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Showing posts with label Grains. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Grains. Show all posts

Friday, 9 May 2008

The growing Food Crisis -what should I invest in

Around the world, rising food prices have made basic staples like rice and corn unaffordable for many people, pushing the worlds poor in places such as Africa and Asia to breaking point. It is incredible listening to the news these days to hear the headlines about Global Food Shortages and riots in countries like Haiti  and Mexico. We have become so used to the availability of food in our stores that it is sometimes easy to forget that for some people it is not just a case of heading to the nearest store to get food for their table.For some it is a matter of life and death to be able to get staple items such as wheat and rice.

It has become such a problem that some of the worlds governments have had to step in to try to protect the stock that they hold.Just yesterday India placed a ban on futures trading in several commodities, including soybean oil, chickpeas and potatoes.This was an attempt to preserve supplies and keep down the rampant inflation that is being caused by the increase in food prices.

800px-Tranplant-rice-tahilandIn Asia the problem is just as acute with rice continuing to make new highs on world exchanges.The demand placed on the prices of rice due to the huge populations of China and India has seen it reach astronomical levels with the price more than doubling in the last year.

As well as the impact on populations desperate to feed themselves, we are seeing the impact on countries as farmers try to capitalise on the current high prices by seeking land wherever they can to grow the crops that are being demanded across the globe.

Until the end of the last century, soybeans were practically unknown in the Amazon basin. It was not until the grain terminal was built that soybean farmers came to the region from farther south. The land there was cheaper, the banks were offering low-interest loans and sales were guaranteed.

Villages, rubber plantations and grazing land for cattle were transformed into bean fields. The farmers cut enormous swathes into the rainforest, until environmentalists put a temporary stop to the unchecked rash of clearcutting. In Mato Grosso, the most important farming region, producers and environmental activists agreed on a two-year moratorium on the purchase of soybeans from the Amazon basin.

From the Río de la Plata to the Amazon, the Chinese are sucking the markets for soybeans dry. Large segments of the state of Mato Grosso are already covered with a green, pesticide-drenched monoculture. In the dry season between August and November, a cloud of smoke descends on Cuiabá, the capital of Mato Grosso. Despite a government ban, many farmers burn down sections of the rainforest to gain more farmland.

In Brazil we see huge swathes of land being used to grow Soybeans to satisfy the demand from ChinaBrazil Soybeans .Brazil is one of China's major trading partners. Long-term contracts between the two countries are intended to secure raw materials for China -- and, more recently, food products in particular.

This rising world power, with its population of 1.3 billion, must take steps to ensure that it too does not become a victim of the Food Crisis .However it has a competitor on the horizon.India home to 1.1 billion people, has caught up with China in terms of the power it wields as a massive market. Together, the two Asian nations must feed more than a third of the world's population. In times of exploding food prices, their sheer size alone makes the crisis even worse.

It isn't difficult to imagine what happens to prices when the world's two most populous countries buy up other food products in a similarly aggressive fashion. In more and more dangerously poor countries, wheat and meat have become an almost unaffordable luxury, while famine and hunger riots are only likely to get worse.

Over the next few years I can only see these challenges becoming worse and prices continuing to rise.

In order to invest in these commodities we need to look once again at our favoured ETFs, I have a position in DBA the Powershares Agriculture Fund.You could also look at the AIGG Grains ETF (AIGC) or the individual ETFS for Soybeans (SOYB) or Wheat (WEAT).

There is likely to be volatility in  these markets so I would not bethinking short term and I will place stop losses of around 20% on any positions that I have or buy in to. Over a 3-5 year period I think these holdings will do very well.

 

Best Wishes

 

Alan

 

Monday, 10 March 2008

How to Short Commodities using ETF

In my last post we talked about how to make money from  increased food prices and looked at the  impact these prices would have on livestock such as Live cattle and Lean Hogs. I mentioned that for the more adventurous amongst you you might also wish to look at shorting the grains as they have risen very far very quickly.Shorting Commodities has traditionally been very difficult until the recent advent of Contra ETF's.

These ETF's will move higher when the price of the commodity goes lower allowing you to benefit from declining prices by buying the ETF.One of the most forward thinking of the companies involved in these Contra ETF's is ETF Securities   http://www.etfsecurities.com/csl/short/index.asp   ETF Securities will allow you to go short a number of the major traded commodities and since you are buying and not selling they should be  tradable in most accounts.

A major shortcoming of many  brokerage accounts has been the inability to make money when markets are doing anything but going up, now with these new ETC/ETF that is no longer a problem.It also allows for some quite sophisticated trades to be placed-for example if you are bought in to the story of the last two posts of mine and you are an aggressive trader you might consider going long livestock and short grains by buying one of the livestock ETF's such as CATL (Live Cattle) and buying one of the Short ETF such as SWEA (Wheat).

 

The volatility in the stockmarket currently is very difficult to invest in and is being driven back and forward by news and by the manipulations of the big boys, the commodity markets however are more fundamentally driven by supply and demand and so are easier to predict in the medium term.

 

Best Wishes

 

 

Alan

Thursday, 6 March 2008

How to make Money from Higher Food Prices

I am sure like me, that you have noticed the increased prices of many food stuffs when you make your trips to the local store or supermarket.Global food scarcity is even in this day and age still a major problem.Countries such as Egypt have actually widened its food rationing system for the first time in 20 years.Russia and China are putting controls in place and other countries such as Vietnam are imposing taxes on foreign sales to protect their own supplies.

The cause of all this is that our current Global food supplies cannot cope with the increasing demands of a world population which is growing by over 70 million per annum.Not only is that a huge increase but the emerging market countries with their expanding middle classes are starting to demand Westernised , meat heavy diets.We are also seeing misguided political pressure to increase the use of Biofuels-this has the effect of diverting already stretched supplies of foodstuffs such as grains to energy inefficient fuels.

This means that over the last year while the price of agricultural commodities have gone through the roof look at the price of wheat over the same period.

WEAT

Last week the price of wheat rose 25% in one day as Kazakhstan (one of the largest exporters of grain) announced a plan to impose export tariffs.This caused buyers to panic sending the price soaring.So we all pile into grains then?...well not exactly I am always wary when something moves this much so quickly and I think we are experiencing a short term bubble in the price of grains.

For me a better way to take advantage of the grains boom and one which is not so obvious-and therefore less likely to be driven up by the hype is through buying meat such as Live Cattle and Hogs.Normally this would only

be possible on the CME futures but once again the advent of ETF's or in this case ETC(Exchange Traded Commodities) come to our rescue.

They can be traded in London via ETF Securities the symbols are( LSE:HOGS) and (LSE:CATL). This will give in my opinion good exposure to the grains boom-how I hear you ask, well Livestock are fed mainly on grains so if you are a livestock farmer faced with the choice of paying the increased costs of feeding your herd or selling them in the market-it seems to be a pretty easy choice.The farmers rather than feed their livestock grain will sell it into the market and obtain record prices, they will then also sell the livestock.

If you look at the prices of cattle for the last 12 months you will see that cattle has dropped in price as a result of too much stock hitting the markets

CATL

This will mean in the near term we have too much grains everyone is planting that to cash in on the high prices and not enough meat, within the next 6-12 mths people are going to start to realise that there is a shortage of meat and this will I believe cause prices to rise. Supply and demand, Supply and demand the mantra on which the commodity markets thrive.

I would be looking for opportunities to cash in on the grains and buy the meats.If you feel really aggressive then think of going short the grains and long the meats....how can I do that in a non margin account I hear you ask...........well that is for the next post. Until then good trading.

Alan


Reference List

href="http://traderbill.wordpress.com/2008/03/03/3308a-mess-and-a-half/" rel="nofollow">3/3/08…a mess and a half « Traderbill’s Financial Markets..

Bull Market in Agriculture | Teach Talk Trade Day Trading & Technical Analy..

The value of the U.S. dollar is sinking world-wide. « Bridges to Hope..

Wheat’s Major Price Reversal : Contrarian Profits

Data Feed « Trading for the Masses

Now That Warren Buffett is Crazy About the Loonie, Here are Seven Ways to P..

Tracey’s Market Update : Blog Archive : Wheat: “A rally of e..

Putting the pieces together...: Commodity/Inflation Funds: Update