- Joined
- 18 February 2006
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nizar said:ur first property in 15years?
Thats what i used to aim for.... when i was 5!
lol but now just past 20 and still no house... but im confident EVE and OMC will do it for me... OMC a nice car, but EVE, EVE is for my house!
kennas said:Looks to me like the resource bears have been put into hybernation.
1130 [Dow Jones]JPMorgan moves to overweight on resources from underweight on Chinese growth, slow supply response and rising iron ore prices. Says BHP Billiton (BHP.AU) and Rio Tinto (RIO.AU) have underperformed the recent surge in base metal prices and are now looking attractive. JPMorgan expects Chinese growth of 10.6% in 2006 and 9.5% in 2007. (APW)
thestorm said:Commodities are sure to crash shortly. Every expert around is predicting their downfall.
I wouldn't want to be holding any commodities by the end of the year otherwise I wouldn't be able to afford any Christmas presents!
michael_selway said:i wouldnt say shortly, atleast another 6 months, but likely 12 months, then it might get dangerous
thx
MS
CanOz said:I think we will see various metals and resources go through various extreme levels of sup/demand cycles leading up to the Olympics (as a milestone for example).
CanOz said:I think we will see various metals and resources go through various extreme levels of sup/demand cycles leading up to the Olympics (as a milestone for example).
nizar said:Really?
I think the olympics has NOTHING to do with it
But i guess u being based in China, would know better...
Can u please elaborate on how 1.3billion people + india would be dragging themselves out of poverty because of the Olympics??
After 27 years of growth, it will all come down because of the olympics?? or after the olympics??
So they will decide: No more houses, cars, fridges, appliances, because of the Olympics??
I beg to differ i must say...
Please elaborate....
CanOz said:Sure Nizar. The Olympics are just a time frame. By 2008 Beijing's massive infrastructure upgrades will be completed, the airport, the subway, the new ring roads, the new bus system, and all of the new apartments. There will be a slowdown in demand for materials, this could cause some nervous selling pressure in the markets (not too mention the panic that hits over investment in fixed assets here, this could drag down some big banks, there not exactly built on a history of strict lending practices)
Do you think a boom cycle will continue without this happening? Do you think China is different than other countries when it comes to normal cycles? I'm picking 2008 as the time when the cycle will correct itself most dramatically in China. Could it take the other Asian markets with it...quite possibly. In the meantime we'll still see the little mini corrections happen too, but in my opinion demand will cause quicker recovery, until the a larger more significant correction in 2008/2009.
Only my opinion. I'm very interested in your take on it too.
Cheers,
nizar said:Really?
I think the olympics has NOTHING to do with it
But i guess u being based in China, would know better...
Can u please elaborate on how 1.3billion people + india would be dragging themselves out of poverty because of the Olympics??
After 27 years of growth, it will all come down because of the olympics?? or after the olympics??
So they will decide: No more houses, cars, fridges, appliances, because of the Olympics??
I beg to differ i must say...
Please elaborate....
YOUNG_TRADER said:As such they will buy up every commodity they need to get all of their buildings completed pre-olympics, post olympics they won't need to work on a deadline and so can afford to wait,
While the Commonwealth Games in India will also help a little, I think that 2008 Post Olympics will see a commodities slowdown,
Long Term Stronger for Longer driven by the Industrialisation of 3Billion People
YOUNG_TRADER said:Long Term Stronger for Longer driven by the Industrialisation of 3Billion People
BSD said:http://www.smh.com.au/news/national/mining-boom-over-costello/2006/10/31/1162278141451.html
Time to get in heavy!
When a dopey, oft-lying lawyer backed by the most consistently wrong group of forecasters in the country (Treasury) call the end of anything, it is time to buy.
Perhaps this is to be the shortest commodities boom in the last 100 years; despite being fuelled by the largest demographic demand effect and untold supply shortage from 10 years of no exploration?
Why can a property boom last for 15 years and nobody thinks properties are returning to 1992 prices?
What are 'normal prices' anyway? If copper is above $2.50 in 2008 are we in a bust, a boom or normal?
Jawboning the RBA in my opinion. - when you have no record or respect to defend, being outrageously wrong on calls like this dont mean much for a spiv like Costello.
Politicians are the worst form of commentator. Guaranteed pensions and not having to invest your own money means you have no skin in the game and your opinion is worth little.
BSD said:http://www.smh.com.au/news/national/mining-boom-over-costello/2006/10/31/1162278141451.html
Time to get in heavy!
When a dopey, oft-lying lawyer backed by the most consistently wrong group of forecasters in the country (Treasury) call the end of anything, it is time to buy.
Perhaps this is to be the shortest commodities boom in the last 100 years; despite being fuelled by the largest demographic demand effect and untold supply shortage from 10 years of no exploration?
Why can a property boom last for 15 years and nobody thinks properties are returning to 1992 prices?
What are 'normal prices' anyway? If copper is above $2.50 in 2008 are we in a bust, a boom or normal?
Jawboning the RBA in my opinion. - when you have no record or respect to defend, being outrageously wrong on calls like this dont mean much for a spiv like Costello.
Politicians are the worst form of commentator. Guaranteed pensions and not having to invest your own money means you have no skin in the game and your opinion is worth little.
wayneL said:I was thinking along the same lines myself, though I don't see the link between property trends and commodities.
MS said:3.50 now and 2.50 in 2008 is quite a drop, so likely shares will fall by then?
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