|
Published: February 9, 2010
The Statue of Liberty is one of the most
recognizable American icons in the world.
And as she towers 305 feet above Ellis Island, what's Lady
Liberty wearing? Copper -- 60,000 pounds of it.
Clearly, copper's big in art. It's also a key metal that keeps
the world economy humming. Copper consumption has grown at an
average annual rate of 4% since 1900. China and India -- which
some analysts describe as the combined market of "Chindia" --
where one of every three human beings resides, needs loads of
this element to meet its modernization requirements for
electricity and infrastructure.
Copper is also used in today's currency, where most U.S. coins
are actually 92% copper, and 8% nickel.
But there's no denying that, given the choice, nearly everyone
prefers gold. It's valuable, it's seductive and it's mystical.
Ancient kings fought wars to amass it. Yet, for thousands of
years, its most enduring role has arguably been in the form of
money -- as a store of value.
That's because fiat-paper-currency experiments have never
lasted, and always ended badly.
Increasingly, followers of the Austrian School of Economics are
nostalgic for gold to regain its former glory, perhaps "backing"
a new international currency.
But despite gold's much longer history as true money, some
believe that copper -- the much humbler metal -- could be
positioning itself to upstage gold.
China's Paper Mountain
If copper is to replace gold as the world's most-valuable metal,
China will have to play a huge role. With all its uses -- from
hybrid cars to an electricity grid -- copper may become both an
inflation hedge and a strategic asset.
Today, China sits atop a paper Everest, with foreign-currency
reserves worth more than $2.4 trillion. No public financial
institution boasts that degree of financial-asset firepower. Of
that total, more than $800 billion is held in U.S. debt.
A war chest of this size serves as a great insurance policy
during tough economic times. The trouble is that China is
painfully aware of the damage that U.S. dollar inflation will
inflict on that massive hoard of greenbacks.
During a visit to New York last February,
Luo Ping, a director general at the China Banking Regulatory
Commission said: "We hate you guys. Once you start issuing $1 to
$2 trillion... we know the dollar is going to depreciate, so we
hate you guys, but there is nothing we can do."
That's not completely true -- there are some things that China
is already doing. When that Asian giant recently announced an
increase in its official gold reserves, it said the total had
catapulted by +76% since 2002, reaching 1,054 tons. China
accomplished this without a single purchase on global bullion
markets. How? By quietly becoming the world's largest gold
producer, then buying up all that it produced.
Red Gold to Back a New Currency?
I expect China will continue to covet gold. But with such a
large reserve in dire need of both diversification and
securitization, this emerging global superpower of 1.3 billion
citizens has set its sights on other tangibles. Let's face it,
the gold supply is small, and China needs resources of all
kinds.
So it makes perfect sense for Beijing to trade holdings it has
too much of -- like U.S. Treasuries, for example -- for assets
China needs more of, like copper. There are multiple benefits to
this strategy, too: Not only is China swapping a holding whose
value is declining (dollar-based holdings) for a tangible asset
whose value is on the rise (copper), it's also getting (in
copper) an asset that's central to its ongoing infrastructure
build-out.
Yet some believe that China's actions reflect a new strategy,
since this acquisition binge goes way beyond national
consumption requirements. And with a full war chest, that buying
could be sustained for some time.
Copper could be used to back a currency, but it's also necessary
for the modernization of China, and even in the next wave of
automobile technologies -- both electric and hybrid -- an
industry this nation could lead.
China's share of the copper market is a world-dominating 38%.
Clearly, its 2009 record import levels helped vault the copper
price by +226%, from its January slump of $1.50 per pound to a
recent high near $3.40 per pound.
As China was buying hand over fist in early 2009, copper prices
began to rebound. London Metals Exchange (LME) statistics
underscore that copper stockpiles were raided from February
until mid-July.
What happened next, however, was both surprising and
counterintuitive.
As copper stocks continued to rise in the second half of 2009,
the price of copper rose, as well -- zooming from $2.50 a pound
to about $3.40. The last time copper stockpiles were above
500,000 tons, the metal's price was $1.50. So copper at $3.40
was looking quite overbought considering current stock levels.
Dr. Copper's Diagnosis
Commodities traders often refer to this all-important
non-ferrous metal as "Dr. Copper." Its price and supply/demand
characteristics are widely assumed to reflect the health of the
world industrial economy, hence its "Ph.D. in Economics."
Given that reputation as an excellent barometer, it's tough to
understand just what's keeping copper prices high at a point in
which the risks of a double-dip recession worldwide are exceeded
only by the fears of one.
So what's propping up copper prices? For one thing, hedge funds
are taking physical positions in the metal, rather than through
futures contracts, due to concerns the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission (CFTC) will bring in position limits.
What's more, China's State Reserves Bureau has purchased large
amounts of copper, pushing the nation's year-over-year imports
up by 63%.
The Longer-Term View
I am convinced that we are still relatively early in a secular
commodity bull market. In fact, with the modernization of
Chindia and numerous other less-developed nations, I expect this
bull market will be one for the record books. Fundamental demand
coupled with inflation will push resource prices to unimaginable
heights.
But that doesn't mean -- in the intermediate term -- that copper
hasn't gotten ahead of itself. Look for its price to weaken
somewhat before the price of the metal resumes its upward
trajectory.
Even if a new international commodity-backed currency were to
emerge, it's likely that copper will only be one of its
underlying components.
For now, copper will continue to be overwhelmingly used in
industry and infrastructure, with 75% of output going into
electrical applications.
From my vantage point, gold will remain the ultimate form of
money, while copper will retain its Ph.D. in Economics.
That's why I'm not expecting copper thieves to steal Lady
Liberty's dress and melt it down, but I do expect copper to
become increasingly valuable as our secular commodity bull rages
on.
The last question investors need to answer is a simple one: How
do I profit from this trend? If you're looking for a simple way
to play copper directly, check out the iPath DJ AIG Copper TR
Sub-Index (NYSE: JJC) Exchange-Traded Note. This ETN tracks
the price of Copper High Grade Futures Contracts traded on the
New York Commodities Exchange.
-- Peter Krauth
Contributing Editor
Money Morning |