Quantcast

Commodities





Commodity News

Commodity Prices : MCX, NCDEX, NMCE, Spot Rates

Commodity Trading Tips

For medium and high value investors
For brokers,sub brokers and high value investors
For those who trade in just one commodity
For those who trade in Mini Lots

Equity Trading Tips

Intraday Futures and Option calls
Specially filtered 4 to 7 calls per day
For those who trade in just one commodity

Commodity Outlook

Reports

Last Updated :May 26, 13:58 IST
109.2     (+0.15)
12797.5     (-157.5)
2637     (0)
Get MCX/NCDEX/NMCE Futures Rates
Last Updated : 02 March 2010 at 05:05 IST
Follow us on and for updates

Is the Chinese boom in commodities all over?

 SHARE THIS STORY
0
2
By Dave Forest
There are a lot of ships sailing around China these days. As I've discussed several times over the past weeks, Chinese shipping indices have gone ballistic.

The China Containerized Freight Index measures shipping costs for exporting goods from ten major Chinese ports to 11 regions worldwide. And those costs have been rising lately. Up 17% since January 15.

The trend shows no signs of reversing. Last week the index jumped 3.9%. Led by a 7.1% leap in shipping traffic from China to the U.S. West Coast, and an 8.6% jump in shipments to Korea.

The jump in the index means more goods are being sailed from China. Raising demand for shipping, and increasing charter prices.

This is a Chinese-only phenomenon. Shipping rates throughout the rest of the world (as measured by the Baltic Dry Index) fell sharply at the end of January and were flat throughout February.

For breaking Geopolitical Intelligence & Finance news please consider joining our Free weekly intelligence newsletter. Click here for more information.

These data points strongly suggest a wave of exports coming out of China. The indexes don't tell us what goods are being shipped. But there's anecdotal evidence that metals from China are making their way to other countries. Unusual shipments of aluminum, probably from Shanghai, showed up in Japan recently. And January saw a marked increase in Chinese applications for steel imports into the European Union.

Observers in the metals industry have long-feared this "bust that would launch a thousand ships".

China built huge stockpiles of copper, zinc, coal and iron ore over the last year. The fear is much of this inventory is held on speculation of rising prices.

If prices fail to rise, all of this metal could re-appear on the world market as worried investors sell. Representing a big drag on global metals prices.

Recent action in the shipping indexes may be confirming those fears. If you're a commodities investor, this is one you need to watch.

Courtesy: www.oilprice.com
MCX Silver 05 July 2012 contract was trading at Rs 55888 , up Rs. 493 . What's your view on it?
Post your comment  (0)
Connect:
Post to Twitter
Post to Facebook