Monday, August 4, 2014

Zinc prices to average around $2,500 per mt over 12 months: Goldman Sachs

Zinc prices to average around $2,500 per mt over 12 months: Goldman SachsAccording to latest research note published by Goldman Sachs (GS)- the investment banking major, zinc prices are likely to average around $2,500 per mt over the next 12 months. However, in immediate near-term, the prices are likely to remain under pressure. Although it maintains overall bullish view on the metal, the prices are most likely to cool off after the recent 13% rally since late-June ’14.

According to Roger Yuan, analyst at GS, the fundamentals of the metal still look bullish as large mines-Australia’s Century and Ireland’s Lisheen are expected to be depleted by mid-2015. The closure of the mines is likely to cut supplies by 450,000 mt/year and 160,000 mt/year respectively. This will further tighten supply of zinc into global market. Over a period of 12 months, zinc prices are expected to average around $2,500 per mt. The research notes states that any short term dip in prices should be used a strong buying opportunity.
The metal prices had a stellar run since late-July. The zinc prices have soared nearly 13% since then. These points to a near-term downside pressure on prices. The recent rally was mainly on the back of better US and Chinese macro economic data. Going forward, Chinese imports are likely to reduce, which in turn may bring down the zinc prices.
The spot price of Zinc at LMEselect had quoted at $2,355 per mt as on last Friday.

INFOGRAPHIC: Swiss bank accounts . India is Rumored to have $ 1.5 Trillion Black Money.

Swiss bank accounts have long been a place for the wealthy to store their cash in order to evade hefty taxes. As of late, however, the American government has been cracking down on tax evaders and those that aid them.

American tax authorities created an amnesty program for Swiss banks that were willing to cooperate in bringing American tax evaders to justice, in exchange for less severe fines. In total, 106 banks signed up for the program. This all stems from a criminal investigation of twelve Swiss banks, headed by US tax authorities.
In order to be in the good graces of Uncle Sam, some of these banks have even threatened to freeze the accounts of their American clientele, unless they can prove that they are fully tax-compliant. Other Swiss banks have taken a softer approach. If a client has or had an undeclared account and has avoided getting caught, the bank will aid them in paying fines if they confess to the American government. It sounds good, but the amount they are offering is only $5,000. It is likely that Uncle Sam will want a lot more than just a few thousand dollars.
Original infographic from: TimothySykes.com

INFOGRAPHIC: Swiss bank accounts

Weekly Economic Data for the week 02-Aug-14 to 08-Aug-14

Weekly Economic Data for the week 02-Aug-14 to 08-Aug-14
Expected impact on price: This indicator shows the effect of the anticipation of data on the prices of related country’s major indices. We have categorized it as below:
Very Good Good Neutral Bad Very Bad
Actual: Refers to the actual/latest figures after its release.
Data for the week 02-Aug-14 to 08-Aug-14
Date Time (IST) Country Data Exp. Prior Exp. chg today Avg. chg of last 1 year Exp. Impact on Price
05-Aug-2014 07-15 AM China HSBC China Services PMI -- 53.1   1.41 Neutral
05-Aug-2014 10-00 AM Australia RBA Cash Rate Target 2.5% 2.5% 0.00% 0.05 Neutral
05-Aug-2014 10-30 AM India HSBC India Services PMI -- 54.4   Neutral
05-Aug-2014 10-30 AM India HSBC India Composite PMI   53.8   Neutral
05-Aug-2014 11-00 AM India RBI Cash Reserve Ratio 4.0% 4.0% 0.00% 0.03 Neutral
05-Aug-2014 11-00 AM India RBI Repurchase Rate 8% 8% 0.00% 0.16 Neutral
05-Aug-2014 11-00 AM India RBI Reverse Repo Rate 7% 7% 0.00% 0.16 Neutral
 
06-Aug-2014 02-00 PM United Kingdom Industrial Production (MoM) 0.6% -0.7% 1.30% 1.75 Neutral
06-Aug-2014 06-00 PM United States Trade Balance -44.9B -44.4B -0.50% 3.21 Neutral
06-Aug-2014 08-00 PM United States EIA Crude Oil Stocks change -- -3.697   3.45 Neutral
 
07-Aug-2014 11-30 AM Germany Industrial Production s.a. (MoM) 0.12% -0.18% 0.30% 2.36 Neutral
07-Aug-2014 04-30 PM United Kingdom Bank of England Bank Rate 0.5% 0.5% 0.00 0.00 Neutral
07-Aug-2014 05-15 PM European Monetary Union ECB Main Refinancing Rate 0.15% 0.15% 0.00 Neutral
07-Aug-2014 08-00 PM United States EIA Natural Gas Storage change -- 88   33.60 Neutral
 
08-Aug-2014 -- China Imports (YoY) 0.3% 0.55% -0.25% 6.92 Neutral
08-Aug-2014 -- China Exports (YoY) 75.0% 72.0% 3.00% 5.65 Neutral
08-Aug-2014 -- China Trade Balance 26.00B 31.56B -5.56 13.34 Neutral
08-Aug-2014 -- Japan BOJ 2014 Monetary Base Target -- ¥270T   0.00 Neutral


Dynamic Levels

BofA Warns Euro Bank Stocks Are Rolling Over, "Negative For All Risk Assets"

Despite the recent significant weakness in the broader European and US equity indices, European bank stocks are only just beginning to resume their larger downtrend (as the hopes of a Draghi put remained firm until the last few days of BES debacle). As such, BofA's Macenil Curry believes, they are likely to be the catalyst for the next leg of "risk off" and in that environment EURUSD should continue to suffer.

Via BofAML,

Chart of the week: European bank stocks are rolling over
BofA Warns Euro Bank Stocks Are Rolling Over, "Negative For All Risk Assets"
European bank stocks are resuming their downtrend. The 6 month topping formation (Head and Shoulders Top) points to further downside in the sessions and weeks ahead.
Downside targets seen to 130.52/126.83 (approximately 8%/11% lower from current levels) before renewed basing.
Stay bearish EURUSD
BofA Warns Euro Bank Stocks Are Rolling Over, "Negative For All Risk Assets"
While intra-day and daily charts say that €/$ risks a further corrective squeeze higher, bounces must be sold.
The combination of vulnerable European bank stocks and poor price action say that €/$ should continue lower to 1.3104 and below.

Sunday, August 3, 2014

Doubts creeping in over stellar zinc price run

While the aluminium price was the strongest price performer among industrial metals in July, zinc again enjoyed a stellar month, rising almost 8% over June.
The price of zinc rose to a near-three year high of $2,416 a tonne last week as the base metal continues to benefit from expected supply cuts due to the scheduled closures of Australia's Century, Namibia's Skorpion and the Lisheen mine in Ireland.
Lisheen and Black Mountain, both controlled by London-listed Vedanta, also suffered production disruptions this year, further boosting the price of the base metal.
While zinc inventories have pulled back some 30% this year warehouse stocks remain relatively high at more than 655,000 tonnes compare to the long-run average of around 500,000 tonnes since 1990.
Last week levels also ticked up for the first time in months, which saw the metal fall back below $2,400 a tonne.
Another factor clouding the supply issue is the use of commodities as collateral for trade credit in China – responsible for 40% of base metal demand. Beijing is clamping down on the practice as it tries to curb its shadow banking system and after a scandal involving such deals at a major port.
While zinc is not as widely used in financing deals as copper, some 250,000 tonnes of zinc is currently being held in Chinese bonded warehouses according to research house Capital Economics.

The latest data from the International Lead and Zinc Study Group also show that mine supply continued to increase in the first four months of this year, growing by 6.8%. Nevertheless, Australia's government commodities researcher, BREE, estimates global deficits of 190,000 tonnes in 2014 and 116,000 tonnes in 2015, as no new major mines are due to be commissioned to replace the lost output.

"People are asking questions about whether zinc has any further upside. We have been saying that the price has escaped the fundamentals. It's overextended and it's got a correction due," analyst Vivienne Lloyd at Macquarie in London told Reuters on Thursday.

On the demand side the forecast also remains positive.
China has been able to lift manufacturing activity in the country to a 27-month high with targeted stimulus measures while Europe, which buys 20% of global zinc supply, along with Japan is expected to boost demand particularly in the automotive sector and for use in value-added steel products galvanised with zinc.
Sister metal lead gained 4% in July, but has not benefited to the extent of zinc this year, despite the fact that zinc mine closures in 2015 will also negatively affect lead supply.
Doubts creeping in over stellar zinc price run

Why China Wants Control Of The South China Sea

A stunning $5.3 trillion in goods cross South China Sea every year, 190 trillion cubic feet of gas reserves sit below the ocean floor - enough to replace China's natural gas imports for over a century - so it is hardly surprising that the world's largest importer of oil wants control of such a critical region.
Why China Wants Control Of The South China Sea

As Bloomberg illustrates in these 10 incredible graphics, everyone has a claim on the same territory andtensions are rising. “The Chinese believe they have the right to be a great power,” said Richard Bitzinger, a senior fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies in Singapore. “What we are seeing is a hardening of China’s stance about its place in the world.”

Why China Wants Control Of The South China Sea

What's at stake...
Why China Wants Control Of The South China Sea

The Claims...
Why China Wants Control Of The South China Sea

The Chaos...
Why China Wants Control Of The South China Sea

The ambitions of China’s leaders don’t stop at the nine-dash line.

China’s ultimate long-term goal is to obtain parity with U.S. naval capacity in the Pacific,” said Willy Wo-Lap Lam, adjunct professor at the Centre for China Studies at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. “This is a long-term proposition. At this stage the Chinese understand they don’t have the capacity to take on the U.S. head-on.”

China is testing the limits of America’s alliance relationships in Asia,” said Storey. “By pushing and probing and essentially showing that the U.S. isn’t willing to respond to these provocations, it is undermining those alliances and hence ultimately U.S. credibility and U.S. power over the long term.”

There are two schools of thought on the eventual outcome of China’s ascendancy, according to Rory Medcalf, director of the International Security Program at the Lowy Institute for International Policy in Sydney.

One argues that dominance of the South China Sea is an inevitable outcome of China’s economic and military expansion. The other says that China will have to curb its ambitions or risk provoking a conflict, even war, which could draw in the U.S.

It’s not possible to judge which scenario ends up proving right, said Medcalf. “The story is only beginning.”
zerohedge.com

Gold Prices 1971 - 2014 in 3 Waves

The Big Picture

Ignore the hype regarding gold, bonds, booms and busts, hope and chains, "shock and awe," stock market crashes, "money honey" commentary, and ignore the politicians. Don't obsess over High-Frequency-Trading and market manipulation. Instead, focus on the big picture as shown in the following chart of monthly gold, which has been divided into 3 phases since 1971.
Gold Prices Chart - Monthly from 1971 - 2014
Larger Image
Phase 1: Gold rallied from about $42 in 1971 to over $800 in 1980, thanks to massive money printing, debts, deficits, wars, and a loss of confidence in the US dollar.
Phase 2: Gold prices crashed subsequent to the bubble of 1979-80, and then drifted lower for about 20 years. It double bottomed in 1999 and 2001.
Phase 3: Gold rallied off the 2001 low of about $255 to over $1,900 in August 2011. Since then it has corrected to under $1,200, and double bottomed in June and December 2013. Current price is about $1,300.


How Will Gold Prices Change in the next 3 - 5 Years?

Option 1: Gold prices will continue rising, erratically of course, within the green "megaphone" pattern shown above. In my opinion this option is the most likely unless we descend into a global deflationary depression and/or nuclear winter, which the politicians and bankers will do "whatever it takes" to avoid.
or
Option 2: Gold prices continue falling much like they did subsequent to the 1980 bubble high. I consider this option unlikely.


What Else Supports Option 1 - Higher Prices?

  1. The rally into 2011 does not resemble the parabolic bubble blow-off into 1980. The drop in prices since 2011 looks like a correction, not a post-bubble crash. Gold was not in a bubble in 2011.
  2. Interest rates today are practically zero, but in the 1980 crash era US rates were at all-time highs. Economic conditions are quite different.
  3. Monetary policy today is extremely loose, but in 1980 era it was, relatively speaking, tight.
  4. The stock market in 1980 had been declining or flat for over a decade, while the stock market of today has enjoyed over 5 years of practically continuous rally.
  5. In 1980 confidence in the US dollar and the financial system was fragile, while today it seems (perhaps undeservedly) much stronger.
  6. Technical indicators (see graph below) suggest that long-term gold prices have been bottoming during the past year. Note the other examples of "over-sold" conditions in gold prices.
Gold 1975 - 2014
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What Else Supports Option 2 - Lower Prices?

  1. Various self-serving forecasts from investment and bullion banks suggest lower prices - at least until they have sufficiently loaded up on future contracts and can massively profit from the rally ahead. I remain skeptical of such prognostications.
  2. The price chart shows that gold has been falling since 2011. Some people believe it will continue falling for another 10 - 20 years. However, with ever increasing debt, bond monetization, food and energy inflation, massive Chinese and Russian purchases, and increasing political instability, lower prices appear to be an unlikely outcome.
  3. The Fed and most other western central banks would like stable or lower gold prices, so their unbacked debt based paper currencies appear less weak. Maybe they can manufacture another decline in the gold prices such as during April - June 2013, but that also seems unlikely.


Conclusions

This is not 1979 or 1980 when political and economic conditions were drastically different.Perhaps a better analogy would be about 50 years ago (1964) when the Vietnam War was escalating, US citizens were angry and marching in the streets, a gallon of gasoline cost 25 cents, coffee in a restaurant cost ten cents, and a decent middle-class wage was $2.50 per hour. The subsequent 20 years were life-changing and financially difficult for many people. Consumer prices increased drastically, the purchasing power of savings was destroyed, and people lost confidence in government and the US dollar.
Gold prices will rally much higher in the next 5 years. Jim Sinclair's initial target of $3,500 seems very likely by 2016 - 2019. If the powers-that-be choose hyperinflation to deal with their massive debts, then much higher prices are "in play."
There are many other options. For example, if you don't trust or like gold, a bank will pay you 1% interest each and every year if you invest in a Certificate of Deposit.