The FinancialContent Network     SocialPicks Community   |   MarketMinute Monitor   |   MarketMinute Market Updates   |   MarketMinute Stock News
SocialPicks
   Sign Up   |   Log In   |   What is SocialPicks?     
Free Stock Picks by Top Performers
SocialPicks is a community where stock investors exchange ideas and track performance of financial bloggers.
Top_member_photos
Get free stock picks and email alerts daily
 
Are you a stock guru?

1 point   posted on 12/09/08
Arrow_up
Arrow_down
Bull_and_bear
68%
+1.16%
 risk: conservative

Commodities Rally!!!


Well everything except my natural gas. When I listened to the markets today, it seemed that they were telling me that if we see a rally in equities, we will see a rally in commodities. We are not in the place where rising oil prices hurt the equities markets.

Lets really examine where we are at this point in the cycle. This started as a banking crisis and LIBOR rates were soaring with banks seemingly not trusting each other. Credit contracted so fast--really really fast. That contraction slammed the economy and now we are seeing the effect that it has had on unemployment. At the same time we had the credit crisis, we had extremely high oil/gasoline prices that were serving as a tax on not only our economy, but foreign economies as well. The effect? MORE CONTRACTION. The markets were heading down during this time---seemingly scared by any bit of news. The mainstream media kept running shows about the CRISIS, asking if your money was safe. Some at retirement age were watching their 401k plans shrink so fast that they put off retirement plans. During all of this panic the government started not just injection, but FORCING money into the system. There were stimulus plans, bailouts, and many other types of things that all resulted in INCREASED LIQUIDITY. Now you might ask why I appear to be giving a lesson on recent history. The answer is to prove my point that we have been pumping money into this economy and it is going to cause inflation. Banks around the world have been adding liquidity so incredibly fast. So now LIBOR rates are down to very comfortable levels and we are seeing so many talk about how the financial stocks are going to lead us out of this mess.

SO WHAT DO I SEE AS THE PROBLEM? The speed at which these liquidity injections begin to cure the economy---coupled with the tax break given to consumers when everyone panicked and got sold their commodities. Everyone---and it was reasonable--seemed to think that companies such as Federal Express would benefit as oil prices came down so rapidly. So what happened? Did the economy slow so fast that it hit their revenue harder than declining fuel prices helped their bottom line? I think so. And I think the same could be true as we turn around.

All the technical traders seem as happy as fat pigs in the sunshine. They think we have great support and that we should just bolt up another 100 points on the S&P. I know that I can't fight the momentum---but I will tell you that I can't fundamentally see what all of the euphoria is about. Are the smart investors going to pour their money into equities in this environment--especially if we run another 100? Or are they going to choose to put their money in "real" assets such as gold, oil, and agricultural commodities? What percentage gain did we see in equities today? What was the percentage move in oil today? I am being cautious here and am just trying to point out that we will see inflation and I plan to invest accordingly. I am still holding my natural gas even though I have been hammered in the trade. I am going to watch gold here. If I had to bet, I would say that the Federal Express news in the after hours is not going to be well received tomorrow.

Make no mistake more people have gotten long in the last few days, but are they going to get scared if things turn sour? I will guarantee you that I will take some off the table if this thing starts to pull back.

Sometimes you have to sit back and be non-emotional. I would love to put on my rally cap and start putting money into this market. But that would be emotional. My rational side tells me that we are in completely uncharted territory with this credit crisis and the measures that have been taken to fix it. So my rational side tells me to play what I believe that I know. I believe that at some point as these measures take full steam---we will see INFLATION. SHOW ME A TIME IN HISTORY WHERE THIS MUCH LIQUIDITY HAS BEEN CREATED AND WE HAVEN'T SEEN INFLATION.

COME ON YOU DEFLATION CHEERLEADERS---PROVE ME WRONG.....
Visit www.stockshotz.blogspot.com for more market commentary.



Comments (2)

Add Comment

Arrow_up
Arrow_down
India_flag_background
Thomas George    9 %     1 point   commented 358 days ago reply

Inventories are still high,mining juniors are still alive,farmers are desperate but still farming - we still have a long way to go before supply is fully crushed.As with all booms(trouble ?) this would coincide with China recovering and the money printers will continue to run.Just as in the seventies when everybody prepared for inflation and there was a recession.After wards everybody prepared for deflation and there was rampant inflation.We are going to see a replay.(from the book by Peter Lynch).As for the money supply the American Home ATM isn't working so that is not coming into the system.But I have great faith in the Fed and politicians - there was never a politician who did not like to print money.Besides with a 11 trillion dollar debt,America CANNOT afford deflation.But this rally amounting to anything.I don't think so.

Arrow_up
Arrow_down
alephandtao   84%     1 point   commented 353 days ago reply

I think that commodities are oversold. That doesn't mean necessarily that this is the best time to buy, unless you are positioned to ride it out. I'm talking about a medium to long term long, so don't get caught in a cash squeeze if the bottom is lower and you have to wait, and sure don't go on margin.


Your Comment




 


TODAY'S HEADLINES





IN THE PRESS
Press_forbes Press_washingtonpost Press_wsj Press_npr Press_techcrunch