Copper Plunges Most In 3 Months As "Rehypothecation Evaporation" Concerns Grow | Zero Hedge
This is a follow on to an article I posted yesterday. Remember The Fountainhead, where crooked promoters sold 200 percent of a project that Roark built? The same thing is going on in China with commodities. Rehypothecation means that the same commodity has been pledged as collateral for multiple loans. This could get very serious.
http://www.gold.org/supply-and-demand/go...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gold
As for technical trading, in so far as it attempts to determine the ebb and flow of emotion in markets, I think it is valid. I never paid much attention to fundamentals when I traded (and I did very well), only emotion, because the fundamentals are always backwards looking. I never saw a fundamental analyst correctly call a big turn in any market, while simple technical indicators were often quite useful in doing just that. Nothing is perfect, but trading is a crowd based, emotional phenomenon and any strategy that ignores that is doomed to failure. I saw markets react directly opposite to what the "fundamentals" would imply so many times, especially at big market turning points, that to follow them would have led to bankruptcy. In fact, one of the best market signals is when markets react opposite to what the "fundamentals" would suggest.
What the zero hedge graph is showing is futures contract trading over 5 days, wherein the price fell from 3.17 to 3.03 (4.4%). To a speculator, I imagine this is nothing. I won't go as far as to say the futures market has NO bearing on the open market, but it's definitely muted. To get an idea, go to finance.yahoo.com and pull up a 6 month graph on JJC. A better headline would be "Is copper's three month recovery run coming to an end?"
Here's what I confess I do not understand. If there has been a belief that the commodity warehouses were filled with copper and now we find out they are not, how can there be wholesale liquidations going on? If everyone is scrambling to get the commodity we know know isn't there in the quantity we originally thought, shouldn't the price be going up? And just how much copper comes from China anyway? Another article zerohedge links to says the port in question is the 7th largest in the world, which is another way of saying "not that big".
http://www.kitcometals.com/charts/copper...
I note also, that if warehouse legerdemain caused the price to FALL as traders sell off to cover their positions, then, when the central bank shenanigans with GOLD are revealed, the price of gold will collapse... or so it would seem.
Myself, technical trading is fine if you like to amuse yourself with astrology. I keep to the fundamentals. We know how much copper (or gold) is in the Universe. Even if you could convert all free energy (suns without inhabited planets; dark energy, etc., etc.) into gold (or copper), it would be finite. Human invention is not so constrained: the presence of a hand-axe did not predict the marginal utility of the computer.
Commodity prices change because speculators take losses. That is all that speculators are good for. They eat losses so that primary producers and users can plan forward. Gold mines, wheat farmers, lumber harvesters, lard renderers, they all take buy/sell put/call long/short positions - both sides of every trade - because that reduces risks (inevitable production accidents, natural calamities, labor problems...). Speculators try to out-guess the market. They buy into their hopes and sell into their miseries.