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Thread: Uh Oh, Dr. Copper just got Wacked!

  1. #11

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    So the question is... when do the stocks get low? I did read that the Chinese had IIRC like a billion ounces of copper in stock? So they must have a lot of lead too. That would make sense. But I wonder if it's enough to fill all the current orders for ammo? It must be. Amazing.

  2. #12

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    IIRC...One of the ways government was able to curb moonshiner's operations in the 30s was to buy up all the sugar and cause a artificial rise in price and cause supply problems in that commodity. It worked, the commodity became to expensive and hard to get for the majority of the moonshiners. .

    They are doing it again by buying up all the ammo and passing new gun laws. However this time the price of lead and brass commodities are not reflecting it. The finish product yes. But the raw material is getting cheaper.

    Off hand I think WTF chuck? A wag, could China and company be in on it? Or is war about ready to brake out?

    It just really smells bad. I see huge spike in the LME stocks. Looking like 2008 but higher. Then the economy was doing better before, then after the stocks crashed too. Why did the LME stocks decline after the 2008 mini-crash?
    Last edited by Westerner; 03-30-2013 at 07:21 AM.

  3. #13

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    Ammo is still on a tare, let copper, zinc and lead are dead. What will it take to get them moving? Or are they moving and what we see in the base is a allusion?

  4. #14

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    Quote Originally Posted by Westerner View Post
    Ammo is still on a tare, let copper, zinc and lead are dead. What will it take to get them moving? Or are they moving and what we see in the base is a allusion?
    Copper is a base metal used as an indicator for economic growth since it is used in so many processes, specifically for it's capacity to carry electrons, but it is malleable, fights bacteria growth and oxides to a fine green patina. It is a canary in the economic coal mine. I look for a huge slowdown soon. One that even the CB's can't prevent.

  5. #15

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    Copper getting whacked again, off 1%.

    We are now approaching the 2012 lows. if it breaks below 3, watch out below.

  6. #16

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    Quote Originally Posted by Atlas Shrugged View Post
    Copper getting whacked again, off 1%.

    We are now approaching the 2012 lows. if it breaks below 3, watch out below.
    Now down 1.52% It does matter.

  7. #17

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    Once cu breaks 3 it will be katy bar the door time.

    Those stawk market dreamers will awake to a nightmare of epic proportions

  8. #18

    Default Kitco's base metal charts are important to me anyway

    Quote Originally Posted by NolaM View Post
    Whoops...good catch...off 2.4% for the week.

    For anyone who doesn't follow the reference
    http://www.cnbc.com/id/44630360

    “There is an old saying that every stock bull market has a copper top,” wrote Jeff Hirsch, who runs the Stock Trader’s Almanac newsletter, in prescient note to clients at the start of March. “While not entirely true, as a key industrial material and benchmark of economic growth, copper tops have coincided with stock bull market tops on enough occasions to warrant concern.”
    Thanks for posting the link.

    Quote Originally Posted by Atlas Shrugged View Post
    Copper is a base metal used as an indicator for economic growth since it is used in so many processes, specifically for it's capacity to carry electrons, but it is malleable, fights bacteria growth and oxides to a fine green patina. It is a canary in the economic coal mine. I look for a huge slowdown soon. One that even the CB's can't prevent.
    Agree 100%. Kitco base metals charts, (copper,aluminum,lead,zink) are something I check regularly. I recommend everyone take a peak at them. Check the historical charts, as well as the daily chart for all the base metals. They can be a real eyeopener.
    I look at them often, for clues about how the world economy is doing. And, when is the best time to sell my scrap.
    I am a member of one of Americas smallest minorities......I am a US Veteran. I was a Tincan Sailor. Gearing and Fletcher class Destroyers, gone but not forgotten by those that served on them.

  9. #19

    Default Copper Prices Recede Toward Cost of Production

    http://www.foxbusiness.com/news/2013...st-production/

    Copper Prices Recede Toward Cost of Production Published April 18, 2013

    Dow Jones Newswires

    For the first time since 2009, copper prices are falling toward the cost of production.

    Copper's recent drop has pushed futures prices to the precipice of a bear market, down nearly 20% off their February 2012 highs. As futures trade around $3.20 a pound, they're dangerously close to the $2.80 a pound it costs some mining companies to dig up the metal, said Catherine Virga, director of research at CPM Group, a New York-based metals consultancy.

    This marks a swift reversal from just two years earlier, when copper breached $4.62 a pound as investors feared a copper shortage. Copper-mining companies responded to the higher prices by diverting more of their profits toward expansion and new mines, but the development of new supply has been slow.

  10. #20

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    Quote Originally Posted by FiatC View Post
    http://www.foxbusiness.com/news/2013...st-production/

    Copper Prices Recede Toward Cost of Production Published April 18, 2013

    Dow Jones Newswires

    For the first time since 2009, copper prices are falling toward the cost of production.

    Copper's recent drop has pushed futures prices to the precipice of a bear market, down nearly 20% off their February 2012 highs. As futures trade around $3.20 a pound, they're dangerously close to the $2.80 a pound it costs some mining companies to dig up the metal, said Catherine Virga, director of research at CPM Group, a New York-based metals consultancy.

    This marks a swift reversal from just two years earlier, when copper breached $4.62 a pound as investors feared a copper shortage. Copper-mining companies responded to the higher prices by diverting more of their profits toward expansion and new mines, but the development of new supply has been slow.
    Yep, if it breaks three, look for a huge deflationary slowdown to follow. Too much demand pulled forward. We (the world) did not take our lumps and now it will be worse.
    Last edited by Atlas Shrugged; 04-20-2013 at 06:44 AM.

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