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VTforInvestorDaily said:Resources boom may hit a hurdle
By Vishal Teckchandani
Thursday 15 November 2007
The commodities boom is set to remain strong till 2009 after which it may start to burst, according to Putman Investments chief investment officer Shigeki Makino.
"We can expect two to three years of smooth sailing before you sense oversupply," Makino said.
"By around 2012 a lot of projects are expected to be complete in emerging economies like China and India.
"So when you see a lot of planes, ships, infrastructure and major cities complete, that's when the fundamentals may start to turn and the market will appreciate that a year before. At that point equities could collapse."
He expected the global economy, along with emerging markets and large cap stocks, to flourish in the current environment.
"Emerging markets are a long-term positive theme for global cyclicals. We remain bullish on steel, oil refineries, commodities, shipping and airlines," Makino said.
He said investors were too focused on the credit crunch and housing bust in the United States and should use any declines as buying opportunities.
During the week, all the base metals moved from positions of fundamental weakness to strength, or indifference - nickel falling into the latter camp.
Copper is leading the charge again, suggesting that whatever new capacity has come on stream, it's hardly denting demand.
Both zinc and lead have added significant cancellations to their picture, and shoud increase drawdowns next week.
Aluminium is going to go long term bullish, but will move as quickly as a snail.
Irrespective of US market capitulation, it does seem that there remains a strong and vibrant metals market that for now is making its own race.
Zinc to drop 11% in 2008: Study
Bloomberg / Mumbai November 30, 2007
More gloomy predictions from Gerard Burg: Business standard.com smart investor link
Any thoughts on this guy?
During the week, all the base metals moved from positions of fundamental weakness to strength, or indifference - nickel falling into the latter camp.
Copper is leading the charge again, suggesting that whatever new capacity has come on stream, it's hardly denting demand.
Both zinc and lead have added significant cancellations to their picture, and shoud increase drawdowns next week.
Aluminium is going to go long term bullish, but will move as quickly as a snail.
Irrespective of US market capitulation, it does seem that there remains a strong and vibrant metals market that for now is making its own race.
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