Tag Archives: commodities

What Will China Dump Next, After Treasuries, to Keep Control? by Wolf Richter

From Wolf Richter at wolfstreet.com:

“Practically boundless” future capital outflows.

“Beneath all of the financial turbulence there lurks, in my view, a credit crisis; I fear the worst now,” UBS economic adviser George Magnus told Bloomberg TV today. The reform agenda “has stalled,” he said, and “things are looking much bleaker for China going forward.”

And so on Monday, we got another flavor of it.

The Shanghai Composite index plunged 5.3%, to 3016, down 15% so far this year. The Shenzhen Composite fell 6.6%. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng fell 2.8% to 19888, below 20000 for the first time since June 2013, and down 30% from its April high.

Everyone had hoped that China’s “National Team” would jump into the fray and bail everyone else out, but it didn’t. And the People’s Bank of China didn’t offer any big new remedies either. But it did stabilize the yuan after it had dropped 1.5% against the dollar last week, and about 6% since mid-August.

In Hong Kong, interbank yuan lending rates broke all records since the Treasury Markets Association started compiling the data in June 2013, with the overnight Hong Kong Interbank Offered Rate spiking 939 basis points to 13.4%.

And copper did it again, ratting on China’s real economy. Copper goes into anything from skyscrapers to smartphones. China is the world’s largest copper consumer, accounting for over 40% of global demand. And on Monday, copper dropped 2.6% to $1.97 per pound, the lowest level since May 2009.

Buffeted by, among other things, fears about slowing demand from the industrial sector in China, oil plunged – with WTI down 6.1% to $31.13 a barrel

To prop up the yuan and counter the impact of capital flight, China had dumped $510 billion of foreign exchange reserves last year, drawing them down to a three-year low of $3.33 trillion. And that was just the beginning.

To continue reading: What Will China Dump Next?

Junk-Bond Risk Gauge Jumps as China Meltdown Adds to Energy Rout, by Sridhar Natarajhan and Michelle Davis

From Sridhar Natarajan and Michelle Davis at blomberg.com:

Premium on high-yield debt approaching most in three years

The goal is to `avoid land mines’ with oil at 12-year low

Junk-bond investors coming off their first losing year since 2008 are in the crosshairs again, as a stock-market meltdown in China and a plunge in oil prices cloud the outlook for debt sold by the least credit-worthy companies.

The risk premium on the Markit CDX North American High Yield Index, a credit-default swaps benchmark tied to the debt of 100 speculative-grade companies, surged as much as 21 basis points to 516 basis points, rising toward the highest mark in three years. The average borrowing costs for the riskiest portion of the high-yield market surged to 18.4 percent, Bank of America Merrill Lynch index data show, a level not seen since 2009.

“The whole world’s interrelated and you can’t get around that,” said Andrew Brenner, head of international fixed income for National Alliance Capital Markets in New York. “High-yield’s going to be under pressure just because oil’s under pressure. And you’re having this whole risk-off situation.”

The price of crude has plunged 10 percent this week and touched its lowest level since 2009, pushing the relative yield on energy-company debt to more than 13.5 percentage points, Bloomberg indexes show. The industry, which is clocking its worst performance on record, makes up about 15 percent of the junk-bond gauge.

‘Pointing Negative’

“With commodities, there are 10 things that can go right or wrong, and right now almost all of them are pointing negative,” said John McClain, a portfolio manager at Diamond Hill Capital Management Inc., in Columbus, Ohio, which oversees about $17 billion. “You want to avoid land mines in this market. You don’t want to be a hero. It’s not a time to reach.”

The People’s Bank of China cut the yuan’s reference rate against the dollar by 0.5 percent on Thursday, the biggest since Aug. 13, two days after a surprise devaluation. The Shanghai Composite Index tumbled 7.3 percent before trading was halted by new circuit-breakers that some criticized for exacerbating declines.

Later, the nation’s regulator said it was suspending the circuit-breakers.
China’s central bank further spooked the market when it announced that foreign-exchange reserves posted the first annual drop since 1992, spurring concern that capital flight from the world’s second-largest economy is accelerating.

To continue reading: Junk-Bond Risk Gauge Jumps 

Now Comes The Great Unwind—-How Evaporating Commodity Wealth Will Slam The Casino, by David Stockman

Happy New Year! From David Stockman at davidstockmanscontracorner.com:

The giant credit fueled boom of the last 20 years has deformed the global economy in ways that are both visible and less visible. As to the former, it only needs be pointed out that an economy based on actual savings from real production and income and a modicum of financial market discipline would not build 65 million empty apartment units based on the theory that their price will rise forever as long as they remain unoccupied!

That’s the Red Ponzi at work in China and its replicated all across the land in similar wasteful investments in unused or under-used shopping malls, factories, coal mines, airports, highways, bridges and much, much more.

But the point here is that China is not some kind of one-off aberration. In fact, the less visible aspects of the credit ponzi exist throughout the global economy and they are becoming more visible by the day as the Great Deflation gathers force.

As we have regularly insisted, there is nothing in previous financial history like the $185 trillion of worldwide credit expansion over the last two decades. When this central bank fueled credit bubble finally reached its apogee in the past year or so, global credit had expanded by nearly 4X the gain in worldwide GDP.

Moreover, no small part of the latter was simply the pass-through into the Keynesian-style GDP accounting ledgers of fixed asset investment (spending) that is destined to become a write-off or public sector white elephant (wealth destruction) in the years ahead.

The credit bubble, in turn, led to booming demand for commodities and CapEx. And in these unsustainable eruptions layers and layers of distortion and inefficiency cascaded into the world economy and financial system.

To continue reading: Here Comes The Great Unwind

Dislocation Watch: Getting Run Over on Third Avenue, by Pater Tenebrarum

This is a good article that amplifies some of the points made in Crisis Progress Report (14): Global Margin Call. From Pater Tenebrarum at davidstockmanscontracorner.com:

It has become clear now that the troubles in the oil patch and the junk bond market are beginning to spread beyond their source – just as we have always argued would eventually happen. Readers are probably aware that today was an abysmal day for “risk assets”. A variety of triggers can be discerned for this: the Chinese yuan fell to a new low for the move; the Fed’s planned rate hike is just days away; the selling in junk bonds has begun to become “disorderly”.

Recently we said that JNK [a junk bond ETF] looked like it may be close to a short term low (we essentially thought it might bounce for a few days or weeks before resuming its downtrend). We were obviously wrong. Instead it was close to what is beginning to look like some sort of mini crash wave:

To be sure, such a big move lower on vastly expanding volume after what has already been an extended decline often does manage to establish a short to medium term low. There are however exceptions to this “rule” – namely when something important breaks in the system and a sudden general rush toward liquidity begins.

As we have often stressed, we see the corporate bond market, and especially its junk component, as the major Achilles heel of the echo bubble. One of its characteristics is that there are many instruments, such as ETFs and assorted bond funds, the prices of which are keying off these bonds and which are at least superficially far more liquid than their underlying assets. This has created the potential for a huge dislocation.

We would also like to remind readers that it is not relevant that the main source of the problems in the high yield market is “just” the oil patch. In 2006-2007 it was “just” the sub-prime sector of the mortgage market. In 2000 it was “just” the technology sector. Malinvestment during a boom is always concentrated in certain sectors (in the recent echo boom the situation has been more diffuse than it was during the real estate bubble, but the oil patch is certainly one of the most important focal points of malinvestment and unsound credit in the current bubble era).

To continue reading: Dislocation Watch: Getting Run Over on Third Avenue

Crisis Progress Report (14): Global Margin Call, by Robert Gore

A tedious ritual this time of year is lengthy Review and Preview articles, in which financial publications and websites highlight the year’s winning picks, acknowledge the losers, and prognosticate about the coming year. Does anybody read them? Probably not. The only way SLL’s Review and Preview will get read is if it’s short, so here goes. The year 2015 in review: SLL pretty much got it right (see Debtonomics Archive for confirmation). Preview of 2016: things will get much worse. There, that’s out of the way.

The global economy has been sucked into the event horizon of the black hole of debt. The world does not enough assets and cash flows to service $225 trillion in debt, or almost three times gross world product, and sustain economic growth. Most financial assets are somebody’s debt, an increasing percentage of which is impaired, and mounting debt service is taking a larger share of cash flows. Consequently, trend growth rates are declining, with some countries already in recession (e.g., Canada, Russia) or depression (Brazil).

This is the margin call phase of debt contraction. When speculators employ leverage, they put up some percentage of the initial speculation, called equity, and borrow the rest. The loan is secured by the speculative asset. If the price moves against a speculator and equity shrinks, the lender will demand that the speculator put up more money (or “margin,” hence the term margin call). If the speculator is unable to maintain the required equity, the lender liquidates the collateral-asset.

Here we have the dynamics of debt contraction writ small. The initial extension of credit supported a speculation; the price moved in the undesired direction; the creditor restricts credit to the speculator; the speculator, creditor, or both sustain losses, the speculator has less money, and so will the lender if it shares in the loss. The loss may have ripple effects throughout the economy if one or the other or both curtail future speculation, lending, or consumption.

The most leveraged sector of the economy receives the first margin calls. There’s always a story that supports the rush to grant unwise extensions of credit. In 2006, the story was that house prices never go down. In 2014, the story was China, whose perpetual hyper-growth would supposedly fuel a commodities and raw materials supercycle. When the Chinese economy slowed last year, miners, oil drillers, and other raw materials companies that had borrowed heavily to fund expansion for the Chinese market got the margin call.

Cash-strapped borrowers facing margin calls have only two options: borrow more or sell assets. Behind almost every graph showing a vertiginous drop in the price of an asset are leveraged sellers trying en masse to repay their loans. Such drops in a number of commodities were dismissed at the end of last year in various Reviews and Previews as isolated and aberrational, but they were the first margin calls. SLL said at the time: “The future is now. The carnage in the oil sector, where a glut has knocked over a third off its price in less than five months, is not an aberration, but a harbinger—the shape of things to come across sectors and around the world.” (Oil Ushers in the Depression, 12/1/14).

These margin calls have commodities and raw materials producers on the ropes. In the debt-based global economy, there is no way a margin call in a large sector will stay contained to that sector. Most assets are either encumbered with debt or are in fact debt. When a significant part of the interconnected debt matrix runs into trouble, it spreads to the rest of the matrix.

The prices of debt issued by commodity and raw material producers have crashed and their debt has been downgraded by the ratings agencies. The margin call is rippling; the yield spread between junk bonds and US Treasury benchmarks has widened for all issuers. Last week a junk mutual fund and a junk hedge fund, faced with mounting losses and customer withdrawals, refused to honor further redemption requests for an indefinite time period. They cited fire sale prices for junk debt and illiquidity: the failure of the market to provide deep enough bids for them to unload their positions. However, the liquidity they were counting on is funded by debt. When debt contracts, that pool gets shallower and eventually evaporates, usually just when sellers are stampeding to get out.

Evanescent liquidity in financial markets is funded at close to the Federal Reserves microscopic interest rate target on federal funds, now between zero and twenty-five basis points, or one-quarter of one percent. This week the Fed will most likely raise its target rate twenty-five basis points. That raises the cost of doing business for leveraged speculators, which will impair liquidity to an unknown extent. Many are treating the Fed’s hike as a defining moment for financial markets and the economy. David Stockman, with whom SLL is generally in agreement, said: “Yes, the end of the bubble does begin on December 16th.

While the Fed may finally mark up the cost of credit to leveraged speculators this week, they are following, not leading, credit markets, which have already marked up the cost of credit, and by a lot more than twenty-five basis points, to leveraged speculators in oil, natural gas, coal, iron ore, aluminum, steel, container ships, railroads, trucks, factories, infrastructure projects, buildings, and more. The Fed move may be the coup de grâce for stock prices, which for most companies are already well off their highs, but with all due respect to Stockman, the end of bubble arrived over a year ago.

There may be an interesting twist to this margin call and debt contraction. Usually debt supports long positions in assets. Figures indicate a preponderance of speculative short positions in the gold, and to a lesser degree, silver futures markets. Leverage can fund short positions as well as longs. Claims have been made that central banks and the banking industry have a vested interest in suppressing the prices of precious metals and have in fact done so. This, so the argument goes, has created a massive imbalance between the amounts shorted on paper in the futures market and actual physical precious metals available for delivery.

SLL does not dismiss this speculation because it may be right. If so, those leveraged speculators who are short the precious metals could get caught up in a margin call reflecting the general contraction in debt and fall in asset prices. In the reverse of the usual situation, they would have to close out their positions, buying either futures or the physical metals. We may see some spectacular short-covering fireworks, sending the prices of precious metals explosively higher while everything else is going down. This is conjecture, not a bet-the-ranch proposition. SLL has been bullish on the precious metals for some time, and this may be yet another reason for bullishness.

Baron Rothschild, a 19th century member of the banking dynasty, is credited with saying: “The time to buy is when there’s blood in the streets.” Since then, speculators have tried to catch falling daggers, rationalizing that financial losses already sustained by other speculators amounted to “blood in the streets,” but usually only impaling themselves. Rothschild meant that one should wait to buy until there is literally blood in the streets, crimson rivers of it. Full-bore bear markets and depressions are accompanied by wars and tectonic political shifts, even revolutions. During these troubled times, most of us should stick with cash, provisions, firearms, and some precious metals, reduce or eliminate debt, and avoid speculating from either the long or short side. However, nothing lasts forever and eventually the financial landscape will be dotted with screamingly cheap survivors of the carnage. When to dip a toe in the investment waters? Follow Baron Rothschild’s advice.

A GREAT NOVEL, A GREAT CHRISTMAS PRESENT

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Walloped by Crummy Global Demand and Overcapacity, China Containerized Freight Index Crashes to Worst Level Ever, by Wolf Richter

From Wolf Richter at wolfstreet.com:

Bad breath of zero-interest-rate era wafts over real economy.

To the chagrin of the government, China has one export that is booming: capital flight.

Fearing further devaluations of the yuan, a terribly inconvenient crackdown on corruption, political purges, and other mayhem, wealthy Chinese are trying to get part of their money out of harm’s way. Capital outflows tripled to an estimated $113 billion in November from October.

To prop up the yuan in face of this sort of capital flight, the People’s Bank of China has been selling foreign currency, including US Treasuries. As a consequence, its foreign exchange reserves plunged by $87 billion in November to $3.396 trillion, the lowest since February 2013. The export of capital is a booming business in China.

Actual exports weren’t so lucky, according to China’s General Administration of Customs. In November, they dropped 6.8% year-over-year (3.7% in yuan terms), after a 6.9% swoon in October. They’re down for a fifth month in a row. They’re a sign of crummy global demand for Chinese goods.

This has been the story of the Caixin Manufacturing PMI, which tracks manufacturing activity in China via a survey of purchasing managers. It has been mired in contraction mode for nine months in a row.

China is no longer the low-cost producer with an undervalued currency. The yuan is essentially pegged to the US dollar – now ironically called the “strong dollar” – and has been rising in near lockstep with it, except for the smallish devaluations. So China faces weak global demand and a currency that is strong in relationship to the currencies of many of its customers.

Imports fell 8.7% year-over-year (5.6% in yuan terms), having now fallen every month over the past year, a sign of collapsed commodity prices and lukewarm demand in China.

This swoon in exports has hit the container shipping industry at the worst possible moment: Infused with central-bank-managed optimism and flush with nearly free money from global monetary policies, executives of shipping companies have gone on an expansion binge for the past seven years. Drewry estimates that capacity of the world fleet will balloon by another 8% this year, while demand might edge up a measly 1%, if that – the lowest increase since 2009.

To continue reading: China Walloped by Crummy Global Demand and Overcapacity

Plunging Commodities Interfere With The New World Order, by Raúl Ilargi Meijer

From Raúl Ilargi Meijer at automaticearth.com:

Anglo American, a British company, and one of the world’s biggest miners, and a ‘producer’ (actually just a miner, how did those two terms ever get mixed up?!) of platinum (world no. 1), diamonds, copper, nickel, iron ore and coal, said today it would scrap dividends AND fire 85,000 of it 135,000 global workforce (that’s 63%!).

Anglo is just the first in a long litany line we’ll see going forward. Commodities ‘producers’ are being completely wiped out, hammered, killed, murdered. They’ve been able to hedge their downside risks so far, but now find they can’t even afford the price of the hedges (insurance) anymore. And then there’s all the banks and funds that financed them.

And they’ve all been gearing up for production increases too, with grandiose plans and -leveraged- investments aiming for infinity and beyond. You know, it’s the business model. 2016 will be a year for the record books.

Just check this Bloomberg graph for copper supply and demand as an example. How ugly would you like it today?

And what’s true for copper goes for the whole range of raw materials. Because China went from double-digit growth to shrinking imports and exports in pretty much no time flat. And China was all they had left.

Iron ore is dropping below $40, and that’s about the break-even point. Of course, oil has done that quite a while ago already. It’s just that we like to think oil’s some kind of stand-alone freak incident. It is not. With oil today plunging below $37 (down some 15% since the OPEC meeting last week), it doesn’t matter anymore how much more efficient shale companies can get.

They’re toast. They’re done. And with them are their lenders. Who have hedged their bets too, obviously, but hedging has a price. Or else you could throw money at any losing enterprise.

But there’s another side to this, one that not a soul talks about, and it has Washington, London and Brussels very worried. Here goes:

These large mining -including oil- corporations most often operate in regions in the world that are remote and located in countries with at best questionable governments (the corporations like it like that, it’s how they know who to bribe to be able to rape and pillage).

The corporations de facto form a large part of the US/UK/EU political/military control system of these areas. They work in tandem with the CIA, MI5, the US and UK military, to keep the areas ‘friendly’ to western industries and regime.

To continue reading: Plunging Commodities Interfere With The New World Order

Iron Ore in the $30s Seen Near Tipping Point for Largest Miners, by Jasmine Ng

From Jasmine Ng at bloomberg.com:

Big Four’s highest-cost mines pressured: Capital Economics

Miners’ shares retreat, with Vale sliding to 12-year low

Iron ore’s tumble into the $30s threatens the world’s largest miners as prices approach break-even costs, according to Capital Economics Ltd. Shares of Vale SA, the biggest producer, sank to the lowest in 12 years.

The most expensive operations at the four largest suppliers are on the verge of making losses at rates below $40 a metric ton, said John Kovacs, senior commodities economist at Capital Economics in London, who estimates their break-even levels at $28 to $39, taking into account freight and other costs. While these producers will keep output strong, they’ll be constrained by low prices, he said by e-mail on Monday.

Iron ore’s plunge below $40 comes as producers including Vale in Brazil and Rio Tinto Group and BHP Billiton Ltd. in Australia press on with expansions to cut costs and defend market share just as demand from the largest consumer China slows. They’re the world’s biggest suppliers along with Fortescue Metals Group Ltd. Prices of the raw material have lost 46 percent this year and have plunged 80 percent from their peak in 2011.

“The big four will find it hard to maintain output at below $40,” Kovacs said in response to questions. “If prices remain weak, output from the highest-cost mines of the big four will be under pressure.”

To continue reading: Iron Ore in the $30s Seen Near Tipping Point for Largest Miners

If China Killed Commodity Super Cycle, Fed Is About to Bury It, by Kevin Crowley

From Kevin Crowley at bloomberg.com:

Raw-material losses worst since 1999, before China buying boom

Higher U.S. rates mean stronger dollar, further eroding demand

For commodities, it’s like the 21st century never happened.

The last time the Bloomberg Commodity Index of investor returns was this low, Apple Inc.’s best-selling product was a desktop computer, and you could pay for it with francs and deutsche marks.

The gauge tracking the performance of 22 natural resources has plunged two-thirds from its peak, to the lowest level since 1999. That shows it’s back to square one for the so-called commodity super cycle, a hunger for coal, oil and metals from Chinese manufacturers that powered a bull market for about a decade until 2011.

“In China, you had 1.3 billion people industrializing — something on that scale has never been seen before,” said Andrew Lapping, deputy chief investment officer at Allan Gray Ltd., a manager of $33 billion of assets in Cape Town. “But there’s just no way that can continue indefinitely. You can only consume so much.”

If slowing Chinese growth, now headed for its weakest pace in 25 years, put the first nail in the coffin of the super cycle, the Federal Reserve is about to hammer in the last.

The first U.S. interest rate increase since 2006 is expected next month by a majority of investors, helping push the dollar up by about 9 percent against a basket of 10 major currencies this year. That only adds to the woes of commodities, mostly priced in dollars, by cutting the spending power of global raw-materials buyers and making other assets that generate yields such as bonds and equities more attractive for investors.

To continue reading: If China Killed Commodity Super Cycle, Fed Is About to Bury It

Biggest U.S. Iron Ore Producer Says Rio, BHP in ‘Imaginary World’ by Jasmine Ng

The situation in iron ore looks just like the situation in oil and a lot of other commodities: continued production in the face of massive gluts and declining prices. From Jasmine Ng at bloomberg.com:

Biggest Australia miners won’t change behavior, Goncalves says

`Prices below $50 are not comfortable to anyone,’ CEO says

The biggest iron ore producer in the U.S. says its larger rivals in Australia are hurting themselves as well as their competitors as they ramp-up production in an oversupplied market.

With iron ore slumping to less than $50 a metric ton, revenues at the biggest miners are shrinking faster than costs, according to the head of Cliffs Natural Resources Inc., who said the majors’ expectations that rivals will quit the market aren’t being fully realized.

“Prices below $50 are not comfortable to anyone, including the majors,” Chief Executive Officer Lourenco Goncalves said in a phone interview from the company’s headquarters in Cleveland, Ohio on Tuesday. “The cost-cutting is not even close to offset their loss in revenues. My entire point: the loss in revenue, totally avoidable. Self-imposed. Self-inflicted.”

BHP Billiton Ltd. spokeswoman Emily Perry said on Wednesday the company wouldn’t respond to Goncalves’s remarks, while Rio Tinto Group sent comments from Brendan Pearson, head of the Minerals Council of Australia, which represents miners. There is open competition in the iron ore market and the Cliffs’ CEO shouldn’t be taken seriously, Pearson said.

Raising Output

Iron ore sank below $50 last week on expanded low-cost production from Rio, BHP Billiton and Brazil’s Vale SA, coupled with signs demand in China is contracting. The biggest producers are raising output as prices sag, betting that they can pare costs per ton and boost market share while less efficient miners face closure. Iron ore will decline gradually for years to come, Alan Chirgwin, BHP’s vice president of marketing for iron ore, has forecast.

Goncalves took the helm at Cliffs in 2014 after an activist-investor revolt, promising to end the company’s vulnerability to the oversupplied seaborne market. Shares in Cliffs have fallen 73 percent in the past 12 months as iron and steel prices have tumbled. Last year, Cliffs produced about 34 million metric tons of iron ore from mines in the U.S. and Asia-Pacific. Rio produced 295.4 million tons in 2014, filings show.

“In their imaginary world, 60 million tons of capacity will go offline this year, then another 125 million tons of capacity will go out of commission next year,” Goncalves said. “That’s not the case. Everyone is driving down costs, everyone is trying to continue to cope. You’re not seeing any meaningful number of tons going offline.”

To continue reading: Biggest U.S. Iron Ore Producer Says Rio, BHP in ‘Imaginary World’