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China Has Stopped Stockpiling Metals

By Dan Denning • July 1st, 2009 • Related Articles • Filed Under

About the Author

DanDan Denning is the author of 2005's best-selling The Bull Hunter (John Wiley & Sons). He began his financial publishing career in 1997 and has covered financial markets form Baltimore, Paris, London and, beginning in 2005 Melbourne. He’s the editor of The Daily Reckoning Australia and the Publisher of Port Phillip Publishing.

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Filed Under: Market • Precious Metals
Tags: aluminium • ben bernanke • china • Copper • I.O.U.S.A. • indium • iron ore • metals • Pilbara • State Reserve Bureau • stockpiling • Tim Geithner • titanium • treasury market • U.S. dollar • zinc
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China has stopped stockpiling metals, according to reports in the Chinese media. Will this put the cap on the recent strength in base metals prices? The AFP reports that, "China has been building its inventories of metals, including 235,000 tonnes of copper, over recent months, Caijing magazine reported on its website over the weekend, citing Yu Dongming, an official with the state economic planner."

"China also bought 590,000 tonnes of aluminium, 159,000 tonnes of zinc, 30 tonnes of indium and 5,000 tonnes of titanium, said Yu, who works in the National Development and Reform Commission's industry department." Now that metals prices have rebounded, though, will the stockpiling continue, even at high prices? Or was it a case of bargain shopping at everyday low prices?

There are several components of demand. There's real economic demand (you need the stuff to make other stuff). There is investment demand (you're buying it in order to make a profit from what you think the price trend is. There is also pure speculation, and it's possible that some middle-men were flat-out speculating by buying alongside China's State Reserve Bureau (sort of like the banks and brokers in the U.S. buying Treasuries ahead of the Fed late last year to improve Q4 earnings).

But if you're trying to figure out the ultimate direction of certain base metals prices (or commodity prices in general) you have to also consider the currency in which they're priced. Or, as my colleague Dan Amoss writes, "You also want to consider what Ben Bernanke and Tim Geithner will do to debase the dollar in the coming years. If you're a foreign creditor facing with this constant portfolio decision, which has higher marginal utility? Is it 1.) US$2.32 or, 2.) one pound of copper?"

Dan is referring to a pretty handy economic concept. Marginal utility is the economist's attempt to quantify how much satisfaction or benefit you get out of each additional good or service you buy. You have probably heard the term "diminishing marginal utility" more often.

An easy way to understand this is that while one cheeseburger may satisfy your appetite (and your craving for animal fat), four cheeseburgers gobbled down in a row are neither useful nor terribly good for you. They might even be bad (although as an American, we are reluctant to concede this point).

In Dan's scenario, U.S. dollar holders will ask themselves if each additional dollar owned is more useful. Given the fact that the U.S. monetary authorities are making so many dollars, it's pretty clear that each additional dollar added to supply makes each existing dollar less useful. It is not very satisfying to see a methodical reduction in the purchasing power of your savings.

If Dan is right, then stockpiling real assets (even during a relatively weak economy) makes more sense that stockpiling U.S. liabilities. Or, as Dan says, "The Chinese will probably go with #2, especially because copper (and oil, and iron ore) can be stored and used in infrastructure projects to keep the population somewhat placated with infrastructure jobs," says Dan.

He adds that you should look for the Chinese to stockpile resources on the dips in commodity prices, while selling/divesting of U.S. Treasuries into the rallies that come with 'safe-haven' buying. That sounds right to us. But the only catch to the plan is if Treasuries fail to rally on safe haven buying.

On that score, the Treasury market seemed to survive last week's big auction without a huge spike in yields. If the economic news remains neither bullish nor exceptionally bearish, then we reckon Treasuries could rally (prices up, yields down), providing a discrete exit opportunity for certain large investors.

Incidentally, we still haven't seen much in the Australian press about the long-term consequences of government deficits. That's probably because most people are accepting the government's case that Australia's borrowing (and its deficits) will be temporary. We're not as sure. And besides, there are some serious questions about how structural deficits affect a country's currency, its credit markets, and its interest rates.

Those are just some of the questions we hope to take up at our upcoming debt symposium/summit, which will precede the first Australian screening of I.O.U.S.A. We've even picked a date, booked a venue, and secured a cracking panel of experts to train their eye on Australia's very own addiction to debt. Stay tuned for your official invitation!

Meanwhile, did you see that China has astonishingly and rather conveniently discovered some 3 billion metric tonnes of hematite and magnetite iron ore? It's apparently true, and probably comes in pretty handy during the current stagnated annual price contract discussions with Aussie iron ore producers BHP Billiton and Rio Tinto.

As you know, China is the world's largest steel maker and thus the largest importer of iron ore. Chinese geologists claim they have found Asia's largest iron ore deposit ever in Benxi city, which is in the northwest province of Liaoning. The good news is that the deposit is said to be about 2.5 miles long and 1.8 miles wide and could, officials say, have a mine life of 50 years-if a mine is built.

The bad news is that the resource (not a reserve because it's not know if it can be produced economically) is buried around a mile underground. That's a long way down, or a long way to lift iron up, if you prefer, and if you're strong (which China is).

Contrast that with the Pilbara, where the stuff seems to lying around waiting to be found in the hundreds of millions of tonnes by any Tom, Dick, or Kerry. That's right. Iron Ore Holdings, owned by Kerry Stokes, told the ASX yesterday it was increasing by 50% its estimate of its mineral resource at Iron Valley in Western Australia.

This deposit is only 97 metres below ground. It's surrounded by big projects by BHP, Rio, and Fortescue. And the company says it reckons its sitting on a 132 million tonne resource-which is up from the 88 million tonnes it believed it had just three months ago.

Proving up a resource into a reserve-and seeing your share price benefit because of it-is the name of the game for the iron ore juniors. Despite the big Chinese find, we reckon the Iron Valley story is where the Big Picture meets the Little Juniors (or where the rubber meets the road, if you prefer).

At the right prices, stockpiling commodities makes sense to people who will need them later anyway and already have too many U.S. dollars. And if prices aren't right...if..in fact...commodity prices decline (either because of slow economic growth or a halt in stockpiling) then commodity stocks probably fall a bit too...which makes those very stocks-especially the smaller ones that need capital and JV partners-the next logical candidates for acquisition or accumulation.

Dan Denning
for The Daily Reckoning Australia

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Related Articles:

  • Every Investor in Commodities Should Know China is their Biggest Buyer
  • China Reduces Holdings of Treasury Securities
  • The Saudi Arabia of Coal
  • The World, Right Side Up
  • Geithner Reassures China that America Takes Financial Obligations Seriously

About the Author

DanDan Denning is the author of 2005's best-selling The Bull Hunter (John Wiley & Sons). He began his financial publishing career in 1997 and has covered financial markets form Baltimore, Paris, London and, beginning in 2005 Melbourne. He’s the editor of The Daily Reckoning Australia and the Publisher of Port Phillip Publishing.

See All Posts by This Author

There Is 1 Response So Far. »

  1. Comment by Ebden on 2 July 2009:

    There may be national security as well as economic reasons for the Chinese stockpiling raw materials. A strategic reserve of resources is a sensible precaution against economic sanctions or naval blockade. Tension may rise between the US and China as circumstances change, e.g. Chinese dump US bonds, competition over energy, issues with Taiwan etc.

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