Showing posts with label how to invest like jim rogers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label how to invest like jim rogers. Show all posts

Friday, February 11, 2011

Cattle at All-Time Highs: The Price Outlook for 2011 and How to Play the Trend

With cattle prices hitting all-time highs, I decided to take a look at the broader causes for the trend - both short term and long term.

To read the full article, please hop over to Hard Assets Investor.

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Where's the Beef? Cattle Prices Hit All-Time Highs

Cattle prices are at all-time highs, thanks to a strong 25 percent rally over the last 12 months. Just look at prices over the past 25 years:

Live Cattle Futures Price Chart 2011
Source: Barchart

Several long-term factors have provided a significant, sustained tail wind to meat prices, starting with grain prices. Grains have rallied quite a bit over the past year; the iPath DJ-UBS Grains Subindex Total Return ETN (NYSE Arca: JJG), whose index tracks a basket of corn, wheat and soybeans futures, has risen 59 percent year-over-year.

It takes a lot of grain to produce a pound of beef—roughly 8 pounds of grain per pound. Thus any rise in grain prices means it becomes more expensive to feed a cow, which inevitably gets passed along to the cattle buyer. Since 2006, feedstock prices have skyrocketed—and stayed higher—and the elevated costs have forced ranchers to pare back their herd levels to acclimate.

But it's not just bigger input costs keeping herd inventories down. In fact, herds have shrunk steadily since 2004, due to a combination of drought and mad cow disease shocks. Collectively, the 2011 herd is the smallest in 53 years.

At the same time, demand has never been as high. As consumers in emerging markets like China and India become more prosperous, their diets are quickly becoming "more American"—as in, they are consuming a lot more meat. According to Eric Ocrant, vice president of Oak Investment Group, there are three times as many beef consumers now as there were 10 years ago.

Therefore it's clear that, unlike in 2008, this current trend isn't the result of a short-term market shock. Rather, it's more the culmination of a slow, developing trend bubbling up to the surface.

Please click here to read the rest of my article: Where's the Beef? Cattle Prices Hit All-Time Highs

An Update on Our Rough Rice Futures Trade

We've seen a lot of mustard on the price action in rough rice since we initiated our long May 2011 futures position - but for all that, we are just about where we started:

Rough Rice Chart Futures Trade February 2011

Which, actually, is perfectly fine with me.  Since I generally use a 15-day low as my stop on these trades, a week or two of sideways trading is great, because it raises the stop - and hence, lowers the risk on the trade.

When entering this trade at the beginning of the month, we really had to use 13.50 cents as the stop.  After a couple weeks of sideways action, we can raise that up to around 15.00, or even 15.50.
  
Rough Rice Chart February 2011Source: Barchart.com

For the fundamental reasons and motivation behind this trade, see the article I wrote for Hard Assets Investor: Why We're Setting Up For a Rally in Rice.

Thursday, February 03, 2011

Rough Rice Looked Good Today - The Only Green on the Screen!

So far, so good on that "long rice" trade - always a good sign when your position is the only green on the screen!
Grains futures rice heat map february 3 2011
Today was a forgettable one for most grains - but rice stood tall amidst the apathy. (Source: Barchart.com)

For some background on our rough rice trade...

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Jim Rogers Interview - His Latest Thoughts on Commodities, Treasuries, and the Economy

Our friends at Hard Assets Investor just conducted an interview with our commodities hero, Jim Rogers.

Some quick hits from the interview:
  • He's still long sugar - but wouldn't buy more right now
  • Rogers is still bullish on oil over the next decade
  • He continues to like China
  • Not short Treasuries yet, but hopes to short them in the next year or two
Again here's the full interview transcript - a short two-pager, over at Hard Assets Investor.

More recent commentary from Jim Rogers:

Monday, August 10, 2009

Sugar Prices Hit 28-Year High - How's Jim Rogers Playing It?

The severe supply/demand imbalance in sugar fundamentals has propelled sugar prices to a 28-year high. The big driver of the rally has been India - which, as we reported earlier this year, has turned into a net importer of sugar.

As you can see below, sugar prices are starting to go "parabolic." Commodity rallies typically end with a big blow off and stories like this one by the mainstream financial media, questioning where the world will ever find enough sugar to meet demand.

Sugar mania is running wild!
(Source: Barchart.com)

If you are an adventurous trader, you could initiate a long position and try to ride this spike up for as long as it goes. I personally do not have this stomach for this, having been burned one too many times on the inevitable reversal. Parabolic spikes rarely end quietly.

I hope that you, Dear Reader, played this trade better than I did. Since writing on March 1 that sugar could stage an impressive rally, my follow through trading was quite poor...to say the least!

Ah well, if you missed this rally - be patient. We should get another shot at it - at least according to our favorite sugar guru Jim Rogers, who told Bloomberg:

“Sugar is certainly going to go much, much higher during the course of the bull market,” Jim Rogers, chairman of Rogers Holdings, said in an Aug. 6 interview in Singapore. “Sugar is still 70 percent below its all-time high and not many things in life are 70 percent below what they were in 1974. Sugar has a wonderful future.”

What's the easiest way to invest in agriculture if you don't trade futures? Check out our recent piece: 5 Easy Ways to Invest in Sugar...And Other Agricultural Commodities.

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

5 Easy Ways to Invest in Sugar...and Other Agricultural Commodities

One of the commonly asked questions on our recent reader survey (appreciate you checking it out here if you haven't already) was:

How can I invest in sugar, and other agricultural commodites, without having to trade futures themselves?

Opening a futures account IS a big pain - and learning also takes time - so many folks want to know how they can get in on Jim Rogers' favorite markets without opening up a futures account.

If that's you, here are some ideas for you to consider. And a heads up that I do intend to cover the basics of getting started with futures at some point...just need some time to put that information together.

Easy ways to invest in agriculture, from the comfort of your regular brokerage account:
  • PowerShares DB Agriculture Fund (DBA) - Consists of roughly equal parts corn, soybeans, wheat, and sugar. Not something I'd buy and hold for 10 years, but something you can trade in/out of fairly safely. I'd consider buying the breakouts, and setting a trailing stop.
  • Jim Rogers Agricultural Index (RICIA) - Despite the fact that this is supposed to track the Rogers Index itself, it scares me a bit, because I've never understood who was behind it. I've also seen RJA mentioned, which may be worth a look, but I can't vouch for it personally. Instead, I would recommend...
  • Direct investment in the Rogers index via Uhlmann Price Securities - The official fund. They do have a minimum investment level, I'm not sure what it is right now. If you want to buy and hold a basket of commodities/agriculture for the next 5-10 years, this is probably the best way to do it, and it's hard to see how you could go wrong.
  • Potash (POT) - Can include many of the other fertilizer guys here as well. Analogy here is that you're buying the guys that make the "picks and shovels" for the coming agriculture boom. Don Coxe likes this method of playing the ag boom. Requires some stock picking, unless you just pick up an index of these guys...which would be...
  • Market Vectors Agribusiness ETF (MOO) - An index of the picks and shovels guys.
  • Livestock Index (COW) - Bonus pick! This one is simple...it's just lean hogs and live cattle futures. The play on agricultures is that cattle and hogs eat grains - a lot of grains - so rising input prices should eventually result in rising meat prices. This is one you probably also want to buy on a breakout, and have a trailing stop.
Were these suggestions helpful? Anything else you'd like to explore in future columns? Leave a comment and let me know!

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