Pullback In Commodities Offers Opportunity
The Dynamic Wealth Report
May 14, 2008
Ride The Wave And Profitably Trade Commodities
I recently
re-read a great book, Hot Commodities: How Anyone Can Invest
Profitably In The World's Best Market by Jim Rogers. I first
read this book a few years ago when it hit the market. Now it seems as
timely as ever. For those of you who don’t know, Jim Rogers is one of
the great investors of our time.
In 1970 he cofounded the Quantum Fund with famed investor George Soros. Over the next few years, it’s reported the fund returned over 4,200% to
investors. In the same period the S&P was up 47%.
Not bad.
Then in January 1999 Jim began an around the world trip – literally. Over the next few years he drove through 116 countries traversing more
than 152,000 miles. Before he left on this trek he started investing in
commodities.
-------------Sponsor-------------
Where Can You Turn $300 Into $1.3 Million Right Now?
Our own small-company specialist, Robert Morris, has found a
way to 'sniff out' tiny penny stocks on the verge of a major breakout. And
the timing for this has never been better.
You see, the system takes advantage of an obscure SEC regulation that
sends penny stock prices through the roof.
We've seen some stocks gain 852%... 5,450%... even 17,496% in no time
flat.
Click here
for the details...
-----------------------------------
Take a look at this chart. It’s a commodity index put together by Dow
Jones. Over the last few years commodities have been on quite a run. If
you extend the chart all the way back to 1999 you see an even bigger
move up.

I don’t know about you, but I look at the recent pullback in commodity
prices and I see an opportunity. I’d be willing to bet that Jim Rogers
is thinking the same way.
It’s important to understand that commodity prices are going up because
of global demand. It’s not speculation that’s driving prices higher. I
pointed this out in my last article on oil. The number of private cars
being driven in China is growing by leaps and bounds.
Increasing oil prices.
The number of cars on the road are growing by more than 10 million a
year. And it’s not about to slow down any time soon. Every one of those
cars needs gas to run. And gas comes from oil. This is why oil prices
are increasing.
The same thing is happening in traditional agricultural commodities. The
Institute of Nutrition and Food Hygiene in China has this to say, “The
classic Chinese diet includes cereals and vegetables with few animal
foods.” They go on to say recent economic growth is causing “a rapid
evolution of the Chinese diet.”
Put simply, the more developed China becomes the more meat they eat.
Growing meat requires grains. Grain prices are increasing. This shift in
dietary habits causes the traditional Chinese diet to look more and more
like our own Western diet.
Processed foods, lots of protein, and obesity are in store for China –
just you watch.
However, China is not the only country experiencing this shift. We are
seeing similar shifts in other major emerging markets like India and
Brazil. Millions and millions of people around the world are working
their way into the middle class. And they’re going to consume more and
more goods.
Growing demand leads to increasing prices. And this demand is not
limited to oil or agricultural products. We’re seeing it everywhere.
Precious metals, steel, concrete, copper, potash . . . the list goes on
and on.
Commodity prices are going to continue rising.
The best way to profit from all this is by owning commodities.
Unfortunately traditional commodity trading can be complex and risky.
High leverage and low margin requirements expose you to major risk. You
can lose more than you invest. Never a good thing.
Lucky for us new investment vehicles show up every day.
Recently UBS – the global investment bank – launched a number of ETNs or
exchange traded notes. ETNs are a bit different from the traditional
ETFs you’ve heard me talk about so much. Essentially ETNs are a note or
a promise from the issuer (in this case UBS) to deliver the performance
of an index. They don’t actually hold any of the commodities they
represent.
Other than that, they are similar to ETFs in the way they trade. You can
buy them in a traditional stock trading account. No need to worry about
margin, leverage, or contract expirations.
The beauty of these ETNs is the direct exposure you get to a particular
commodity. Let me give you an example. Let’s say you want to buy
platinum. A few weeks ago you had two choices. You could buy a
diversified precious metal ETF that also owns gold and silver and a
bunch of other stuff. Or, you had to buy platinum in the futures market.
But now it’s different.
Now you can buy the E-Tracs UBS Long Platinum ETN (PTM) or the
E-Tracs
UBS Short Platinum ETN (PTD). These new securities make trading platinum
easy for everyone. Watch the news closely as I’m sure a number of these
new ETNs are on their way.
• Corn ($6.07 bushel)
Corn retreated from recent highs on improved weather forecasts for the
Midwest. With the weather clearing farmers can plant more corn seed.
Improved plantings increases the chance of higher yields and greater
supply. . .pushing down corn prices.
Print
Page
Bookmark Us