Registration Strip Icon for smarter Trade smarter, not harder: Unleash your inner pro with our toolkit and live discussions.

Bill Cara
Bill Cara's columns :
01/16/2006North American markets are losing momentum
12/19/2005North American markets are nearing a cycle top
12/12/2005North American markets readying for winter
12/06/2005North American chill in the air
11/21/2005Friday afternoon trapped the bears
11/14/2005Traders have turned bullish, but I'm sitting out
11/07/2005When everybody turns bullish, bad things happen
10/31/2005When told of the impending rally, I ran for cover
10/24/2005One Traders Conundrum
10/17/2005Bear markets come and go
10/10/2005Stagflation - the financial pandemic
10/03/2005Sold to me!
09/26/2005The Rita-Katrina Effect
09/19/2005Rita meet Sam Houston; Sam meet Rita.
09/11/2005Pull-back in commodities sets new buying >>
09/07/2005The Katrina Domino

« EARLIEST ‹ PrevNext › LATEST »
Bill Cara – Trends and Cycles in the US and Canadian Markets

Bill Cara has enjoyed a highly successful securities industry career in Canada and abroad. Today he publishes one of the world's most popular and widely acclaimed trading blogs (www.billcara.com ). His weekly column for ADVFN looks at trends and cycles at work in the US and Canadian capital markets.


Pull-back in commodities sets new buying

09/11/2005

Last week, commodity prices dropped like a stone. The $CRB commodity index was down -2.42 pct Week over Week (W/W), to 323.32.

But, for those of you who think the Commodities Research Bureau (CRB) index is now likely to cave in, signalling the end of inflation, let me give you an important heads-up.

Until February of this year, not since the time I joined the securities industry -- which, trust my wife, is ancient history (24 years) - was the $CRB ever above 300. Its 40-Week Moving Average (M40) is now 302.22.

I don't like to talk dirty - but it ain't going back!

$CRB confirmed a secular bull market when it broke through the 300-glass ceiling. And while secular means long-term, the term in this case is likely to be 10 to 20 years.

That's not so long when you consider that the $CRB made its secular trend bottom in October 2001, at 178.44, which was a 24-year low, going back to 1977.

The index had been falling since its all-time high, set on November 28, 1981, at 337.60 - a month before I joined Dominion Securities in Toronto.

And, in real terms, October 2001 was when commodity prices hit their lowest levels since long before your great-great grandfather was born. In fact, of the value that existed in commodity prices in 1800, probably half has been lost, even at today's high prices.

The new secular bull trend, which started a month after 9/11, will likely carry commodity prices much higher for the next generation. And depending on your time horizon, $100 oil, and $1,000 gold, are not out of the question.

Last week I wrote in my blog:

"$CRB shot up +4.49 pct W/W to close at 331.35. This is after all an inflationary spiral that Talking Heads for both Wall Street and Washington are telling you does not exist. A week ago, I posted graphs/charts of the PPI/CPI data in the U.S. I did it (as I said a week or two before that) because it is a fact that we are in an inflation cycle where commodity prices are rising. Some days and weeks they may fall, but generally the $CRB is headed higher."

So, after the Feb-05 break-out, $CRB quickly moved to a cycle high of 323.33, then down to 292.06 (which is the new floor support), then back up to its present cycle high of 337.18 over a week ago. Note that $CRB has now reached its all-time high (Nov-1980 @ 337.60).

With farmers and distributors hoping to move goods following Katrina, and then the Force Majeures and the govt bail-outs from the strategic petroleum reserves, and so forth... voila .. $CRB settled back slightly off its highs, to 323.32.

But what's to happen if and when you can't get coffee or orange juice from South America, and it takes months if not years to repair the energy complex, and the emerging economies (China/India/Russia/Brazil/Indonesia/etc) refuse to stop growing, and demanding other commodities like steel and copper and forest products? ... You really know, don't you?

Yes, and your employer and their customers are soon going to know this too. Prices are going up. Way up.

My little genie in the U.S. PPI/CPI charts told me so.

In the next couple weeks, I will drill down into the stock beneficiaries for the commodities complex, but for now I think it's wise to start looking at an exchange-traded fund called the XLB. It is so far out-of-favor even my friends and associates are calling it a dog.

XLB components are: (1) Chemicals @55 pct, (2) Metals & Mining @22 pct, (3) Paper & Forest Products @15 pct, (4) Containers & Packaging @6 pct, and (5) Construction Materials @2 pct.

Some of the leading stocks in this sector are up +10 pct or more in the two weeks since Katrina. They are due for a rest. Others are not performing well and will take some time to work through a cycle bottom.

Afterwards, however, I expect the Basic Materials sector to be among the broad market leaders. I'll even let you know when.