings increases. Basic Plastics, Chemicals, and Performance Plastics saw decreases. Those divisions also saw $76 million in hurricane related costs.

It is frustrating but we have to play the game for another quarter. Then the Kuwait and the Rohm deals close and the earnings profile is forever altered. Will it be an immediate panacea? No. It will remove oil (USO) as the immediate concern on the mind of investors.

Recession. Will it hurt? Yep. A global recession will hurt, well, the globe (hence the name). But, what do we have? A 7% plus dividend yield that is not going down, Berkshire’s Warren Buffett (BRK.A) as a fellow shareholder (the largest individual one) and company with a global footprint both in manufacturing and sales. It manufactures the basic building blocks for virtually every industry.

When it all shakes out the $.60 before charges did beat what the guys and gals on Wall St. expected ($.58) so we may see a bump in shares. I would also say we ought to see some Q4 expectations increase as it appears price increases are holding and oil continues its nose dive.

Also:
– The European Commission Monday cleared the creation of a joint venture between Dow Chemical Co. (DOW) and a unit of the Kuwait Petroleum Corporation. Dow and Petrochemical Industries Company will jointly control the new company, which will manufacture and market polyethylene, ethylenamines, ethanolamines, polypropylene, and polycarbonate.

– Dow AgroSciences has added 350 jobs around the world so far this year-200 of them at its Indianapolis headquarters-and the CEO of the agricultural-chemical company expects to continue expanding the work force into next year. “Global demand for food, feed, fiber and fuel reinforces the need for agricultural productivity, and Dow AgroSciences is well positioned as a technology leader to provide solutions,” CEO Jerome Peribere said in a statement.

The company in recent years has been evolving from a maker of herbicides and pesticides into a biotechnology firm using genetics to develop products that protect crops and improve yields.


Disclosure (“none” means no position):Long DOW, none
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Rohm & Haas Beats Estimates

Dow Chemical’s (DOW) upcoming acquisition beat estimates this quarter.

Highlights:

* Sales up 12 percent from the prior-year period, primarily driven by timely pricing actions and growth in Rapidly Developing Economies.
* Adjusted earnings per share, excluding special items, up 3 percent versus the prior-year period.
* Proactive cost control and pricing actions coupled with effective financial strategies more than mitigated the impact of deteriorating business conditions.

Rohm and Haas Company (ROH) today reported third quarter 2008 sales of $2,471 million, a 12 percent increase over the same period in 2007, driven by timely pricing actions, favorable currencies, acquisitions, and growth in Rapidly Developing Economies, partially offset by decreased demand in North America and Western Europe. The company reported third quarter 2008 earnings from continuing operations of $129 million, or $0.66 per share, compared to $129 million, or $0.61 per share, for the third quarter of 2007. This quarter’s results include special items totaling $0.24 per share: $0.09 per share in costs associated with the proposed merger with The Dow Chemical Company announced in July; $0.07 per share in costs resulting from the impact of hurricanes on the company’s operations in the quarter; and $0.08 per share in asset impairments and costs resulting from restructuring actions announced in June. Adjusted earnings per share, excluding the special items noted above, were $0.90, up 3 percent compared to $0.87 in the prior-year period.

“The economic and operating environment deteriorated further this quarter, yet we were able to deliver respectable financial performance in the face of these challenges,” said Raj L. Gupta, chairman and chief executive officer of Rohm and Haas Company. “Our coordinated and prompt response to rapidly changing conditions and our timely pricing and cost reduction actions gained significant traction in the quarter allowing us to largely offset rising raw material and energy costs.”

Gupta added, “Our confidence in a bright future for Rohm and Haas Company remains high, and we fully expect to deliver outstanding results for all our stakeholders as we look forward to the merger with The Dow Chemical Company.”

Rohm is the perfect buy for Dow in the current environment. I am convinced beyond any shadow of a doubt the market does not fully understand that the Dow Chemical that reports tomorrow will resemble the Dow Chemical that reports next year (Q2). Gone will be 50% of the highly cyclical and petroleum dependent commodity business and in its place will be the predictable and growing specialty chemical business that is Rohm.

Currently yielding over 7%. How safe is it? Consider this is the 388th consecutive cash dividend issued by Dow. Since 1912, Dow has paid its shareholders cash dividends every quarter and has either maintained or increased the quarterly dividend amount throughout that time. Safe enough?

If it dips after earnings tomorrow, I am buying more..


Disclosure (“none” means no position):Long DOW, ROH
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Arb Spreads Huge

Here is an interesting arb. spread analysis. current potential profit is more than twice historical average.

Yesterday we went long Rohm & Hass (ROH) in their upcoming buyout by Dow chemical (DOW).

There are a bunch of other opportunities out there, just be very wary of those involving bank debt..it may not be there.


Disclosure (“none” means no position):Long ROH, DOW
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Buying Rohm & Haas

This is a short term arb play.

Dow Chemical will purchase Rohm & Haas (ROH) for $78 a share and the deal will close in early 2009.

Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.A) is investing $3b in the deal and it is an all-cash transaction. Currently shares trade at $70 a share under the current credit environment. Purchasers of shares today will get a 10% 4 month return (30% annualized). Downside is minimal.

What could go wrong?
Kuwait, who is buying 1/2 Dow’s commodity business for $9.5b could back out of the deal. That cash is being used for funding the ROH transaction. How likely is this? Well, when one considers that the newly formed JV is in the process of hiring personnel and setting up shop in Michigan, not very.

Berkshire could back out. Again, can anyone come up with a scenario when this has happened? Me either.

Since no debt is being used for the transaction and Dow has already received the bridge loan necessary to complete it, credit market conditions are irrelevant here.

Why did the price fall? Simple. During mass sell-offs like we have had, everything falls, whether is should or not. That gives us tremendous opportunity for very safe situational investing. What this trade is essentially is a way to park some money for 4 months with a very high probability of a 10% payoff with very little downside risk (not none, but very little).

The deals today that are at risk are the ones that depend on bank’s lending for the financing, looks for the all cash or all stock ones.


Disclosure (“none” means no position):Long Dow, none
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Sherwin Williams Results: What Housing Collapse?

Sherwin Williams (SHW) beat “analyst” expectations by 23 cents a share or 18%.

– Sales increased 3.3% to a record $2.269 billion in 3Q08 and 2.1% to a record $6.280 billion in first nine months
– EPS was $1.50 in 3Q08; $.05 above the 3Q08 guidance range of $1.20 to $1.45
– Net operating cash in the first nine months was $592.6 million; an improvement of $28.8 million over the first nine months last year
– EPS guidance range of $.40 to $.60 for 4Q08 and raising full year guidance range to $3.97 to $4.17

All segments experienced sales increases:
* Net sales in the Paint Stores Group increased $9.5 million, or 0.7%, to $1.410 billion in the quarter and decreased $20.6 million, or 0.5%, to $3.797 billion in the first nine months. The sales increase in the quarter was due primarily to increased sales from acquisitions of 1.5% and selling price increases that were partly offset by sales volume reduction
* Net sales of the Consumer Group increased $6.2 million, or 1.8%, to $355.7 million in the quarter and decreased $20.8 million, or 2.0%, to $1.026 billion in the first nine months. The sales increase in the quarter was due primarily to selling price increases and an increase in sales of 0.4% related to a 2007 acquisition.
* The Global Finishes Group’s net sales stated in U.S. dollars increased $55.8 million, or 12.5%, to $500.8 million in the quarter and $170.1 million, or 13.3%, to $1.452 billion in the first nine months due primarily to volume gains, selling price increases, favorable currency translation rate changes and acquisitions.

The Company acquired 793,135 shares of its common stock through open market purchases during the quarter and 7.0 million shares during the first nine months. The Company had remaining authorization at September 30, 2008 to purchase 20.0 million shares.

CEO Christopher Connor said, “During the fourth quarter of 2008, we anticipate consolidated net sales growth, in percentage terms, will be plus or minus in the low single digits from last year’s fourth quarter. We expect diluted net income per common share for the fourth quarter will be in the range of $.40 to $.60 per share compared to $.80 per share last year. For the full year 2008, we anticipate consolidated net sales will be slightly higher than 2007. At that sales level, we are raising our expectations for diluted net income per common share for full year 2008 to a range of $3.97 to $4.17 per share compared to $4.70 per share earned in 2007.”

Would I be a buyer of Sherwin shares here? No. Not because they are not a great company or their shares are not undervalued, it is just that I think there are some extreme values out there currently and Sherwin is not an extreme value. The dividend yield at 2.8% is good, but again, far below the 7% at Dow Chemical (DOW), 6% at GE (GE) and 5.8% at Harley Davidson (HOG). Now, should share dip into the mid 40’s ($45) then I would have to take a close look.

Also, despite the title of the post, Sherwin is tied to housing and that is not going anywhere but flat or down for at least a year, maybe more. That being said, Sherwin’s results will remain stable due to fantastic management and it’s brilliantly timed international expansion so the downside from here is limited. Should shares be sitting here at these levels 6 months to a year from now, perhaps they then warrant a buy.

There are just to many truly magnificent bargains out there now…


Disclosure (“none” means no position):Long SHW, DOW, HOG, GE
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Latest Soveriegn Wealth Fund Report: US Not The Favorite

This is a follow-up to a post from July. Isn’t it funny how when we need the money the politicians are not screaming about this anymore? In fact, one could make the argument they are begging for SWF Investment now.

File this under “be careful what you wish for, you just might get it”. The good news? SWF’s are not investing large sums in US businesses. The bad news? SWF’s are not investing large amounts in US businesses.

The latest Monitor Group analysis is an update to its June 2008 report: “Assessing the Risks: The Behaviors of Sovereign Wealth Funds in the Global Economy.” Key findings of the latest analysis include:

§ In the second quarter of 2008 (Q2 2008), funds in the Monitor SWF transaction database executed 43 deals totaling $26.5 billion. In contrast those funds executed 42 deals totaling $58.3 billion during the previous quarter (Q1 2008).

§ SWFs continued to invest actively in emerging markets. In Q2 2008, more than half the deals and funds invested were in emerging markets (vs 40% in Q1). SWFs carried out 26 deals and invested $15 billion in BRIC and non-OECD countries.

§ Investment in North America dropped dramatically. In Q2 2008, four deals totaling less than $1 billion were received by North America. In contract, this region received seven deals totaling $23 billion during the previous quarter (Q1 2008).

§ Half of the deals by value in Q2 were in real estate (shopping centers and real estate management companies). Real estate had the largest number of deals (12) and the highest investment ($13.7 billion) in Q2 2008.

§ During Q2 2008, investment has shifted away from financial services. SWFs carried out 10 deals and invested $4 billion in the financial services sector during Q2 2008. In the previous quarter (Q1 2008), funds carried out 13 deals totaling $43.4 billion.

“Our transaction data show that SWFs have focused recent equity investment away from volatile geographic markets and sectors, like North America and financial services, and are instead seeking more attractive returns in emerging markets and other sectors, including real estate,” said Drosten Fisher

The country taking the lion share of the business? India. There was heavy investment in the healthcare, consumer and aerospace sectors in India in Q2. This also follows the trend they exhibited in other nations. This is particular distressing to those who are looking for funds to flow to the US. Those are not sectors in the US that lend itself to foreign investment (thing Wal-Nart (WMT), Target (TGT), GE (GE) or United Health (UNH).

But, for shareholders of wither Wal-Mart (WMT), GE (GE) or even Dow Chemical (DOW) who are aggressively expanding into the region, it is good news. A steady flow of funds to the region raises the standard of living for all and by default the sales prospects for those doing business there.

Bill Ackman at the Value Investing Congress commented on “opportunistic capital” (hedge funds and SWF’s). He said that “opportunistic capital is always the first in” when it comes to investment (listen to press conference here). It should be noted that Russia has receive zero deals. For those thinking of investing overseas, if those with the money are avoiding a country, perhaps you ought to think twice before committing funds there? Based on their activity, India and Brazil seem to be the nation’s of choice both for opportunity and safety of capital.

Now, for those afraid of SWF’s, please note the following graph.

A disclaimer: This is my chart and Monitor Group in no way implies the “Bailout” equates the US to a SWF. This chart is purely for comparison purposes.

What is the point? SWF’s are a nice boogey man for people intent on stirring things up but they really are dwarfed not only buy US Mutual funds but what our gov’t itself. Let’s not forget, $250b of the US investment in banks wasn’t an option for the banks….that is not an issue with SWF’s.

Q2 report available by email akrull@racepointgroup.com
About Drosten:
Drosten Fisher is a principal with the international strategy consultancy Monitor Group. His focus is serving government and commercial clients in the areas of economic competitiveness, national security and international finance. A Middle East specialist, he speaks Arabic and has lived and worked in the region. Before joining Monitor, Drosten was a researcher for former Director of Central Intelligence George Tenet on his memoir At the Center of the Storm.

He was educated at Oxford and Georgetown and is a term member of the Council on Foreign Relations.Drosten is a co-author of a recent Monitor report into sovereign wealth fund investment and is a regular speaker and commentator on Middle Eastern investment, politics and business.


Disclosure (“none” means no position):Long WMT, GE, Dow , none
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Wilbur Ross on TARP, The Economy and What He Is Buying

Anyone who has been an even semi-regular reader knows what a fan of Wilbur Ross we are here. Wilbur has been spot on in regards to the current crisis. Both in leading up to it and what has happened during it.

Ross is looking at companies that are commodity based that are going to profit from the fall in those prices (although he says oil will not go below $70). Specifically he mentioned carbon based chemical companies (Dow Chemical (DOW)?). He also is continuing to buy mortgage servicing companies. He is buying more shares of many of the companies he already owns ad many trade 505 below recent prices and that there is “nothing fundamentally wrong with them”.

Stimulus checks???”A terrible waste, only about 30% of the last batch got spent”

Watch the video…..there is a commercial in the middle and the interview picks up after it.


Disclosure (“none” means no position):
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It’s Our Fault, Not Theirs

I have been reading like a fiend lately on 1929, the 60’s, late 90’s and obviously today. One theme is a constant….greed, margin, debt then a reckoning..

Each episode had its roots, not in corporate greed or lack of “regulation”, although there were certainly elements of them in each, but of the greed of the public. What follows is a basic overview of each and their similarities.

The 1920’s featured the barber and the paperboy speculating on stocks with money they did not have using margin. It was common for people to buy stock using 90% to 95% borrowed money. This rush of investor funds drove prices up to stratospheric levels. When they peaked and inevitably fell, margin calls exacerbated to fall and wiped out investors.

The 1960’s featured investors blindly throwing money into mutual funds at unprecedented rates. Again, the rush of funds drove asset levels up to untenable levels. The result was a fall in the market and investor disillusionment in stocks, a psychology that lasted until the 1980’s.

The late 1990’s again featured investors who had never thought about the stock market wildly chasing stock prices to ever higher levels. Conversation everywhere was about the latest IPO issue and newest tech stock that was rocking upward for no fundamental reason. Everyone knew someone who “hit it big” in a tech stock and people rushed to join the fray. Of course eventually the necessary funds for continued stock appreciation ran out as the economy began to slow an then stock prices began to fall. Again, as huge amounts were bought on margin in companies that had no earnings (or any prospects for them), the fall was fast and furious.

Now…one word, housing. Rather than stock prices being inflated, now it is housing and consumers borrowing far too much to purchase homes. Yes, the banks were complicit in their lax lending standards but when all is said and done, it is you who sign on the bottom line buying the 4,000 sq. ft. house with granite kitchen counters when all you really could afford was 2,000 sq. ft. and formica. The collapse in housing has caused a liquidation of the most salable asset, stocks. Investors selling stocks for liquidity and redemptions at mutual funds have cause a rush to sell and stock price collapse.

In all the above episodes there are outlying factors many of which has to do with the gov’ts response at the time, corporate scandals, accounting “issues” and others. But, the constant theme in them all and the primary reason for the inflated bubbles that then popped was the consumer and their borrowing. Without the consumer rushing blindly and without hesitation into the hot investment, the rise in prices that then collapsed would not have been possible. Whether it be margin for stocks or mortgages for houses, investors continually have borrowed to excess chasing rising prices that when they began to fall, took investors with them.

Will “we learn” and not repeat these mistake again? No. In housing perhaps as prices there ought to take a decade or more to reach prior levels and that by itself ought to dampen enthusiasm for the asset class. As for stocks? If history tell us anything, it will happen again. Here is the scenario. Burned investors will sit idly by as stocks eventually bottom and begin their ascent. Fear of a repeat will keep them out of the market initially though. Now, they have will have been hearing from various sources that they ought to be buying now but fear caused them to sell.E veryone will now know somebody will have been buying now (I am) and they will be hearing stories of the wealth it will have created or the paper lossed that were erased and turned into gains.

Like a dog looking at another dog with a bone, the one thing that is irresistible to an investor is watching another make money while they sit on the sidelines (the dog will always drop their bone for the other). Regretting they “got out of the game” they will jump back in…fast and we will start the whole dance over again.

How long will it take? Who knows. One thing is for sure. The internet is allowing information to travel at speeds measured in seconds, not days or weeks like in the past. I think that will have the effect of shortening the time between and the steepening of the ascension and descent of prices in these episodes. It also means that for the investor who can take a step back and see where we are in the cycle, there is plenty of money to be made and losses to be avoided.

Yes, there are fundamental reasons why we are where we are today but the current sell-off is just way overdone. I know people who are pulling money out of stocks “because”. That is the reason, “because”. That is just unadulterated fear and void of any rational thought. Times like this offer spectacular opportunities for those will to step in and buy. Stocks are off 40% for the year. Thinking of buying a summer home? Many such areas are selling those home 40% to 50% cheaper that they did a year ago.

There are tons of opportunities out there….if you have the patience and clarity of thought. If you think I am full of it, just listen to history’s greatest investor, Berkshire’s (BRK.A) Warren Buffett. He has always said “buy fear and sell greed”. If you think this is not fear in the market, think again. What has Warren been doing? Buying..in a big way. Buying stakes in Dow Chemical (DOW), Goldman Sachs (GS), GE (GE) and others for a cool $40 BILLION in investments..

Warren has watched his investments in Coke (KO), Wal-Mart (WMT) and Home Depot (HD) fall just like you have have. The difference is that he has not sold and cemented those losses. He has held on and will pocket the rebound in prices. He has also realized that when things are on sale, it is then the best time to be a buyer.

Here is the suggested reading list
“Once in Golconda” (1929)

“The Go-Go Years” (60’s)

“Origins of the Crash” (Late 90’s)

Mr. Market Miscalculates (today)


Disclosure (“none” means no position):Long GS, DOW, GE, None
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Buffett Invests in GE

First Warren followed me into Dow Chemical (DOW), then Goldman Sachs (GS), and now days after my GE (GE) investment, in comes Berkshire’s (BRK.A) Warren Buffett again. No, I don’t really think he is copying me….it does give me confidence in my recent purchases though..


From Press Release

FAIRFIELD, Conn.—October 1, 2008– GE today announced plans to offer at least $12 billion of common stock to the public. The underwriters will have a 30-day option to purchase shares representing an additional 15%of the offering amount from GE to cover over allotments, if any. The offering is expected to be priced prior to tomorrow’s market open in the U.S.

In addition, GE announced that it has reached agreement to sell $3 billion of perpetual preferred stock in a private offering to Berkshire Hathaway, Inc. The perpetual preferred stock has a dividend of 10% and is callable after three years at a 10% premium. In conjunction with this offering, Berkshire Hathaway will also receive warrants to purchase $3 billion of common stock with a strike price of $22.25 per share, which is exercisable at any time for a five-year term.

Berkshire Hathaway Chairman and CEO Warren Buffett said, “GE is the symbol of American business to the world. I have been a friend and admirer of GE and its leaders for decades. They have strong global brands and businesses with which I am quite familiar. I am confident that GE will continue to be successful in the years to come.”

GE CEO Jeff Immelt said, “This action does two things for GE investors. First, it enhances our flexibility and allows us to execute on our liquidity plan even faster. Second, it gives us the opportunity to play offense in this market should conditions allow. In addition, we remain committed to the Triple A rating and in the recent market volatility, we continue to successfully meet our commercial paper needs.

“The economic environment remains volatile,” Immelt said. “However, the company’s performance remains on track with the earnings guidance we provided last week for 2008, including third quarter financial services earnings of approximately $2 billion and industrial earnings growth of between 10 and 15 percent, excluding our Consumer & Industrial business. “

Goldman, Sachs & Co. is the bookrunner for the transaction. GE expects that Banc of America Securities, LLC, Citi, Deutsche Bank Securities, J.P. Morgan and Morgan Stanley will be added as additional bookrunners. Copies of the prospectus for the offering may be obtained from Goldman, Sachs & Co., Attn: Prospectus Department, 85 Broad St., New York, NY 10004 or by faxing (212) 902-9316 or by emailing prospectus-ny@ny.email.gs.com.

A registration statement relating to these securities has been filed and is effective. This press release is neither an offer to sell, nor a solicitation of an offer to buy, nor shall there be any sale of, these securities in any state in which such offer, solicitation or sale would be unlawful prior to registration or qualification under the securities laws of any such state. The proposed offering will be made only by means of a prospectus.


Disclosure (“none” means no position):Long GS, Dow ,GE, none
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Dow Chemical Makes Another Acquisition & Some Thoughts on Valuation

Dow AgroSciences, a division of Dow Chemical (DOW) has now made six acquisitions in the last year to strengthen its seed business.

Dow AgroSciences LLC said today it is acquiring most of the assets of Sac City, Iowa-based Renze Hybrids Inc. for an undisclosed price. It will acquire all sales, marketing and agronomy assets related to the Renze brand as well as all soybean production assets. Renze operations manager Craig Williams will join Dow AgroSciences to lead the Renze business. The Renze family has formed a seed corn production company to provide hybrid corn for Renze.

This comes after the August deal to acquire Dairyland Seed Co. DowAg is a double digit earnings grower for Dow and the division that CEO Andrew Liveris is most excited about. Let’s look at some numbers.

Kuwait recently bought 50% of the commodity business from Dow for $9.5 billion in a deal that valued Dow at $38 billion vs today’s $28 billion market cap. Dow parlayed that investment from the low multiple commodity business into the Rohm & Hass (ROH) deal, a specialty chemical maker that commands a mid-teen earnings multiple.

ROH earned $661 million last year. At the 18 pe specialty makers are trading at (that is a discount to the 22 ROH currently trades at), that portion of Dow will be valued at $12 billion. Add in the $19 billion valuation of the commodity business and you have today’s markets cap.

That also means buyers of the stock today get the Ag business, Dow’s current specialty business and it various JV’s around the world FOR FREE. Oh yea, and a 5% dividend. Does anyone wonder now why Berkshire (BRK.A) and Warren Buffett recently became the largest shareholders?

Me either…


Disclosure (“none” means no position):Long Dow, none
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Where is Armageddon?

OK, let’s ignore the politics. If Democrats want to pass this they can, they have the majority. Period. Republican’s are powerless and will not block a vote. Anything else is just games.

So, will it pass? Yes. As the market drops, Main St. will feel the pain and the public opinion polls will turn.

When that happens, everything let’s loose and we rally. In the meantime you have GE trading at decade lows yielding 5%, Dow Chemical at 5 year lows yielding 5.5% and the list goes on.

The point is you have people panicking out there. Panic leads to selling en mass and that means bargain basement prices.

Think about it. we have heard daily for 2 weeks now that something has to get done TODAY or we risk armageddon. Yet, nothing has been done, Wachovia (WB) and Washington Mutual (WM) were absorbed by Citi (C) and JP Morgan (JPM) respectively i na very orderly manner. No deposits were lost and there was no run on the bank when the news was announced. An 8% drop in the DOW (.DJI) today isn’t even in the top 5 worst days.

There are deals out there for the patient investor. Pick strong companies with low debt and strong balance sheets. The yield alone out there have not been seen in a long time..

Something will get done, just pick at the bargains until it does..

Disclosure (“none” means no position):Long GE,Dow,C, none
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Buying GE…

Safe 5% yield and 10 times earnings….picked up some for $24.77 a share Friday morning.

I first got real interested in GE (GE) last week when shares hit $23 and change but did not pull the trigger.

Yesterday, GE lowered guidance for the quarter and the year. Not real surprising given conditions out there but two questions I has were answered. Was the dividend safe, and was their ‘AAA’ rating safe. The answer to both was yes.

Why does ‘AAA’ matter? Consider there are only 6 companies that carry that rating, Automatic Data Processing (ADP), Berkshire Hathaway (BRK), GE (GE), Johnson & Johnson (JNJ), Exxon (XOM), and Toyota (TM). It simply means safety and low cost of capital. In these times, with the inevitable credit contraction with us for years, a ‘AAA’ rating will take on more importance.

The dividend. I like high, safe dividends. I currently hold Altria (MO) at 6%, Phillip Morris International (PM) at 4%, Dow Chemical (DOW) at 5%, Wells Fargo (WFC) at 4% dividend yields. Now we’ll ad GE at 5%. All of the above had dividends that, were they to be forced to be cut, simply would mean economic conditions have deteriorated to the point that the actual dividend cut would be the least of all our worries.

Watch the following video from Thursday. Please ignore CNBC’s Melissa Francis saying GE Capital was a “buy to sell” model. It isn’t (that has been discussed here on this blog before as a reason to maybe buy GE shares). It is a “buy to hold” and Immelt corrects her…how could she get that wrong? She just interviewed her boss and had the business model for the company’s main profit driver wrong….I bet it will come up at review time. Anyway, the video.

Here is an interview with Charlie Rose from March:
I think it is safe to say Immelt as GE (along with virtually every economist and other business leader) underestimated to the scope of the current crisis. That being said, I can’t single him out as “being wrong” about the future. But, if we look at the various businesses, one must be encouraged. GE is global in scope and will benefit from global growth. It’s financial services, being hit hard by the crisis, still maintain ‘AAA’ ratings despite the turmoil. That means very attractive opportunities will arise for GE that other lenders will not get, or be able to fund.

Now, the Immlet bashers will point to thew stock being near $60 a share in 2000 (yielding less than 1%) and want his head for its fall. But, GE made $1.27 a share that year. So, if you paid 47 times those earnings in 2000, Immelt is not the problem, you are. Paying 47 times earnings for a conglomerate the size of GE, is well ,for lack of a better word, just moronic. But, 10 times earnings with a 5% yield?

Essentially a bet on GE at this time is a bet on the global growth story, at a very good price, and a 5% yield. It may take some time to pan out, but i think it will, handsomely.

Disclosure (“none” means no position):Long GE,MO,PM,WFC,DOW
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Text of Dow Chemical CEO Andrew Liveris Speech on US Industry Policy

Here it is. Liveris covers the whole gamut. I though about posting segments but you really need to read the whole text to appreciate the situation we are in. Dow (DOW) is going to be fine as Liveris is moving production overseas. If we want to remain competitive, raising the burden on business is NOT the answer. Unless Congress can get its act together (if you are watching the Paulson/Bernanke testimony today, you can be encouraged) things are going to get worse.

Andrew Liveris spoke in Detroit yesterday… Here are his remarks.

Thank you, Bill (Ford, Jr.) for your kind words and the invitation to be here today.
As Bill mentioned, I was here two years ago. At that time, I shared my concerns about the state of manufacturing and the weak economy. But I am an optimist and in the back of my mind I thought, surely, it can’t get any worse, right?

Instead, we’ve witnessed two years of continual slide capped by the unprecedented meltdown in the financial sector last week. Frankly, we’re just now beginning to see the repercussions of that crisis as markets respond and re-settle themselves.

Wall St. isn’t the only place feeling pain, of course. Main Street USA is feeling it, too. People in every town and city across the country are uneasy these days. And for good reason.

Since I was here last, oil has risen from the mid-$70s a barrel to around $100 today.
Housing starts are at their lowest level since 1991, and there seems to be no bottom in sight. Consumer prices are expanding at the fastest pace in 17 years, affecting every consumer item from fuel to food.

On top of that, we have the sobering news that the economy lost some half a million manufacturing jobs since the end of 2006. And I’m sure you all saw the jobs report last month for the entire nation: 84,000 jobs lost in August alone.
September, it appears, won’t look any better.

And the rank and file employees who are still working? They earned three percent less last month than they had a year earlier simply because of inflation.

Even the small things are more expensive. I saw a report in the New York Times recently that the price for the common paper clip – this small item holding my talk together – is up 40 percent.

As that great American philosopher, Will Rogers, once said, we seem intent on showing the entire world we’re prosperous … even if we have to go broke to do it.

Given all the doom and gloom, it really is hard to remain an optimist. But I am reminded of the advice that I’ve given others so many times – that often the difference between success and failure is nothing more than pure persistence and hard work.

So here we are, talking again about a difficult economy and what to do with it.
Talking … again … about a real energy crisis that will have no quick or painless solution.

Talking once more about how to return this country to a position of strength and vigor.

As Bill said, on my last visit before you I did state that the United States was THE indispensable nation in the world. As a foreign citizen who has benefited enormously from the American freedom and enterprise model, I stand by that statement today more than ever.

The world would be a much poorer – and a much more dangerous – place were it not for the United States and its global influence.

But as I travel around the world and I see other countries putting together comprehensive and well thought-out plans for energy, manufacturing and sustainable economic development – I have concerns.

I’m concerned that our economic dependence on others is continuing to increase every day. I’m concerned that we’re in the midst of the greatest wealth transfer out of this country in history … $500 billion plus spent annually for foreign oil … and too few in Washington seem alarmed.

And I’m concerned – most concerned – that the U.S. is forfeiting its dominant position as THE indispensable nation because it has lost sight of what first made it strong: a vibrant industrial and manufacturing base that drives innovation, technology – and creates jobs – from the shop floor, to the engineering centers, to the R&D labs and to the white collar offices.

Ladies and gentlemen, let us never forget that the very life force and strength of this great country begins here – in America’s heartland. A country can’t be strong abroad if it’s not strong at home. It can’t be strong in China or Chile if it’s not strong in places like Cleveland and Canton. It can’t be strong in Dubai if it’s not strong first in Detroit.

Somehow, our government has lost sight of that. Instead of implementing policies that make our industrial heartland stronger, government has made it weaker. And we’ve allowed bad economic policies to drive good jobs out of the country.

In fact, between the bankers in New York, the lawyers in Washington, and the actors and entertainers from Hollywood, we have allowed people who know nothing of the might and intellect of our manufacturing base to make laws and decisions on our behalf.

We’ve allowed them to create an industrial crisis in this country that is undermining our nation’s strength … and they don’t even know it.

If you want to do something enlightening, go to the Internet and Google for the phrase “energy crisis.” You’ll get over 4,000 stories.

Then search for “economic crisis.” You’ll get more than 5,000 hits.

Then search for the phrase “industrial crisis,” something that is just as real and felt just as deeply by everyday Americans. You’ll get fewer than 10 stories – and none will be about the United States.

So, yes. I am still an optimist. But I’m an impatient optimist because at Dow we know there is a better way.

So what I’d like to do today is lay out for you the broad components of a new industrial policy. Not one characterized by central planning and the picking of winners and losers. We know that approach doesn’t work.

What I’m talking about is a pro-industrial policy crafted and developed by manufacturers for manufacturers, a policy that rejuvenates our economic base.

Consider it a new strategy, if you will, to make American industry competitive again, re-establish our economic and energy independence and re-grow jobs in America.
What are the components of this plan? There are two.

First, we must look with fresh eyes at the structural costs that have weakened the very foundation of our manufacturing enterprises and remove the obstacles hurting our competitiveness.

And second, we must develop a comprehensive energy policy.

Now, I will admit that some people, like the ones I referenced before, don’t like the words “industrial policy.” I understand.

But the truth is that in this country today we already have an industrial policy – except, in reality, it’s mostly an ANTI-industrial policy – a set of contradictory, ill-planned and ultimately self-defeating laws and regulations that are creating havoc at the manufacturing base.

Consider this alarming fact: Thirty years ago, manufacturing made up nearly 22 percent of the U.S. economy. Today, it’s less than 12 percent and falling.

This will be no surprise to anyone in Michigan but the number of manufacturing jobs in the U.S. has fallen by 3.7 million over the past 10 years. We’re projected to lose another 1.5 million over the next eight years.

That’s 5.2 million jobs – 5.2 million jobs that today pay more than $17 an hour plus benefits. To put it another way, that’s $190 billion in wages and $76 billion in benefits.

I ask you this: What elected official in his right mind would develop an industrial policy that destroys $190 billion in annual wages? Which politician would want to tell the American voters they just lost $76 billion in benefits?

The sad fact is that nobody intentionally sought to do this. But it’s happening right under our noses. Anti-industrial policy is hurting a lot of good people.

If it were just the U.S. and nobody else, it wouldn’t matter. But there ARE countries around the world that DO see the uplifting power of manufacturing. I spent much of my career at Dow working in Asia. I saw first hand how the “Asian tigers” used manufacturing and trade to go from grinding poverty to growing prosperity.

Today the emerging economic powers like China and India understand that when you build an economy from the ground up – make a strong manufacturing base as its foundation – benefits flow to everyone.

Those nations are our competitors and many of them are beating us at our own game.
Do we have to change? Well … no. As the quality guru Edward Deming put it: Change isn’t necessary. No one said survival was mandatory.

History is replete with once-great countries that have dissolved into obscurity precisely because they didn’t change.

If we want to keep the economic lead we’ve had for a century, however, we have to re-tool a few things. If we want to keep the many benefits that accrue from a strong economy, we must change course.

Times change, and strategies have to change with them.

And we have to start, first and foremost, with the structural costs that are suffocating industry in this country. We must level the playing field by removing the artificial, ANTI-industrial policy costs that disadvantage American businesses against the rest of the world.

Think about this. The 14 million men and women who work in U.S. manufacturing created about $1.6 trillion of wealth in 2007.

That’s a huge, almost mind-blowing number. But the sad fact is it could be so much larger, and we could be so much more competitive.

We’re burying our manufacturers under red-tape, weighing them down with structural burdens that push our production costs a staggering 32% higher than our major trading partners.

Understand: I’m not talking about top-down economic planning in any way, shape or form. I’m talking taking into account Tom Friedman’s “flat world” and using a little forethought about the policies that affect business.

I’m talking about little more coordination with policies in place already, and a lot more coordination with reality.

And I’m talking about resolving the conflicts in law and regulation that hamper our abilities to do business efficiently and effectively.

I propose work in four areas to bring our costs in line with our competitors.

1- Lowering the corporate tax rate.
2- Re-inventing regulation.
3- Reforming our civil justice system.
4- And finding a solution to the crisis known as healthcare in America.

Each one of these puts U.S. industry at a competitive disadvantage above and beyond the cost of labor. And each one of these burdens could be lightened or eliminated by our own government.

I won’t go into each of these for the sake of time. Besides, most of you already know, for example, that America has the second highest corporate tax rates in the world.

But did you also know that of the 30 members who comprise the Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development, nine dropped their corporate tax rates last year to attract more investments.

Germany dropped its tax rate. So did Canada and the UK. Even the Czech Republic!

Not the U.S. Why should that be?

As one great leader said, some in this country regard private enterprise as if it were a predatory tiger to be shot. Or they look upon it as a cow they can milk. Only a handful see it for what it really is: the strong horse that pulls the whole cart.

That was Winston Churchill who fought his own battles a half century ago to keep Britain’s economy unencumbered and vibrant. He was unsuccessful, if you hadn’t noticed.

If you want a cautionary tale about what this economy could look like if we continue to push manufacturing out of the country, look across the great pond. The service-based economy of the U.K. rises and falls at the mercy of others.

This point is really being brought home right now as the financial crisis in the US has been felt in full force in the UK, which has no other sector available to buttress this effect.

We can’t afford to follow down a path of economic malaise like U.K. by destroying our manufacturing sector.

Making things – real, tangible things – still matters.

The leaders of this country should remember that the word “industry” created this great country’s might by opening up the West … by fighting two World Wars … by putting a man on the moon … and by improving our lives and the lives of our children by creating high paying jobs and rewarding careers.

They should remember … but they don’t.

Instead, they’ve saddled it with huge corporate taxes … AND a crisis in health care costs … AND an out-of-control civil justice system that adds a huge cost burden to American enterprise … AND an inefficient regulatory system that costs us as much as $10,000 per employee in the manufacturing sector.

Don’t we owe it to America’s families, and especially to the next generation, to put back in place a Pro-Industrial Policy that stimulates investments and jobs by removing the structural costs that are holding us back?

This brings me to the second key component of an Industrial Policy for the 21st Century – the need for a comprehensive Energy Plan.

I don’t need to tell those of you here today that energy is the life-blood of our modern economy. But I do want to point out that the current energy crisis goes far deeper than the price of gasoline at the pump and those high heating bills on the way this winter.

Here’s what I mean by way of an example. Dow is currently on track to spend $32 billion – yes, I said billion with “B” – $32 billion this year on energy and feedstock costs. That’s more than the entire U.S. chemical industry spent just a few years ago.

That’s just one way to measure the impact of rising energy costs. The race for affordable energy also affects where we invest and where we build plants.

Keep in mind that every dollar of energy consumed creates 20 dollars of GDP value-add. That dollar also creates five of the kind of high-paying manufacturing jobs Michigan and every other state needs so badly.

It seems like common sense to keep those kinds of investments inside our borders.

Instead, most of those investments are now occurring outside the U.S.

Dollars are flowing – in unprecedented amounts – to places like China, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait, and many other countries that want the value-add to their economy that manufacturers bring.

What I don’t understand is why our political leaders don’t see that.

Maybe it’s because they hear TV commentators say the price of oil has “dropped” to $100 a barrel! Or that gas has “dropped” below $4 a gallon! This type of irresponsible reporting is creating a false sense of security.

It does, however, confirm what James Schlesinger, the first Secretary of Energy in the U.S., first noticed decades ago: When it comes to energy policy, he said, America has only two modes: panic and complacency.

A slight, temporary moderation in price is no excuse for complacency. $100 oil brings me no comfort. Gas at $3.70 is no cause for celebration.

Frankly, this country needs a little panic because the truth hasn’t sunk in yet. We have entered a new era in energy – one driven by a new global fact of life: less supply and more and more demand.

Even with greater conservation, energy consumption is soaring. It’s forecast to rise 53 percent between now and 2030. Earlier this year the International Monetary Fund put out a report projecting the number of automobiles by themselves increasing 2.3 billion by 2050.

The good news for Detroit is that somebody will have to manufacture all those cars. The bad news is that we’ll still have to power them and they’ll still add to our growing energy consumption.

And despite the exponential increases in the amount of wind, solar and renewable energy coming on line, the fact is that these sources won’t be able to keep up with overall demand.

So the energy of tomorrow – like today – will depend predominantly on fossil fuels: oil, natural gas and coal.

Everyone in Washington knows this. So where’s the policy to deal with this new reality? This country doesn’t have one.

I say “this country” has no strategy. But what I really mean is that Washington has no coherent strategy. Americans everywhere else already know the solutions.

Ninety-two percent of Americans believe that developing alternative energy sources is a step in the right direction. 88 percent want cars that are more fuel efficient. 67 percent believe we need more oil refineries and 73 percent believe off-shore drilling is a good idea. And, I’m heartened to say, 82 percent believe that conservation is important to our overall energy policy.

Even in Santa Barbara – the city where 200,000 gallons of oil spilled offshore some 40 years ago and where the movement to ban off-shore drilling began – even Santa Barbara gets it. The County Board of Supervisors there voted just last month in support of new drilling off its shore.

When it comes to energy, there’s no ideology among the American consumer. Almost everyone wants more conservation, alternative energy, greater fuel efficiency, and environmentally responsible offshore drilling to help us right now.

And, yet, here we are … constrained by the old politics, separated by silos of thinking and ill-served by politicians intent on fighting the last war instead of the one in front of us.

And what is most worrisome to me – what is most vexing – is that Washington doesn’t understand that the energy crisis isn’t just about energy. The energy crisis is also about jobs … about manufacturing competitiveness. And at its base, the energy crisis is an industrial crisis that is threatening America’s strength and standing in the world.

Four years ago we at Dow proposed a way out of this. We proposed an Energy Plan with three key components.

The first is to pass comprehensive federal goals on energy efficiency and conservation. To me, this is common sense.

Now, I realize I’m in Detroit and energy efficiency goals sound like code words for new fuel standards. It’s heartening to see all the Big Auto’s developing new models to consume less fuel. But what I’m mostly talking about here is improving the efficiency of buildings.

Consider this: buildings are responsible for 40 percent of our total energy use, 70 percent of our electricity use and 38 percent of our CO2 emissions. A combination of federal incentives and local energy efficiency building codes could lower all of those numbers and significantly improve this country’s energy security.

A very achievable 25-percent improvement in the energy efficiency of our economy would save this country the equivalent of all of its oil purchases from the Middle East and be the foundation for a secure energy future. It’s the first and easiest step to implement.

The second component is to increase and diversify our domestic energy supplies. This is simple logic.

We have the oil deposits here. We have natural gas deposits. And we certainly have the coal reserves.

We should be accessing – responsibly and safely – every source we have to produce as much energy as we can at home.

We also have the best technology in the world. Why not use that to build new, safe nuclear power facilities? Why not begin – today – an Apollo-like R&D project to solve the carbon capture and sequestration question so we can use – safely and responsibly – that 200-year supply of coal beneath our feet?

The third component of our plan is to accelerate the development of all alternative energy sources – including renewables – and provide the financial support on research and development to get us there.

Given the situation we’re in today, it’s amazing to me that this Congress can’t even seem to pass an extension of the Renewable Energy Tax Credits and, as a result, is putting this country’s renewable energy industry – along with 100,000 jobs and $20 billion in investments – at risk.

Congress should also live up to its commitment and fund the direct loan program it created last year to help lower the cost of capital so the auto industry can retool to make more fuel-efficient vehicles.

The fact is we don’t need to limit our possibilities by limiting our choices. Solar. Wind. Biomass and other renewable and alternative supplies. We need them all. And we
need them now.

Will these give us energy independence? No.

Energy independence is a pipe dream for the U.S. But these steps will help us achieve the more realistic goal of energy security.

And, while I’m at it, let me remind you we have to do all of this within the context of reducing our carbon footprint. That’s why Dow – along with the Big Three automakers, other large and diversified companies and leading environmental groups – are members of the U.S. Climate Action Partnership and are committed to driving the Federal government to adopt measures to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

So there are three steps to Dow’s Energy Plan for America. Improve efficiency and conservation. Diversify domestic supplies. Find new alternatives and renewables.

If we take these steps – in concert with one another – we can literally provide the fuel that will restore the power to American industry.

Do these sound familiar? They should.

They are now being talked about more and more … by more and more politicians, companies, CEOs, and yes, even the President of the United States and the two candidates that want to succeed him.

I suppose we should be pleased that this plan is finally being talked about. But it’s hard to take pleasure when all we hear is talk.

We have yet to see any significant action by Congress. We have yet to see a bipartisan approach to getting it ALL put in place. And I mean ALL.

Not what partisanship brings us, but what common sense demands we do.

The right path forward is not one of “divide-and-conquer.” That’s what got us into this mess to begin with.

The right path forward – the only path forward – is one of collaboration and coordination: public and private sectors, Republicans and Democrats, industry and environmentalists, working together with the goal of finding and removing obstacles.

And we need to start where the major challenges of our day intersect: on manufacturing … on jobs … on energy … and the environment.

That’s what we call the Dow Energy Plan for America – a workable plan and a real solution to rebuild the industrial base in this country and put Americans back to work.

One of the things I love about democracies – like America – like my native Australia – is that every few years we get to elect new leaders and chart a new course.

This country is entering an historic era. It will elect either its first African-

American President or its first female Vice President.

And this new leadership must marshal the courage to re-establish America’s place in the world as THE indispensable nation.

If this nation is going to live up to its legacy – if it’s going to fulfill its potential of independent influence – our leaders must remember that its strength comes not necessarily from strong politicians … but from a strong economy. Not from strong words … but from strong, practical policies that rebuild the industrial heartland and create new jobs for Americans in every part of this great country.

We do that by removing the artificial anti-industrial policy costs that disadvantage American manufacturers.

And we do it by insisting – at every turn – on an energy policy that promotes efficiency … alternatives and renewables … AND new domestic supplies.

We at Dow are committed to this defining idea and plan. We are committed to this state and to this great country.

And I look forward to working with all of you – in the private AND public sectors – as we build this new future together and re-establish America’s preeminence in the world.


Disclosure (“none” means no position):Long DOW
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