HRA Dispatch - Oct 09
Cycles...
David and Eric
Coffin's
Hard Rock Analyst Journal
Posted Oct 27, 2009
Mayan Indian elder Apolinario
Chile Pixtun has restated his belief that the world is not going
to end in 2012. Or more precisely, that his beliefs don't suggest
the world should end despite it being the end of a major cycle
in the Mayan calendar. According to China Daily, he is
even more emphatic that he's tired of being asked about it. 2012
is the end of a 5126 year cycle (end of the 13th of 13 Baktun).
It also ends a 26800 year cycle that may relate to the Earth's
wobble, which is useful for gauging the drift of seasonal climate
changes. China Daily also briefly mentions predictions
by 16th century (Christian calendar) French herbalist Nostradamus
that is being combined with the Mayan cycles to create buzz for
a spate of movies and TV specials.
The Nostradamus' predictions
appear to be linear rather than cyclical. It's hard to say since,
like most good prophesy, they're in code. The cycles described
in Mayan calendars still have the more universal appeal. It's
comforting to think things will come around again. Mesoamericans
outlined complex calendars that, we're told, are quite accurate.
That does make them useful to time planting, and also to justify
the timing of power shifts. We assume feeding people generated
much of the early buzz around star gazing, but as usual the technical
breakthrough brought hangers-on.
Perhaps it will be 2012 when
western economies at the centre of the debt/housing bubble hit
that wall of resignation that creates a final bottom. That will
partially depend on how the interest rate cycle plays out in
each of them. Capital will continue to seek the safety of bonds
for a while yet, assuming its not central banks doing all the
buying. As long as yields stay low mortgage resets will keep
some weaker players afloat. Bottoms are marked by capitulation,
which for debt usually comes when rising interest rates submerge
those still treading water. Yields would normally have to go
a long way to generate this impact but this cycle features many
overextended borrowers that need plenty of time to earn down
debt loads.
Right now there is much confusion
about whether a "typical" market cycle even applies.
Asian growth economies that function somewhat differently than
western markets (and differently than each other) are clouding
crystal balls. These effects are skewed even more by price shifts
against currencies. We seem to be between cycles, and probably
are. In our little bit of the galaxy this means coming up with
a new gauge for the price vs. stocks equation for copper and
some other metals.
Most of the capital that flowed
into copper earlier this year plans to use the stuff at some
point, and sees potential for a supply squeeze. The question
is whether taking a gain now will be rewarded with a lower buy-back
price before the stocks are needed. Normally that would work
but with metals being used as inflation hedges and pair trades
against weak currencies prices (at least dollar prices) have
gotten detached from the inventory cycle.
Notwithstanding last week's
new highs for gold, producer stocks move hesitantly, with plenty
of traders waiting for "the other shoe to drop", whatever
that might be. Metals in general are continuing their anti-dollar
rally. While we would still like to see falling inventories
on the base metal side inventory levels have at least been flattening
in the case of most metals and falling for zinc and aluminum.
There is fear of bubbles and a multiplying list of grumpy bears
now that the Dow has added a digit the way gold already had.
Yes, a lot of this has to do with a flood of liquidity and speculation
on what level profits (or the USD) might be at a year or two
out. But, as we've noted several times recently its better to
deal with the market that is than to try and tell it what to
do.
Even though it's considered
the height of irrationality by some, renewed strength in many
asset classes can continue as long as central banks flood the
markets with liquidity and drive down the returns on competing
assets like government debt.
The day may come when that
won't work any longer and bond yields take off so taking profits
regularly continues to be a good idea. The day may come sooner
when other central banks, the ECB in particular, start trying
to jawbone their own currencies lower which could give the greenback
a bounce and metals a correction. We expect that would be a correction
however, not a panic, and those central banks will still have
to prove they can back up words with actions. Jawboning is only
a stop gap measure and the Dollar Index has breached several
important technical levels on the downside. There will be support
for most markets as long as decent economic stats continue to
be reported and there is belief that the recession is at least
easing. While we agree this is mainly (but not wholly) a currency
trade, the longs in commodities have reason to be skeptical that
central banks will "get it right" or that some turn
of events will create a new batch of Dollar bulls. Central banks
do no have the best of track records when it comes to controlling
liquidity flows.
It would be nice to have some
magic ratio that says "metal X is a buy when inventories
equal Y and the US Dollar Index is at level Z". We would
like to say we that we already know, but we can't. Unfortunately,
we left our codebook in the other computer and, unlike Mayan
calendars; we don't think anything in this market is carved in
stone.
***
David
Coffin & Eric Coffin
Editors HRA Journal
email: hra@publishers-mgmt.com
David Coffin
and Eric Coffin are the editors of the HRA Journal, HRA Dispatch
and HRA Special Delivery publications focused on metals exploration,
development and production stocks. They were among the first to
draw attention to the current commodities super cycle and have
generated one of the best track records in the business thanks
to decades of experience and contacts throughout the industry
that help them get the story to their readers first. Please visit
their website at www.hraadvisory.com for more information.
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