Introduction


The Exit Cafe is dedicated to helping investors and professionals of all experience levels be more aware of changes to their risk exposure and the importance of using an intelligent exit strategy to control and act upon risk.

The editorial manager and a frequent contributor to our blog is Chuck LeBeau, an industry leader in the application of technical analysis for risk management. We hope you find our blog enjoyable, educational and valuable. Please feel free to chime in on any stories or analysis posted.

Jul 16, 2009

Why The Base Metal Rally Is Not Sustainable

By Kevin Grewal, Editorial Director at www.SmartStops.net

The second quarter of the year has turned out to be astonishing for base metals, but can they sustain their gains or will they slowly diminish away?

Stockpiling by the Chinese, stimulus plans, both domestically and internationally, that were heavily concentrated on infrastructure, and a drop in production helped base metals utilize basic both macro and microeconomic principles to enable a rally.

This recent rally is hardly sustainable and is most likely short-lived. The gains that have been seen in aluminum, copper, and other industrial metals have been caused by the phenomenon of reverting back to the mean; after all, the industry was badly battered due to the global economic meltdown.

Both producing and consuming companies around the globe continue to suffer from the economic woes brought on by the global financial crisis. As stated in an earlier article, corporate America is beating Wall Street’s expectations primarily due to cost-cutting factors and not revenue growth and expansion. So until the economy rebounds, corporations start outperforming due to growth and not lean measures and jobs are created, the industrial sector will continue to suffer.

Some equities that have benefited from the most recent “revert back to the mean” are the following:

The PowerShares DB Metals Fund (DBB), up from its March low of $10.95 to close at $15.42 on July 15, an increase of 41%.

Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold (FCX), closing at $50.91 on July 15, up 92% from a $26.49 March low.

Southern Copper (PCU), rebounding nicely from a March low of $12.74 to close at $21.83 on July 15, a jump of 71%.

Rio Tinto (RTP) up 52% after witnessing a March low of $91.91 to close at $138.96 on July 15

Alcoa (AA), almost doubling and closing at $10.15 on July 15 after hitting a March low of $5.22.

When investing in the aforementioned equities, one must keep in mind the risks that are involved. To help moderate these risks implementing an exit strategy and identifying when the upward trend is coming to an end is vital.

According to the latest data from www.SmartStops.net, an upward trend in these stocks and
ETFs would be over at the following price levels: DBB at $14.77; FCX at $47.05; PCU at $20.05; RTP at $128.01; AA at $8.97. These levels change daily and updated data is free at www.SmartStops.net.

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