Value Buy
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Post by Value Buy on Feb 24, 2011 11:22:55 GMT -5
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- January 21st 2011 quotes................December 31st 2019 quotes
Dow 11,871 ......................................28,538.44 Nasdaq 2689.....................................8,972.60 S&P 500 1283....................................3,230.78 Crude $89.19 per barrel ....................$61.14 a barrel Gasoline $2.463 per gallon.................$1.6902 per gallon Natural gas $4.71 per therm .............$2.182 per therm Gold $1,341 an oz ..............................$1520.30 an oz Silver $27.45 an oz. ........................... $17.915 an oz copper $4.31 per lb ........................ $2.798 per lb Euro $1.3616 .................................... $1.1214 Corn $6.57 per bushel ......................$387.25 per contract
Since I started the thread with January numbers i 2011, until December 31st. Quite a run for the stock markets, and as you can see commodities can go way up and way down over the months and years.
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Value Buy
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Post by Value Buy on Feb 24, 2011 11:29:14 GMT -5
Over the years, I have done a thread on key commodities on the P&M board concerning commodities and the potential effect on the stock market and national politics. I think it has potential over here on this board, due to the members who are active traders/investors, so I am bringing it here for your thoughts. Everyone should feel free to update commodity prices or add graphs of anything they feel interested in, to the mix, and please add to the conversation of how this will effect our economy going forward as well as your investment strategy based on the markets. Thanks
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Post by yclept on Feb 24, 2011 12:55:35 GMT -5
I, for one, would appreciate seeing your commodity tracks on this board. I'll try to remember to check the other board as well. I think the most important of them all from the standpoint of world economy and further potential political chaos is food -- represented by corn in your tracks. In the developed countries we need devote only a small portion of our income to food, and thus when it spikes 6% in a month (as represented by your corn numbers) it represents a small increase in our overall cost of living. In much of the third world, the cost of food takes upwards of 50% of a consumers income. For a person in that situation a 6% increase in food cost represents a much higher increase in their cost of living, and an increase in income that probably cannot be attained. And yet it is not a commodity that can be substituted for or cut back beyond a certain level. If the price of gasoline gets too high, one can go fewer places, use cheaper modes of transit (Walk? -- Still free everyplace I know of!), combine trips, etc. If home heating gets too expensive, one can wear heavier clothes. If your belly is growling, all you can do is eat.
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ModE98
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Post by ModE98 on Feb 24, 2011 13:21:51 GMT -5
VB .... Yes, bring it on ... Commodities are very appropriate on this board (sans politics).
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Value Buy
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Post by Value Buy on Feb 24, 2011 13:49:15 GMT -5
I, for one, would appreciate seeing your commodity tracks on this board. I'll try to remember to check the other board as well. I think the most important of them all from the standpoint of world economy and further potential political chaos is food -- represented by corn in your tracks. In the developed countries we need devote only a small portion of our income to food, and thus when it spikes 6% in a month (as represented by your corn numbers) it represents a small increase in our overall cost of living. In much of the third world, the cost of food takes upwards of 50% of a consumers income. For a person in that situation a 6% increase in food cost represents a much higher increase in their cost of living, and an increase in income that probably cannot be attained. And yet it is not a commodity that can be substituted for or cut back beyond a certain level. If the price of gasoline gets too high, one can go fewer places, use cheaper modes of transit (Walk? -- Still free everyplace I know of!), combine trips, etc. If home heating gets too expensive, one can wear heavier clothes. If your belly is growling, all you can do is eat. Corn is interesting as a "food commodity", ie, feed for cattle, etc, but due to ethanol, it is also important to the energy trade as well. Wheat might be a more pure food commodity play. Copper interests me as a production metal representing the health of the world economy, but with China scooping up everything is sight, hard to figure out if the world economy is turning up, or just China's. Always have to track the Euro to watch Europe's progress, or lack there of, but the Europeans seem hell bent on keeping it propped up, even with half of Europe now basically bankrupt. Interesting times we live in....... So much potential money to be made....or lost.......
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Post by Deleted on Feb 24, 2011 13:53:57 GMT -5
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Post by Bluerobin on Feb 24, 2011 15:01:37 GMT -5
Just today, I was thinking of selling scrap silver, until I checked the prices on some of the coins. One local dealer is paying $20 per dollar of face value. When I checked, dimes, each one was worth a few bucks. Now, I am thinking of holding. Info like the above is definitely welcome here.
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Post by runewell on Feb 24, 2011 15:52:17 GMT -5
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- January 21st prices..............................February 23rd prices Dow 11,871 ......................................12,105 Nasdaq 2689.....................................2723 S&P 500 1283....................................1307 Crude $89.19 per barrel ....................$98.87 a barrel Gasoline $2.463 per gallon.................$2.90 per gallon Natural gas $4.71 per therm .............$3.94 per therm Gold $1,341 an oz ..............................$1410 an oz Silver $27.45 an oz. ........................... $33.38 an oz copper $4.31 per lb ........................ $4.32 per lb Euro $1.3616 .................................... $1.3779 Corn $6.57 per bushel ......................$6.99 per bushel Considering all the turmoil in the last two weeks, we still look good compared to January 21st numbers, but oil and gas will crush us if it continues upward. Read more: notmsnmoney.proboards.com/index.cgi?board=politics&action=display&thread=129#ixzz1EtUa2n4XIt's not just gas and oil, it's also gold and silver and corn, and probably a lot of other things. We are getting poorer, FYI and thanks to the middle east situation I'm sure the indices are down a bit and I imagine oil is over $100 now.
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Post by rovo on Feb 24, 2011 16:46:17 GMT -5
ValueBuy, I look forward to your updates on commodities as it is an under represented segment on this board.
Political arguments will not be tolerated here.
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Value Buy
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Post by Value Buy on Feb 27, 2011 14:21:03 GMT -5
ValueBuy, I look forward to your updates on commodities as it is an under represented segment on this board. Political arguments will not be tolerated here.Rovo, if this comment is for me, it is not necessary. When I mention "turmoil" I am referring to Middle East tensions, riots, etc, that affect our commodity markets and pocketbooks. I will leave this country's political response, or lack of one, as in a true energy program, etc, at P&M where it belongs.
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Post by rovo on Feb 28, 2011 10:42:00 GMT -5
Value Buy, Nope. The message was not directed at anyone in particular. I know there are many lurkers on this board and I just wanted to make it clear that this board will not turn into a political forum. Geopolitics greatly affect commodity prices and can not be totally divorced from discussions but we should dwell on the prices and thoughts for price changes.
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Value Buy
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Post by Value Buy on Mar 2, 2011 19:06:29 GMT -5
March 2nd pricing Dow 12066 Nasdaq 2748 S&P 500 1308.44 Gasoline $3.0295 Natural gas $3.818 Gold $1437.70 an oz Silver $34.825 an oz Copper $4.48 lb Corn 7.2150 Euro $138.65 10 year Treasury $101.281 Since February 23rd, not much has happened outside of rising commodity prices. Stock market is better than I would have thought-I expected a bigger fall in stocks. I am perplexed by the Euro. I just do not understand it's strength against the dollar. Europe has as bad of a financial crisis, if not worse than we face, and they are even more held hostage to the price of oil than we are, due to pricing of Brent crude. Pundits have suggested the soft commodities (food) and copper, might sell off in favor of higher metal and oil futures, but so far copper is holding strong.
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Value Buy
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Post by Value Buy on Mar 24, 2011 14:28:16 GMT -5
Today's prices at 2;:20pm Dow 12179 Nasdaq 2735 S&P 500 1309 Gasoline $3.047 Natural gas $4.247 Gold $1428 an oz Silver $37.27 an oz Copper $4.42 lb Corn 7.025 Euro $1.418 10 year Treasury $101.78
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Value Buy
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Post by Value Buy on Mar 24, 2011 14:37:09 GMT -5
Three weeks have passed, and the numbers have not changed much except for Oil, natural gas, Silver and the Euro on the upside, and corn lower, but the prices have been all over the board, with plenty of opportunities to make money on trades.... Considering everything that has happened in the world, everything is back to "normal", whatever that is.......... I think silver will climb to over $40, but I am confused about natural gas. Why is it climbing now? Heating season is winding down, and it is going up? Surely, no one believes we will be closing down nuclear electric plants, replacing them with natural gas plants, do they? Corn? Where is it headed, down or up? Any thoughts?
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Post by verrip1 on Mar 25, 2011 13:48:15 GMT -5
If you look at NG price over the last 3 years (I use UNG as a proxy), the price has been driven really low. I won't pretend I know why, I just know that it is. But the price can really only go so low, and perhaps we hit the low in early March and are starting a recovery (do a 3 month or YTD chart).
NG is a viable energy source. Quite available from production here in the US. Less explosive than hydrogen. Proven for use in powering vehicles. A lot of pipelines already in use. Fewer emissions than from coal, gasoline or diesel. Lots of reasons that its use may well increase in the US.
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Post by soycapital on Mar 26, 2011 23:04:04 GMT -5
I think this would be a good time to increase exposure to the natural gas sector. I believe it will be used more and more. I have a few natural gas picks in my portfolio but I'm looking for some new ones. Any ideas?
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Post by soycapital on Mar 27, 2011 17:29:29 GMT -5
Thought I'd put up a list of equities I own that have exposure to NG: XOM, PMGYF, SE, CVX, BIP. These have all run up a bit the last few months, not sure I'd want to be putting new money into these except perhaps PMGYF, it's a small cap and probably has plenty of room to run so to speak.
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Value Buy
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Post by Value Buy on Mar 27, 2011 22:53:02 GMT -5
This is a very interesting thread. For me, the two things that stand out are the price of copper and natural gas. 20 years ago I did a lot of...how to phrase it...salvage work I guess. There was an area where folks would appliances, building materials and such near our house, so I would strip the copper and aluminum out of them. I remember very distinctly that I would get paid .60-.80 lb for copper. I thought I hit paydirt one day when I found about a whole truckoad of house wiring, but it turned out to be aluminum...still was worth about .30 lb if I remember right. The ironic thing is that it was stuck to a bunch of charred 2 x 4's...maybe the cheap wiring was what burned the structure down? Anyway, pretty dramatic increase for copper, so no wonder you here so many stories of folks stealing it from construction sites and such. For natural gas, I'm surprised it isn't pinned more closely to the price of oil. I'm certainly no expert on oil drilling methods, but I was under the impression that NG is usually found in the same areas and is more or less a byproduct of drilling for oil. Maybe that is why it went down though, as oil goes higher more wells are put into production which creates a glut of NG? I don't know...if anybody does I'd be interested in a summary though. Ratchets, we are flooded with natural gas in the states right now. They are using a term call "fracking" literally breaking the underground rock releasing natural gas. They do this by pumping water under high pressure into the rock layer. I do not believe it is good for the enironment, but it does produce a lot of N.G. And this is actually happening in what is considered old and/or abandoned gas fields, thereby increasing production as well as estimated reserves.
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tyfighter3
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Post by tyfighter3 on Mar 27, 2011 23:02:49 GMT -5
Plus with Fracking, when a well runs dry, all they do is to drill another 500 feet and refrack it and you now have a NEW well producing again in the same hole.
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dothedd
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Post by dothedd on Mar 29, 2011 23:23:12 GMT -5
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tyfighter3
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Post by tyfighter3 on Mar 29, 2011 23:36:00 GMT -5
Dot, nothing you do in life is perfect. All you can do is to try and do it better. K for You to.
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dothedd
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Post by dothedd on Mar 31, 2011 18:52:41 GMT -5
Ty, IMO there have always been alternative energy resources that have not been pursued because of deals made by powerful entities that profited from foreign oil.
It would be interesting to know how many inventions made it off the drawing boards that were bought-up and shelved by big industry; such is the way of the world.
I can think of one, but need to find my research before posting it.
Have a good evening ... DTDD
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dothedd
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Post by dothedd on Mar 31, 2011 18:58:33 GMT -5
Thanks, GREAT LINK!
K4U
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Post by Value Buy on Mar 31, 2011 22:57:07 GMT -5
January 23rd ..............................March 31st end of quarter
Dow 11,871 .............................Dow 12,319 Nasdaq 2689 .............................Nasdaq 2,781 S&P 500 1283 ...........................S&P 1325 Crude $89.19 per barrel.............Oil $107.31 Gasoline $2.463 per gallon.........Gasoline $3.11 Natural gas $4.71 per therm.......Natural gas$4.374 Gold $1,341 an oz.......................Gold $1,431.70 Silver $27.45 an oz. ...................Silver $36.11 copper $4.31 per lb ...................copper $4.3035 Ten year bond $94.953...............Ten year $101.312 Euro $1.3616 .............................Euro $1.4157 Corn $6.57 per bushel ...............Corn $7.30
Imust have a bad number for January on the 10 year bond. Will try to find the correct number later
Stocks are up from January 1st, but nothing like the commodities. Even so, it was a stellar performance for stocks in the last three months. Commodities are on a rampage. Inflation will be raising it's ugly head to the consumer this summer and fall. Retail gasoline will be above the $4 a gallon level, hurting the economic recovery. Food prices will climb, by 8 to10% within the next 12 months,imo, hurting the consumer and damaging the restaurant and leisure industry. I still think we have another good month in April for stocks, then we will take a breather in May. Until the oil/gasoline complex starts falling, I would expect commodities to beat out stocks on the level of gains.
Any Thoughts?
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Value Buy
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Post by Value Buy on Apr 21, 2011 18:19:37 GMT -5
JANUARY 21 ST PRICES............ APRIL21st
Dow 11,871 .............................Dow 12,506 Nasdaq 2689 .............................Nasdaq 2,820 S&P 500 1283 ...........................S&P 1337 Crude $89.19 per barrel.............Oil $112.29 Gasoline $2.463 per gallon.........Gasoline $3.27 Natural gas $4.71 per therm.......Natural gas$4.54 Gold $1,341 an oz.......................Gold $1,503.80 Silver $27.45 an oz. ...................Silver $46.08 copper $4.31 per lb ...................copper $4.42 Ten year bond $94.953...............Ten year $101.84 Euro $1.3616 ..............................Euro $1.455 Corn $6.57 per bushel ................Corn $7.445 let's add the Canadian dollar..... $1.0496 Gold is still climbing, but silver is riding a rocket. The dollar continues to decline in value setting almost all commodities on fire. Gasoline is outpacing crude oil, but both will crater the consumer this summer. Right now, commodities are not hurting the stock market, possibly because maufacturers are able to pass on cost increases to the consumer, but I think that will stop when the consumer finally shuts down in late May. There does seem to be some positive movement on the employment front, so we will have to wait and see, if spending will not be cut back as much as I think it will be. I like silver to continue it's climb, to mid fifties to low sixties.
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Value Buy
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Post by Value Buy on May 9, 2011 19:27:32 GMT -5
Today's index prices Dow 12,684 Nasdaq 2843 S&P 500 1346 Gold $1510.50 oz Silver $37.74 an oz Copper $4.05 Oil $101.8 barrel Gasoline $3.28 gallon Natural gas $4.24 Corn $704.50 bushel 10 yr treasury $103.91 Euro $143.74 Canadian dollar $ 103.78
What a difference a weekend makes in commodities. My feeling is oil and gas will decline from here. The question is" how much? I'm thinking low nineties for oil, this month. More after that if the dollar strengthens. I also look for food commodities to drop, as I see the dollar gaining strength this late spring against the Euro. Canadian dollar will go to parity with the dollar, but stay around a dollar. If the dolllar does strengthen gold should fall, but I look for Europe to buy bullion, if the Euro falls, or even breaks up due to Mediteranean countries money problems. I do not see Germany and Belgium, etc, continueing to bail out Greece, Italy and the other members who are now hurting bigtime economically. Gold, may not fall as much as it should if Europe buys the bullion. Silver, is the one I cannot figure out, but with higher minimum requirements for traders trading on margin could hurt oil and metal markets...... Now if I only had a few spare millions, to play with right now................... Thoughts?
Oh, and corn----if the farmers do not get the planting in real soon, corn could be a big price swing upwards, blowing my thoughts on it, out of the Missisippi floodwaters situation. I live in northern Indiana, and the farmers are a week or two behind the last few years due to wet and cold weather. Southern Indiana is behind due to very wet conditions, but get an extra week or two in the fall to recover. Could affect bushel production 3 to 6 bushels per acre here.
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Value Buy
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Post by Value Buy on May 17, 2011 10:35:45 GMT -5
Metals continue their retreat Oil and gasoline continue their retreat Big cap tech continue their retreat. Big banks not gong anywhere What's left to stay up? Utilities?
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Post by Value Buy on May 19, 2011 22:35:28 GMT -5
Today's index prices, May 19TH Dow 12,605 Nasdaq 2823 S&P 500 1343 Gold $1495 oz Silver $35.11 an oz Copper $4.07 Oil $99.43 barrel Gasoline $3.04 gallon Natural gas $4.18 Corn $7.51 bushel 10 yr treasury $99.59 (Not sure if correct?) down from $103.91 on 5/9/11 Euro $143.16 Canadian dollar $ 103.47
Markets have been whacky the last week or so, but everything is pretty much as it was. Oil and metals are weaker, soft commodities, food very strong, currencies about even and the stock markets are down slightly. Higher margin numbers did in metals and oil complex. Corn on fire, and will go up more. Cold and wet weather is going to hurt the number of acres allotted for it, but farmers should go with soybeans, as smaller growing season is required. Can anyone tell me if the ten year number is actually correct? Why under $100? Stocks are wonky right now. Big swings in prices, some of you who trade daily here, or at least set up buy and sell orders, have to be making a killing on the spreads right now. Are we going to see a June swoon this year? The old quote, "sell in May and go away", is looking like it might be the right call this year.
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Post by Value Buy on Jun 1, 2011 1:24:12 GMT -5
Today's index prices, May 31st Dow 12,569 Nasdaq 2835 S&P 500 1345 Gold $1532 oz Silver $38.05 an oz Copper $4.17 Oil $102.98 barrel Gasoline $3.05 gallon Natural gas $4.66 Corn $7.53 bushel 10 yr treasury $100.53 Euro $144.4467 Canadian dollar $ 103.40
With the dollar weakening over the weekend, over of all things, Greece settling down, (even though it will probably default) the fuel markets are hot again, but not as much as the gold/silver complex. Natural gas is climbing based on speculation of hot temperatures kicking in utility useage for electricity, which is speculation at the exchange. There is so much natural gas out there, that this country will not run out of it in our children's lifetime, and they are finding more all the time..... Right now the sell in May and stay away theory for stocks is alive and well.
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Post by Value Buy on Jun 1, 2011 19:50:55 GMT -5
Very bad day for me today. All ten stock positions in the red. JCI, JPM and Exxon took my largest hits, but my only utility was also a victim today.
Commodities down also except for gold, and I would assume that is part of the reason stocks were so bad today. That and the fact they are admitting everything is bad these days.........
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