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With the Dow 30 continuing to carve its new series of all-time record
highs, the excitement it is creating is sucking in capital like a black
hole. Nothing draws in new investors faster than heavily-hyped rising prices.
But all of this redirected Dow capital has to come from somewhere, and one
of these places is commodities.
After being one of the best-performing market sectors of the last five years,
over the last couple months commodities have suddenly been among the worst
performers. Since early August many key commodities, particularly metals and
energy, have been spiraling relentlessly lower. Naturally these fast and ugly
losses are challenging the faiths of even some long-time commodities bulls.
Among commodities traders most are not yet questioning the underlying fundamental
foundations of this commodities bull. A unique event in world history
is taking place right now with the rise of Asia and its huge new demand for
commodities coupled with decimated global commodities infrastructure left
rusting and neglected for decades after the early 1980s commodities bust.
Relentlessly growing world demand coupled with restrained and inelastic supplies
is the perfect recipe for many years of prices rising on balance.
But still there comes a gut-check time for every trader when the dire short-term
technicals crowd out the bullish long-term fundamentals and gnaw at your brain
like a rat trapped in your skull. Every week I am blessed to talk with all
kinds of traders ranging from independent speculators to seasoned investors
to hedge-fund managers. In light of all these discussions, one event stands
out far more than anything else as the most worrisome and vexing to traders'
confidence in this bull's continuing viability.
This troubling development is the total and utter breakdown of the CRB Commodities
Index. The CRB is to commodities what the NASDAQ is to tech stocks, the flagship
index and general sector bellwether. From its secular lows in late 2001 until
the last six weeks or so, the venerable CRB was in a bulletproof secular uptrend
that had not even been seriously challenged. But in late August the CRB suddenly
plummeted out of this uptrend, causing much wailing and gnashing of teeth.
This total CRB breakdown is a big deal and cannot be ignored. Hardcore technicians
would be justified in declaring a bull over for less of a secular breakdown
than what we've just suffered through in commodities. But as the vicious late-1998
stock-market breakdown about 18 months before the great stock bull finally
ended illustrates, major technical breakdowns don't always signal the end of
a bull. But they sure can and thus all such events have to be taken very seriously.
In light of the gravity of this situation, I want to take a look at the brutal
CRB breakdown in this essay. Being heavily long commodities-related investments
and speculations personally, the last six weeks or so have been my worst ever
in terms of ballooning unrealized losses. With countless other investors sharing
in this pummeling, we face a hyper-critical question.
Is this commodities bull over or is this breakdown a 1998-style temporary
blip in a secular bull that is due to recover? If the former is true, then
the best strategy is to cut our losses before commodities spiral much lower.
But if the latter proves to be the case, the prudent course of action is certainly
to ride it out despite the acute pain of the moment. As contrarians know, usually
the worst time to sell is when we most want to.
Since all my relentless analyses have
led me to believe that commodities' fundamentals are still very bullish, that
metals and energy demand growth ought to exceed supply growth on a global basis
for years to come, I naturally gravitate towards the conclusion that this CRB
breakdown is temporary. But if it is indeed just a blip, then why was it so
extreme and utterly unprecedented within this bull? What drove such a fast
plunge?
I think the answer lies in a little-known fact of immense consequence. Like
all indexes, periodically the CRB is modified with new component commodities
added, old ones removed, and weightings and calculation methodologies changed.
This is usually good as it better reflects current markets. For instance, the
original CRB in 1957 included lard and onions, but did not include crude
oil or gold. I doubt even the most radical soft-commodities zealot today would
argue that lard and onions are more important than oil and gold!
Since these periodic revisions are few and far between, they are pretty irrelevant
for short-term technical analysis. But when long-term technical analysis
comes into play, these revisions must be considered. In July 2005 the
CRB's tenth major revision of its distinguished four-decade history took place.
The evidence is very strong that this tenth revision is the reason the CRB's
recent plunge is unprecedented.
Since July 2005 the CRB has behaved radically differently than it had in the
trading span after its previous revision of a decade before. Comparing the
pre-July-2005 CRB to the post-July-2005 CRB in a single technical analysis
is like comparing apples to oranges. Even without considering the nature of
the tenth revision's vast changes to the CRB, upon careful technical examination
it is readily apparent we are seeing a wildly different beast.

Before we delve into the new CRB, the red technicals above show why technically-oriented
commodities traders are so unsettled and worried today. Since its bottom in
late 2001, the CRB has been marching higher on balance within a razor-sharp
secular uptrend. It originally established the slope of this uptrend's support
line in early 2002 and this support subsequently held rock solid in 2003, 2004,
2005, and early 2006 through a half-dozen major challenges. The CRB's lower
support was considered nigh on impregnable for very good reason.
Until six weeks ago that is. In mid-August the CRB slid under its key 200-day
moving average which it had done briefly many times before in this powerful
bull. But rather than quickly recovering like usual, the CRB started spiraling
lower. At this long-term scale above, the CRB looks like it fell off a cliff.
It knifed through its five-year-old secular support line like a bullet through
rice paper. The CRB's breakdown was massive, unambiguous, and scary. Traders
have good reason to be very concerned.
But unremembered by most, today's CRB is not the same CRB that formed
the first four years or so of this well-defined uptrend. In July 2005 the CRB
was revised for the tenth time since 1957, and this crucial juncture in time
is marked by the vertical yellow line above. Prior to this change the CRB moved
in relatively smooth and long waves, nonchalantly meandering higher on balance.
After this change the CRB became hyper-volatile.
In order to better illustrate this, I traced the CRB's pre- and post-July
2005 action with smoothed lines and then moved them off of the underlying data.
The blue tracings above and below the CRB highlight the crux of the CRB's action
during both periods of time. The pre-July-2005 smoothed line looks relaxed
and gradual, a very conservative and measured bull market. The post-July-2005
looks like an electrocardiogram of a trader on speed, frantically volatile.
These two blue tracings don't even look like the same index!
So what odd alchemy transpired in the little-remembered tenth revision to
so radically alter the CRB? I wrote an
essay on it the week it happened, but here it is in a nutshell. The previous
ninth revision was geometrically averaged and equally weighted. The
new tenth revision is neither. Today's CRB index is no longer geometrically
averaged nor is it equally weighted. It is an entirely new breed of CRB.
Now I know geometric averaging tends to make eyes glaze over, but please bear
with me here as it is quite important. In the ninth CRB revision, its 17 component
commodities were equally weighted and geometrically averaged. To get a geometric
average, you multiply all 17 commodities prices together and then take their
17th root. Because of this math, geometric averaging has a tremendous smoothing
effect. It was used in the CRB explicitly to render this index not easily influenceable
by individual-commodity volatility.
Interestingly this wasn't the only smoothing in the ninth CRB revision. Before they
were geometrically averaged which bleeds out most volatility, individual commodity
prices were averaged across their various futures contracts expiring in the
next six months. So the ninth CRB not only averaged across commodities geometrically,
but across time arithmetically. Often commodities will spike on the
spot market but the futures move less than spot the farther out they expire.
So this time-averaging smoothed out the CRB even more.
Thus the CRB was probably the most unnaturally smoothed major index in existence,
like an older woman with so much plastic surgery that her tight smooth face
barely reflects underlying realities anymore. In March 2005 well before the
tenth revision I concluded that the CRB was so heavily smoothed that it was useless
as a trading tool. It was only useful as a strategic measuring rod. The
ninth revision construction made the CRB all but impossible to manipulate,
very sedate, and able to carve the beautiful uptrend we see above with nary
a hiccup.
The ninth CRB revision was also equally weighted, all 17 component commodities
were each responsible for about 5.9% of the index's weight. This also contributed
to the CRB's traditional low volatility. For example, gold could rise 50% but
if the other 16 components were flat the CRB would only be up a few percent
at best. While it made the CRB smooth, this wasn't particularly realistic.
At the time crude oil was weighted the same 5.9% as orange juice. Are oil and
orange juice equally important in our global economy today?
Since we speculators love volatility more than normal folks love oxygen, the
CRB custodians set out to eliminate the vast majority of the excessive smoothing
in their index. A more volatile index would lead to more interest in the new
CRB futures market that was created at the tenth CRB revision. The more volatility,
the more opportunities to trade and the more widely the CRB would be followed.
The tenth revision was a great step forward in my opinion, a good thing for
traders.
In order to make the index relevant again, its custodians eliminated geometric
averaging entirely in the tenth CRB revision. This change alone is important
and can explain a lot of the CRB's increase in raw volatility since July
2005. In its geometric-averaging scheme, the CRB was effectively continuously
rebalanced with the math under geometric averaging ensuring that a rising
commodity price would get less exposure while a falling one would
get more exposure in influencing the final index number. Today's new CRB
eliminates all the excessive smoothing of its predecessor's geometric approach.
But the CRB custodians also threw out the equal weighting, again with sound
logic in my opinion. There is no reason that orange juice should be treated
as an equal peer of crude oil in a commodities index since orange juice doesn't
even approach the importance of oil in the world economy. Why not weight more
important commodities higher than less important ones? The new weightings of
the tenth CRB revision were broken down and illustrated in a
pie chart I built the week the change was made in July 2005.
Out of all the commodities, there is no doubt that the energy complex is the
most pervasive and important. Since energy is needed to heat or cool everything,
run every electronic device, and transport everything physical that is moved
in our world, it is the most important commodity sector by far. So the CRB
custodians vastly ramped up the energy weighting in their tenth CRB revision.
In the ninth revision, the CRB only weighted energy 17.6% of the index, the
same as grains and actually much less than the tropical commodities including
coffee and cocoa. In the tenth revision, the energy sector weighting was more
than doubled to 39.0%, now the biggest sector weighting in the new CRB by far.
But of even greater relevance to the CRB's plunge today, crude oil's weighting
alone was drastically increased. It soared from 5.9% in the old CRB
to a whopping 23.0% of the new CRB!
While I think this is totally justified due to crude oil's extreme importance,
technicians have to remember that now today's CRB is almost one-quarter
constituted by oil alone. With this extremely heavy oil weighting in addition
to the fact that the old geometric smoothing is no longer used, the new CRB
is tremendously more influenced by the fortunes of oil than the old CRB. As
goes oil, so goes the latest CRB. This is readily apparent in this chart straddling
the tenth revision.

Back in its ninth-revision days, the CRB was not heavily influenced by oil.
There were times the CRB rallied while oil didn't as well as times the CRB
barely rallied when oil spiked sharply. And perhaps most tellingly for our
situation today, after the oil plunge following the second interim oil high
marked above in this chart the CRB actually rose during the middle stages
of it because other commodities were thriving while oil was plunging in late
2004.
With a 5.9% weighting and geometric smoothing, oil wasn't a big deal back
then. The only time that oil and the CRB moved in unison was when the lion's
share of the CRB commodities were also paralleling oil, as during the third
major oil rally marked above. If oil was doing its own thing sans other commodities,
the ninth CRB revision would follow the majority of commodities and refuse
to be unduly influenced by any one, even oil.
But after July 2005 this all changed forever. With no geometric averaging
this index was destined to be far more volatile anyway, but with oil now weighted
at 23.0% it would suddenly have four to twenty-three times the influence
of each of the other 18 component commodities of the latest CRB. Not surprisingly
since July 2005, the CRB has been slaved to crude oil. When oil moves the CRB
follows, so the near-term fortunes of oil are now the single most important
factor by far driving the CRB's technical behavior. As goes oil, so goes the
CRB.
This leads to two hyper-critical observations regarding the recent commodities
breakdown that is so spooking even some of the long-time faithful. First, today's
CRB is far more volatile and radically different from the ninth CRB revision
that existed for the previous decade. Trying to compare a non-geometrically-averaged unequally-weighted
index with a geometrically-averaged equally-weighted index makes little logical
sense.
Other than the fact that commodities are involved, the new CRB is as different
from the old CRB as night and day. So if you are concerned that a five-year-old
support line suddenly failed, it is extremely important that you realize that
the first four years or so of this support line were created by a very different
index than the one that just broke it. I would go so far as asserting that
it is totally invalid to compare today's CRB to yesterday's CRB across the
vast technical discontinuity created in July 2005. Relative to today the CRB
technicals prior to July 2005 are unrelated and irrelevant.
Second, if the CRB is now oil's puppet due to its heavily-oil-weighted construction
and relative lack of smoothing, then oil is the key to the CRB. The
CRB broke below its 200dma and support in August only because oil led the way.
Indeed I suspect oil created a vicious circle. Oil was falling forcing the
CRB to fall in sympathy. But as the CRB spiraled lower and spooked traders,
they sold off other commodities like the metals which caused the CRB to fall
even further. Oil lit the fire of this plunge and the CRB's flagship status
among professionals fanned it.
Unfortunately a discussion on why oil is faltering and when it is likely to
recover is beyond the scope of this essay, but for our subscribers I have been
discussing it extensively in Zeal
Intelligence and Zeal Speculator lately.
If you are worried about commodities as measured by the CRB then you should
shift your focus to understanding oil. The CRB is going to be weak as long
as oil is weak and it will recover as soon as oil does. Oil is the key now
due to the way the tenth CRB revision is constructed.
I have one last chart on the commodities breakdown. A lot of analysts on Wall
Street, which is perpetually anti-commodities in focus, have been saying commodities
were at all-time highs and therefore needed to plunge and end their bull. But
as I've argued many times in the past, comparing today's prices with those
of the early 1980s while ignoring inflation is foolish at best and intentionally
manipulative at worst. Multi-decade comparisons only make sense when adjusted
for the relentless fiat-currency inflation distortions.
So the nominal non-inflation-adjusted CRB is rendered below in blue and the
real inflation-adjusted CRB in red. The conservative headline CPI was used
as our inflation gauge, although true monetary inflation runs much higher and
would lead to much more favorable results for commodities today. In addition,
I also drew in all the major CRB revisions since 1972. They are rare but they
do happen occasionally as the CRB is constantly, and rightfully, evolving with
the times.

Wall Street hypes the blue nominal CRB line, pointing out that the index just
hit new all-time highs and therefore the commodities crash was necessary and
is just beginning. Nonsense! The red real CRB line, which shows where the CRB
has traded in today's 2006 dollars, really tells the true story. At its recent
all-time nominal highs, in real terms the CRB was barely up to commodities
price levels of the early 1990s. After its recent plunge, today the
CRB is trading near late-1990s real levels! This bull has barely begun
so far!
So next time CNBC makes one of its asinine straight-up comparisons between
a commodities price today with one decades ago, realize it is just anti-commodities
propaganda. Real secular commodities bulls tend to run for 17 years and take
commodities to new real highs, not just nominal ones. So not only is
today's secular commodities bull far too young to be over, but it is far too
small. Today's CRB would have to soar north of 1029, more than a triple from
here, to hit the all-time real highs necessary to end this bull.
Looking at the secular lows in the red real CRB above, it is obvious that
commodities ought to have a long, long ways to run yet if their bullish global
supply and demand fundamentals remain intact. All my research convinces me
they do indeed remain intact, and in some ways are even getting more bullish
as rising Asian demand grows faster than new supplies being found and delivered
to market.
If this bull is still alive and well, then this stunning breakdown offers
the best opportunity to add new commodities long positions in years. Thus we
are aggressively buying elite commodities stocks in an array of promising commodities
sectors today. The latest October issue of our acclaimed Zeal
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are likely to thrive tremendously when commodities start to recover. Please
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The bottom line is today's CRB is radically different than the ninth revision
that went before it. As it was the hyper-smoothed ninth revision that created
the secular uptrend that was recently broken, it doesn't make a lot of sense
to worry about the far-more-volatile and not-directly-comparable tenth revision
breaking it. Worrying about this recent commodities breakdown in any context
prior to July 2005 is neither rational nor logical.
Today's tenth CRB revision is not heavily smoothed nor equally weighted, oil
dominates it making up nearly a quarter of its weight. Thus today's CRB has
no choice but to follow oil like an ox with a ring in its nose with a rope
tied to the oil price. If you want answers for the CRB's recent behavior, then
look to oil. The moment oil inevitably starts recovering the CRB will obediently
follow it northwards and erase this technical breakdown.
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