Print Printer Friendly Version      Email Email this Article






The "Commodity Super Cycle"
How long can it last?
Gary Dorsch
Are we in the ninth inning of the "Commodity Super Cycle" that has lifted the Reuters Jefferies Commodity (CRB) price index 91% higher from four years ago to its highest level in 26 years? The Reuters Jefferies CRB index of 19 commodities reached a high of 349.56 on Jan 30th and is comprised of futures in live cattle, cotton, soybeans, sugar, frozen concentrated orange juice, wheat, cocoa, corn, gold, aluminum, nickel, unleaded gasoline, crude oil, natural gas, heating oil, coffee, silver, copper and lean hogs.

Barclays Capital said on January 5th that commodity investments might parlay another $40 billion this year up to $110 billion as pension funds and other money managers diversify from stocks and bonds. Big-money investment funds have boosted their stake in commodity indexed markets to around $70 billion in 2005, up from $45 billion by the end of 2004 and only around $15 billion at the end of 2003.

Pension funds, as well as small, retail investors are looking to commodities as a crucial part of diversification of any investment portfolio. Although schizophrenic commodity day traders could decide to turn massive paper profits into hard cash at a moment's notice, causing a 5% to 10% shakeout, the longer-term odds still favor a continuation of the "Commodity Super Cycle, into extra innings.

Central bankers point the finger of blame for soaring commodity prices on China's juggernaut economy, which has expanded at breakneck speed of 10% for each of the past three years, competing with rampant demand for basic resources from big importers like India, Japan, Germany, South Korea, and the United States. India's booming economy expanded 8% and Korea's by 5% last year. China bought about 22% of the global output of base metals in 2005, compared with 5% in the 1980's, and has doubled its crude oil imports from five years ago.

Central bankers stare at the explosive CRB rally from the sidelines with a sense of indifference or stone faced silence, though sharply higher commodity prices are telegraphing higher producer price inflation. Furthermore, China is under daily pressure from the Bush administration to revalue its yuan higher against the dollar, which in turn, would give Beijing even greater purchasing power abroad, and provide more support for a whole range of commodities from crude oil, iron ore, zinc, copper, platinum, uranium, soybeans, and ethanol.

But perhaps, the simplest answer to explain the long term bullish outlook for global commodities boils down to one simple equation. According to the latest population count by the United Nations, the world had 6.5 billion inhabitants in 2005, 380 million more than in 2000, or a gain of 76 million persons annually. By 2050, the world is expected to house 9.1 billion persons, assuming declining fertility rates. In other words, a world of finite raw materials, along with an increasing population base, translates into higher prices.

But how did the Reuter's CRB index reach record levels in the first place? Well consider the Chinese and Indian economies, which also account for one third of the world's population, and the super easy money policies pursued by the big-3 central banks, the Bank of Japan, the European Central Bank, and the Federal Reserve. Both ingredients, when mixed together, make an explosive cocktail that has lifted commodity indexes into the stratosphere.

And a trend in motion, will stay in motion, until some major outside force, knocks it off its course. So not withstanding inevitable profit-taking sessions, what major outside force is out there that could derail the CRB's upward trajectory?

Chinese demand for imports has soared by 330% from roughly $15.5 billion per month in early 2002 to a record $64.4 billion in December 2005. China is the world's fifth largest importer, and bought $632 billion worth of goods in 2005. The world's number-one miner BHP Billiton BHP.AX ran its mines and smelters at full speed in the fourth quarter to capture strong commodities prices, setting the stage for full-year profits to exceed $9 billion. Rio Tinto, RIO.AX, the world's second largest miner pushed its operations harder to double its 2005 profit to around $5 billion.

China's economy overtook France and the Great Britain to become the world's fourth largest last year, and will grow an estimated 9.4% this year. The European Union and Japan expect growth of 1.9% this year. Chinese Premier Wen said on December 1st that China needs to "maintain rapid and stable economic growth to raise the living standards" of the nation's 1.3 billion people, whose per capita income of $950 per year, ranks 129th in the world. Beijing is cutting taxes and raising salaries to encourage more spending on cars and household appliances.

Exports are a key driver behind the Chinese economic miracle, with China's currency exchange controls and trade surplus with the US topping $204 billion in 2005, a 25% increase on the previous year and nearly 30% of the total US deficit. The lynchpin of Chinese exports is the low yuan /dollar exchange rate pegged at 8.11 per dollar, undervalued by 30% to 40% on a trade weighted basis.

The People's Bank of China increased its M2 money supply by 18.3% last year, issuing more yuan (renminbi) to soak up foreign currency earned through foreign trade and direct investment into Chinese factories from abroad. Explosive money supply growth, in turn, boosted domestic retail sales by 13% last year, and industrial production was 16.6% higher in November from a year earlier. China's central bank raised its M2 money supply target to 17% in the third quarter from 15% earlier, to offset stronger demand for the yuan, and maintain the peg at 8.11 per US dollar.

China's biggest oil field, Daqing, fell about 3% to 44.95 million tons (900,000 bpd) last year. China, the world's second-largest oil consumer, expects to secure foreign energy supplies with foreign deals for its economy, after it turned into a major oil importer and still suffers from severe power shortages.

China's oil giant Sinopec signed a $70 billion oil and natural gas agreement with Iran, to buy 250 million tons of liquefied natural gas over 30 years from Tehran and develop the giant Yadavaran field. Iran is also committed to export 150,000 barrels per day of crude oil to China for 25 years at market prices after commissioning of the field. Iran is China's biggest oil supplier, accounting for 14% of Chinese oil imports. In return, Tehran's Ayatollah is demanding a Chinese veto at the UN, to shield his secret nuclear weapons program from international sanctions.

India's Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, wants his country to achieve 10% economic growth in the next two to three years, to create more jobs and help lift a third of the country's 1.1 billion people out of poverty. Asia's fourth-biggest economy expanded 8% in the second and third quarters of 2005. Singh's government wants industrial production, which makes up a quarter of India's economy, to grow 10% annually to boost the incomes of Indians, one in three of whom live on less than $1 a day.

India's industrial production grew at an annualized 8.3% rate between April and November 2005, faster than major economies like US, UK, the Euro zone, Japan, Brazil, Indonesia and Russia. Only China and Argentina recorded faster industrial production rates of 16.6%, and 9.6% respectively. India ranked 24th among global importers purchasing $113 billion of goods in 2005, or a sixth Chinese demand.

Japan is also a major factor behind the rise in global commodity prices, with industrial production rising for a fifth month in December to a record, sustaining the nation's longest expansion in eight years. Japanese industrialists plan to spend 17.3% more on factories and production facilities in 2006 than last year. Overseas sales are also bolstering production and imports of raw materials from abroad. Japan imported $451 billion of goods in 2005, the seventh highest among global importers.

Japan's exports rose 14.7% in November from a year earlier to 5.9 trillion yen ($50.2 billion), the second highest ever, on the heels of the yen's 19% devaluation against the dollar, and 17% drop against the Chinese yuan. Shipments to China rose 12.8% and those to the US climbed 8.9 percent. Exports were up for the 23rd consecutive month while imports rose for the 20th month in a row.

To meet strong demand from abroad, and an economic revival at home, Japanese imports of raw materials have soared 66% to 5.42 trillion yen per month from three years ago, and in turn, providing underlying support for global commodity prices. Japan paid 20% or more for nonferrous metals, crude oil and coal in 2005, which companies are expected to pass on to customers.

Global commodity prices bottomed out in late 2001, soon after the Bank of Japan lowered its overnight loan rate to zero percent, and adopted quantitative easing. The central bank prints about 1.2 trillion yen ($10 billion) per month to purchase Japanese government bonds, inflating the amount of yen circulating around global money markets. More Japanese yen yielding zero percent, chasing fewer natural resources in turn, leads to sharply higher global commodity prices.

The Japanese ruling elite are devaluing their way to prosperity, by flooding the Tokyo money markets with 32 trillion to 35 trillion yen above the liquidity requirements of local banks. The enormous supply of excess yen pushed Japan's 3-month deposit rate below zero percent for most of 2004. With borrowing costs at zero percent or less, Japanese and foreign hedge fund traders have found the cheapest source of capital to leverage speculative positions in global commodities.

And the Japanese ministry of Finance is not expected to grant permission to the Bank of Japan to begin mopping up some of the excess yen until the second half of 2006, at the very earliest. On January 9th, Japanese Finance Minister Sadakazu Tanigaki said, "There is a need for the BOJ to make a careful assessment of data. It should not rush things." The BOJ is certainly not rushing things. It has kept the overnight loan rate pegged at zero percent for five long years.

The European Central Bank cannot ignore the Euro zone's loose monetary conditions and increased risks to price stability, said ECB chief economist Otmar Issing on December 19th. "Money growth has been high for quite some time and credit growth has continuously increased, supporting our assessment of the risks to price stability. Liquidity in the Euro area is more than ample. A central bank with the mandate to maintain price stability cannot ignore these signals," Issing added.

Yet for two and a half years, the ECB ignored a 50% surge in commodity prices, since lowering its repo rate to 2.00% in May 2003. The Euro M3 money supply growth rate was 7.6% higher in November from a year earlier, above the central bank's original mandate of 4.5% growth. Thus, the ECB's quarter-point rate hike to 2.25% in December was too little, too late, to get in the way of the "Commodity Super Cycle," with the Reuters CRB rising another 10% in its aftermath.

For the past three years, the ECB pursued a policy of "asset targeting", inflating its Euro M3 money supply to lift European stock markets into higher ground, and through the "wealth effect" lift the spirits of the frightened European consumer. The ECB is running into a barrage of resistance from top European finance officials to higher Euro interest rates, fearful of any action that could undermine the European stock markets. Still, the ECB has much greater political independence than the BOJ.

Because most commodities are traded in US dollars, the Federal Reserve has a special role to play in the fight against commodity inflation. The Fed must protect the value of the US dollar in the foreign exchange market, with higher interest rates if necessary, to keep the "Commodity Super Cycle" in check. Yet the Greenspan Fed waited for the Reuters Commodity price index to rise by 45% above its 2001 low, before taking its first baby step to lift the fed funds rate by a quarter-point to 1.25%.

The Fed has moved in predictable quarter-point moves for the past eighteen months, and has signaled that 4.50% could be the peak in the tightening campaign. The Fed is targeting US home prices, which have flattened out in recent months, and should preclude further rate hikes in 2006. Still, the Fed's go-slow approach to combating inflation has left it far behind the "Commodity Super Cycle."

The Greenspan Fed produced a sizeable counter trend rally for the US dollar in 2005, pushing the greenback from 102-yen to as high as 121.50-yen, and knocking the Euro from as high as $1.3450 to a low of $1.1650. However, the Fed efforts to control commodity inflation were completely undermined by the super easy money policies of the Bank of Japan and the European Central Bank.

How would the new Fed chief Ben Bernanke react, if commodity prices were to continue to soar further into the stratosphere? Without the life support of higher interest rate expectations, the deficit ridden US dollar could come under renewed speculative attack in 2006. Especially, after China signaled a desire to diversify an expected build-up of $200 billion of foreign currency reserves away from the US dollar this year. A weaker dollar could give commodity prices extra support.

Fortunately for commodity bulls, Bernanke doesn't believe there is a link between a higher CRB index and higher producer price inflation. On February 5th, 2004, Bernanke said, "rising commodity prices are a variable of growth rather than inflation." Then on May 24, 2005 Bernanke played down worries about higher energy and commodity prices. "Much of the recent price gains in energy and commodities reflect the rapid growth of the Chinese economy. Chinese authorities are now trying to slow that growth, and should help check the growth of commodity prices."

Most likely, Bernanke would continue to ignore a surge in commodity prices, but keep a close eye on US home prices. Any sign of a significant downturn in US home prices, could quickly prompt the new Fed chief to lower the fed funds rate. Already, home re-sales in the United States fell 5.7% in December to the lowest level since March 2004, after five years of gains that shattered construction and sales records and sent prices up more than 55% nationwide. The national median sales price in December was $211,000, and down from a record high of $220,000.

The Greenspan Fed was an "Asset Targeter" and inflated US home prices over the past few years to offset huge losses in the Nasdaq and S&P 500 stock indexes. The Fed borrowed this strategy from the Bank of England, which pioneered home price targeting in 2001. By moving in baby step quarter-point rate hikes, the Fed was careful to avoid a meaningful downturn in the housing markets, until signs of froth in home prices were sprouting in over 100 major US cities in late 2005.

Any sign of potential weakness in the DJ home construction index towards the horizontal support at the 800-level, could be met by aggressive half-point rating cutting by the Bernanke Fed to head off an implosion of consumer wealth and confidence. A significant decline below the 800 level could signal a head and shoulders top pattern to technicians, projecting a decline to the 550-level. Fortunately, head and shoulder pattern rarely work anymore, and usually just set bear traps. Sharp rate cuts by the Fed might bring Wall Street investment bankers to the rescue of the housing sector.

So what could derail the "Commodity Super Cycle" in 2006? Schizophrenic speculators could be tempted to lock in profits at a moment's notice. But big time players like China, Japan, and India could provide a safety net for falling commodity markets, gratefully locking in lower prices for raw materials. Beijing is on course to reach $1 trillion of foreign currency reserves by years ahead. Base metal and precious metal dealers could be loathe to offer big discounts to cash rich Beijing.

The Bank of Japan is aiming for negative interest rates by forcing the "core" inflation rate to rise above its zero percent overnight loan rate, before moving to tighten its monetary policy. Negative interest rates would actually produce an easier money policy in Japan in the short term, and possibly create a bubble in the Nikkei-225 stock index. The ECB's baby step rate hike campaign would probably fizzle out near 2.75%, hardly enough to scare anyone. And the Fed's Bernanke may lift the fed funds rate a quarter point to 4.75%, deflating the US housing bubble, and putting the Fed on guard against falling home prices for the remainder of 2006.

Crude oil is hovering near record highs, fearful that Iran's Ayatollah might unleash the "Oil Weapon" in 2006, squeezing crude oil to $80 per barrel, if Europe and the US muster the nerve to impose economic sanctions on the Islamic regime. A battle in the Strait of Hormuz could disrupt oil supplies and the supply of commodities worldwide. But high-flying Asian and European stock markets are betting the Ayatollah will flinch at the eleventh hour to avoid a military showdown with the US and NATO, and wipe out a $10 per barrel "War Premium" for crude oil.

Weighing all the bearish and bullish arguments, after a healthy shake-out of over-extended speculative long positions, it's appears likely that the "Commodity Super Cycle" is bound to go deeper into extra innings and reach new frontiers in un-chartered territory.

********

If you are interested in reading similar articles on gold, foreign currencies, foreign stock and bond markets, crude oil, and natural resource stocks, and underlying ETF's, for as little as $75 per year for 36 issues, click on this link, Free Trial Newsletter . This special introductory offer price expires after February 20th.

Copyright © 2005-2006 SirChartsAlot, Inc. All rights reserved.

Disclaimer: SirChartsAlot.com's analysis and insights are based upon data gathered by it from various sources believed to be reliable, complete and accurate. However, no guarantee is made by SirChartsAlot.com as to the reliability, completeness and accuracy of the data so analyzed. SirChartsAlot.com is in the business of gathering information, analyzing it and disseminating the analysis for informational and educational purposes only. SirChartsAlot.com attempts to analyze trends, not make recommendations. All statements and expressions are the opinion of SirChartsAlot.com and are not meant to be investment advice or solicitation or recommendation to establish market positions. Our opinions are subject to change without notice. SirChartsAlot.com strongly advises readers to conduct thorough research relevant to decisions and verify facts from various independent sources.


Email this Article to a Friend Email




426723285