Showing posts with label lead. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lead. Show all posts

Thursday, August 5, 2010

The Curious Case of Copper and Its Compatriots

The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.


While traders are scratching their heads about how the stock market can continue to go up while the economic news continues to get worse, they also should be puzzled over the sharp rise in copper and other industrial metals in recent weeks. These metals move with building and manufacturing activity and a rise in their prices is not just an indication of an improving economy, but is also an indication of inflation - not the deflation that the Fed and its friends have been worrying about lately.

The base metals, copper, aluminum, nickel, zinc and lead, all bottomed in early June. They mounted lackluster rallies into the middle of July. Their rallies went into overdrive after Fed Chair Bernanke testified before congress that it might be years before the U.S. economy fully recovers. Stocks also mounted a significant rally on this gloomy news, which followed a host of economic reports with falling numbers that came in below expectations. Leading indicators had also turned down and were pointing toward an impending recession. Stocks and industrial metals should have tanked, but instead rallied strongly on the news. Only a lot of liquidity flowing into the financial system at that point could make something like this happen.

When trying to analyze the metals markets, the first place to look is China, the primary driver of demand. In June, China imported 212,000 metric tons (tonnes) of copper, 67,000 tonnes less than in May and a drop of 44% year over year. Moreover, projections came out for Chinese demand growth to ease for the industrial metals in the second half of the year. Then the HSBC Purchasing Managers Index for July came in below 50, indicating a decline in Chinese manufacturing. So far, none of this news has stopped the rally.

So if the news from China is bearish, the next place to look is the U.S. dollar. All commodities are priced in dollars and are affected by swings in the currency. The U.S. dollar peaked in early June at the same time that the industrial commodities bottomed. It has since lost about 10% of its value. However, much of this loss took place before Bernanke's congressional testimony and much of the base metal rally took place after. The metals rally has also been too big to be accounted for by the drop in the dollar alone. From the June low to the high of August 4th, Copper (JJC) rose 25%, Nickel (JJN) 24%, Aluminum (JJU) 23% and Lead (LD) 46%.

So we are left with a picture of strongly rallying stocks, even more strongly rallying industrial metals and lots of evidence of an economy falling apart. Has this situation ever existed before?  Indeed it has plenty of times in world financial history. This is what happens when there's massive inflation. It ruins the economy, but makes the prices of assets go up because people want to get rid of their currency. Yet the economic elites are currently worried about deflation and not inflation. Well, that's also happened before as well. In 1920s Weimar Germany, economists even managed to prove definitively that deflation existed and that inflation was not a worry, so it was OK for the government to print all the money it wanted to. Of course, after inflation reached a trillion percent, many people became skeptical.

Disclosure: No Positions

Daryl Montgomery
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. Like all other postings for this blog, there is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Dollar Break Downs

The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. In addition to the term helicopter economics, we have also coined the term, helicopternomics, to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government and to update the old-fashioned term wheelbarrow economics.

Our Video Related to this Blog:

The trade-weighted dollar closed below its break down point of 78.33 yesterday. Intraday the dollar traded as low as 77.45 and it closed at 77.57. As has been the pattern for months now, everything else rallied as the dollar sold off. While stocks continued their long move up and the S&P 500 reached 1000 (a major resistance point), commodities were the star players in the rally. The CRB index, a broad basket of commodities, was up 3.48%. The ISM manufacturing Report supposedly set off the rally.

According to the media, the promise of economic revival was responsible for the big commodity rally. So what commodity is doing best recently? Sugar! - which was trading at a three year high yesterday. Sugar is not economically sensitive at all (people don't go into sugar eating frenzies when a recession ends), but is instead a strong mover in the early stages of inflation. The biggest winner on the day was natural gas (the chart is very bullish and UNG closed above the 50-day moving average), with the near term futures contract up 10%. Copper, which is perhaps the most economically sensitive of all commodities was up 4.4%. Copper, zinc, lead and nickle are all trading at 10-month highs. Aluminum is at an 8-month high.

The rallies in gold and silver, which are the commodities most sensitive to movements in the U.S. dollar, were somewhat muted. Gold was as high as $963 intraday. A report released yesterday stated that net sales of gold by central banks fell to 39 metric tons during the first half of this year. This was down 73% from last year. If total sales for the year come in under 140 metric tons (highly likely), they will be the lowest in decades. Central bank gold selling was a major factor keeping gold prices low in the 1980s and 1990s and it looks like it is now completely exhausted.

As for the ISM report PMI came in at 48.9 (under 50 means contraction). This was above expectations and a few components were up decently, including production, new orders, and prices paid -which is an indication of inflation. Inventories were the most negative component of the report and they have been contracting for 39 months so far. According to the ISM, six industries are now expanding - Nonmetallic Mineral Products; Paper Products; Printing & Related Support Activities; Electrical Equipment, Appliances & Components; Transportation Equipment; and Chemical Products.

As I have stated many times in this blog, economic revival is going to mean a lot of inflation.
The dollar break down is an indication of this and the powers that be are going to have to do something soon to try to hold up the dollar. My guess is that this will happen when gold hits the $1000 area. This is the inflation marquee for the economically savvy. The Fed can deny that inflation exists all it wants, but if gold soars past 1000, only the naive and gullible will listen. Since there is usually a lot of buying pressure for gold in August, the next few weeks should be interesting.

NEXT: Gold Shining, Silver Lustrous

Daryl Montgomery
Organizer,New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21


This posting is editorial opinion. Like all other postings for this blog, there is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.