Wednesday, 24 February 2010



February 24, 2010
This Commodity Could Suffer a Catastrophe Soon
By Matt Badiali 

It's not often a major stock or commodity gets set up for "catastrophe," but when it does, I stand up and take note.

Most investors and traders aren't much interested in catastrophe. They won't short a vulnerable asset when a crisis is looming..
. and they won't buy it just after the crisis... when the asset is very cheap. 

This is a shame, but it's why most people lose in the stock and commodity markets. And it's why they're going to miss a big 
opportunity coming 
to the copper market soon. 
Put simply, 
speculators, rather than real demand, account for a great deal of the 120% rally in copper prices over the past 12 
months. Many of those "hoarders" are in the People's Republic of China. 

I started digging into this idea after listening to David Threlkeld, a longtime copper trader and analyst. He recently told
 Bloomberg that China, the world's largest copper user, more than doubled its imports of refined copper in 2009. 

Today, Threlkeld thinks China has 3 million tons of unreported copper. China consumed about 5 million tons of copper in 2009. 
That unreported 3 million tons would be seven months of supply. 

While not all the experts believe China has that much copper stashed away, another source agrees with Threlkeld. I recently spoke 
with a banking insider who believes that China has about 1.8 million tons of unreported copper. 

These Chinese speculators and hoarders are not buying copper to build refrigerators: In 2008, 50% of the raw copper imports
 turned around as exports. In 2009, it was just 15%. They're buying copper to stockpile a bit and to bet on a price increase. 
But when stockpilers and speculators get their fill, it only takes a lack of buying to hammer the market. 

In addition to hoarding in China, copper stockpiles are soaring in warehouses elsewhere. The London Metal Exchange, the 
market maker in all kinds of metals, has another 1.2 million pounds in warehouses all over the world. That supply is equal
 to another three months of Chinese consumption. 

In total, there's enough copper out there to supply China's demand for nearly a year and that has Threlkeld worried. He 
recently predicted copper prices will fall to $1 per pound. That's 70% below today's price of $3.30 per pound. 
 
Even if he's half right, and copper prices fall to $2 per pound, large copper producers like Freeport-McMoRan, Southern Copper, and Teck Resources are in for a huge fall. I'm not making this bet yet. With current prices near 
yearly highs, the uptrend is still strongly in favor of the bulls. But this trend could end quickly. 

If you hold stock in the big copper producers I just mentioned, watch your trailing stops. If you're more of a short-term trader,
 consider getting ready to trade these from the short side. 

Good investing, 

Matt