New Buzzword for Commodities - “Demand
Destruction”
By Gary Dorsch, Editor, Global Money Trends
Jesse Livermore, the world’s
greatest trader used to say, “Remember, the market is designed to fool most of the
people most of the time. Sometimes, the market will go contrary to what
speculators have predicted. At these times, speculators must abandon their
predictions and follow the action of the market. Never argue with the tape.
Markets are never wrong, but opinions often are. I only try to react to what the
market is telling me by its behavior,” he said.
After Reuters CRB Index of
19-exchange traded commodities plunged by 10% in July, its biggest monthly
decline since March 1980, the five-year bull-run for the “Commodity Super
Cycle” appears to have peaked out, and speculators are building net short
positions in commodities. “I came to learn that even when one is properly
bearish at the very beginning of a bear market, it is not well to begin selling
in bulk until there is no danger of the engine back-firing,” Livermore
warned.
“The bull market in crude oil
started in 1999, and in the last nine-years the oil market has gone down over
40% three times. Was that the end of the bull market?” asked famed investor
Jimmy Rodgers on July 29th. In a world of limited resources, the
world’s population is expected to double over the next 40-years, with more than
95% of the increase in demand concentrated in developing countries.
Still the new buzzword in the
trading pits is “demand destruction,” a favorite slogan for short-sellers in
the commodity markets. After setting an all-time high a month ago on July 2nd,
and up 40% from a year earlier, the Dow Jones Commodity Index (DJCI) suddenly
finds itself on the brink of bear market territory, after an -20% slide from
its peak, and faring no better than the MSCI All-World Stock Index, which has
been mutilated by the bear’s claws, for the past nine months.
“Demand destruction,” the new
flavor of the month, refers to a sustained reduction in demand for a commodity,
following a prolonged period of extra-ordinary high prices. For example, Americans
shunned pickups and SUV’s in June, with retail gasoline prices moving above $4
per gallon, while sales of many fuel efficient car models went up. Sales of
GM's light trucks and SUVs tumbled 16% in June, while Toyota Motor saw a 15%
jump in sales of its compact Corolla, and US-demand for gasoline is roughly 3%
lower from a year earlier.

Historically, every “Oil Shock” since
1972 has tipped the global economy into a recession, which in turn, has
weakened demand for industrial commodities. But the recent declines in industrial
commodities were also accompanied by equally sharp slides in agricultural
commodities like corn, soybeans, wheat and rice, suggesting a broader exodus by
hedge funds and other big speculators is underway.
History will show that the July 2nd
peak in the “Commodity Super Cycle,” coincided with the European Central Bank’s
courageous move on July 3rd, to lift its repo
rate by a quarter-point to 4.25-percent. The ECB hawks refused to be bullied by
Euro-zone politicians into a series of rate-cuts, or join the Fed’s money
printing orgy, even while banks and brokers worldwide had recognized $480
billion of write-offs from toxic-sub-prime mortgages, over the previous 12-months.
Instead, the ECB held its repo
rate steady at 4% through the first-year of the global banking crisis, then
guided German schatz yields to a six-year high. The
ECB got the pay-off it was hoping for, when the commodity markets subsequently plunged,
led by a $30 /barrel drop in crude oil, and 20% losses in the agricultural
sector.
The world economy needed a powerful central
bank to go against the “Big-Easy” at the US Treasury and the Fed, and the “yen
carry” traders at the Bank of Japan, in order to deflate the oil and commodity
“bubble” with a classic dose of higher interest rates. The ECB’s
baby-step rate hike was the tipping point, where market psychology switched
from “fears of inflation” to worries about “demand destruction.”
The ECB hawks received back-up support from
central bankers in Brazil, China, India, and Russia, which tightened their
monetary policies in July, in order to combat inflation and slow their
economies. Later this week, the Bank of Korea is expected to hike its overnight
loan rate to 5.25%, to shore-up the value of the Korean-won and rein-in the
explosive growth of the money supply.
The ECB hawks repudiated the
advice of the ultra-inflationist Frederic Mishkin, a
top advisor to Benjamin S. Bernanke at the Federal
Reserve. “Just as doctors take the Hippocratic Oath to do no harm, central
banks should recognize that trying to prick asset-price bubbles using monetary
policy is likely to do more harm than good. Interest rates are too blunt a tool
for targeting specific asset prices, and attempting to prick an asset price
bubble should be avoided,” he said on May 15th.

Six weeks later, the ECB hiked its
repo rate to 4.25%, and greased the skids under the
commodity and global stock markets. The annual rate of change for the DJ
Commodity Index has plunged to +14% today, from a record high of +40% a month
ago. Government apparatchniks will soon begin to report
a significant slowdown in official inflation rates, giving central banks more time
to keep interest rates low, or the leeway to ease monetary policy where
interest rates are historically high.
But the ECB’s
tonic for curing global inflation was a bitter pill to swallow. Global stock
markets lost $3 trillion in value over the past two months, and the “reverse
wealth” effect” threatens to grind the Euro-zone economy to a halt in the third
quarter. The Euro-zone’s manufacturing and services sector composite index fell
to seven-year low of 47.8 in July, and Spain’s
jobless rate jumped to 10.4%, a 10-year high.
The UK’s PMI tumbled to 44.3, it’s
lowest since December 1998, from 45.9 in June, and British home
prices have tumbled 8% in the past year, a record rate of decline. One in
seven British home owners could fall into negative equity over the next year, threatening consumer
spending. With commodity markets under siege from “demand
destruction,” a Bank of England rate cut to 4.75% could be on the table, if
commodity and stock markets continue to trend lower in the months ahead.

Japan’s
industrial production fell for the second straight quarter in April-June, the
first such back-to-back decline since 2001, when output fell in all four-quarters. Since
1953, the Japanese
economy has never escaped a recession when production falls for two quarters in
a row. Exports, a key driver of Japan’s
economy, fell in June for the first time in nearly five years, as shipments to
the United States
plunged by 15% from a year ago, and sales to Europe and
Asian markets sputtered.
Japan’s trade surplus was
nearly wiped out in June, plunging 90% from a year earlier to 139-billion yen
($1.3 billion), with a soaring oil bill on the one hand, and
faltering exports on the other. Household spending fell for a fourth month, slipping 1.8% in June from
a year earlier, and Japan’s jobless rate rose to 4.1% in June,
a two-year high, as factories froze hiring, signaling “demand destruction.”

China’s
manufacturing sector contracted in July for the fourth consecutive month to 48.4
in July, and sub-indices for output, imports, and new export orders all fell by
more than 5% from June. India’s industrial production grew at the slowest pace
in more than six years in May, slowing to an annual rate of +3.8% for the month
from an expansion of +10.6% a year ago. Concern over the slide in industrial
output and exports contributed to a 31% decline in the Bombay Stock Index this
year.
India’s
central bank raised its benchmark rate by 50 basis points on July 29th
to 9.00%, it’s highest in seven years and hiked the cash reserve ratio, or
the
amount of funds banks must keep on deposit with the central bank, by 25 basis
points to 9.0 percent. The
double-barreled punch is a signal that the central bank is ready to accept
slower growth, (much like the ECB), as the price for lower inflation, which is
holding just below 12 percent.

Corn and soybean prices have tumbled
sharply in-line with plunging crude oil prices, since establishing contract
highs in June and early July. Corn futures reached an all-time high of $7.70
/bushel on June 27th, but since declined to $5.05. Soybean futures
reached a high of $16.60 on July 3rd, but fell to $12.20 on August 5th.
Fears that hot weather that could damage the crops during the crucial
pollination phase have eased, with cooler temperatures and rainfall expected. The
world is expected to produce a record wheat crop in 2008-09.
While the dominant link between
the agricultural and energy sector is the bio-fuel connection, traders can also
gauge market sentiment, when bullish news is released and the market remains
unchanged or moves lower. Such was the case on July 30th, when the
US House Republicans defeated an anti-speculator bill, designed to tighten
position limits on energy and agricultural futures contracts. Yet the bounce in
the commodities markets was brief and lacked significant firepower.

One of the most curious
developments is the recent strengthening of the US dollar compared to the Euro,
in-line with sharply lower oil prices. The US
imports 4.5 billion barrels of oil per year, so the latest $30 /barrel decline,
if sustained, can reduce America’s
oil import bill by roughly $135 billion per year. On the other hand, the US
is also the world’s largest exporter of grains, and projections of foreign
sales revenue has just been sliced by 20% in the past four weeks.
Two months ago, on June 3rd,
Fed chief Bernanke warned the US central bank “is
working with the Treasury to carefully monitor developments in foreign exchange
markets, and is aware of the effect of the dollar’s decline on inflation and
price expectations,” a subtle threat of stealth intervention in the currency
markets. Yet Bernanke never had any intention of
lifting US interest rates to bolster the dollar. Instead, the ECB turned its tough
words into action, by hiking its repo rate, yet the
US dollar, (not the Euro), was the eventual winner from lower oil prices.

The Fed was successful in scaring
the gold bugs in July, by sending false signals to the mainstream media, about
a tighter Fed policy, sooner rather than later. On July 18, with gold trading
near $960 /oz, Minneapolis Fed chief Gary Stern warned, “headline inflation is
clearly too high, and the Fed can not wait until financial and housing markets
stabilize before raising interest rates,” he said.
Then on July 22nd,
Philadelphia Fed chief Charles Plosser warned that
keeping monetary policy too-loose for too-long could worsen inflation by
allowing expectations to get entrenched into consumer and business psychology.
“To keep inflation expectations anchored means that monetary policymakers will
have to back up their words with actions. We need to reverse course. I
anticipate the reversal will need to be started sooner rather than later,” he
warned.
Then on July 23rd, Plosser warned again, “Real interest rates are negative,
and we can’t stay there indefinitely. We’ve got price pressures clearly
throughout the economy. Ultimately, rates are going to have to go up,” he said.
Stern and Plosser duped the gold bugs into a selling
frenzy, and on August 4th, the dynamic duo flip-flopped, and voted
to keep the fed funds rate steady at 2-percent.
The Fed’s propaganda artists
could hardly believe their good fortune, as gold and oil prices sank, even as
they signaled no change in “negative” US
interest rates for the remainder of the year. But as the charts above indicate,
bottom fishing in US financial shares, after the US
government’s bailout of Fannie and Freddie, combined with sharply lower
agricultural and oil energy futures, and a stronger dollar, were the chief culprits
behind gold’s latest plunge below $900 /oz.

Copper prices have tumbled by 12%
in the aftermath of the ECB rate hike on July 3rd, amid rising
inventories on the London Metal Exchange and a slowdown in global factory
activity. Stockpiles monitored by the LME jumped 22% since July 1st
to 150,000 tons, and are the highest since February. The HSBC Global Mining
Index fell 30% from its all-time high set in May, and the world’s top 20 mining
stocks have lost $670 billion in market value, over the past 10-weeks.
In the commodities markets, sentiment
can turn instantly on a dime. Livermore
said the market is 90% emotional and 10% logical. It’s difficult to catch a
falling knife, without getting hurt. For commodity bulls, OPEC’s upcoming
meeting on Sept 6th could be a turning point. “If there are
expectations that demand will fall, or if supply is actually more than
demand, OPEC will act to balance supply and demand,” said Qatari Oil Minister
Abdullah al-Attiyah on August 1st. Beyond
OPEC, contrarians might see the dismal readings on global factory orders as
nearing a bottom.
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