- Joined
- 3 January 2007
- Posts
- 940
- Reactions
- 2
Temjin as i mentioned in another thread how would 1 acquire commodities long term? whats the best vehicle for this? obviously futures and CFD's are out so what would the best option be? (im assuming long term means 3-5yrs+ eh?)
I have been reading up on ETF's and ETC's but its still foreign to me. I understand you can trade the GOLD ETC on asx but im unaware of any other commodities you can trade on the asx.
I would still prefer to trade within the Australian market as im more comfortable with that.
The problem with commodities like oil, agriculture etc.. unlike gold where you can buy physical and store its highly unlikely to do that with those others soft commodities.
How long you been trading ETC's temjin?
rowie said:Another problem with buying ETF's from say the american stock market is that you are exposed to the fluctuations in the currency exchange as you will be buying in US dollars. Hence if the ETF performs well but the Aus dollar strengthens against the us dollar, it negates the gains. Any thoughts on this?
Thursday 6 November 2008
> - Just check out some of the graphs below.
> (yes, I know bottom picking is pointless)
Pointless, yet you still recommend it?
Just a different POV: it is the trend of any market
that determines its viability for producing profitable
returns.
Granted, the grains are near support, depending
upon one's timeframe, but there is no indication
that price still cannot go lower. The trend is still
down.
Another consideration, when and once the trend
does stop declining, how long will it take before a
clear bull market gets underway? Months? Years?
For how long do you [generic] want to tie up your
capital and expose it to risk?
If you, and even Jim Rogers, were to look at an
annual, or semi-annual chart of the CRB Index, you
would see the most massive reversal ever recorded
in commodities. [In fact, I already pointed this out
to Rogers over a month ago.]
It takes time to transition from a bear market to a
bull market, and there are no signs that this bear
market is transitioning, let alone ending.
Just some thoughts.
As a way to mitigate this, interactivebrokers allow one to "borrow" US dollars to purchase USD denominated shares. Because you are borrowing the currency, any fall in the value of the dollar would be a gain to you when you convert them back to your base currency. Note that only your initial investment is hedged this way, any extra profits would not be hedged and be subjected to currency fluctations.
If you have a certain amount in your IB accounts, your cash in AUD as base currency will earn certain interest while your "negative" cash in USD (borrowed) will attract interest. So depending on the spread they charge and the interest rate for each currency, you may break even from the interest cost. At least for the past few months, the interest cost has been negative, that is, providing me with a small gain, for me since the interest rate here is much higher than the rate in the US.
- Jim Rogers has started accumulating more commodities recently and said he would probably make more money from agriculture than gold. (http://jimrogers-investments.blogspot.com/). Do note that he is a crap short term market timer but almost flawless long term timer.
-most farmers are older (how many 20 year olds want to be farmers?)
I like this idea, but do you actually own the shares (or ETF) or does IB remain the owner?
After seeing what happened to those in OPES I'm a lot more careful now. It seems on their webpage that as long you are under $500,000 you are insured. http://www.interactivebrokers.com/en/accounts/accountProtection.php?ib_entity=llc
Naked Short said:As soon as i saw the title of this thread, I knew you would mention ol Jim, I would recommend subscribing to this youtube channel for his interviews
http://au.youtube.com/user/RemiG2006
^ this person has basically all of his interviews, and uploads new ones generally within a day (if not hours) of him doing an interview.
One thing I would like to get my hands on is some sugar. Do IB allow you to purchase it, is there a ETC for sugar? Im not too keen on building a warehouse to store it....
@Jet328
Its important to realize the potential opposites to those facts
such as:
> Increased automation on farms (I saw on TV the other day a farm that used lasers to find the nipples on a cow so it could attach a suction cap. No more seat and bucket)
> Improved crops (e.g. ultra genetically modified crops producing more product)
Note that both of these ETFs carry credit risk and is probably more significant through etfsecurities as AIG has recently asked for another bailout again! I am steering well away from securities offered by them, except for the one that has physical backing.
Those options are not the most comforting, I wonder what Jim does to buy his stuff.
I also dont think that Jim Rogers himself would do that blog.
Nice thread Temjin, and agree, agriculture will be a great sector for the medium/long term.
you've got
-world food supplies at the lowest levels in fifty years
-most farmers are older (how many 20 year olds want to be farmers?)
-population growing at 50 million per year
-an emerging middle class (studies show that as income passes USD10k, protein consumption increases significantly)
-food being burnt to power our cars
I like this idea, but do you actually own the shares (or ETF) or does IB remain the owner?
I'm definitely thinking about it, but not the same old style.Developing a hobby for it right now to see how viable it is.
One thing I would like to get my hands on is some sugar. Do IB allow you to purchase it, is there a ETC for sugar? Im not too keen on building a warehouse to store it....
@Jet328
Its important to realize the potential opposites to those facts
such as:
> Increased automation on farms (I saw on TV the other day a farm that used lasers to find the nipples on a cow so it could attach a suction cap. No more seat and bucket)
> Improved crops (e.g. ultra genetically modified crops producing more product)
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?