Global Market Comments
December 10, 2009
Featured Trades: (COPPER), (FCX),
(CRUDE), (XTO), (RIG), (USO), (MUSTANGS)
1) I have to tell you that my old friend, Dr. Copper, the only
commodity that has a PhD in economics, looks like he may be giving the
market an “F” on its latest exam. If you recall, I was feverishly
pounding on the table trying to get people to buy the red metal at
$1.35 in January (click here
for the call) . It tickled $3.28 last week. I also was pushing the
world’s largest copper producer, Freeport McMoRan (FCX) at $30, which
eventually ran to $88, and has been one of my best performing stocks
this year. Watching the two charts roll over in tandem like a Busby
Berkeley musical merits a quick review of the base metals. If this were
happening in isolation, I would just write it off to another hiccup in
the long supply chain to China. But coming against a backdrop of a
sharp rally in the dollar, and sell offs in gold and oil, it is
possible that something more ominous is at work. If we get a New Year
liquidity surge you might want to lighten up on these positions. Of
course, the long term bull market in the red metal is still alive and
well. But wouldn’t you like to have enough dry powder to buy more
copper 60 cents cheaper? And watch out for that next report card.
2) I recently spent an evening with Ambassador Richard Jones, the
Deputy Executive Director of the International Energy Agency in Paris,
who had some eye opening things to say about the energy space. The IEA
was first set up as a counterweight to OPEC during the oil crisis in
1974, and has since evolved into a top drawer energy research
organization. World GDP will grow an average 3.1%/year through 2030,
driving oil demand from the current 84 million barrels/day to 103
million b/d. That means we will have to find the equivalent of six
Saudi Arabia’s to fill the gap or prices are going up, possibly a lot.
His conservative target has crude at $190 in twenty years. Some 39% of
that increase in demand will come from China and 15% from India. A
collapse in investment caused by the financial crisis last year means
that supply can’t recover in time to avoid another price spike. More
than 1.5 billion people today don’t have electricity at all, but would
love to have it. The best the Copenhagen climate negotiations can hope
for is for CO2 to rise until 2020, and then plateau after that, because
once this greenhouse gas enters the atmosphere it is very hard to get
out. This will require a massive decarbonization effort reliant on
nuclear, hydro, alternatives, and carbon capture and storage. Up to
half of the needed carbon reduction can be achieved through simple
efficiency measures, like ditching the incandescent light bulb, driving
more hybrids, and closing dirty, old coal fired power plants. Natural
gas will be a vital bridge, as it is cheap, in abundant supply, and
emits only half the carbon of traditional fossil fuels. The total 20
year bill for the rebuilding of our new energy infrastructure will
exceed $10 trillion. Richard, who comes from a long diplomatic career
in Kuwait, Kazakhstan, and Israel, certainly didn’t pull any punches. I
have been a huge fan of the IEA’s data for 35 years. Better use the
current plunge in oil prices to accumulate long term positions in crude
through the futures (LOH10), the ETF (USO), the offshore drilling
companies like Transocean (RIG), and leveraged oil and gas plays like
XTO Energy (XTO). When oil comes back, it will do so with a vengeance.
3) The Western US has found a new wrinkle in the housing collapse,
where homeowners are desperately struggling to cut living costs to meet
the next doubling of their adjustable rate mortgage payments on their
underwater houses. Raising horses can cost more than children, so
Nevadans are turning them loose to join herds of wild mustangs, to
dodge the $30,000/year it costs to board and care for these voracious
animals. Local populations are exploding, eating local ranchers out of
house and home, who depend on public grazing lands to feed commercial
livestock. This week the Bureau of Land Management held hearings on
where to place 25,000 excess animals. Mustangs are the feral
descendents of horses which escaped the conquistadores, and there are
now thought to be 30,000 running wild, down from a 19th century peak of
2 million. The BLM has another 30,000 in pens, and is making
10,000/year available for adoption at $125/each. The problem is that
many who adopt “pets” who then flip them to Canadian slaughterhouses,
which cater to the odd French taste for horseflesh. To see how this
works, watch Clark Gable, Marilyn Monroe, and James Dean’s last film,
The Misfits. Madeleine Pickens, the wife of famed oil trader T. Boone
Pickens, has offered to take the BLM’s entire herd and put them out to
pasture at an undisclosed million acre location. If there is anyone who
could have an undisclosed million acres, it is Boone. I have frequently
run into majestic and beautiful mustang herds over the years while
camping in the remote desert (no, I don’t go to Burning Man). Reminding
me that there is still some “wild” in the “West”, I will miss them when
they are gone.
QUOTE OF THE DAY
“God bless Tiger. This week we got a huge uplift. The scandal has been
better for Yahoo than the death of Michael Jackson, because it’s kind
of hard to put an ad up next to a funeral,” said the ever blunt CEO,
Carol Bartz.
TRIVIA OF THE DAY
Google has named “John McCain” as the fastest falling search term of
the year. It is better to have been Googled and lost, then to have
never been Googled at all.
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