BREND said:I have heard too many bearish view on US housing without any data to support. If you look into my blog, mortgage rate has an inversed relationship with housing sector. Mortgage rate has remained low, this should support housing sector in 2007.
http://basemetal-trading.blogspot.com/2006/12/us-will-not-have-recession.html
BREND said:I have heard too many bearish view on US housing without any data to support. If you look into my blog, mortgage rate has an inversed relationship with housing sector. Mortgage rate has remained low, this should support housing sector in 2007.
http://basemetal-trading.blogspot.com/2006/12/us-will-not-have-recession.html
kennas said:And yet POI has been going down??
Wayne, do you think a major recession could keep oil at, or below your $40 ish sentiment target even with those geopolitical forces?wayneL said:Could go to the 40's based on sentiment I reckon and could linger there as economies go over the cliff in the next 1 -3 years.
However, I suspect geopolitical forces (as detailed in your post) will force oil higher sooner, rather than later.
None of which changes the reality that housing is incredibly overvalued relative to the earnings of those buying it. That's the problem IMO.BREND said:I have heard too many bearish view on US housing without any data to support. If you look into my blog, mortgage rate has an inversed relationship with housing sector. Mortgage rate has remained low, this should support housing sector in 2007.
http://basemetal-trading.blogspot.com/2006/12/us-will-not-have-recession.html
That's actually the wrong way round. The specs are reactive and pile in BECAUSE copper is tanking and may push it along. The specs don't cause the direction though.BSD said:The copper market is full of hedgefund noise at the moment.
The speculative shorts have piled up enough to send the market into freefall. The self-fulfilling prophecy is amazing to watch.
BSD said:The copper market is full of hedgefund noise at the moment.
The speculative shorts have piled up enough to send the market into freefall. The self-fulfilling prophecy is amazing to watch.
The fundamentals are fine and investment decisions should be guided by timeframe of investment.
The US property market did not drive copper up and it is not the reason behind the fall.
US property demand is 5% of world copper demand. Chindia is 30%.
Chindia is growing at 10% per annum still - does anyone really believe that copper consumption fell during this growth?
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=newsarchive&sid=a1lRHtUL6_uY
Copper processors in China used more than 250,000 tons of the metal that was stockpiled at their plants or warehouses last year, according to Yang Changhua, an analyst at Beijing Antaike Information Development Co., which advises the government on industry policies.
``Our inventories are close to zero, and most other processing plants are in a similar condition,'' said Zhang Xuefeng, head of futures trading at Chinalco Luoyang Copper Co
Where will they get the 250,000 tons from this year?
Short termists can short it all they want - when the Chinese start buying the equivalent of the total LME stockpile again, the game will be up.
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The Dow Jones index reweighting is also having an effect - particularly in nickel and zinc. Their weights have been halved and at the same time their prices have doubled.
The index has seen industrial metals downgraded significantly for the increase of energy.
$30bn USD of commodity index money follows this index and that is a lot of selling for illiquid metals like Zn and Ni to bear
dj_420 said:just wondering if someone could please point me to the website where i can get crude oil prices?
thanks
I think you're forgeting that modern agriculture is itself a form of mining and is not sustainable as such. That and the renewal rate limit which applies to all renewable resources - can't sustainably use it faster than it grows.BREND said:The situation of too much money chasing too few goods will continue for commodities. I will be more bullish on industrial metals and oil rather than agricultural commodities. Because there is only so much metals and oil under the ground, once it is dug out, it is gone. But for agricultural products, once it is consumed, it still can be grown again
Smurf1976 said:I think you're forgeting that modern agriculture is itself a form of mining and is not sustainable as such. That and the renewal rate limit which applies to all renewable resources - can't sustainably use it faster than it grows.
To get it to grow quickly enough to meet present demand basically means oil, gas, phosphate rock and a bit of fossil water in = food out.
I contend that agricultural commodities produced on an industrial scale (which is necessary with 6.4 billion people) are ultimately a finite resource no more abundant relative to demand than any mineral apart from precious metals.
That won't change without either a technological revolution in sustainable agriculture (possible but no real signs of it yet) or an outright crash in demand (and presumably population).
Smurf1976 said:I think you're forgeting that modern agriculture is itself a form of mining and is not sustainable as such. That and the renewal rate limit which applies to all renewable resources - can't sustainably use it faster than it grows.
To get it to grow quickly enough to meet present demand basically means oil, gas, phosphate rock and a bit of fossil water in = food out.
I contend that agricultural commodities produced on an industrial scale (which is necessary with 6.4 billion people) are ultimately a finite resource no more abundant relative to demand than any mineral apart from precious metals.
That won't change without either a technological revolution in sustainable agriculture (possible but no real signs of it yet) or an outright crash in demand (and presumably population).
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