Dona Ferentes
A little bit OC⚡DC
- Joined
- 11 January 2016
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yes I know PM went very well:
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but my system stocks: mostly small caps and miners lost 2% today overall
and even at the ASX200 level: materials were smashed today
View attachment 137551
but this is probably just noise and opportunities...
Not sure i get you ?these were discretionary asx stocks on mostly PM related area.You're holding a lot of stocks there, Frogster.
The coloured squares chart was an image of day changes on the whole asx200..not my portfolio ?
An interesting feature of the present price booms in so many commodities is their supply constraints rather than overwhelming demand. Covid has clearly had a massive impact on supply in most sectors, and now the Ukranian crisis will amplify that trend.
remember current ( official ) US policy is to further restrict the development/use of unconventional oil , so it is also creating it's share of the problem ( not to mention funding unrest in other oil-producing nations )An interesting feature of the present price booms in so many commodities is their supply constraints rather than overwhelming demand. Covid has clearly had a massive impact on supply in most sectors, and now the Ukranian crisis will amplify that trend.
Oil has not yet rebounded as North American unconventional oil remains well below pre-pandemic levels, while coal supply is being hit by ethical considerations and lack of banking industry support for new projects.
New energy metals are the exception, and in the case of copper and nickel which take many years to ramp up supply, their price strength looks assured for many years to come.
At a global level we are not in a cycle of comparative strong industrial growth as few post-covid (are we there yet) stimulus measures have been enacted.
Apart from the above, China has driven iron ore prices to record highs in the past year, but outside of China few nations are doing much to add to significant commodity demand.
I would call it an accidental boom.so do we consider this to be a true commodity super-cycle or an artificial device to suit a different agenda
"We are witnessing the remaking of the world order in front of our eyes, and this will impact global supply chains in unforeseen ways," Freight Waves chief executive Craig Fuller wrote.
"We are about to experience the most dramatic and unpredictable supply chain map we've experienced since World War II. "If the Russia-Ukraine conflict's international ramifications keep spreading, we face a real possibility of a bifurcating global economy, in which geopolitical alliances, energy and food flows, currency systems, and trade lanes could split."
"North American economic integration will become a new priority," he said. "Surface transportation across the Eurasian continent will become more complex, and possibly contested.
"Entire supply chains will be rewritten, with new sources and partners, all in the interest of corporate and national security. "The future market winners will be the corporations that make the investments in supply chain infrastructure and reliable, Western-friendly production locations.....:
so do we consider this to be a true commodity super-cycle or an artificial device to suit a different agenda
i was more thinking the value of currencies ( all of them ) declining ( in real purchasing power ) putting pressure on costs ( whether it is staff costs , reduced productivity per hour worked , compliance costs )I would call it an accidental boom.
Ideally we want strong global-level industrial production to drive broad based commodity demand.
Covid exacerbates some data as 2020 production levels were suppressed, making 2021 data looking really good as it has come off a low base. It also has had an effect on supply in that many sectors are yet to return to pre-pandemic levels, so prices have been driven higher while demand has struggled to return to 2019 levels.
Yes.
Supply of commodities has been reduced - Russia and Ukraine can no longer sell to the West.
but more than just those two , Brazil had the tailings dam failures , civil unrest in a few other places ( not just Africa ) i feel this started before the virus outbreak , but the virus issues added acceleration , and now we have 'war rumblings '
One theme I have been harping on [about] ... is that commodities tend to make V tops, and stocks tend to make V bottoms. But when stocks top, they make big, rounded U tops, and when commodities bottom, they make big, rounded U bottoms (the oil bottom in 2020 is the exception, where prices went negative).
We’re seeing a lot of V tops in commodities, and correspondingly, we’re going to see a V bottom in stocks.
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