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  • Crops Headed for a Tough Harvest [View article]
    With December wheat (WZ09) tickling $5.78 two weeks ago, the e-mails are now pouring in from farmers, co-ops, and silo managers in the Great Plains states offering reasons why it should go higher. The Northern states and much of the Midwest west have now endured a couple of cycles of heavy rains followed by punishing freezes. With much of the crop now being brought in wet, it has to be dried by burning large amounts of natural gas to keep it from rotting, delaying shipping. The intemperate weather is pushing back the double planting of new crops. Railroad managers tell me that extra cars are being booked by the hundreds to ship wheat to the West coast ports to accommodate larger than expected Chinese buying. The harvest in the Ukraine is coming in seven million metric tonnes less than expected, which will force some Eastern European nations to come here to buy. My bet that weather would not continue perfect is paying off big time. How hard was that? I also predicted that the September $4.40 bottom would be put in by cash strapped small farmers desperate to unload at any price in order to finance seed and chemicals for the next crop (click here for the report). Traders who took my advice now have the luxurious choice of cashing in their three week, 25% profit (175% if you did it through the futures) and running, or rolling over to a longer dated contract to catch the bigger trend. For a list of reasons why you want to do this, read the piece below on the coming food crisis. And if you want to know how to get set up on the futures, don’t hesitate to email me at madhedgefundtrader.com.
    Nov 03 11:08 am |Rating: +1 -4 |Link to Comment
  • Closing Update for Tuesday, August 4 [View article]
    Hasta la vista baby! Welcome to the new bubble. I four months we have gone from 35% below the 200 day moving average to 15% above. It turns out that 1,000 in the S&P 500 is 38.2% recovery of the fall from the 2007 peak, a great Fibonacci number. DeMark indicators are showing that buying power is getting exhausted. Daily sentiment indicators are 88% bullish. RSI’s and oscillators are over extended. Every day the buyers show up, marching in lockstep with military precision, to give us our needed spike up at the close to keep the rally alive on the charts one more day. Worst of all, I am getting deluged with emails from subscribers asking if they shuld start buying now, buying everything. All of this, and we still have the second half of the “W” to discount. If the American stock market was the only issue, I wouldn’t really care, since most of my longs are overseas. But if the US rolls over like the Bismarck, emerging markets, foreign currencies, commodities, the energies, and junk bonds will be dragged down with it because everything is so interlinked these days. There will be no place to hide. I think the glass half full crowd is coming to the end of their run, so I would urge investors to pare down some risk. If your friends stay in, and they make a ton of money, that’s fine. Just let them buy the next round of drinks.
    Aug 04 17:40 pm |Rating: +3 -1 |Link to Comment
  • A Complete Guide to Agriculture ETFs [View article]
    Here's another reason to focus on this sector. Here’s a follow up on my call to buy wheat yesterday (www.madhedgefundtrader...). There is a new fungus out there called UG 99 which has the potential to wipe out 80% of the world’s wheat crop. It has been doing damage to crops in Africa for the last ten years, and if it escapes to Asia, where wheat is a major part of the diet, the results could be disastrous. Sygenta (SYT) is the world leader in producing the fungicide for this particularly nasty form of wheat rust, and has already seen its stock double over the past eight months. Unfortunately, ridiculous European fears about genetically modified crops and “Frankenfoods” have discouraged further research in the field. There is no money in wheat, so companies like Monsanto and Du Pont focus their attentions on rice, soybeans, and canola, which see more processing and are therefore less subject to the EC restrictions. Needless to say, if UG 99 makes it to Asia, or Heaven forbid, here, the effect on prices would be unimaginable. See the long term bull case for the grains at www.madhedgefundtrader.... There will be no food bailout. The Fed can’t print calories.
    Jun 25 21:36 pm |Rating: +3 -1 |Link to Comment
  • A Complete Guide to Agriculture ETFs [View article]
    Get to know these well. The world population has doubled from 3.5 to 7 billion since then, eating up surpluses, and is expected to rise to 9 billion by 2050. Now we are running out of water in key areas like the American West and Northern India, droughts are hitting Africa and China, soil is exhausted, and global warming is shriveling yields. Water supplies are so polluted with toxic pesticide residues that rural cancer rates are soaring. Food reserves are now at 20 year lows. Rising emerging market standards of living are consuming more and better food, with Chinese pork production rising 45% from 1993 to 2005. The problem is that meat is an incredibly inefficient calorie transmission mechanism, creating demand for five times more grain than just eating the grain alone. I won’t even mention the strain the politically inspired ethanol and biofuel programs have placed on the system. It is possible that genetic engineering, sustainable farming, and smart irrigation could lead to a second green revolution, but the burden is on scientists to deliver. The net net of all of this is that food prices are going up, a lot. Entertain core long positions in corn, wheat, and soybeans on the next dip, as well as the second derivative plays like Agrium (TO), Potash (POT) and Monsanto (MON). You might also look at DB Commodities Tracking Index Fund (DBC). These will all surpass last year’s stratospheric highs at some point.
    Jun 25 08:57 am |Rating: +3 -1 |Link to Comment
  • Commodities vs. Commodity Stocks Redux [View article]
    “ For decades, the money shufflers, the paper shufflers, have been the captains of the universe. That is now changing. The people who produce real things will be on top. You’re going to see brokers driving taxis,” said legendary investors Jim Rogers, former partner of George Soros.
    Mar 13 17:43 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • 30 Stocks Worth Investigating for 2009 [View article]
    The longer crude stays below $40, the more production is being taken off the market. At this stage all 35 million barrels of storage at the Cushing, Oklahoma delivery point for west Texas intermediate are brimming with crude. The 709 million barrel Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) is nearly full. And there is another 50 million barrels stored in supertankers at sea which is building by the day. Demand has collapsed so fast, that oil companies can’t shut down production fast enough. The scary thing about this is that when the next crude spike upward in crude comes, it will be worse than the last one. Take advantage of the current distress prices to accumulate oil infrastructure stocks. Kinder Morgan Energy Partners (KMP) has a PE multiple of 25 and a dividend yield of 8.3%. Enterprise Products Partners (EPD) has a $10 billion portfolio of fractionation facilities, storage, offshore drilling platforms, and 32,478 miles of product, natural gas, and crude pipelines, and carries a modest PE multiple of 12 X and a dividend yield of 9.2%. More expensive Kinder Morgan Energy Partners (KMP) with a PE multiple of 25 X and a dividend yield of 8.3% is also worth a look see.

    Feb 20 12:37 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
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