Tactical Copper Trends
Adam Hamilton
Archives
Apr 25, 2006
Copper, a lowly industrial metal seemingly incapable of capturing
investors' imaginations, has become the dark horse champion of
our unfolding commodities bull. It just keeps rising and rising
on balance, becoming the little engine that could.
Copper is not precious, you
will never hear of investors eagerly hoarding it like a true
precious metal. Yet its bull-to-date performance has utterly
trounced the precious metals coveted all throughout history.
As of all their respective bull highs this past May, copper was
up 3.1x more than gold, 2.3x more than silver, and 2.6x more
than platinum!
With breathtaking performance
like this, copper should be the belle of the metals ball. In
a true market meritocracy, copper would certainly be the
superstar metal. Copper-centric websites would be multiplying
like rabbits, copper stories would be gaining increasing traction
on CNBC, and average investors would be growing aware that copper
prices are thriving.
Yet copper still gets little
respect, even amongst commodities-focused investors. Gold and
silver stocks are trading at stratospheric
valuations today, investors can't buy enough of them despite
their persistent inability to earn anywhere close to the levels
of profits necessary to justify their rich stock prices. Meanwhile
copper stocks, which have also done extraordinarily well, are
trading at dismal bear-market
valuations today.
How is this possible? How is
a mundane everyday metal blowing the precious metals out of the
water in performance terms? Copper's global supply and demand
profile, which is purely industrial, has been and remains tremendously
bullish. Copper is one of the most fascinating sub-bulls in our
current great
commodities bull.
Global demand for copper is
rising rapidly, primarily because of the enormous amounts of
this key metal required in the industrialization of Asia. Yet
global supplies remain constrained. Copper prices were so low
for so long that few incentives existed for miners to keep exploring
for new copper projects. And even with miners scrambling to bring
new copper mines online today, it will take many years for supply
to catch up with surging demand.
Due to these factors copper,
an unassuming and dull metal ignored by almost everyone for many
years, has become a standout performer. Copper's stunning advance
was generally not anticipated because there is no precedent for
it. During the last great commodities bull in the 1970s, Asia
was not industrializing. Back then copper only rose modestly,
to a tiny fraction of the bull-market gains achieved by gold
and silver.
Today copper is an amazing
testament to the raw power of the free markets and the laws of
supply and demand. Despite copper not being an investment metal
and therefore usually being ignored by the vast majority of investors,
it has surged to the forefront of the metals bulls.
The really exciting and crazy
thing about all this is it is still not yet widely known! Copper
stocks are generally tremendous bargains today in valuation terms,
almost as cheap as oil stocks. Since the thundering herd hasn't
caught wind of the whole wild copper scene yet, vast opportunities
still exist in copper stocks. But in order to uncover the most
opportune times to trade these thriving stocks, we have to gain
a solid understanding of the technical behavior of copper itself.
Just as the bull market in
this pure industrial metal with no investment cachet has been
totally unique, so are its resulting technicals. Copper has done
wondrous things in the last few years that I have never seen
anywhere else, its fundamentals so strong that it has defied
typical market behavior. It is utterly fascinating!
Copper's magnificent bull market
since late 2001, in which it has rocketed an unbelievable 575%
higher as of this past May, has had two distinct stages. There
was the pre-parabola stage running into late 2005 and then the
parabola stage running for the past year. To best analyze copper
technicals, we really need to look at these two distinct stages
individually. Somewhat surprisingly, they do bear much in common
upon close examination.
This initial chart shows the
strategic overview of the entire copper bull to date, which has
clearly shot parabolic in 2006. The two shaded areas highlight
the specific sections of the copper bull covered by the following
two charts. The red line is relative
copper, or copper divided by its 200-day moving average. Copper's
bull, especially since 2003, has been extraordinary in a multitude
of ways.
While you'd be hard-pressed
to find a more extreme example of a commodity price going parabolic,
copper has exhibited a stubborn resiliency that greatly reduces
the odds it will crash. Although crashes are the normal expected
aftermath after major parabolic ascents, copper has defied the
odds twice now. Instead of swiftly collapsing back down to its
200dma after parabolic tops, copper has instead just nonchalantly
consolidated sideways.
Note above that since its bull
began copper has spent virtually no time under its 200dma. The
red rCopper line barely ever hits 1.00 relative. No matter how
fast copper has been rising, no matter how steep its upslope
becomes, copper steadfastly refuses to fall hard and fast. Rather
than rapidly returning to its 200dma as is typical in these situations,
copper just casually wanders forward in high consolidations and
forces its 200dma to rise to catch up with it.
Interestingly the late 2003/early
2004 copper upleg, the first of its bull market really, was considered
a parabolic ascent at the time. While it looks small now in comparison
thanks to our latest massive parabola, at the time it was enormous
and considered highly unsustainable. Yet copper defied popular
predictions of doom at the time and consolidated into the future
rather than crashing down sharply.
A couple years ago I did some
parabolic analysis
on the HUI gold-stock index. At the time one of my goals was
to somehow measure parabolic slopes, in order to empirically
quantify just how extreme a particular parabola was relative
to its peers. I hoped to use this data to more accurately time
my gold-stock trades. Unfortunately continuously changing slope
gradients are complex to calculate.
Despite people graciously writing
in and trying to help me with this exercise, I couldn't find
a parabolic measure I liked. While studying copper parabolas
this week though, a simple new idea came to mind. Rather than
worrying about slopes and by extension the calculus necessary
to define them mathematically, why not just create a simple slope
proxy that everyone can understand and replicate?
One way to do this is quite
easy, yet still empirical. All we have to do is isolate the final
euphoric vertical ascent of any parabola. Then we determine the
percentage gain in the parabola from its starting point to its
ultimate apex. This final-stage gain is then divided by the number
of trading days this final ascent took. The resulting metric
expresses the extremeness of a particular parabola in terms of
its average percentage gain per day in its final rocketing blowoff
phase.
This proxy for parabolic extremeness
is used in both charts below to compare the 2003/2004 parabola
with our latest specimen of 2006. It is probably hard to believe
after the stunning copper parabola of 2006, but the 2003/2004
copper surge was considered at the time to be an unsustainable
parabola, a one-time anomaly due to Chinese demand and particular
supply disruptions.
The copper bull market started
without fanfare in late 2001, and gradually marched higher in
an initial modest uptrend for the next couple years. As you probably
recall, back in 2002 and 2003 gold was the primary commodities
bull capturing traders' imaginations. Gold gradually broke above
$300, $325, $350,
and $375 over this period of time and gold stocks were skyrocketing.
Copper was ignored, yet it continued higher anyway in its stealth
bull.
By late 2003 copper broke out
of its initial modest uptrend and started climbing rapidly higher.
Insatiable demand out of China, at high levels the industry had
not expected, led to the rapid depletion of above-ground copper
inventories. As inventories plunged, copper prices climbed relentlessly.
In October 2003 this demand-driven rally went parabolic on
news that a lethal rockslide slowed production at the third
largest copper mine in the world in Indonesia. It was the perfect
storm at the time.
In its final parabolic ascent
marked above by the blue arrowheads, copper soared 58% over 67
trading days, or just under 0.9% per day on average. This totally
crazy spike higher, the largest and steepest in nearly two decades,
sure looked unsustainable at the time. It had blasted rCopper
up to 1.527x copper's 200dma and most folks at the time, including
me, figured copper would probably fall rapidly as the supply
disruptions ended.
But amazingly it didn't! Global
copper demand remained strong and supplies could not keep up,
so copper did something that is almost never seen off of parabolic
tops. Rather than crashing lower, copper started trading sideways
in a peculiar peak consolidation. It was a strange event, seemingly
telegraphing to the world that copper's multi-decade nominal
highs were fundamentally driven, not just speculative anomalies.
After a couple months largely
oscillating between $1.30 to $1.40 per pound, copper finally
retreated modestly. But instead of correcting to its 200dma as
bulls are wont to do, it soon started trending higher
in a high consolidation. This event was wild and totally unexpected.
Copper demand was so strong worldwide relative to supply that
it just couldn't crash or correct hard like a normal bull.
Copper's high consolidation
continued into mid-2004. It was climbing on balance and forcing
its 200dma to rise to play catch up. Incredibly, in less than
three quarters after copper's early March 2004 parabolic top,
it was already carving fresh new bull-to-date highs! Just after
this surge to new highs in early October, copper finally
corrected a bit and kissed its 200dma briefly.
Thus copper took its sweet
time, about eight months, to revisit its 200dma after its parabolic
top. There was no crash and not really any meaningful correction.
Copper had simply rocketed up in a parabola and plateaued,
which is not the expected response after a parabola unfolds.
I believe that this was only possible because global copper demand
was growing far faster than copper supply so fundamentals overwhelmed
any skittish speculators selling ahead of the expected sharp
correction.
And even copper's plateauing
behavior was unique. Check out the red rCopper line above. For
much of 2004 and 2005 copper traded in a fairly fixed consolidation
range above its 200dma. While copper's 200dma was running
inexorably higher and trying to catch up with the manic metal,
copper kept on rising out in front of it. Despite its relatively
tiny following among speculators compared to gold or oil, fundamentals
kept driving it relentlessly higher on balance. Copper broke
out of this new uptrend in late 2005.
This yields some interesting
trading observations. Since 2003, copper has only approached
its 200dma four times. Three of these times were exceedingly
brief too, a matter of days where copper flirted with its 200dma.
If copper continues this behavior into the future, which is entirely
possible given its continuing structural deficit worldwide, traders
cannot wait for conventional 200dma pullbacks to buy copper
or copper stocks.
Per the chart above, anytime
rCopper slides under 1.08x or so copper is probably a good buy
technically. In light of this precedent, I think we need to look
at throwing long copper and/or elite copper-mining stocks whenever
copper retreats within 8% of its 200dma. In terms of conventional
bull analysis this is a very high buy zone relative to a 200dma,
but copper has proven that it is no ordinary bull.
Its purely industrial supply/demand
profile largely untainted by speculative emotion-driven buying
and selling has led copper to keep marching higher on balance
regardless of technical norms. Interestingly this extraordinary
behavior we witnessed from 2002 to 2005 has continued in copper's
latest mighty parabola of 2006. Like an air bubble under water,
copper just seems to want to naturally rise. Apparently you can't
keep a good metal down.
These charts overlap slightly,
so we'll start the next step of our technical journey in August
2005. Copper was near its upper resistance rendered on the previous
chart and was threatening to break out. Its first attempt failed
though so speculators sold, leading to a modest pullback that
took it to 1.082x relative, nearly within 8% of its 200dma. This
was the best buying opportunity in copper last autumn, and it
only lasted a few days.
Copper then continued higher
in a strong but reasonable uptrend. From its September lows to
early February the oft-ignored base metal climbed 40% to new
all-time nominal highs up above $2.30. Copper then started trading
sideways for the next six weeks in what looked like an apparent
topping consolidation. This is where things get a bit tricky
and correlation analysis comes into play. The correlation I am
interested in is between copper and gold.
Gold topped February 2nd at
$572 while copper topped February 6th at $2.34. At the time these
looked like the real interim tops. Gold would trade sideways
for the next couple months, not closing above its early February
highs until the very end of March. Copper largely did the same,
not seeing closes above $2.34 until late in March, about 8 trading
days before gold's own new bull highs were achieved. Due to this
sideways action in both metals, they appeared to be consolidating
after topping.
But in late March gold started
moving again, and the whole metals complex including copper sparked
to life in sympathy. I believe the reason gold started soaring
in its own parabola was because the dollar started sliding in
late March ahead of gold's renewed vigor. For our Zeal Intelligence
subscribers, I discussed this thesis in depth in the June 2006
ZI, looking at gold, the dollar, silver, copper, and the HUI
technically. Gold appeared to be the ringleader.
With gold moving, copper followed
as metals speculators poured into it. The resulting final ascent
marked above saw copper rocket up 86% in just 45 trading days,
a staggering 1.9% per day average parabolic pace! Copper advanced
so fast that it ultimately reached 1.841x its 200dma on May 11th,
incidentally the very day gold and silver topped, before it started
retreating. If there was ever a time for a copper crash, this
was it.
If you look at the charts and/or
read the 6/06 ZI, it is pretty evident that copper was pretty
tightly correlated with gold leading up to the May 11th interim
highs. After May 11th both gold and silver started falling sharply.
If copper was playing gold's game, it should have done the same.
Yet instead of following in a steep slide, copper started consolidating
sideways in another peak consolidation similar to 2003/2004.
It was incredible.
Copper, which had just shot
vertical into an incredibly aggressive parabola as the first
chart showed, once again reasserted its behavior of ignoring
the high odds for a crash and instead nonchalantly loitered around
its all-time highs. Such a sharp move suggests copper's stunning
parabolic ascent had to be partially speculator-driven, but despite
this copper supply and demand was bullish enough to let it hover
near highs while gold fell. So during this peak consolidation
in May copper was once again decoupled from gold.
Then June rolled around, and
gold abruptly plummeted down to its 200dma. Copper fell in sympathy
but to a much more modest degree. Copper reasserted its curious
independence from normal technical probabilities and bounced
at 1.28x above its 200dma in June, very high for an interim bottom.
Then it climbed higher and has since entered another high consolidation,
although this one is trending lower at the moment just like gold's.
Copper has since meandered around $3.50, levels that would have
seemed absurd six months ago, as if they were nothing.
These recent competing crosscurrents
in copper are fascinating. Some of the time copper behaves like
it has in previous years, generally rising on balance and seemingly
incapable of sharp falls. After any copper rally, no matter how
steep or technically crazy, copper just hangs out at its dazzling
new highs casually. And then it gradually meanders sideways,
in no hurry, and forces its 200dma to rise to catch up with it
rather than the usual process of a 200dma dragging down a price
after a high.
But there have also been other
times in the last six months when copper seems to be held hostage
by gold. Wherever investors and speculators drive the gold price,
copper follows like a lost puppy. But copper's upward tendencies
still shine through here to some degree too. It tends to far
outperform gold during both up episodes and down episodes, climbing
higher than gold in the former and falling less than gold in
the latter.
Why do I bring up this crosstalk
between copper and gold? It creates two different trading scenarios
in the near future depending on whether copper follows gold or
not.
Gold and silver,
like it or not, are consolidating after their parallel May bull-to-date
highs. As I discussed extensively in the current August Zeal
Intelligence for our subscribers, the HUI is in the same boat.
There is a good chance the June lows in gold, silver, and the
HUI will be challenged again. If this happens, and if copper
follows gold lower, then we may get a copper-stock buying opportunity
sooner rather than later. There is a lot of recent technical
precedent for copper mirroring gold in the past six months.
Conversely if copper reasserts
its independence and its wonderfully carefree rising-on-balance
behavior continues, it could continue to drift sideways to higher.
Such a high consolidation would make traders around the world
comfortable with copper's new high levels and lay the foundation
for the next major copper upleg. There is plenty of evidence
copper may do just this, act independently of the precious metals
as it has done so many times in recent years.
So which scenario will play
out? I don't know. Personally I would prefer copper to approach
its 200dma sooner rather than later, probably via sliding with
gold, so the next great copper-stock buying opportunity happens
soon. Once copper gets within 8% of its 200dma, we should be
good to go on the buying front.
All summer at Zeal we have
been doing comprehensive fundamental research on base-metals
stocks to find our favorites. Half of these are elite copper
plays, into which we are really excited to deploy when the copper
technicals look highly favorable once again. We are planning
on publishing our latest extensive base-metals stock fundamental
research in a new Zeal
Report in the coming week or two.
Once copper technicals are
highly favorable again, regardless of whether it is sooner or
later, we will launch our next campaign in elite copper stocks
in our acclaimed monthly Zeal
Intelligence newsletter. If you want to see which copper
stocks we are buying and when, fundamentally cheap companies
that are likely to thrive as the bull market in copper continues,
then please subscribe
today so you don't miss the coming opportunities.
Our subscribers also have access
to various private copper charts on our website, including a
large rCopper one that I use myself at Zeal to monitor copper's
progress. You can monitor the same charts we do to watch for
the coming buying opportunities in copper stocks.
The bottom line is copper's
mighty bull has been unique among the major metals. Copper demand
growth is so far ahead of copper supply growth that its price
seems to want to rise on balance regardless of how crazy it gets
technically. And the industrialization of Asia, which is driving
the stunning marginal copper demand, is just beginning. It will
probably take miners many years to catch up and bring new copper
mines online.
Astute investors and speculators
can take advantage of this powerful bull, which surprisingly
remains not widely known. Most elite copper stocks are trading
at extremely low bear-market-types of valuations, so they are
ideal for long-term value investors too. Even if copper was to
trade sideways for years to come, with no new highs, copper stocks
would still have to almost double from here to merely hit fair
value!
Aug 25, 2006
Adam Hamilton, CPA
Thoughts, comments, or flames? Fire away at zelotes@zealllc.com. Due to my staggering and perpetually increasing e-mail load, I regret that I am not able to respond to comments personally. I will read all messages though and really appreciate your feedback!
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