A post devoid of any precious metal information
this week but no less interesting. I have taken an extract from
Sovereignman, and this offers some compelling reading for the budding investor.
Enjoy.
July 9, 2014
Erbil, Iraq
It's been nearly 1,000 years since Iraq had some
positive momentum.
Back then, Europe had plunged into the Dark Ages
where intellectual and economic progress all but halted.
Baghdad, on the other hand, was the most exciting,
cosmopolitan city in the world. It was the capital of the Abbasid Empire, and
in their society, education was a virtue.
Scientific, technological, and intellectual
achievements were highly celebrated.
Mega-libraries known as Houses of Wisdom were
inaugurated all over the region. And in many cases, books were more valuable
than even gold itself.
In one famous case, after they had defeated the
Byzantine Empire in a long war and were negotiating a peace treaty, the
Abbasids demanded annual payments of Greek manuscripts rather than gold.
But that was the peak.
In 1258, a Mongolian horde obliterated the city.
They laid waste to the population, destroyed the libraries, and even threw the
books into the river. It was said that the water turned black from all the ink.
The next 750+ years were not especially fortunate
for this region. It took centuries to rebuild the population from the Mongol
attack, during which time they were subjugated by a number of empires... or
manipulated by meddlesome foreigners. All of that external turmoil is
finally behind them. Obviously there are still internal challenges to
sort out. But what they're primarily left with here is tremendous oil wealth...
and conditions for substantial economic growth.
One need look no further than here in the Kurdish
region up north to get a sense of where this growth story is going. In
terms of sheer volume, most of Iraq's oil is NOT in Kurdistan. But on a
per-capita basis, there's far more oil here than anywhere else in the
country... especially now that they control Kirkuk.
That oil has driven fixed asset investment on a
nearly unmatched scale. The amount of construction and infrastructure projects
here far surpasses that of even China. Yet unlike China, these aren't ghost
cities. It's real development. Iraqi Kurdistan's story is much closer to
that of Myanmar, where I was just about two weeks ago.
Myanmar is emerging from decades of economic
isolation and a total lack of development. The opening of trade and foreign
investment has spawned an incredible boom there.
Both places are undergoing rapid transformation.
But one primary difference is that Kurdistan has a more advanced base to start
from. This place is not destitute. There's already been quite a lot of
development.
Moreover, the oil wealth here provides a much more
rapid catalyst to growth.
Oil is the obvious play for many foreign investors.
You might remember Tony "I want my life back" Hayward, for example.
After he got the heave-ho as CEO of BP for his bungling of the gulf coast
oil spill a few years ago, Mr. Hayward joined a private company bankrolled by
Nathaniel Rothschild, scion of the famous banking family. The company
became Genel Energy... which at the moment happens to be one of the biggest
players in the Kurdish oil fields.
More and more companies are starting to produce
here. And with good cause.
The Kurdish government has been exceptionally
motivated to negotiate favorable concessions with foreigners. Plus tax rates
are as low as 0% to 5% (for people who actually pay them).
There's little doubt this place is becoming a
veritable boom town. And that makes all the non-oil investments even more
interesting. Real estate. Retail. Finance. Capital equipment. These
sectors all do well in periods of massive economic growth.
A decade from now, Kurdistan will look completely
different than it does today-- both politically and economically. And that's
seriously exciting. In terms of the landscape, I imagine it will be like
Dubai's rapid transformation from a sleepy desert outpost to a cosmopolitan
business hub. It only took about 10-15 years.
Yet Kurdistan has a major advantage-- there's
potentially ten times more oil here than in Dubai. But both have essentially
the same size population. This is the mother of all rising tides. And a
lot of people are going to make a lot of money. It's definitely a place to keep
on your radar.
Mokarimakka?
You should do.
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