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Base Metals Technicals 2
Some of the most fascinating and amazing market action this
year has occurred in the base metals.
They have blasted stratospheric in mighty parabolic surges, exhibiting
tremendous volatility that even dwarfs that of the stock markets. And now they are largely retreating in
healthy bull-market corrections necessary to bleed off their earlier
speculative excesses.
This jaw-dropping volatility in the base metals is even more
remarkable considering how young their bull markets are. Several years ago the base metals, which
in the markets are defined as any metal that is not considered precious, were
languishing near secular lows. Not
even the contrarians who were zealously trading the precious metals at the time
cared about the base metals.
Yet regardless of their lack of sexiness, the laws of supply
and demand function just as well in the base metals’ realm. World demand for base metals was soaring
on the back of the industrialization of Asia,
but new mines were not being constructed since prices were too low to make
supplying base metals worthwhile.
The resulting global supply crunch has driven base metals to levels unimaginable only a few years ago.
The past several months since I wrote my original essay in this
series have been some of the most exciting in history for the base metals, so
this week I want to update my charts and analysis. Before I delve into this, I’d like
to relay an interesting anecdote that happened to me earlier this week that
puts this analysis in context.
In recent newsletters for our subscribers, I have been
discussing the ongoing metals corrections extensively. Corrections are inevitable, every bull market in history has flowed and ebbed,
taking two steps forward in dazzling uplegs before retreating one step back in
necessary corrections to restore balance to sentiment. These steps back are immensely valuable
as they provide the best buying opportunities of any bull market.
A few days ago in our Zeal Speculator alert service,
I was discussing potential interim-bottoming targets for copper’s ongoing
correction. One gentleman wrote in
after the alert was published and he was not happy with my thoughts on
copper’s probable near-term fortunes. After telling me I was smoking
something, he pointed out that copper is ultimately in short supply, that China
cannot build its infrastructure without copper, that the fleets of hybrid
vehicles being produced worldwide each use large amounts of copper, and on and
on.
He was absolutely correct in his fundamentally bullish
arguments for copper. Fundamentally
the base metals all look outstanding.
Their supplies were neglected for decades and now the rise of Asia is adding unprecedented demand. And it will probably take at least
another decade or so before enough new base metals mines come online to address
this structural deficit, so prices should continue to rise on balance in the
meantime. But long-term fundamental
arguments mean nothing in the face of short-term
technicals.
No markets rise in a straight line forever and neither will
the base metals. As the base metals
technicals clearly show, they became radically overbought by any standard in
the last few months. When
speculators get too euphoric and drive prices to extremes, corrections are
necessary to bleed the greed out of the markets which ensures the bulls’
ultimate longevities are not damaged or compromised.
Corrections are not threats to investors and speculators,
but opportunities to realize profits and reload positions at the resulting interim
lows. So as you digest these base
metals technicals, get in the crucial speculator mindset of seeing corrections
as a gift you can capitalize on to buy
bargains at the coming interim lows, not a threat. And realize that bearish short-term
technical arguments never impair long-term bullish fundamentals.
Copper is the undisputed king of base metals. In the heavily wired Information Age,
this efficient conductor is ubiquitous in everything from buildings to cars to
electronics. It is one of the most
essential commodities for modern civilization. In the markets, copper usually sets the
tone for the rest of the base metals.
As such, copper is the best place to start examining the current base
metals technicals.
Copper has had an absolutely amazing bull run in the last several years. Three years ago this week it was trading
under $0.77 per pound. But at the
end of its latest parabolic surge in late May, it closed near $4.08! This 430% gain is breathtaking and
illustrates just how incredible the base metals’ performances have
been. The majority of these
dramatic gains, however, have accrued only since
February which is just far too rapidly in the grand scheme of things.
Back in 2003 copper was in a nice solid uptrend. It eventually broke out in late 2003 and
early 2004 with a very impressive 58% surge in only 67 trading days. This secular awakening of copper put it
on the map again for many speculators.
China
was starting to bid on copper worldwide which drove prices up and speculators
jumped on for the ride, fanning the flames. After this first major upleg, copper
modestly corrected 18% over the next 54 days before entering its next major
uptrend channel that lasted until late last year.
Back at the time it unfolded, copper’s 2003/2004 upleg
looked vertical, totally unsustainable.
But copper really didn’t correct too radically after such a
powerful surge. After an initial
modest correction it started consolidating and grinding sideways to higher. This behavior illustrated that pure
global supply and demand fundamentals were a much bigger driving force behind
copper’s first upleg than speculative fervor.
Fast forward to last summer. In May 2005, copper was trading just over
$1.42, already back above its early 2004 highs. Over the next year or so, copper would
ultimately run 187% higher over 257 trading days. This occurred in two distinct phases, an
initial 64% upleg running into early February and a secondary 91% parabolic
surge that erupted in late February.
The latter is the reason why copper is almost certain to correct.
Up until February, copper’s 64% run over 183 trading
days was totally normal. It was
certainly a strong upleg, but it was justified because global copper demand
growth continued to exceed supply growth.
If copper had topped on an interim basis in early February at $2.34 as
it probably should have, I would have expected a modest correction leading into
a long sideways consolidation as this metal had done in 2004. But then something incredible happened.
Speculators, largely hedge funds, started deploying enormous
amounts of capital into commodities futures. At the time oil, gold, and silver were
all strong which was spawning interest in the commodities realm outside of the
usual players. Much new capital
poured into hedge funds, which promptly deployed it in futures and drove base
metals prices parabolic. Copper
itself rocketed up 91%, nearly doubled, in just 60 trading days!
This magnificent parabolic surge certainly sticks out on
this chart. It was like copper
looked normal until February then the character of its bull totally
changed. The problem with parabolas
is they are never sustainable. As a
price shoots vertical on a chart and nearly doubles in a short period of time,
the amount of capital necessary to continue generating gains of this scale
grows exponentially. Without enough
continuing buying to offset the selling of the speculators locking in their gains,
the only thing the parabola can do is collapse.
And so far it looks like this collapse has started for
copper. The parabolic collapse in
this case is certainly not going to end the copper bull, but just close the
book on a particularly exuberant upleg.
Through this process of correcting, copper will bleed off the
excessively optimistic sentiment so common lately and restore balance. Sooner or later this metal will bounce
and provide an awesome opportunity to add more longs including the stocks of elite
global copper producers.
No matter how bullish copper’s fundamentals are, a
vertical 91% gain in just three months is beyond the realm of reason or
sustainability. Industrial users
that drive true physical demand cannot bid up prices fast enough to spawn a
parabola. Only speculators
can. But speculators, since we
don’t actually need or want the physical copper, can exit long positions
just as fast and drive a symmetrical correction. Since this has already started, extreme
caution is in order for copper until its price starts to stabilize again.
Interestingly zinc’s parallel parabolic surge is even
more extreme than copper’s!
This metal skyrocketed 98% in just 58 trading days and ultimately
crested at unthinkable levels over twice
as high as its baseline 200-day moving average. Like in copper though, such incredibly
fast surges leading to verticality are never sustainable. Zinc’s necessary correction to
rebalance its sentiment has already started.
This chart is utterly amazing! If anyone would have told me a year ago
that zinc, a relatively obscure base metal compared to the headline
commodities, would rocket up 228% in just one year I would have laughed. Yet here we are. Such an extraordinary move in such a
short period of time, especially the final double since February, has carved
one of the most textbook-perfect parabolic blowoff patterns I have ever seen. Such a mighty surge will absolutely have
consequences.
Now what are the odds that zinc was so horribly undervalued
fundamentally at $0.91 in February that it had to double over the next few months to reach fair value on a pure
supply and demand basis? Pretty slim. Industrial users of zinc know about how
much they will need months or years in advance so they gradually buy and lock
in their prices with futures. It is
only speculators that can and will buy aggressively enough to spawn a true
parabola, an enormous surge in a very short period of time.
At any time, even at the apex of a parabola, prices can only
do one of three things, rise, flatline, or fall. To rise, regardless of where a price is,
new buy orders have to continue to outnumber sell orders. Thus for zinc’s parabola to extend
higher, some big buyers have to come in and not only absorb all the speculative
sell orders from funds realizing their profits but provide marginal demand on
top of that. As the 17% initial
slide in zinc over just 6 trading days has shown, this apparently is not going
to happen.
The second possibility is the parabola flatlines, a new
price plateau is reached and prices trade sideways. For this to happen, enough buy orders
have to come in at these stellar zinc prices to totally offset sell orders from
speculators locking in their immense profits. This almost never happens though. If you wanted to buy zinc either as a
speculator or an industrial user, and you thought prices were heading lower,
why not wait a couple weeks or months to try and get a better price? No one wants to buy once parabolas start
faltering.
Hence the final, and most likely by far, outcome after a
parabola is a sharp correction. At
the top, prices seem crazy high to everyone. Speculators sell aggressively to lock in
their profits and sell orders dwarf buy orders so prices start falling. These falling prices spook other speculators
who soon join in lest they give back all of their gains. This cascading selling starts damaging
sentiment. Buyers don’t come
into the market again in volume until prices start to stabilize after the
plunge frightens most of the potential sellers into selling, or shakes out the
weak hands.
No matter how bullish zinc’s long-term fundamentals
may be, it is not immune from these temporary psychological extremes that
dominate short-term market action.
If you want to go long zinc or buy zinc miners, the best time to do it
is after a correction when fear is
high, not near a parabolic top where euphoria runs rampant. Zinc, like copper, simply cannot sustain
nearly 100% gains in just a few months.
They are too extreme.
Nickel, which is primarily used to make alloys like
stainless steel, has also joined in the recent extraordinary base metals
action. Interestingly though,
nickel’s recent runup was nowhere near as extreme as those of copper and
zinc. Nickel, thanks to its earlier
2003 parabolic ascent, also illustrates the potential aftermath of a parabola
in the midst of a strong bull market.
In 2003 nickel soared, up 130% in just 187 trading
days. The apex of this vertical
move drove it to extremely high levels relative to its baseline 200dma, over
1.75x above it. While fun at the
time for speculators long nickel, the extreme speculator greed necessary to
drive parabolas has inevitable consequences. Thus in early 2004 nickel corrected and
fell sharply, ultimately bleeding off 41% over 92 trading days.
It is important to realize that this correction, while
vicious, in no way jeopardized nickel’s ongoing secular bull market. Nickel corrected back down to its old
support line, which was under its 200dma that had been jacked up faster than
usual due to its 2003 parabola. And
after its 2004 correction bounced, nickel established an excellent new uptrend
and continued moving higher for over a year. This event is crucial as it illustrates
how a short-term parabola and its aftermath can be fully digested in the midst of a secular bull without
threatening to end the bull prematurely.
My best guess for the outcome of the current copper and zinc
parabolas is they will follow a similar course to nickel’s earlier
example. They will correct and
grind lower for several months or so, ultimately falling under their 200dmas
since those 200dmas were rising abnormally rapidly in response to their
parabolas. These bounces could even
go as low as the latest support lines of copper and zinc. I’ll certainly be watching for
these next interim lows wherever they happen as I am really excited to redeploy
into base metals miners when they are once again technical bargains.
Back to nickel’s recent technicals, it was up 101%
over 144 trading days since late last year. Now this is certainly a big upleg, even
a quasi-parabolic surge, but to me it doesn’t quite feel fully
parabolic. There is a big difference
between a price doubling in three months and it “merely” shooting
59% higher. Nickel is and ought to
be correcting after such euphoria, but ultimately its correction should be
considerably milder than copper and zinc because its preceding parabolic
pattern was so much less extreme.
If you aren’t happy with all these technicals pointing
to probable ongoing corrections in copper, zinc, and nickel, then you should be
pleasantly surprised by lead.
Lead’s own quasi-parabolic surge topped in early February and it
has been correcting ever since, off 30% so far. Unlike the other base metals, lead is
already back down to its technical strong-buy zone below its 200dma from whence
its next upleg is likely to launch.
Lead is really interesting and also offers insights into the
likely near-future paths of copper and zinc today. In 2003 and early 2004 lead soared 127%
higher in a strong upleg over 215 trading days. While the end of this particular rally
came close, it never quite went vertical and hence it doesn’t feel like a
true parabola to me. But the
consequence of this immense strength was a sharp 29% correction over about
seven weeks. Yet immediately after
this correction rebalanced sentiment, lead started marching slowly higher again
in a new uptrend. The 2003/2004
parabola and its aftermath didn’t hurt the secular bull.
Fast forward to 2005, lead started powering higher again
last summer just like the rest of the base metals. For some reason it peaked in early
February though and did not participate in the strong secondary surge from late
February to late May that drove the rest of the base metals straight up. As for reasons, I’ve yet to hear a
really convincing thesis that could explain this lead lethargy. All I know is that lead is largely
unloved and politically incorrect and speculators didn’t flood into it in
recent months like they did with the other base metals.
The result of this lack of secondary-surge participation is
lead is already technically cheap today, and it may be at or nearing the end of
its correction as long as it isn’t sucked into a sympathetic slide with
the other base metals. Unfortunately
this technical bright spot in the base metals is not easy to capitalize
on. Unless you trade futures
directly on the London Metal Exchange, it is hard to buy lead or lead options.
And to the best of my knowledge there is still only one
publicly traded pure-play lead miner in the world. While we recently recommended it in our
newsletters, it is not yet traded in the US stock markets. Thus unfortunately this lead weakness is
not as easy to capitalize on as the eventual interim bottoms in the other base
metals will be. Indeed it is quite
possible that one reason lead didn’t participate in the secondary base
metals surge in recent months is because it is so difficult for American
speculators to trade it directly or indirectly.
The final major base metal is aluminum. While it did mirror the surges of copper
and zinc, in magnitude terms it didn’t even come close to seeing similar
gains. With aluminum’s recent
secondary surge only up 38%, I would classify it as a strong upleg and not even
a quasi-parabola. This also
suggests that aluminum’s necessary correction to rebalance sentiment
should be considerably milder than copper’s or zinc’s.
In light of aluminum’s more sedate gains since last
summer and February, it is ironic that its young correction is leading, at the
moment, the base metals that participated in the secondary surge. Aluminum was down 20% by Wednesday
night, the data cutoff for this essay, compared to 17% for zinc, 15% for
copper, and 11% for nickel. This
anomaly probably won’t persist though, as the metals with the most
extreme parabolic surges should ultimately suffer through the biggest
percentage corrections.
The base metals technicals are very interesting today. They generally show extraordinary surges
in these metals, especially since February, driven by pure speculative
fervor. They now reveal corrections
that are already well underway. But
they also show that parabolic surges in base metals have happened in the past
and they did not damage their ongoing secular bulls. While they did need to correct for a
season to rebalance sentiment, their bullish uptrends resumed afterwards none
the worse for wear.
In light of these base metals technicals, I believe the best
course of action today is to expect further corrections in most of the base
metals. They became far too
overbought in the past month and they need to correct to rebalance sentiment. On the bright side, ultimately these
corrections will spawn the next interim lows that will provide the best buying
opportunities before the next major base metals uplegs erupt.
At Zeal we are always watching the base metals and waiting
for this opportunity, researching the most promising base metals miners on the
planet. When the base metals
technicals look highly favorable for going long again after these corrections
mature, we are planning to redeploy into elite base metals stocks in a big
way. When the appropriate time
comes, we will outline and recommend these actual trades in our newsletters for our
subscribers. Please subscribe today so you
don’t miss these coming major buying opportunities!
In addition to exclusive access to what we decide to trade
and when as these coming base metals interim bottoms materialize, our
subscribers also gain exclusive access to the large selection of private charts
on our website. This collection
includes large high-resolution versions of base metals technicals charts that
are updated weekly so you can follow the progress of these ongoing corrections
yourself.
The bottom line is most of the base metals, regardless of
how wildly bullish their fundamentals may be, simply grew far too overbought in
May. A flood of new speculative
capital drove the metals up, parabolic in some cases, to crazy levels that are
not sustainable over the short term.
All bull markets flow and ebb, and the base metals are no
exception. Their latest ebbings
have arrived.
But on the bright side these corrections will ultimately lead
to the best buying opportunities in the base metals and base metals stocks
since last summer. As these
metals’ histories show, even short-term parabolas and their aftermaths
are not a threat and will not derail long-term secular bulls driven by global
structural deficits in metals production.
Adam Hamilton, CPA
June 9, 2006
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information.
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