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    www.kiplinger.com/columns/value/archive/2009/va1006.htm - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 1/1/2009    Last Visited: 10/21/2009  

    "It's whole a new ballgame," says Charles Ober, the veteran manager of T. Rowe Price New Era (symbol PRNEX), which invests in stocks of commodity companies.
    ...
    "Investors are now a multiple of the people who need a hedge," Ober says.
    ...
    "People now perceive them as the new gold," Ober says. Global growth -- particularly in emerging markets such as China -- is leading to increased demand, especially for oil, while supplies are gradually being depleted. In the long run, there's a compelling case to be made for commodities. But the short term has been so thoroughly distorted that it pays to look for other ways to invest in commodities -- and other ways to diversify your investments.

    Ober thinks the price of oil will begin to rise again sometime next year. He has as good a record as anyone at making such calls.
    ...
    In the 1980s, Ober says, there was little or no correlation between any fall in the dollar and high oil prices.

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    www.kiplinger.com//columns/value/archive/2008/va1202.ht - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 12/2/2008    Last Visited: 12/6/2008  

    Charles Ober, manager of T. Rowe Price New Era (symbol PRNEX), says that many hedge funds sold short financial stocks (that is, bet that they would fall), then bought oil and other commodities as a way of betting against the dollar. The trade worked -- for a while. "What the hedge funds missed was that the dollar was becoming a safe haven during the financial crisis," says Ober. (Because oil is priced in dollars, their prices tend to move in opposite directions.) As a result, many hedge funds imploded. "By the end of the year, there will be a pretty good shrinkage of hedge funds," Ober says.

    Prices also declined because people began to conserve. Now that the price of gasoline has dropped, that trend may well reverse, unfortunately, and alternative energy may well be forgotten until the next energy crisis. "Energy policy has become secondary," says Ober. "It has taken a back seat to the economic problems."

    Ober says the demand for oil will outstrip supply beginning in 2010. The price of oil, he predicts, will begin to rise in the second half of 2009 as the market anticipates the supply crunch; he predicts it will go to between $80 and $100 a barrel by 2010 and will rise further in 2011.

    Energy stocks will recover along with oil-and-gas prices, Ober says: "Two years from now, we'll be talking about the great buying opportunity we had in energy stocks."

    At age 58, Ober knows energy inside out. He's been covering it -- first as an analyst and then as manager of New Era since 1997 -- for 30 years. He's seen booms and busts in natural resources before, so it pays to listen to his advice.

    Over the past ten years through November 30, New Era returned an annualized 9.3% -- putting it an average of 0.8 percentage point per year ahead of Standard & Poor's Natural Resources index. So far this year, however, the fund has fallen 49%, trailing the index by eight percentage points. All of those losses occurred from midsummer on as oil prices collapsed. The Price fund is broader-based than most of its competitors, and it has tended to lag in bull markets but excel in bear markets -- a commendable trait in a volatile sector.

    Ober isn't optimistic about all industrial materials. He likes copper but says supplies of most mining and mineral commodities are growing rapidly. Consequently, New Era holds more energy stocks than it usually does.

    But Ober is bullish on agricultural stocks. "Demand is not going to go away," he says. His favorite is Potash Corporation of Saskatchewan (POT), the giant Canadian fertilizer producer.

    Among energy stocks, Ober's favorites include Schlumberger (SLB), the oil-services provider. "It's the technology leader in oil services," he says. Schlumberger has longstanding relationships with oil-producing nations around the world.

    Ober is also bullish on BP (BP), the British energy giant. The company has several huge oil fields coming on line. Likewise, Petrobras (PBR), the Brazilian oil company, "has an incredible resource base to be developed."

    Alternative-energy stocks have fared worse than traditional energy stocks during the market's sell-off. As an alternative-energy play, Ober likes Quanta Services (PWR), which assembles, installs and maintains the high-voltage lines needed to power the electric grid.

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    www.kiplinger.com/magazine/archives/2007/11/bestinvlist - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 1/1/2007    Last Visited: 10/15/2007  

    Longtime manager Charles Ober takes an eclectic approach to picking stocks.Rather than invest solely in commodity producers, such as oil companies, he diversifies the fund with businesses that supply and service those producers.

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    www.troweprice.com/viewpoint/fundManagerVideoArchive?sc - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 3/2/2007    Last Visited: 3/2/2007  

    Charles Ober, Portfolio Manager:

    New Horizons Fund

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    www.usnews.com/articles/business/your-money/2008/07/02/ - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 7/2/2008    Last Visited: 7/3/2008  

    Still, the simplest way to protect oneself from rising gas prices, says Charlie Ober, vice president at T. Rowe Price and manager of its New Era Fund, is to drive less, plan vacations closer to home, carpool, and drive more fuel-efficient vehicles."I think as a consumer, you're going to have to get used to a world of higher gasoline prices," he says, "and that is potentially a lifestyle-changing event."

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    www.troweprice.com/viewpoint/3Q2007/0,7286,lnp%253D1009 - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 3/20/2007    Last Visited: 12/5/2007  

    Charles M. Ober,Portfolio Manager, T. Rowe Price New Era Fund

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    www.kiplinger.com/columns/value/archive/2008/va0317.htm - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 3/17/2008    Last Visited: 3/18/2008  

    Charles Ober, the veteran manager of T. Rowe Price New Era (symbol PRNEX), has done a good job predicting oil prices since the energy bull market began.He sees the price of crude oil falling to $85 a barrel by year's end, then rising toward $100 over the next two years.

    Of course, oil isn't the only commodity on a tear.Inflation fears and demand from emerging markets have pushed up the price of everything from corn to gold."All of these commodities have been dramatically affected by inflows into commodity funds," Ober says.
    ...
    If Ober is right and the price of oil falls and then climbs over the next two years to a point at which it is 10% lower than the current level, investing directly in the commodity will be a bad bet.

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    www.kiplinger.com/columns/value/archive/2008/va0624.htm - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 1/1/2008    Last Visited: 6/25/2008  

    The supply of oil is slated to increase significantly in the second half of 2008, says Charles Ober, manager of T. Rowe Price New Era (symbol PRNEX).Saudi Arabia has 500,000 barrels a day of newly developed oil coming onstream.Other new supply will come from the Gulf of Mexico, Kazakhstan, offshore Nigeria and the tar sands of Canada.

    At the same time, demand has already begun to weaken.In the U.S., which consumes roughly 25% of the world's oil, vehicle miles are down.Demand for oil in the U.S. and the rest of the developed world will be lower this year than last year, Ober predicts.
    ...
    Ober says prices will head higher again in 12 to 18 months as the global economy strengthens.
    ...
    Among oil stocks, Settles and Ober both like Schlumberger (SLB), the world's largest oil-services company, which helps other companies get oil and gas out of the ground and process it.
    ...
    Ober and Settles are also fans of "clean coal."

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    juliusbabao.multiply.com/ - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 7/3/2008    Last Visited: 7/3/2008  

    Still, the simplest way to protect oneself from rising gas prices, says Charlie Ober, vice president at T. Rowe Price and manager of its New Era Fund, is to drive less, plan vacations closer to home, carpool, and drive morefuel-efficient vehicles."I think as a consumer, you're going to have to get used to a world of higher gasoline prices," he says, "and that is potentially a lifestyle-changing event."

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    www.forbes.com/home/forbes/2008/0602/120.html - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 1/1/2008    Last Visited: 5/18/2008  

    Charles Ober, manager of the T. Rowe Price New Era Fund, likes StatoilHydro,and also Petr,leo Brasileiro (Petrobras), which has recently found what could amount to 30 billion barrels of oil in the Tupi and Carioca discoveries off the shore of Brazil.

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