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Many
readers have asked us to update our comments on base metals, which we
last addressed in any substantive way just over a year ago, when we sold
most of our base metal plays in the July 2005 issue of the International Speculator, on the basis of an expected correction in
base metals prices. We are still expecting a greater correction in base
metals than we’ve seen so far. We were out early, we admit—but we
vastly prefer to be out early, rather than late, and can’t complain
about having locked in the profits we did.
What
Is a Base Metal?
Base
metals are called that because they oxidize, corrode and react easily.
The primary ones we’re concerned with are: copper, nickel, lead, zinc,
aluminum, and iron. Their inherent value lies in their industrial uses,
not as money, like the precious metals—though silver is an interesting
hybrid, being both an industrial metal and good for making small change
as money. Compared with precious metals, base metals are plentiful in
nature and therefore much cheaper, of course. The exploration question
is not generally one of finding them, but one of finding enough of them
concentrated in a large enough deposit to make them profitable to
extract for a substantial length of time. Eventually, their fortunes are
tied to the state of the world’s economy—the fundamentals of supply
and demand.
Supply,
Demand and Prices
As
we go to press, copper prices have recovered somewhat from this
summer’s correction, in part because of a possible labor strike at
Chile's Escondida mine. This is characteristic of all base metals;
numerous factors, including political and labor unrest, and even floods,
affect the supply of base metals. In addition, cranking up supply in the
short term is usually impossible; the process of prospecting, exploring
and developing a mine takes many years, sometimes decades. The scale of
most base metal mines is huge—they take an enormous amount of
financing, require endless environmental permissions and need extensive
infrastructure. These factors make it very difficult to balance supply
with demand in the short term (meaning, up to a few years), creating
frequent cycles of price increases when supplies tighten, followed by
corrections when new supplies come online.
On
the demand side, Asia, particularly China (see the chart below), has
stayed in high gear, requiring prices to go up to match demand with
supply. Some day soon, India will join the arena. The result has been
rising prices, which has been good news for companies like Falconbridge
and Teck Cominco: both have just announced near-tripling of
profits.

Base
metal prices during the last couple of years have risen faster than the
price of precious metals, generating a lot of interest and excitement,
even among mainstream investors. That’s a sure sign to a contrarian of
at least an intermediate high… though that doesn’t mean they can’t
go higher before they correct. In fact, we wouldn’t be surprised if
they went to the sky, given price-insensitive demand and fixed supply
and the involvement of hedge funds in the metals market. But any spike
like that would be short lived, and for now we still see base metal
prices as having gotten far ahead of themselves. In addition, we are
bearish on the U.S. economy and are not sure that even China can pick up
all the slack we see coming, especially with so much of their economy
going into exports to the U.S. At the same time, continually high prices
have prompted everyone with assets that can be put into production
quickly to move in that direction, so there could be a short-lived
supply glut as that inventory of near-to-production assets come online.
The
Dreaded Crystal Ball
In
the longest term, we believe that all commodities—even including
gold—will drop to near zero. Barring a new Dark Ages, that’s the
inevitable result of advancing technology. But that’s still decades
off, for the most part. In the nearer long term (over the next decade or
so), we’re bullish on commodities, believing that we are in a
super-cycle that corresponds to the 20-year bear market for commodities
that started in 1980. In the medium range (3 to 5 years), we are also
bullish, as anything that can be quickly dusted off will have been, and
new discoveries will take longer to bring online. In the short term
(zero to 12, maybe 18 months) we see a high probability of economic woes
leading to a major correction. That will be our time to re-enter base
metal plays aggressively.
Are
we just guessing?
Not
entirely. Consider the data from the futures market:
- Copper
for delivery in 27 months is US$5,590/tonne vs. the current US$7,260
- Nickel:
US$16,675 vs. current US$27,350
- Zinc:
US$2,293 vs. current US$3,125
Furthermore,
as you can see from the production and consumption numbers in the table
below, the higher prices have brought enough new supply online that base
metals are not actually in a state of shortage at the moment. The
projected surplus for silver is something we touched on in our silver
issue last May and are still watching. (The figures for gold and silver
consumption, provided for context, do not include investment demand,
which is why gold is not in surplus as it may seem to be, nor silver,
and their prices are rising.)

Base
Metal Company Stocks
Consequently,
we are holding off on buying any new base metal company stocks, unless
the company has something of such extraordinary potential that we
don’t want to wait, or if a company also has a lot of precious metals,
which hedges our base metal bet.
________________________________________________________________________
We don’t have anything base metal specific so
how about if we go with the Shopping Season one that kind of covers
everything?
Oil up, dollar down, the housing market on the
brink of extinction… at least three good reasons to buy gold and
silver on the current dips.
But aside from hoarding precious metals, you can
profit even more from the emerging commodities bull market by investing
in the little-known sector of junior exploration.
Right now is the perfect time to get into these
underreported—and often undervalued—stocks. It’s the Shopping
Season, as Doug Casey likes to call it, the summer period during which
the juniors spend their time digging and drilling, and very little news
comes out of this corner of the stock market. Many investors confuse no
news with bad news, and share prices are taking a nosedive.
Not forever, though. Once the summer is over,
share prices will rise again—bringing smart speculators a
much-appreciated windfall.

© 2006 Doug Casey
Editorial Archive
(Ed.
Note: DOUG CASEY
and his subscribers have made millions investing in under valued natural
resource stocks. Doug is the author of Crisis Investing which was #1 on
the New York Times Best-Seller list for 26 weeks. His company, Casey
Research, publishes the International
Speculator - now in it’s 26th year - one of the
nation's most established and highly respected publications on gold,
silver and other natural resource investments and the Casey
Energy Speculator a monthly newsletter dedicated to energy
opportunities with the very real potential of at least 100% growth
within a year.)
If
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You
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and www.kitcocasey.com
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