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The
Daily Reckoning PRESENTS:
Since most commodities rose significantly in price over the last several
years, the recent slide begs the questions: What does it all mean? Is
the commodity boom over? Chris Mayer answers those questions - and more
- below...
The
market has knocked the stuffing out of many commodities of late. Crude
oil is down 35% from its record high of $78.40 in July to a 19-month low
as I write. The CRB Index of 19 commodities is off about 20% since May.
The only commodities holding up seem to be in the agricultural markets
(e.g., corn).
The
key piece to understanding the commodity jigsaw puzzle lies in that
ever-baffling and wondrous place, China, which never seems to stray far
from our view. What happens there has a huge impact on commodities
worldwide.
China
is already the world’s largest consumer of copper, nickel and zinc. It
is among the largest consumers of many other commodities, as well. But
what’s really amazing is not so much the sheer quantity of commodities
devoured... what is really staggering is the growth rate of such
consumption — especially in the context of what the rest of the world
is doing.
For
example, from 2002-05, according to the International Monetary Fund,
China alone accounted for 48% of the increased demand for aluminum. Take
a look at the short table below, which shows the percentages for some
other commodities, as well:
*Aluminum,
48%
*Copper, 51%
*Lead, 110%
*Nickel, 87%
*Steel, 54%
*Tin, 86%
*Zinc, 113%
*Oil, 30%
Think
about that. Worldwide, when you look at the increased consumption of,
say, steel, 54% of that increase came from China alone. In Wall Street
fancy talk, they call that percentage the “commodity delta” — try
dropping that in conversation at the next neighborhood barbecue. For
lead and zinc, China’s increased consumption actually offset declines
in the rest of the world. No single country has been as important to the
commodity bull market as has the Middle Kingdom.
I
traveled to China in late 2005, spending time seeing the sights around
dusty Beijing in the north, exploring the crowded streets of Shanghai
and marveling at the busy panorama in Hangzhou and Hong Kong. I also
stopped off at a small village between Shanghai and Hangzhou — called
Wuzhen — where I ate chicken feet and pigeon soup and saw another side
of China away from the big cities. All along the way, I met with Chinese
professionals and business people who helped me gain a better
understanding of what was happening on the ground in China.
The
whole experience made a big impact on me. Ever since, I can’t seem to
stop talking about China. With good reason, I think. The emergence of
China’s economy on the world stage may be the biggest investment story
of our time. In 1990, China was the world’s 10th largest economy.
Today, it is the fourth largest. That’s mind-boggling growth.
The
implications of that cover just about everything I’ve written about
over the past 12 months — from strained water resources and bustling
agricultural markets to aging infrastructure and needed energy
investment. These are long-term trends that will take years to play out.
It
would be a mistake to say increased demand from China alone assures a
rise in commodity prices. There are always many variables, but China is
unmistakably a big one. If China went away, it would be like a fat guy
getting out of a hot tub. The water level would plunge. Let me put it
this way: It’s hard to imagine a continued bull market in commodities
without China.
It
would also be a mistake to assume that China’s growth rate stays at
its hot pace of recent years. “Only stand high a long enough time,”
the poet Robinson Jeffers wrote, “your lightning will come; that is
what blunts the peaks of the redwoods.” There is plenty of potential
for lightning — social unrest within China, political tiffs with the
U.S. and other policy mishaps. (I found it interesting that 27 separate
pieces of anti-China trade legislation have made their way to Congress
since 2005.)
However,
even a slower-growing China will still have a lot of sway in the market
for commodities. China is still in the early innings of
industrialization. It’s in the midst of a massive shift of population
to the cities, the biggest the world has ever seen. Chinese officials
expect more than 300 million Chinese farmers will migrate from rural
areas to live in urban areas in the coming two decades.
As a
result, China has big plans for investment in infrastructure — such as
water and wastewater systems, power grids and much more. China will need
a lot of steel, copper, energy, etc., to build all that stuff. For
example, as Stephen Roach at Morgan Stanley notes, “There is an
especially tight link between homebuilding and copper.” In the U.S.,
the average home contains 400 pounds of copper. We don’t have
comparable numbers for China, but it seems reasonable to assume
China’s numbers should be similar. It’s possible, given that Chinese
efficiency lags behind the U.S.’s, that China could require much more.
Nonetheless,
we should expect commodity prices to fluctuate, sometimes sharply. Even
in the last great commodities boom, from 1966-82, there were plenty of
setbacks. And these commodities won’t all move together as each
responds to the unique tugs and pulls of its market. We’re seeing some
of this already with corn rallying hard amid a nasty decline in oil.

© 2007 Chris Mayer
The
Daily Reckoning Archives
www.dailyreckoning.com
Editor’s Note: Chris
Mayer is a veteran of the banking industry, specifically in the area of
corporate lending. A financial writer since 1998, Mr. Mayer’s essays
have appeared in a wide variety of publications, from the Mises.org
Daily Article series to here in The Daily Reckoning. He is the editor of
Mayer’s Special Situations and Capital and Crisis - formerly the Fleet
Street Letter.
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