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BASE
METALS BEARS
- The Casey Files -
by
David Galland
Managing Editor, BIG GOLD
from Casey
Research
July 27, 2007
To
save you some reading time, the theme of the article is that, due
to high prices, the supplies of base metals coming onto the market
will quickly reach the point where they’ll overwhelm demand,
driving prices down. This scenario will be exacerbated, according
to the base metals bears, because China’s rocket-like economic
expansion must surely slow, thereby simultaneously reducing the
demand at the same time supplies are increasing.
According
to the Bloomberg article, despite the strength of their argument,
these same bears, most notably the folks at JP Morgan, have been
wrong about the base metals for some time now. To quote…
An
investor who acted on the advice of JPMorgan, the third-largest
U.S. bank, missed gains of 67 percent for nickel, 30 percent for
copper and 41 percent for lead, the best-performing commodities in
the 26-member UBS Bloomberg CMCI Index.
Even
so, just because they have been wrong in the past doesn’t mean
they are going to continue to be wrong, and so one shouldn’t use
that as an excuse to dismiss their arguments.
Always
happy for a second opinion, I forwarded the Bloomberg article on
to long-term friend Clyde Harrison, the brains behind both the
Rogers International Commodity Index and now the Bridgewater
Index.
After
reading it, he gave me a call. His view can be summed up as
“They may be right, in the short term. But a year down the road,
the base metals are going to be trading much higher than they are
today.”
Why?
According
to Clyde, the debate about China’s growth is already over,
underscoring that contention by sharing just a few data points.
For
instance, there are currently 168 power plants being built in
China. In addition to the massive amount of metal used in
constructing those plants, consider the copper wire those power
plants are going to be connected to. “Will there be a fall-off
in demand for copper? Not likely,” Clyde replied, answering his
own question.
He
also noted that China built and sold as many cars as the U.S. last
year.
And
it is important to understand, Clyde continued, that today one
billion people use 2/3 of the world’s natural resources. The
balance of 5.6 billion people use the other third, but they are
quickly becoming more successful, setting up a serious
competition.
Which
goes a long way toward explaining why there are now 50,000
students studying geology in China, versus 900 in the U.S. (of
which 300 are foreign). And why the Chinese are increasingly
showing up in remote corners of the world, checkbooks open, eager
to trade our dollars for tangible resources. Unlike businessmen
from the U.S., the Chinese buyers don’t insist that the sellers
start labor unions or clean up their pay practices, they’re just
there to do business.
In
that regard, the Chinese have no qualms of passing across a
briefcase full of cash if that’s what’s required to get the
deal done. That’s something a U.S. executive would go to jail
for. Behind Door A is a briefcase full of cash. Behind Door B is a
Happy Meal and nothing else. Who do you think is going to get the
deal?
Then
there’s this.
According
to Clyde, historical data shows that when a country starts to
industrialize, per-capita usage of oil typically goes from about 1
bbl at the beginning of the industrialization, to between 17 and
27 bbl per capita by the time the industrialization is completed.
That
China is just beginning to industrialize, and has much further to
go, is evident when you consider the Chinese currently consume
just 1.7 bbl per capita per year. And the citizens of India use
just 0.9.
Like
Clyde, we believe there is no putting the Chinese genie back in
the bottle. In fact, in our view, what we are witnessing in China
is evidence that when the mainland Chinese, while preparing to
take Hong Kong back from the British, came to the realization that
free market capitalism with little hindrance from the state was
the only way forward.
A
New Economic Age in the Making?
The
implications of that shift in thinking are making itself felt
around the world, with the world’s largest nation now
super-charged by the world’s best economic system.
That
is not to say that there won’t be rough spots in China’s
future—the level of stock market speculation there is bound to
cause a problem—but the trend in China, and elsewhere, is well
entrenched and not going to change any time soon.
If
you take another step or two back, it is worth noting that Dubai,
a patch of desert with little in the way of natural resources, has
used the same laissez-faire economic approach to transform itself
into a global economic powerhouse. It is not out of the question
that other countries may begin to take note, and follow suit. In
which case, the future is bright indeed… as is the case for all
the natural resources.

© 2007 David Galland
Managing Editor, Casey Research
Editorial Archive
David Galland is the
managing editor of BIG
GOLD,
a new publication from Casey Research dedicated to helping
investors profit from the developing bull market in precious
metals--with an easy-to-maintain portfolio of conservative mid- to
large-cap gold producers and near-producers.

www.caseyresearch.com
and www.kitcocasey.com
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