Wednesday, 26 May 2010


May 26, 2010
This Commodity Bull Market Is Mortally Wounded

By Mat
t B
adiali


My "copper prediction" from a few months back is starting to come true...

Earlier this year, I made the case for lower copper prices. After suffering a big
 fall in late 2008, the metal entered an incredible rally... which took it more than
 180% from its lows.

This incredible rise drew lots of speculators and hoarders... who built up
 massive stockpiles of the metal. Storehouses at the central London Metals
 Exchange were huge. And several mining insiders believe there are a lot
of "unreported" stockpiles in China as well.

Just after my bearish essays, the price of copper rallied... and crow was the
 main dish served at my house for a while. But quietly, in the past few weeks, 
copper entered a bear market. It violated its 200-day moving average: 


A moving average works by collecting a bundle of an asset's closing prices,
say each one from the past 200 days, then taking the average of those prices.
 This produces a chart line that "smoothes" out market volatility so we can gauge
 the general trend.

When a market is trading above its moving average, it's considered to be in a bull
 trend. When a market is trading below its moving average, it's considered to be
in a bear trend. There's nothing magical about using a 200-day price history to
 calculate a trend. It's simply a good middle-of-the-road indicator used by much
 of Wall Street.

What does this mean for commodity traders?

I believe it means "game off" for a while. Commodities tend to boom and bust
like crazy. And no matter how great an exploration company or how great a
commodity producer is, if its chief product is sinking in price,

its share price will sink as well
.

This "trend change" is a bearish development for big copper miners like
 Freeport-McMoRan and Teck Resources (down 20% and 27%, respectively,
since my original "avoid copper" essay). If you're still long miners, know that
you're now fighting an uphill battle. And if you have a taste for trading, consider
 going short this boom and bust sector.

Good investing,

Billionaire fund manager goes "all in" on gold
Bets majority of his multi-billion dollar fund on gold and gold mining stocks...

Tom Dyson: Most investments will crash for the next year or two
"With the right preparation, you have nothing to worry about..."

Richard Russell: "This market has nowhere to go but down"
Make sure you own cash and gold...