Commodities on Fire
It's more than just a dollar implosion story
BY TONY
ALLISON
“History
is not on your side. If you want stable prices, you have to have
stable money. The middle class is being wiped out and it has to do
with the value of money. How are you able to defend this policy of
deliberate depreciation of our money?”
~
Congressman Ron Paul, speaking to Federal Reserve Chairman Ben
Bernanke last week before the House Financial Services
Committee on Capitol Hill.
As
one might expect, Mr. Bernanke’s answer to this question was less
than illuminating. Fed Chairmen don’t usually speak clearly until
they become ex-Fed Chairmen. However, the actions of the Federal
Reserve, as well as other central banks around the globe, offer some
clarity on why the commodity markets are red hot in 2008. Without
overstating the case, global money supply growth is just as hot, if
not hotter. As illustrated in the charts below, year to date money
supply figures are striking. As an example money supply growth in
Russia is up 44%, India up 23%, Australia up 23%, Brazil up 18%, U.S.
up 16% (M3), UK up 12%, etc.


“I
don’t anticipate stagflation. I don’t think we are anywhere near
the situation that prevailed in the 1970’s”
~ Fed
Chairman Ben Bernanke speaking before Congress last week
Unfortunately,
Fed officials were equally unconcerned in the early 1970’s. In those
days, we had a war to finance, large social programs to pay for,
spiking oil prices, and accommodative monetary policy. Sounds vaguely
familiar. The only difference is today we are not energy independent,
not a creditor nation, and not a nation of savers. Oh, and the massive
Baby Boom generation, young and productive in the 1970’s, is now
starting to retire by the millions. History may not repeat itself, but
the comparisons to the 1970’s are not comforting in the slightest.
As
you can see from the chart below, year to date gains in almost all
commodities have been spectacular.

Growing
Demand
The
commodity story is not solely one of inflation. There are other
factors such as growing demand and limited supply. We are all familiar
with the massive industrialization taking place in China and India,
representing 40% of the humans on earth. While the breakneck pace may
slow this year, the need for increasing amounts of commodities will
continue for many years.
“China
will remain hungry for commodities over the coming 15 years. Crude
oil and metal ores lead China’s commodity imports. As incomes rise
and agricultural land becomes scarcer, China’s demand for
agricultural products such as meat and wood is set to increase. Our
forecast model for China’s import demand until 2020 shows that
demand growth rates will remain in lower double-digit territory over
the next decade for most commodities.” Deutsche Bank
Research - June 2006

The
grain market has been on fire, particularly corn and soybeans, as
demand rises from the food, feed and fuel sectors simultaneously.
Demand is especially strong in China and from US ethanol production.
While wheat prices hit record highs in December 2007, it is the one
commodity that begun to pull back in 2008.
Supply
Issues
Despite
the skyrocketing prices, the inventories of many commodities are lower
than they were during the 2001 recession. Discovering, permitting,
extracting and shipping natural resources can take years, even
decades. It will take time to overcome the past two decades of massive
underinvestment in resource exploration and development. This is why
commodity bull markets can run 15 years or more before significant new
supply brings prices back down. In addition this is the first
commodity bull market with the specter of Peak Oil looming ahead, if
not already knocking on the door. That alone can have huge
implications in terms of supply, price, and future expectations of
market behavior.
Nickel
Stockpiles

Source: Bloomberg
Tin
Stockpiles

Source:
Bloomberg
Lead
Stockpiles

Source:
Bloomberg
Zinc
Stockpiles

Source:
Bloomberg
Aluminum
Stockpiles

Source:
Bloomberg
Copper
Stockpiles

Source:
Bloomberg
Significant
domestic power shortages in both China and South Africa are expected
to limit production of coal, steel, aluminum and iron ore in China and
platinum, rhodium and aluminum in South Africa. Geopolitical issues in
the Middle East and Nigeria will continue to hurt oil supply growth.
In addition, global crude oil refining capacity is tight and refining
specifications only get more stringent.
Investing
and Speculation
Money
is pouring into commodities from all over the world, as investors seek
a store of value in tangible assets, which have value independent of
the money supply. The supplies of dollars, and other major currencies,
are expanding rapidly (as shown above) making “hard assets” much
more attractive. This trend will likely continue, and perhaps
accelerate as Sovereign Wealth Funds look for ways to lessen their
dollar exposure.
Edward
Meir, an analyst at MF Global, made the point concisely in a recent
research note published in MarketWatch.
“The
fact that commodities were all up across the board yesterday despite
an uninspiring macro backdrop also suggests that fund and investment
money is finding its way into the commodity space on perceptions that
these investments will do better over the course of the year.
Commodities
are seen as an asset class where underlying demand is growing and
where investments are entered into through contracts that are liquid
and where price-discovery is transparent. This stands in stark
contrast to the almost toxic swatches of alternative investments we
see elsewhere, such as non-government debt, CDOs, and mortgage paper,
all of which in varying degrees, are suffering from poor liquidity,
price opacity, and anemic investor demand.”
As
noted above, with the financial sector in deep peril, the great wave
of excess global liquidity created by the central banks is flowing to
the one area that is moving up, commodities. This of course adds to
the extreme momentum of the last two months.
Bubble
Trouble for Commodities?
The
real trouble is with the dollar, and other major currencies,
destroying their value through excess money creation. The commodities
are just reflecting their debasement, like canaries in a coal mine.
For instance, as oil has more than tripled in dollars the past four
years, oil priced in gold has been stable. The oil price is not out of
control. The dollar is simply imploding. But politicians want to tax
the evil oil companies for “excess profits.” That should fix the
energy problem.
If
the commodity inventories were overflowing and global demand were
plunging, then one might worry about a commodity bubble. At the
present, this is not the case. In addition, commodities (especially
energy) are the lifeblood of economies around the world. Supply is not
likely to outstrip demand as long as global population expands and
nations grow and develop. There is far more concern that future oil
supply limitations will lead to shortages and rationing in the years
ahead. This is far different than the Dot.com bubble of the late
1990’s, where tech companies produced routers by the millions, and
projected the growth track to continue to Jupiter and beyond!
There
is a bubble out there. It’s a currency and credit bubble that
unfortunately is losing altitude by the day.
Nothing
Grows to the Sky
The
current rate of explosive growth in commodity prices is clearly
unsustainable. Of course if we see a meltdown in the global financial
system, all bets are off. Without a financial meltdown, commodities
will likely pull-back and consolidate at some point this year. Prices
retreat after parabolic advances. That is the way markets work. But
this doesn’t necessarily mean the end to the commodity bull-run. The
fundamental elements are still there, in spades. The Fed and other
central banks are still creating currency at alarming rates. The
growth story in Asia will continue. The supplies of most commodities
are limited, particularly oil, the most crucial commodity of all.
These are not the fundamentals of a looming bear market.
Historically,
secular commodity bull markets last an average of 18 years. This bull
may take a breather in the months ahead, but it looks to have many
years of rampaging ahead. Long-term investors would be wise to stay
aboard for the ride.
Today’s
Markets
U.S.
stock indexes were nearly flat Monday, after a report on construction
illustrated surprising weakness in spending on commercial projects,
the latest indication of a troubled economy. The Institute for Supply
Management reported that U.S. manufacturing contracted in February,
with its index falling to 48.3% from 50.7% in January. The reading,
the lowest since April 2003, was better than the 47.5% forecast by
many analysts.
The
Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 7.49 to close at 12,258.90. The
S&P 500 Index was narrowly higher, up .71 to close at 1,331.34.
The Nasdaq closed lower, ending at 2,258.60, down 12.88.
Gold
futures closed with strong gains Monday, after rallying to a record
high of $992 an ounce, as oil also touched new highs, propelled by the
U.S. dollar's tumble and continuing investment flows into commodities.
Gold for April delivery hit a record of $992 an ounce on the New York
Mercantile Exchange. The contract finished up $9.20 at $984.20 an
ounce.
Wishing
you a good evening,
Tony Allison
Registered
Representative
Copyright © 2008 All rights reserved.
ALL KNOW it was an inside job,
they're in forced denial, and they just refuse to believe that their
leaders would execute them for profit and geo political maneuvering.
It’s called cognitive disassociation, its nothing really
complicated. Its just simple denial to keep them in a safe comfortable
bubble
"If there is a decay of conscience, the pulpit is responsible for
it. If the public press lacks moral discernment, the pulpit is
responsible for it. If the church is degenerate and worldly, the
pulpit is responsible for it. If the world loses its interest in
Christianity, the pulpit is responsible for it. If Satan rules in our
halls of legislation, the pulpit is responsible for it. If our
politics become so corrupt that the very foundations of our government
are ready to fall away, the pulpit is responsible for it." famed
Nineteenth Century revivalist Charles G. Finney
"Indeed
I tremble for my country when I reflect that God is just.":
Thomas Jefferson: "The man who reads nothing at all is better
educated than the man who reads nothing but newspapers."
This video is perfect for this picture. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xOIUYdO-0bY
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