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Almost 2 years since this thread began.Almost a year since this thread began, and the base metals are running a repeat performance; ie running to new record highs in many cases.
At present, commodity market tightness is the rule and not the exception.
It is clear that supply side responses are inadequate, despite a 5-year ramp-up phase for most metal miners/producers.
Unless metals demand wanes, then prices in 2007 will be higher on average than 2006.
And we might also be setting-up 2008 for an even stronger year again!
That's certainly where I reckon we are heading right now. However, as always I review this longer term trend more deeply in the 3rd quarter.
Between now and then I'm not likely to move too much unless a clear meltdown comes into view.
Tin and copper have recently hit new record closing prices, and only zinc is wallowing amongst the base metals.
US housing starts - the few there are - have made no difference to the base metals market. Nor, it appears, has US industrial production.
2008 will mark the baton transfer, whereby metals markets dance to an Asian tune, and are likely to for several generations ahead.
Although copper has been a barometer for "industrialisation", each of the metals has displayed distinctively fundamentals-driven price action.
Copper itself is about to hit new highs as strike action and poorer year on year output from many producers keeps ratcheting up its price.
Importantly, input costs have gone through the roof and the metals market will never return to anywhere near the price levels immediately before the bull run commenced.
Despite the spectre of recession, there is nothing on the horizon suggesting commodity prices are about to collapse, which is the theme of this thread.