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 | | Posted by admin on Thursday, December 28, 2006 - 03:42 PM |
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 |  | San Francisco - It was a year to remember for commodities with crude,
copper and platinum futures reaching - then falling - from
never-before-seen levels.
But uranium, corn and oranges will likely be among the resources to take the spotlight in 2007, analysts said.
Overall, "2006 was a year of dissonance for the commodity markets,"
said Todd Hultman, president of DailyFutures.com, a commodity news and
information provider.
The front-month contract for crude futures climbed to a record of
nearly $78 a barrel in mid-July on the New York Mercantile Exchange,
but failed at reaching the $100 price levels some had expected as early
as this year.
Natural-gas futures didn't rise past the nearly $16 per million
British-thermal-unit all-time high it reached in mid-December of last
year. In fact, they've lost more than half their value since then.
In May, gold futures reached a 26-year high well above $700 an
ounce, but was well short of the $1 000 target some experts were
shooting for.
Copper futures tapped a record above $4 a pound, platinum reached an
all-time high above $1 300/oz and silver climbed to a more than
two-decade high above $15, following the launch of the first silver
exchanged-traded fund. All three metals are poised to end the year
below those levels, though still significantly higher for the year. Rising stars
But some of the commodities to watch for next year will be the rising stars from this year.
Corn futures have climbed over 40% from the end of last year, driven by demand for ethanol.
"Five years from now, we will look back and identify 2006 as the year
that the world woke up to the emergence of ethanol as a significant
fuel," said Hultman.
"Barring a major international incident, the perpetual shortage
of crude oil and expansion of the ethanol industry will likely be the
major stories for the rest of this decade," he said.
And don't forget the orange juice. The 2005 hurricanes and ongoing crop
diseases in Florida have kept the orange crops "very small," said Phil
Flynn, a senior analyst at Alaron Trading. "We're just one big shortage
from driving these prices a lot higher."
But Sean Brodrick, a senior editor at MoneyandMarkets.com said the
ultimate commodity bet for 2007 will be uranium, whose market suffers
from growing demand and a severe supply deficit. Energetic moves
The energy markets began the year still reeling from the effects
of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita on oil and natural-gas production in the
Gulf of Mexico but barring unforeseen events, lower prices may be on
tap for 2007.
Analysts' predictions for $80 - even $100 - oil prices were rampant at the start of 2006.
Instead, "2006 was that year when nearly $15 of purely speculative
premium just evaporated from the market, bringing it down from $78 to
$58 in a span of three months," said Rakesh Shankar, an economist at
Moody's Economy.com.
The lack of disruptive hurricanes in the Atlantic were partly to blame for the price decline.
Oil to stay high
Even so, crude prices are still hovering around $60 a barrel, Frank
Holmes, chief executive officer of US Global Investors, implying that
prices are still at high levels. Demand from China and India are to
blame, he said, dubbing the phenomenon "Chindia."
"It is a given that the requirements of India and China for oil will
continue to increase at double-digit percentages," said Charles Perry,
chairperson at energy-consulting firm Perry Management.
Indeed, Holmes said that with "Chindia" growing at 10% and the
US growing at less than 3%, "the tipping point has already taken
place," Holmes said.Hear an interview with Holmes.
Given the growth in Chindia, he said he'd be surprised to see oil
prices fall under $45 on the downside, and "any type of geopolitical
event could take them to $85, $90."
Similarly, John Person, president of National Futures Advisory Service,
said that without supply disruptions from terrorist attacks, hurricanes
or refinery outages, prices will stay above $45 in 2007. Oil could 'easily top $100'
And with the lack of Gulf Cost hurricanes this year and "less refinery
maintenance this winter and spring than in the last few years," retail
gasoline prices in 2007 won't likely surpass the $3.03 a gallon it
reached in August, or the record $3.057 it saw in 2005, said Tom Kloza,
chief oil analyst at the Oil Price Information Service.
But if the crude market "sees any hints of such potential
supply disruptions, then we could easily top $85 to $100 per barrel
[for crude] in 2007," said Person.
"There is still some speculative premium in the market that moderate
demand and higher supply will help deflate as the year progresses,"
Shankar said. He expects crude prices to fall to $55 by the end of 2007
and to $45 by the end of 2008.
As for natural gas, Shankar expects prices to stay in the $6 range
through 2007 because of slow growth in additional supplies. Then the
opening of several new liquefied natural-gas terminals in 2008 will
help drive prices for the fuel "lower some" after 2008. Metals shine then dull
For the metals markets, it was quite a roller coaster as well. Gold and silver hold promise - others, not so much.
Gold made an eye-opening rise to more than $700 an ounce, with most
analysts blaming the weaker dollar and expectations for more weakness
in the greenback, as well as uncertainty surrounding the state of the
economy.
The "gold market rally got ahead of itself," said Peter Spina, a chief investment strategist at GoldSeek.com.
But in the first half of next year, the market will "probably
move back to the prior highs we saw in early 2006," he said. And if
prices can move above the low $700s, the market will likely be looking
at $800, $850 an ounce.
In the meantime, silver's "more attractive right now ... really setting
itself up for a move to the $18 to $20-an-ounce mark by early next year
and potentially move up to $25," said Spina.
Gold to $750
Ned Schmidt, editor of the Value View Gold Report, expects
silver to reach $15 sometime in January and gold to trade between $750
and $775 at the end of 2007.
Copper's another story. "Look out for supply restrictions, not demand," said Holmes. "That's the biggest factor right now."
But "for the first time in recent memory, both consumption and imports
fell in China," said Peter Grandich, editor of the Grandich Letter.
Given that, he expects copper prices to stay between $3-$3.40 until the
end of this year. "Next year, look for a price below $2.50," he said.
Platinum's outlook isn't much rosier. While speculation over the launch
of a platinum exchange-traded fund has died down, any short-term price
rise "from such an event becoming real would be a net negative for
platinum as users would look to switch to palladium," said Grandich.
Hot commodities
Of all the metals, the one with some of the most potential in
the coming year is the one many analysts have been endorsing as
alternative energy climbs in popularity.
For uranium, "$100 [is] a question of when, not if," said Grandich.
Spot prices trade above $60 a pound, up from around $43 six months ago, according to data from Ux Consulting Co.
It's the basic material for nuclear technology, and supplies fall far
short of meeting global demand as the world seeks alternatives to oil
as a source of energy.
"There was a 42 million-pound shortfall this year," said Brodrick. "You want to bet on one commodity in 2007? Make it uranium."
Ethanol demand up
Also benefiting from the rise in alternative energy sources is
the demand for ethanol, which will translate into a boom for corn, a
key source for the fuel.
There are actual "twin demands" on corn - for ethanol and to feed an "increasingly hungry world," said Brodrick.
And with a shift in acreage to corn and wheat, "cotton acres will
shrink," said Thomas Hartmann, an analyst at Altavest Worldwide
Trading, and bean oil may benefit from the shift away from soybean
acres. Don't ignore the orange market
Oranges are also a market not to be ignored in the coming year. Frozen
concentrated orange-juice futures touched at their highest level in
more than 15 years, and are ready to log a more than 50% gain for the
year.
In mid-December, the US Department of Agriculture estimated Florida's 2007-2007 orange crop at 140m boxes.
"If that estimate holds, it will be Florida's smallest orange crop in
15 years," said Dailyfutures.com's Hultman, adding that as of December
2, inventories of frozen concentrated orange juice were down 40% vs. a
year ago, according to the Florida Department of Citrus.
Wrapping up the year
All told, traders are in for an interesting year ahead.
"2007 may well be the year when mainstream investors rediscover
hard assets," said Jon Nadler, an investment-products analyst at
bullion dealers Kitco.com. "Precious metals, especially gold, will make
headlines that we have not seen for a generation."
And the markets will realise that "this is not a bubble or a short-term
phenomenon" they've seen in gold, said Lawrence Roulston, editor of
investment newsletter Resources Opportunities. "The high metals prices
are going to be here for some time yet."Hear an interview with
Roulston.
There has been a "massive transfer of wealth and manufacturing to the
East, as well as wealth," points out Julian Phillips, an analyst at
GoldForecaster.com.
In the meantime, "the demand for commodities ... is swamping the
commodities markets that cannot respond to the rise in demand quick
enough," he said.
"Next year is sure to be a very eventful year," Phillips said. | |
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