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Showing posts with label Commodities. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Commodities. Show all posts

Saturday, August 7, 2021

Goehring & Rozencwajg Q2 2021 market commentary: The IEA Ushers in the Coming Oil Crisis

Goehring & Rozencwajg 

The fundamental problems facing global oil markets are much more severe than 2021’s spike in oil prices would suggest.

Our newest commentary, The IEA Ushers in the Coming Oil Crisis, provides an in-depth look at why global oil demand will not taper off due to ESG-related reasons, as the IEA predicts, and supply growth will likely remain restricted — a recipe for a dramatic oil deficit.

  • Problems facing the oil supermajors: Exxon, Chevron, Royal Dutch Shell and Total
  • Shrinking global oil inventories
  • Tightness in the US natural gas markets
  • Higher-than-expected Chinese agricultural demand

Thursday, February 25, 2021

Crescat Capital: The FED Is Trapped

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The year is just getting started and the US fiscal deficit already reached another record, now at its worst level in 70 years. The Fed is facing its worst predicament yet. The current fiscal spending path will lead to record Treasury issuance this year. Foreign investors are unlikely to be the ones funding this operation. With 2020 as a guide, there are no buyers of any size for those securities outside of US banks and the Fed. Major foreign holders of US debt only bought about 5.2% of all Treasuries issued last year. In the face of this enormous new government debt issuance, the Fed faces the impossible task of continuing to prop up already historic asset bubbles while also preventing inflation. The current extreme fiscal imbalances put the central bank on a crash course to fail at both.

For many reasons, the path of least resistance at this stage in the economic cycle is indeed the inflationary one. After years of underinvestment in the basic resources of the “old economy”, the world is facing commodity supply shortages. When combined with the fiscal stimulus driven boost in demand, hard assets are already starting to catch fire. A commodity boom is contributing to reflexive macro inflationary pressures, including investment demand for inflation protection, as well as rising industrial demand in a fiscal stimulus driven economy attempting to both recover from Covid and transition to a cleaner, greener economy. Rising inflation starts with rising basic materials, energy, and agriculture prices. The recent 12-year breakout in commodities is rock solid.

Tuesday, January 26, 2021

Meb Faber: Episode #278: Lucas White, GMO, “Since Inception Of The Strategy…We’ve Been Buying Companies At A Significant Discount, Yet Our Portfolio Has Had Earnings Growth That Far Exceeded The Broad Equity Market”

 Link:

In today’s episode we’re talking all about resources and climate change as an investment strategy. Lucas sets the stage with why he believes the resource sector offers a huge opportunity and currently trades at an 80% discount to the broad equity market. Then we dive into GMO’s climate change strategy. Lucas explains what led them to focus on climate change and clean energy and officially launch a strategy in 2017. We talk about the allocation to different areas, including copper, food and water.

Sunday, January 10, 2021

Peter Sainsbury: Agflation is here to stay. How to play the agricultural commodity bull market

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Agricultural commodities look like they are beginning to see the start of a sustained bull market. First, precious metals, then base metals and now agriculture. Since the middle of 20202 soybeans and corn have increased by 55% with wheat registering a 35% gain.

Governments in Asia (China in particular) and in North Africa have been buying imported grains and pulses in an effort to build up their strategic reserves. Authorities in many countries made use of those reserves to dampen down domestic food prices during the pandemic, but now those reserves are running low.

Tuesday, December 29, 2020

Taylor Collins: Commodities And Market Rotation

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Commodity prices and performance of many resource-related stocks have been picking up recently. In addition to this, many of the wildly popular, most-talked about tech/growth stocks now seem to be going sideways and/or sputtering altogether. If we go back just a few months to July of this year, NASDAQ was up almost 20% YTD, and we've all probably heard about the record IPO filings and insane valuations on many of those stocks (something we've discussed previously). 

It appears that we are witnessing a market rotation out of tech/growth and into value, and I believe this is just getting started.

There is a great saying from the historian James Grant, "Progress is cumulative in science and engineering,  but cyclical in finance." We will revisit this idea later, but for now let's take a look at a few indicators of commodity prices since the COVID correction back in March.


Wednesday, December 23, 2020

Crescat Capital: December Research Letter The End Game

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Markets are cyclical. Today, stocks trade at record high valuations while commodities are historically undervalued in relation. The setup is in place for a macro pivot in the relative performance of these two asset classes. Comparable conditions were present with the 1972 Nifty Fifty and 2000 Dotcom bubbles as we show in the chart below.

As capital seeks to redeploy towards the highest growth and lowest valuation opportunities, we expect analytically minded investors will soon be rotating, if not stampeding, out of expensive deflation-era growth equities and fixed income securities and into cheap hard assets, creating a reversal in the 30-year declining trend of money velocity.

Today’s Modern Monetary Theory world with its double barreled fiscal and monetary stimulus is crashing head on with an accumulation of years of declining investment in the basic industries such as materials, energy, and agriculture. In our analysis, the “end game” for the Fed’s twin asset bubbles in stocks and bonds is inflation. We can already see it developing on the commodity front.

Saturday, December 19, 2020

MacroVoices #250 Kyle Bass: Commodity Bull Market, Inflation & Singapore

 Link:

All-time highs despite the pandemic – are we shifting into a new paradigm?

Impending inflation and how to trade it 

Is gold still the best hedge against fiat debasement?

Is the bond bull market finally done and are we headed toward negative yield?

Negative yields in Europe – will this recover as inflation begins?

How will Biden administration change the macro outlook?

Implications of electrification of the economy

Will Singapore be replacing Hong Kong as the financial center in Asia?

Perspectives on crypto currencies

Friday, December 11, 2020

Frank Holmes: Still Plenty of Gas in the Base Metal Rally Tank

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Industrial metals are well on their way to being among the top performers of 2020, supported by red hot demand from China and global supply concerns.

As of today, the MSCI Industrial Metals Index—which tracks the price of copper, nickel, aluminum and more—was up 21.4% year-to-date, just below the index of precious metals, up 21.9%. The broader S&P GSCI, which measures metals as well as agricultural and energy-related commodities, was underwater by nearly 10%.

I believe the rally is only getting started, and we could see ever higher asset prices in 2021, for a couple of significant reasons.

Number one, President-elect Joe Biden plans to make infrastructure one of his top priorities soon after taking office next month. Proposals have the U.S. spending as much as $2 trillion not only to improve roads, bridges and seaports but also beef up the EV sector, add charging stations, convert school buses to zero emissions and more.

Monday, December 7, 2020

Frank Holmes: Dr. Copper Gives the Economy a Clean Bill of Health

 Link:

“Dr. Copper,” so named for the metal’s ubiquitous use in many different applications, has been ripping higher since its 52-week low in March, thanks to a number of factors including promising economic data. Copper rose 12.24% in November, its best month in four years. Today it was trading as high as $3.52 per pound, or $7,679 per ton, its highest level since March 2013.

The rally is due in large part to higher demand from manufacturers in the U.S., China and eurozone. For the month of November, the IHS U.S. Manufacturing PMI hit 56.7, up significantly from 53.4 in October. The month-to-month increase was the sharpest since September 2014, according to IHS Markit.

Saturday, December 5, 2020

Smarter Markets - Robert Friedland: Envisioning commodities graded & traded on how responsibly they're produced

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Billionaire Canadian financier Robert Friedland headlines the inaugural episode of Smarter Markets, and shares a vision of commodities being graded based on how responsibly they were produced with regard to ESG priorities, thus allowing free market price discovery to determine a market premium to reward responsible producers of metals and other commodities which have historically had an adverse environmental impact. 

Robert goes on to share his vision for how a distributed ledger (blockchain) could be used to hold commodity producers to account and assure buyers of commodities that they've received the full and true details of how those commodities were produced.

Also discussed is the metals that will be needed for the proposed energy transiton.


Sunday, November 29, 2020

Peter Sainsbury: Back to backwardation: Why the shape of the futures curve is positive for commodity prices in 2021

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The commodity futures curve has moved sharply over the past few months towards backwardation. This should increase the incentive for long side investors to park their funds in commodities and given numerous macro tailwinds (e.g. a weaker dollar, rising inflation expectations and infrastructure spending), set the market up for a promising 2021.

But first, a little bit of background on the futures curve. When the futures price curve is downward sloping, i.e. the futures price of a commodity in say six months’ time is lower than the current spot price, the market is said to be in backwardation. This is also known as an inverted curve or an inverted market.

Monday, November 23, 2020

Frank Holmes: Bullish on Dr.Copper and Gold for 2021

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Here at US Global Investors, we're very bullish on commodities, particularly industrial and precious metals. The manufacturing PMI in a number of countries shows that factories are expanding capacity on a greater number of new orders. In August, the US manufacturing PMI registered 56.0, the highest reading since November 2018. The PMI in China – the world's biggest importer of metals and other raw materials – was 51.5 last month, well above the five-year average of 50.6.

 As I've noted before, commodities continue to look remarkably cheap relative to stocks. Below is a chart showing the ratio between the S&P GSCI and S&P 500. At no other time going back to 1972 have commodities been as undervalued as they are today. If Goldman's projections turn out to be accurate, now could be a phenomenal buying opportunity.