From their lows in the early 2000s, base metals prices have soared to achieve
highs in the last couple years that many would have thought unheard of. Traders
that were long in both the futures and the stocks of the mining companies that
bring these metals to market have seen legendary gains.
This rapid appreciation of base metals prices has been undergirded by rock-solid
fundamentals. Asia's modernization and industrialization is commanding massive
commodities inflows. And to support its insatiable appetite for base metals
in particular, an economic imbalance has crept into these markets that has
simply caught the world off guard. These industrial metals that go into the
infrastructural and mechanical web of global growth have seen supply greatly
lag fast-rising demand.
Well with the base metals shedding some of their amazing gains of recent,
they have begun to fall off the radars of investors and speculators and are
attracting a growing population of scoffers and naysayers. This across-the-board
pullback does indeed have support from slightly-weakening interim fundamentals.
But interestingly we are starting to see some capitulation.
Many folks, even various analysts and so-called industry experts, have thrown
up their hands in surrender proclaiming the end of this commodities bull. People
are getting tired of hearing about the global growth story and bullish sentiment
is indeed waning on the commodities front.
This is just fine though and is in fact completely normal. Prices aren't the
only things that flow and ebb in the markets. The emotions of greed and fear
always follow this same pattern. In our uptrending secular commodities bull
the short-term oscillations within this trend are typically driven by prevailing
market psychology.
Two important things a successful trader in this commodities bull must understand
are first the underlying drivers of the markets, the fundamentals, and then
how to harness his emotions. While emotions can never truly be mastered but
only be refined with practice and fortitude, fundamentals can be viewed objectively.
Now sometimes I feel like I am beating a dead horse, but the reality is the
global growth story is still unfolding in its early stages. And China alone
gives us plenty of reasons to stay bullish on commodities. Many experts believe
it will surpass the US as the world's largest economy in the next 15 to 20
years. And I've even seen studies indicating that China's fixed assets will
continue to double every three or so years.
I can go on and on about long-term fundamentals, but my focus today is on
the tactical nature of base metals' price actions. As traders we need to be
keen on the machinations that influence this market. And just because assets
trend up in a secular fashion it doesn't mean they aren't susceptible to pullbacks
in order to rebalance prices and sentiment.
A couple months ago I analyzed the technicals of
the five major base metals. It was apparent that most of these metals were
reeling to establish support off their respective highs. But in the last couple
months the base metals have continued to fall. And in large part it has been
their interim measurable fundamentals that have driven them lower.
So the first place I go to gauge the health of the base metals sector is the
London Metal Exchange (LME). The LME is the world's largest non-ferrous metals
exchange and serves many important roles in the markets. Not only is it the
most reliable source for daily base metals prices, but its various other functions
are indispensable for commodities speculators.
Of the LME's many functions the most visible is its hosting of the futures
and options markets. Aside from the speculative nature of futures and options,
these instruments are essential in mitigating risk. They allow both consumers
and producers to lock in prices, also known as hedging.
But the key function of the LME that I'll focus on is the physical storage
of the metals that comprise its traded contracts. And the primary reason the
LME houses stockpiles is to ensure price convergence. Every contract traded
on the LME assumes physical delivery.
But since hedging and speculating rule trading on the LME and every other
global commodities exchange, most contracts are sold or bought back prior to
settlement. Only a small percentage of contracts actually result in delivery.
And the metals that are stockpiled in the hundreds of warehouses strategically
located around the world are what are drawn upon if indeed this happens.
Now this physical storage is not designed to supersede existing supply chains
between producers and consumers. But when in fact contracts are actually delivered
upon, it can be implied that consumers' needs are not being met via regular
channels. Therefore the fluctuations of stockpile levels can paint a good picture
of the prevailing global supply and demand balance. And these fluctuations
ultimately serve to be a strong influence on the pricing of the base metals.
In this ongoing essay
series I've been analyzing the correlation between movements in stockpile
levels and prices. And in recent years for the most part there has been an
incredible inverse correlation between the two. But this correlation hasn't
always been as strong.
Up until recent years there have been ample metals stockpiles to absorb the
occasional delivery of contracts. Many producers consistently delivered excess
supply to the LME's warehouses. This created a huge cushion of above-ground
supply and kept base metals prices low. Supply growth in most cases trumped
demand growth.
Well after the turn of the century the Asian economies got a firm hold on
their bootstraps. And their thirst for commodities became unquenchable. As
base metals demand grew the suppliers were quickly overwhelmed. When needs
couldn't be met through direct buying, LME stockpiles were the next logical
place for consumers to go.
The then-lofty stockpile levels were able to absorb early demand growth without
affecting prices too much. But when the pilfering of warehouses continued and
it was apparent that demand wasn't going to subside tomorrow, prices reacted
sharply.
And when LME stockpile levels were able to be measured in days of daily
global consumption versus weeks or months, this sent an alarming message to
commodities traders. Prices in some cases went parabolic as large speculative
risk premiums were placed on those metals that saw stockpile levels continue
to drop. "Base metals scarcity" would normally be considered an oxymoron, but
this was actually becoming reality.
With stockpile levels so low, any build or draw was closely monitored and
prices reacted in real-time. If stockpiles fell, prices would rise. And if
stockpiles grew, a portion of the risk premium was shed and prices would retreat.
This made stockpile fluctuations extremely valuable for traders to watch.
Since the LME provides daily stockpile and price data, even you and I can
observe the behind-the-scenes actions of these highly volatile commodities.
As mentioned this phenomenon has created an incredible inverse correlation
for most of the base metals. And we can watch this unfold visually by plotting
the data in charts.
Well a lot has happened since I last wrote about LME stockpiles in April.
At that time the base metals were in fine shape. Copper was in the midst of
another powerful upleg that had it charging toward its 2006 all-time high.
Nickel and lead were still carving all-time highs within their amazingly strong
uplegs. And zinc and aluminum were consolidating nicely off their previous
highs.
All was well in base metals land. LME stockpiles were low, prices were high,
and investors were bullish on these metals' futures. Today we see a stark contrast.
Prices are down and folks are scared of base metals and the stocks of the companies
that bring them to market. As you can probably guess, this is in large part
the result of growing global stockpiles.
These growing global stockpiles are harboring fear that this is the end of
the road for base metals. Is Asia done growing? Did the mining companies open
a spigot that shot out an excess supply of metals? Is corn replacing metals
for all industrial purposes? Absolutely not! As mentioned earlier the long-term
fundamentals are still intact.
Knowing this I would like to again take a look at where we stand technically
as measured by these LME stockpiles. First let's look at copper, the most influential
base metal of this group. The last time we looked at copper it was on the high
side of its recent upleg that petered out in early May 2007. And as you can
see in this chart, copper has continued to exhibit a strong inverse correlation
to the movements of its LME stockpile levels.

In May of 2006 copper reached its apex in parabolic fashion. Over the course
of this powerful upleg copper stockpiles reached alarmingly-low levels. This
caused speculators to launch the price of copper into an unsustainable northward
trajectory. So once stockpile levels finally started to rise, copper was doomed
for a healthy correction.
Surprisingly instead of crashing after the parabola, the price of copper consolidated
downward off its top in orderly fashion. While still in the mid-$3.00 range
copper ground downward slowly as stockpile levels began to rally higher. Then
in October 2006 the increase in copper stockpiles accelerated causing copper
to break its trend channel on the downside and eventually fall to its February
2007 low.
During this four-month span the inverse correlation was incredibly tight.
There was a mathematical negative correlation of -0.949 with an r-square of
90%. So 90% of the daily behavior of copper from October 2006 to February 2007
could be explained by the inverse movement of its daily LME stockpile levels.
In the nine months following its all-time high the price of copper ended up
shedding 41% as LME stockpile levels soared 141%. After this large build LME
copper stockpiles sharply rounded the corner and commenced a sharp draw once
again. This of course led to copper soaring higher in a powerful three-month
upleg that saw copper rise 57% before encountering resistance.
Concurrent to copper's rise, LME copper stockpiles were cut in half and in
July 2007 pierced the 100k metric ton level. This is the equivalent of less
than three days worth of global daily copper consumption. But for those
speculators hoping that this development would cause copper to surpass its
all-time high achieved more than a year earlier, they were mistaken.
What happened after LME copper stockpiles hit their July 2007 low was in effect
a V-bounce that in just the last five months has seen the stockpiles double.
And this of course caused copper to break its seven-month trend channel to
the downside.
Once again the inverse correlation is readily apparent. From copper's interim
high in the beginning of October 2007 it has run a negative correlation to
LME copper stockpiles of -0.962 with an r-square of 93%. And so far copper
is down 24% in its two-month-and-counting slide.
Now I'm sure this is troubling for those folks new to the base metals game.
But this all needs to be looked at in strategic context. It is important to
understand where we came from. As recent as late 2003 copper was trading under
$1.00. And from its low of $0.60 in late 2001, copper is still up over 400% today.
And even though on this chart it looks as though LME copper stockpiles are
on the high side when they get into the 200k metric ton range, all we need
to do is look a little farther back to realize that this is still historically
low. Just in 2002 LME copper stockpiles were close to 1m metric tons!
So while copper investors have been conditioned to $3.00 as normal, this is
still measurably high compared to just a couple years ago. Copper still has
a lot of wiggle room before you really need to worry about a structural problem
with its bull market.
Now the reason I mentioned earlier that most base metals were running
tight inverse correlations with their LME stockpile levels is because not all
of them are currently doing so. And zinc is one base metal that is exhibiting
some peculiar behavior.

Zinc's major upleg lagged copper's a bit in that its initial large LME stockpile
draw remained on a linear descent through the end of 2006. But this also led
to zinc outperforming copper in the second half of 2006 as it didn't hit its
apex until the end of November.
And 2006 was an incredible year for zinc. After rising 64% in 2005, it soared
another 142% in 2006. This was of course on the heels of zinc stockpiles that
were just obliterated, falling 78% on the year alone. The inverse correlation
worked beautifully in 2006.
But 2007 has certainly been a different story. Looking at what the price of
zinc has done in 2007 you would think LME stockpile levels were soaring. But
this is hardly the case. Now when zinc stockpiles leveled in December 2006
it makes sense that some of the speculative risk premium built into its lofty
price would be shed. And this is what we saw. It then also makes sense that
when stockpile levels started to fall once again in April 2007 that zinc would
rally.
But this rally only lasted for one month before zinc gave up its ghost and
started falling to the levels we see today. This has been quite odd price behavior
as there never really was a sizeable build in stockpile levels since the flattening
one year ago. In fact, from April 2007 to the end of October 2007 LME zinc
stockpiles fell another 48% to record lows! At only about 60k metric
tons, the markets were faced with the equivalent of only two days of
daily global consumption.
And these disturbingly-low stockpile levels don't seem to phase the zinc market
one bit. I honestly cannot figure out why. From a technical perspective we
do see a classic head-and-shoulders pattern in this chart. And this type of
pattern is typically bearish, usually leading to a trend-reversal pattern.
A technician would look at zinc's price chart and not be surprised to see it
decisively break its neckline. But in my experience fundamentals often trump
technical noise. Not so with zinc.
But like copper we need to look at zinc in a strategic context. Zinc is still
214% above its 2003 low of $0.34. As for LME zinc stockpile levels, as recent
as 2004 they were nearly 800k metric tons! Still below 100k today, they
are vastly lower than just a few short years ago. Ultimately I am long-term
bullish on zinc, but I am a little worried about its near-term price if there
is a big build in its stockpile levels. We'll have to wait and see.
Nickel is another of the base metals exhibiting wild swings in response to
fluctuations in its above-ground stockpile levels. As you can see in this chart
nickel has been quite volatile in the last couple years.

Lagging copper and zinc, nickel's massive upleg stayed hot all through 2006
before it reached its apex in May 2007. This incredible strength was in large
part due to a plummeting LME nickel stockpile. In just six months, from February
to July 2006, LME nickel stockpiles fell by 89%!
After the LME stockpiles' quick linear retreat to just 5k metric tons, they
hovered at these dangerously-low levels for ten long months. During this time
the markets placed a huge risk premium on the price of nickel pushing its price
to an incredible $24.50. From the beginning of 2006 to May 2007, nickel rocketed over
300% higher!
As you can see the tides have since changed. As goes the LME nickel stockpile
levels so goes nickel, to the inverse of course. Beginning in May 2007 nickel
stockpiles decisively broke above the 5k metric ton level and commenced a parabolic
ascent that has taken them over 1400% higher!
This massive build simply pounded nickel into a bloody pulp. In just three
months nickel lost over half its value. But this metal has shown some
resiliency. As LME nickel stockpiles continue their linear ascent higher, over
the last five months nickel seems to have found some support around the $12.00
level.
And of course from a strategic perspective $12.00 nickel is still incredibly
high. From its low of $2.00 in late 2001, nickel is still up a stellar 500%! Ultimately
this most speculative of metals has a significantly smaller capital market
compared to the other base metals. And we are likely to see extreme volatility
with this metal going forward.
Lead's bull market was a late bloomer and finally came into its element in
2007. And its actions in recent years really display the powerful influence
LME stockpile levels can have on the base metals.

While the other base metals were picking up steam in 2005 and the first half
of 2006, lead was in the doldrums. In the first half of 2006 LME lead stockpiles
saw a hefty build of 181%. This of course did not bode well for the
price of lead. During this time lead fell 37% before finally getting some reprieve.
In June 2006 lead stockpiles turned the corner and commenced a draw that saw
82% of the inventory disappear. And this draw ignited a powerful upleg that
saw lead rocket 335% higher in this same 16-month span. This brought LME lead
stockpiles down to only 20k metric tons, the equivalent of only about one
day of daily global consumption.
Naturally these low levels attached a huge risk premium to the price of lead.
So when stockpiles started to rise in October 2007, lead started to shed some
of this premium and has fallen 39% in quick order. But this 40k metric ton
LME stockpile is still less than a quarter of what it was in 2003. Lead supply
is still on short order, and even at $1.00 lead is 415% higher than its 2003
low.
Aluminum is the least exciting of the base metals. And this is simply because
of the size of its capital markets. Measured by volume, more aluminum is produced
and consumed each year than all the other base metals combined. Therefore its
volatility on both the stockpile and price fronts is not as erratic.

As recent as early 2004, LME aluminum stockpiles were over 1.4m metric tons.
As the stockpiles depleted, aluminum climbed from its 2001 low of $0.60 to
its May 2006 spike-high of nearly $1.50. But even with this decline in stockpiles,
measured in terms of daily consumption these levels are nowhere near as low
as the other base metals. This is why the advances and declines of aluminum's
price in the last couple years are less extreme.
In the latter half of 2007 with most of the base metals exhibiting weakness,
aluminum has followed suit. LME aluminum stockpiles initiated a build in the
beginning of 2007, and in August aluminum's sideways consolidation finally
broke to the downside. But even this downside loss was a modest 17% at worst
and the price of aluminum seems to have found some short-term support over
the last few months.
So as you can see, on balance the weakness in base metals prices in recent
months is in large part due to rising levels of above-ground stockpiles. In
recent years there has been a strong inverse correlation between the stockpile
levels and the market price. As these stockpile levels rise, varying degrees
of supply risk premiums are shed from the prices.
But even as base metals prices retreat, their bull markets must be viewed
in strategic context. They are in fact secular in nature because of a fundamental
supply and demand imbalance. Huge commodities demand out of Asia has pinched
supplies so that the producers of these commodities are hardly able to keep
up.
And because of the nature of "hard" commodities, or non-renewable natural
resources, the suppliers' ability to meet demand at a higher level is not an
easy feat. It takes many years to discover, develop and construct new mines
to replace the depleted mines and scale production upwards. And because of
so many years of inactivity in this area during the commodities bear of the
late 1980s and 1990s, the suppliers are behind the eight-ball.
So when looking at the base metals' weakness of late, consider their entire
bull markets. Though prices today are well off their highs, they are still
far above their lows around the turn of the century. And even though stockpile
levels are on the rise, for the most part they are still well below the levels
of comfort that we saw just a few short years ago. The interim fundamental
noise of the stockpile/price inverse correlations should not be construed as
a breakdown of long-term fundamentals.
And corrections are not only healthy but necessary in bull markets. The monstrous
gains we've witnessed in base metals the last several years were indeed driven
by fundamentals, but these gains also had sizeable speculative risk premiums
attached to them. In order to rebalance sentiment it is essential to shed the
euphoria surrounding the base metals and bring some fear back into these markets.
Even if there is more room to run on the downside, the base metals still remain
in long-term upward trends. And even at today's prices the mining companies
bringing these metals to market should remain extremely profitable.
At Zeal we have profitably traded the stocks of many of these mining companies
in our newsletters and are waiting for an opportune time to redeploy as base
metals continue their secular run higher. If you are looking for cutting-edge
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As a newsletter subscriber you also gain access to the exclusive subscriber
charts section on our website. We update an assortment of short-term and long-term
base metals charts. And our subscribers have been able to watch the stockpile/price
correlations unfold right before their eyes via weekly updates of the charts
you see above.
The bottom line is the LME base metals stockpiles data continues to provide
us with valuable information on these volatile markets. With base metals prices
trending down in recent months, we've been able to look to the stockpile levels
to explain these movements. Global stockpiles are on the rise, and this has
helped ease the huge supply crunch in the tight base metals markets.
But while these stockpile builds have led to the shedding of some of the speculative
risk premiums attached to the prices of the base metals, their respective bull
markets remain healthy. Prices are still on the high side of their secular
uptrends and stockpile levels are still historically low. A base metals correction
is healthy in order to balance sentiment for the next push higher.