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The 2009 Mid-Year Commodities Review and Outlook


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he 2009 Mid Year Commodities Review & Outlook

By Head Analyst James Mound

  July 20th, 2009

General Market Comments

The first half of 2009 brought three critical events to the futures industry which sets up quite an unexpected second half of 2009: 

Obama Bailout

The inauguration of President Obama brought massive uncertainty to the markets as the foundation of the biggest government bailout in our history was formed.  The question quickly became whether the bailout was a small band aid to delay a hemorrhaging economy or a crutch for a world recovering from getting taken out at the knees?  The concept behind the bailout will be debated for decades in schools, the financial community and throughout the world.  If we are truly a democracy founded on the ideals of capitalism then there was no rationale for government intervention.  Simply, the government stuck their nose in something that was none of their business.  If you wanted an excuse to get the United States that much closer to socialism then you just found it.  If you wanted a reason why the United States will fall as the world's superpower then maybe they just gave you one.  However, if you wanted to be able to go to your bank and access your savings (what's left of it) then maybe, just maybe, you should thank the government for intervening. 

I believe strongly that history repeats itself, but great events that often occur during crisis form new history.  In this case we have done just that.  Two major questions about the bailout remain.  First, does the government continue to use our economic frailty as a path to socialism?  They can begin to move away from control over big banks, the auto industry, housing and just about every facet of our everyday economic functions.  If the government reduces the control then the economy will thrive and this will be considered a global victory for not only the economy but also for democracy.  Otherwise we are likely seeing the first major stage of the fall of the United States as the world's superpower.  I lean towards the former.   

The second question lies in the cause and effect relationship between massive monetary infusion and the delayed effect of inflation.  Does the simple act of flooding money into the economy result in long term inflation?  Is the dollar set for failure because it is diluted from the bailout?  The simple answer is no.  The market, in my humble of opinion, has this all wrong.  There are a couple of key points that just seem to get overlooked here.  First, let me preface by saying that anytime you pump a trillion or two into the world the money has to come from somewhere, which means printing or releasing dollars.  However, the dollar will be supported by a number of factors that will be explored throughout this report.  The overriding theme, however will be that dollar support is relative to global asset allocation.  If the U.S. represents the better investment for foreign assets as we rise out of recession then the dollar will maintain enough demand to offset the potential overflow of dollars from this bailout. 

The Rate of Decline Declines

One of the best phrases I have heard in years came a few a months ago when the market started referring to the rate of declining economic statistics.  As that rate of decline decreases in momentum it becomes a leading indicator of a supporting economy.  For example let's say in month 1 jobs drop 800,000, then in month 2 it drops another 1,200,000, month 3 drops 1,500,000, but then in month 4 it drops 900,000, month 5 jobs drops only 600,000, then in month 6 the drop is just 200,000.  First the trend was massive decreases in employment, but then the decreased employment worsened at a slower pace. In this example employment decreased for 6 months but the trend began to shift in month 4 because the rate in which employment declined was trending in an improving direction.  While the situation remained negative the signs of recovery where there because the rate of the declining employment was getting smaller month over month.  Apply this to a number of critical economic indicators simultaneously and you can see why market analysts began to see a bottom.  This is an excellent theory but in practice it is simply a potential indicator.  After all there are plenty of times in history that market collapses slowed before accelerating once again.  However this time we have a secret weapon - confidence. 

To his credit President Obama has brought some confidence to the Presidency, something that has been lacking for some time.  Bernanke has brought some level of stability to the Fed by base lining interest rates.  The decreasing rate of decline has driven market sentiment higher.  The stock market is over 40% off the lows.  This is, for better or worse, a genuine market recovery.  Whether you want to admit that the bottom is in, which I had commented on even at the time, the opportunity for profit on this recovery has already happened.  You may have even missed it.  Now the question becomes is this just the beginning?  There is an ebb and flow to all trends and in this case there will be great opportunities to buy the dips as the market reinforces that the low is in fact in.

Commodity Bottom

An interesting thing happened in the U.S. dollar since mid-year 2008.  First the dollar rallied significantly as global panic shifted money into U.S. safe haven assets and the credit crisis pushed foreign investors to cover U.S. loans in U.S. dollars.  This exposed commodities to further declines as foreign demand was shrinking regardless, and now with the dollar strong it made it even harder for foreign demand to be sustained in most commodity markets.  When the world began to build confidence in the idea that the economic bottom was behind us there was a general relief from the U.S. safe haven investment.  This allows for a retracement in the dollar and a rebound in foreign currency.  This was furthered by the increase in demand by countries like China for commodities after a reasonably long period of restriction.  A dollar pullback, a spike in global confidence, and a buildup in demand for commodities all helped to boost prices in recent months. 

This boost was sparked by a clear bottom and rally in crude oil.  Oddly enough the oil rally has occurred during a time of geopolitical calming, rising inventories and a lack of fund interest (at least compared to 2008).  Oil is considered by many to be a gauge of commodity demand and overall global economic strength, as oil fuels the growth engine. 

The second half of 2009 will look quite a bit different.  The next several weeks are actually the most critical as a number of bearish technical formations have occurred in key markets like oil, soybeans, corn, coffee, gold and silver.  For market technicians they are seeing stochastics and most moving average and lagging indicators crossover thereby indicating a possible bear reversal from this strong price surge.  Oil, the critical market to watch, actually formed one of the prettiest Mound Ladle Formationstm I have seen in some time, thus indicating a strong price collapse in the near term.  There are some ugly things out there right now and a number of traders are questioning what is next for commodity prices.  The short forecast is that July and the beginning of August is likely to be a washout period for traders, slamming prices in most commodity sectors and taking out weak stops and panicked traders.  If and when this happens I recommend jumping on the long side if we come anywhere near testing $45-$50 on oil.  This is your buy indicator.  Commodity prices have a bull cycle left to them.  Simply put the fund investment bubble burst but the growth potential for commodity prices long term has not changed.  Play the bear short term and ride the bull long term and the rest of 2009 should look pretty good for you come Thanksgiving.   

Sector Analysis

Top 3 Bull Market Predictions 2nd Half 2009

  • 1. Coffee
  • 2. Cotton
  • 3. Wheat

Top 3 Bear Market Predictions 2nd Half 2009

  • 1. Gold
  • 2. Cocoa
  • 3. 30 Year T-Bond

Energies

Why would oil rally if we have plenty of inventory and a relatively calm geopolitical scene?  No hurricanes.  No major fund buying.  Short covering - maybe.  I mean why would you short oil at $40 when it was at $140 six months earlier - for the extra $5?  How about bullishness off of the strong stock market and light at the end of the recession tunnel?  Sounds more like it.  Well those two reasons don't hold up long term, but rather setup a Mound Ladle Formationtm indicating a test of $50 in the near term.  Oil can definitely be a long term buy for me, afterall the commodity bull is not over in my opinion.  But we have a long time between here and $140 again so I recommend playing the game at hand which is a choppy trader's world.  Sell to $50 and then buy it to $65 and then wait for the breakout.  Gasoline is not the play it once was and supplies are sufficient in a weak summer demand season.  Hurricane threats aside this market is going to have a tough time rallying through summer.  Natural gas is a good weather play, but not much else.  These supply increases are slowly building record inventories for this market and I would want nothing to do with the bull side for the time being.

Right-click here to download pictures. To help protect your privacy, Outlook prevented automatic download of this picture from the Internet. 07-20-2009

** **Chart courtesy of Gecko Software's TracknTrade

Financials      

Two steps forward and one step back - a memorable bull market pattern for the S&P that appears to be resurfacing.  To me this market is undeniably in a bull trend after a bear crash.  That does not mean we are in a bull market.  The difference lies in whether we are buying value or expectations and I think at worst it is a little expectation and a lot of value.  This most recent dip below 880 was a great entry into a bull run to 1000.  Unfortunately the downside to the stock market is simply the risk-reward of buying in after a 40% rally from the lows.  I mean who could blame you for salvaging your portfolio of decimated stocks after regaining this much in such a short time?  It is that mentality that will make this a choppy rally that many will miss out on.  1100 by year's end is not just possible - its  likely.

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Treasury bonds offer a unique short after one of the most significant rallies in our country's history.  The recent test through 120 has the 30 year set for a move to 102.  Remember the interest rate priced into a 30 year t-bond is not the current rate as so much as it is a gauge of future rates.  When the Fed appears to be amping up to hike rates bond prices will likely fall very rapidly, setting up a great short ahead of the expected curve.   

The dollar is a puzzle for many analysts this year.  Many think it should be setting fresh all-time lows with the biggest bailout in history and yet in March it set fresh approximately 3 year highs before settling back into a 4 year mid-range.  The chart pattern looks ugly with a head and shoulders bear pattern setting up at least a channel - or is it?  The dollar looks to me like it is snaking.  Snaking is how I refer to a market that is coiling inside a channel, which is something indicative of a pennant that sets up a breakout but is disguised by a channel and possibly a different pattern like a head and shoulders.  Typically when a market is 'snaking' it is actually setting up an explosive move that is normally counter the current intermediate term trend.  In this case that means the dollar might just explode to the upside. 

Right-click here to download pictures. To help protect your privacy, Outlook prevented automatic download of this picture from the Internet. 07-20-2009

** Chart courtesy of Gecko Software's TracknTrade

Ask yourself a simple question - if you can have your money invested in any economy and feel like the currency will be stable which currency would it be?  Which economy is likely to rebound first?  Do you dare jump into the wild east Chinese Yuan?  I doubt you are buying agriculture based Brazilian Reals.  The European run is over.  The yen is so overpriced it is destroying their lifeline of an export market.  The dollar is the logical choice.  The U.S. is the one taking critical action first.  In times of crisis people are comforted by action, a normal psychological reaction to a negative situation - you want to get yourself out of that situation so you take action.  Well the Fed might be overstepping but few would argue that they haven't taken action compared to say the EU or BoE.  That action creates comfort and that comfort spurs investment.  Dollar rally here we come.

Grains

Unlike the stock market and the dollar, grains are a bit puzzling to me.  I half expected to be able to buy beans at $8, corn at $3, and wheat at $5 sometime in March, but this sector was resilient.  Now I want to buy in, but the dollar is about to take off and oil still has some downside so what causes grains to rally independently?  I am not one to straight gamble on the weather, but perhaps this is an oil at $40 situation?  Maybe the short side just isn't worth it here for hedgers with higher input costs, funds down a ton a cash, and specs looking to play a global economic comeback. 

There are some great angles here for the bulls.  First, third world countries lost of a lot of planted acreage with higher input costs and a panicked global economy.  What is the real global production of commodities for 2009?  I would venture to speculate it is under expectations.  Second, we got ourselves an El Nino year which sets up some potential weather anomalies.  Third, the reemergence of global demand as we come out of this economic meltdown.  You give me those reasons and a value buy and I am in with most of my chips, so I recommend buying corn, wheat and beans ahead of September/October corn harvest. 

Right-click here to download pictures. To help protect your privacy, Outlook prevented automatic download of this picture from the Internet. 07-20-2009

** Chart courtesy of Gecko Software's TracknTrade

Rice on the other hand is a bear play.  There was this massive shortage that caused a global rice panic in 2008, but this is not the case in 2009.  In fact India is likely going to unload some rice and there is some serious rice production going on out there.  Yet prices are holding above previous long term resistance.  Look for a move to 950 and a great put play opportunity.

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Meats            

Cattle has continued to gain ground after setting a technical three year low, and remember there is a trend away from pork and generally good demand for beef.  Supply side shows some real weakness year over year and I suspect this market to be a buy on dips.  I just see another 4-6 points not being worth the long play here and would rather wait for a better entry - even if it means missing the move.  Hogs had a heck of a dead cat bounce, but I just am not buying the bull suck-in right now.  This market is a bear market sustained by long term fallout from the swine flu PR disaster.  Expect prices in the upper 40s. 

Metals        

Gold has tried and tried to penetrate the highs but instead has developed a long term channel below that mark.  Meanwhile the dollar has plunged over 10% without as much as a breakout to the upside during that time.  That leaves metals susceptible to an historic collapse.  I realize I am a bit of a contrarian here but when all the stars align what else can you do but forecast what you see?  Strong dollar, weak commodities, rallying stock market and flat to down bond market all scream short metals for the second half of 2009.  Copper is an economy play and holding strong.  Platinum is a sell along with gold.  Palladium may see a bounce from an auto industry that would have a tough time finding a worse situation moving forward - when you hit bottom there is only one place you can go.

Softs  

Coffee has been hit hard by declining commodity prices in recent weeks.  The Brazilian Real's rally in March, along with reduced supply forecasts in several producing countries and rain issues in Vietnam, surged coffee prices.  Buy this dip and play a quick move back to fresh near term highs.  Cocoa has held onto a congested price area just below the contract highs.  Remember this is an epic price move for cocoa and sustaining prices up here is very, very difficult.  It is doing it based on weather issues in the Ivory Coast, but not for long.  The crop may be questionable but the gut says the current price support falls apart and this market sees a remarkable selloff in coming months.  Cotton on the other hand is supported by low planted acreage and exposure to severe weather in poorly managed cotton farms in west Texas.  Net, net cotton could be as much as 50% higher by year's end if we see continued value buying, global support and a helpful run of bad weather.  OJ is already flying high on El Nino and hurricane concerns, but don't be fooled into thinking this is a dead cat bounce - this market is on the rise and I recommend buying the dips.  Sugar continues to impress with short covering rallies, but be weary of the recent top as that resistance could be stubborn.  Get short on a technical play and reverse it back long on a break above 18 and change.  Lumber remains a buy on dips with a move to 250 and possibly 270 expected by year's end.

 

 

 

 

*Disclaimer: There is risk of loss in all commodities trading. Please consult a James Mound Trading Group Broker before you trade for the first time. Losses can exceed your account size and/or margin requirements. Commodities trading can be extremely risky and is not for everyone. Some option strategies have unlimited risk. Educate yourself on the risks and rewards of such investing prior to trading. James Mound Trading Group, or anyone associated with JMTG or moundreport.com, do not guarantee profits or pre-determined loss points, and are not held monetarily responsible for the trading losses of others (clients or otherwise). Past results are by no means indicative of potential future returns. Information provided is compiled by sources believed to be reliable. JMTG or its principals assume no responsibility for any errors or omissions as the information may not be complete or events may have been cancelled or rescheduled. Any copy, reprint, broadcast or distribution of this report of any kind is prohibited without the express written consent of James Mound Trading Group LLC. Total cost, or cost/credit of trade (as referred to in the trade above), includes the cost/credit of entry, commissions and fees. Typical commission is an approximate mean of commission rates amongst JMTG customers, but can be more or less depending upon the individual account/customer, services rendered, account size, trading volume, etc. Options do not necessarily move in lock step with the underlying futures movement. Commissions at JMTG range from $3 to $27.50 per side depending upon the market traded and specific commission rate charged to the client. Fees range from $2.88 to $7.50 per side depending upon the market traded.

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About the author


James Mound is currently the President of James Mound Trading Group LLC and head analyst for MoundReport.com.
  • Previously the head trader and partner of PGA Futures, Inc.
  • Has been published over 1,000 times (online and printed media)
  • Author of the book, "7 Secrets Every Commodity Trader Needs to Know", published by Traders Press, Inc.
  • Quoted/Published in Time Magazine, SmartMoney, Consensus Inc. Newspaper, Futures Magazine, 321Gold.com, Gold-eagle.com, Pitnews.com, Reuters, TradersWorld Magazine, ETVFutures.com and many more.
  • Currently authors the Weekend Commodities Review distributed to thousands of commodity enthusiasts each week and published on over 20 commodity information websites.
  • Member of the National Futures Association

 

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