Showing posts with label investing in sugar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label investing in sugar. Show all posts

Monday, January 10, 2011

Jim Rogers' Two Favorite Commodities to Buy Right Now

Jim Rogers may like gold - but he LOVES silver.
“I would rather own silver than gold," Rogers tells India's ET Now

“Silver is still 40 percent below its all-time high. So silver has not been any sort of great bubble compared to perhaps some other assets we know." (Source: Moneynews.com)
And Jim, an agricultural bull since he opened his commodity fund in 1998, picks rice as his favorite grain:
“Likewise for the rice, if rice goes down, I will buy more rice. So both the silver and rice have a great future for the next few years,” Rogers says.
Incidentally there was an article in today's Wall Street Journal that reported farmers are reducing acreage for rice by as much as 30%, in favor of higher priced cotton and soybeans:
A shift in planting likely will come in the spring when farmers sow their fields in Arkansas and Louisiana, analysts said. They are projecting as much as a 30% cut in acreage devoted to long-grain rice. Growers will turn to soybeans, cotton or other crops after becoming frustrated with rice prices, which have lagged behind other agricultural commodities.

In 2010, U.S. rice futures fell nearly 4%, in contrast to soybean futures that climbed 34% and cotton futures that rose 91%. Driving the price gains were concerns that production wouldn't keep pace with demand, particularly as China's appetite for imports surged.
With corn, soybeans, cotton, and rice often competing for the same land, the sharp speculator can often do quite well buying the laggard(s) - which, in this case, is rice.

Precisely because farmers usually neglect the crop with the lagging price, and instead plant the crops that have already rallied.  Which reduces the supply of said grain.
rough rice 5 year price chart
Rough rice is still well off its 2008 highs - with potential acreage reductions on tap, we could see a breakout soon. (Source: Barchart.com)
This is exactly the reason we we'd been salivating over the potential for cotton for so long - it was a matter of when prices would rocket, not if.  And rocket they did!
cotton price chart outlook 2011
When cotton broke out - largely thanks to supply constraints - it really did a moonshot!

The playbook was analogous with King Cotton - soybeans and corn had been rallying for years, while cotton's price languished.  So farmers who had traditionally planted cotton increasingly got eyes for the sexier returns its ag cousins could bring instead.  Supply fell - and soon after, prices rocketed.

So if you're looking to invest like Jim Rogers - and get some exposure to the grains - it looks like rice is the most reasonably priced starch for your plate today.

Hat tip Daily Crux for the original link.

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:

Thursday, September 17, 2009

Jurgens Bauer on Sugar's Outlook

One of my favorite commodity analysts to track is Jurgens Bauer, especially for his thoughts on the softs. I used to frequently post links to his columns when, I think, he wrote for Barchart.com, or was at least syndicated through them.

He's since moved on, and I was happy to see his name popup as the featured interview over at Hard Assets Investor. It's an 8-minute interview - one that's well worth watching if your keen on commodities, particularly if you're following sugar and cotton.

Jurgens is a throwback - he just LOOKS like a guy who grew up in the trading pits - that just adds to his aura. He did allow that sugar could go to $0.30...or even $0.40...since we are in a supply deficit. He views key upper resistance as $0.23 or so (which we've seen).

Sugar me sweet! Does sugar have another push up?
(Source: Barchart.com)



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.

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Sugar Shines on Manic Tuesday, Nears a 3-Year High


It's been a manic start to the week for commodities and currencies...deflation was "back" yesterday, with investors running back to the dollar...and today inflation was the focus, with the dollar getting dumped!

Last evening, we observed that sugar was standing tall amidst an across the board selloff in commodities. Well today, that strength carried through in a big way - with sugar up nearly a full cent on the day!

July sugar futures closed the day a shade under 16-cents, which was exceeded briefly this April and May. The October contract closed near 17-cents, a high on the year. If this jump holds, we'll be looking at picking up an October sugar contract on this mega-breakout.

Sugar me sweet, baby. (Source: Barchart.com)

What are the fundamentals driving this? The supply/demand deficit that has been on the radar screen since earlier in the year.

Caution is warranted, though, as a pullback in oil could send some of the hot money to the exits just as fast as it appears to be pouring into sugar. But for now, the market seems to be telling us that the sugar bull is back!

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Marc Faber Loves Agriculture at These Prices

Marc Faber says that investing in agriculture today will be like investing in oil in 2001, when it was priced at $17/barrel, according to The National Post.

Faber says that record low inventories, declining agricultural productivity, and increasing demand for food will drive prices higher.

The falling productivity line is especially interesting...Faber says productivity in agriculture has been declining since 1990, and expects that trend to continue.  If this is true, which I'd imagine it is, it's counter to what most folks (including me) believe.


More reasons to invest in agriculture:
Ed. Note: Stay up to date on the latest in agriculture and be sure to check out our weekly insights published every Sunday: This Week in Commodities

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Jim Rogers: The US is About to Have a Currency Crisis

If you have the majority of your savings in US dollars, this may be the most important insight you ever hear from Jim Rogers.


“We’re going to have a currency crisis, probably this fall or the fall of 2010.  It’s been building up for a long time. We’ve had a huge rally in the dollar, an artificial rally in the dollar, so it’s time for a currency crisis.”

Jim reiterated that the place to be invested is in commodities, particularly agriculture:

"You're going to have serious food shortages in the next 3-5 years - prices are going to go through the roof."

You can view a video of this entire interview using this link (click on the "Video" tab on top).

Want some ideas about agricultural commodities with particularly appealing fundamentals right now?  Check out This Week in Commodities, which is heavily focused on agricultural commodities - right now we're invested in sugar and orange juice, both profitable trades to date and still climbing.

More recent insights from Jim Rogers:

Ed. Note: I just got done reading Jim Rogers' new book - review to follow. Long story short, it's an insightful, quick read that I'd highly recommend. Pick up a copy if you haven't already:


Friday, May 08, 2009

A Long Overdue Sugar High

This morning, I authored a guest piece for the folks at Commodity News Center, breaking down the recent sugar rally.  Regular readers will be quite familiar with the fundamental factors discussed.  I always try to constantly re-examine my assumptions to make sure I'm not falling in love with a trade - if you've got a sugar position, or are thinking about initiating one, you may want to review the article - and let me know what you think!  I always appreciate and learn from outside perspective.


A Long Overdue Sugar High

Sugar futures are soaring – to their highest levels since 2006 - buoyed by strong supply/demand fundamentals, along with freshly printed US dollars. How long can this rally continue? Let’s review the driving factors. 

Contents:
  • Supply/Demand Fundamentals
  • Money Printing
  • What Could Go Wrong
  • Outlook for Sugar

Sunday, May 03, 2009

Soft Commodities are Starting to Scream: "Inflation!"

Milton Friedman said that inflation is "always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon."  Judging by the recent price action in many of the soft and agricultural commodities, they appear to agree.

Ben Bernanke, a student of the Great Depression, is making a bet the Friedman was wrong.  Bernanke believes that because Friedman did much of his work during a period of time when the velocity of money was relatively constant, he did not properly account for this factor in determining inflation.

Helicopter Ben is conducting this "Great Experiment" of money printing to stave off a Depression based on the monetary theory developed by economist Irving Fisher, who believed the Depression occurred because money velocity dropped off a cliff, and there was no increase in money supply to counter this.  Thus the US slipped into a deflationary spiral.

This is the big question - when the velocity of money drops, as it is today, should the money supply be increased?  Who's right - Fisher or Friedman?

We don't yet know - though, as always, the market will decide the winners and losers.  And lately it's hard not to notice what the commodity markets have been telling us, especially agriculture.

First, let's see Exhibit A - the adjusted monetary base of the US, which still appears to be in a "bull market":

Many of us saw the initial spike and immediately yelled "Inflation!"  We loaded up and gold and ran for the hills.  And what happened?  The spike in monetary growth continued to grow to the sky, and gold got slammed - along with almost every other asset class.  (Save the US Dollar and US Treasuries - hats off if you had that trade, as you are a true "contrarian's contrarian"!)

Fast forward to a few weeks ago, and we noticed that not only had commodities appeared to have formed a bottom, but they were starting to climb.

This week, we saw a full fledged break out in the softs and the grains - let's quickly have a look at three of our current favorites.

Sugar futures - our old favorite - rallied over 5% this week, to close a shade under 15-cents.  Sugar's been on a steady climb - fundamentals look quite appealing, as we discussed last week, and there's no arguing with this chart:


Cotton futures continued their strong rally, breaking right past the low 50's resistance we were keeping an eye on:


Finally take a look at Soybeans!  This rally was kicked off when soybean acreage came in below expectations, and it's been off to the races ever since:


So which will it be, inflation or deflation?  Don't get too hung up in economic theory - remember that the markets are always right.  And right now, these markets, buoyed as well by strong fundamentals, appear to be casting an emphatic vote for inflation!
 

Top Commodity and Economic News...

Current Futures Positions

Nothing new...unfortunately!  I thought about adding to the sugar position on Thursday - and I should have!  Will seriously look at adding another contract tomorrow or Tuesday on continued strength.

Date Position Qty Month/Yr Contract Entry Last Profit
04/08/09  Long  1 JUL 09 Orange Juice 81.95 85.10 $472.50
04/20/09  Long  1 JUL 09  Sugar #11     13.79  14.91$1,713.60

Net Profit/Loss On Open Positions $2,186.10

Current Account Value: $26,920.49

Cashed out: $20,000.00
Total value: $46,920.49
Weekly return: 3.5%
2009 YTD return: -47.0% (Don't call it a comeback!)

Prior year's results:
2008: -8%
2007: 175%
2006: 60%
2005: 805%

Initial stake: $2,000.00

Editor's Note: This article was also published by SeekingAlpha.com.

Sunday, April 26, 2009

Sugar Futures Rally, OJ Takes a Breather - This Week In Commodities

Sugar Futures Surge to a 6-Month High

Sugar futures rallied nearly 4% on Friday, over half a cent, to close the week at 14.18.  Looks like we've got a new breakout to the upside!

Sugar futures continue their steady climb.  (Source: Barchart.com)

The market continued to focus on the news that India may turn into a net importer of sugar this year.  Indian production is falling to a 4-year low, which, surprise surprise, is spurring prices up.  Don't worry though, Indian politicians are on the scene, with rhetoric and threats of banning futures trading to "halt" this price rise - ha!  

Also bullish for sugar is continued strength in oil prices, which means Brazil will use more of its sugar for fuel.  Last report I recall reading had Brazilian ethanol profitable at roughly $50 oil, so that's the number I keep an eye on.

Finally demand for sugar is still projected to outpace supply this year, so we've got some strong underpinnings for a sustained rise in sugar in the months to come.  


OJ Takes a Breather

Orange juice futures took a bit of a breather this week.  Appears to be just a technical correction and profit taking, as I was not able to find any fundamental news to challenge our initial hypothesis for going long OJ.

Orange juice cooled off this week.

Other Commodity and Economic News

Current Futures Positions

Rolled the May contract over to July earlier in the week.  Other than that, not much new. 

Thinking about adding to OJ, sugar positions on further strength.

Date Position Qty Month/Yr Contract Entry Last Profit
04/08/09  Long  1 JUL 09 Orange Juice 81.95 85.00 $457.50
02/27/09  Long  1 JUL 09  Sugar #11     13.79  14.12 ($672.00)

Net Profit/Loss On Open Positions $1,286.30

Current Account Value: $26,020.69

Cashed out: $20,000.00
Total value: $46,020.69
Weekly return: 0.1%
2009 YTD return: -48.8% (Don't call it a comeback!)

Prior year's results:
2008: -8%
2007: 175%
2006: 60%
2005: 805%

Initial stake: $2,000.00

Sunday, April 19, 2009

Three Soft Commodities Poised to Rally - OJ, Sugar, and Cotton

For a few weeks now, we've been watching the commodity markets with rapt attention, asking ourselves: "Has the next commodity bull market officially begun?"

From the charts, it looks like broader commodity indeces may have finally formed a bottom.


Source: BarChart.com

So if the wind is indeed once again at the back of us commodity investors, which commodities hold the most promise right now? Let's dive in and review three very intriguing soft commodity opportunities.


Orange Juice

Orange juice futures continued their recent rally this week, with July OJ breaking out to 6-month highs this week, closing at 88.25.

Last week we were drooling over OJ, citing potential bullish catalysts of:
  • Dry conditions in Florida that could hurt supply
  • Reports of a weaker orange crop in Brazil
  • A favorable technical back drop
Also my commodity broker gave me a ring on Thursday, recommending some summer OJ calls - he also likes the bullish setup, and mentioned that OJ is seasonally strong in the summertime.


Orange juice, after a long drop, appears to be showing some signs of life.

Florida did get some rain this week, which set prices back temporarily midweek, but this proved temporary as OJ surged ahead on technical buying and traders starting to pile in.

Bottom line: OJ's rally looks poised to continue, and we're looking to add to our exisiting position on further strength.


Sugar

On February 27, we went long one May sugar contract (which reminds me - I need to roll that baby over tomorrow 1st thing! The wife would not be pleased if we took delivery on that contract!).

At the time, we cited these bullish fundamental factors:
  • The global sugar deficit is expected to rise this year
  • India, the world's 2nd largest producer of sugar (after Brazil), will have lower output than forecasted, and may be forced to import sugar this year

Sugar has been rangebound.

Since then, sugar has been rangebound, failing to break up or down. I've read many traders recommending short positions on sugar in the short term, though sugar has not yet broken down in the short term as these folks have expected.

Bullish supply news came out this week, with India's sugar industry reporting that this year's production will fall 8.4% below previous estimates.

We're holding our exising position until the market gives us a clear signal on which way sugar is heading.


Cotton

Cotton futures have been slammed since the financial collapse, as significant cotton demand from India and China has evaporated overnight.

This demand and price wipeout has accelarated the decline in farm acreage devoted to cotton - this year's US cotton acreage is projected to be 7% below last year, and the lowest total amount since 1983, due to high production costs and low prices.

Although supply is coming offline significantly, thus far demand has dropped faster than supply. This may not last for long though, as the best cure for low prices is often low prices.


Has cotton formed a double bottom?

As you can see from the chart above, cotton has put in a double bottom of sorts, and is approaching an upward resistance point in the low 50's. 

Cotton futures have rallied to a 10-week high on continued strength in soybean futures, which surged to 6-month highs themselves.  Because cotton and soybeans compete for acreage, high soybean prices make it more likely that farmers will switch acreage from cotton to beans.

We're watching closely to see which way the price breaks from here, as a breakout to the upside could have some room to run, given the tight supply conditions. A small rebound in demand could set prices off to the races.


Current Futures Positions

No changes this week. Thinking about adding another OJ contract on further strength.

Date Position Qty Month/Yr Contract Entry Last Profit
04/08/09 Long 1 JUL 09 Orange Juice 81.95 88.40 $967.50
02/27/09 Long 1 MAY 09 Sugar #11 13.79 13.19 ($672.00)

Net Profit/Loss On Open Positions $295.50

Current Account Value: $26,005.31

Cashed out: $20,000.00
Total value: $46,005.31
Weekly return: 3.6%
2009 YTD return: -48.8% (Don't call it a comeback!)

Prior year's results:
2008: -8%
2007: 175%
2006: 60%
2005: 805%

Initial stake: $2,000.00

Sunday, April 12, 2009

Time to Invest in Orange Juice? - Weekly Commodities Review

Have Orange Juice futures finally found a bottom?  May Orange Juice futures gained nearly 10% this week, on speculation that drought conditions in Florida could damper yields.

As you can see, OJ has been in free fall over the past 14 months, dropping roughly in half from peak to trough.


Prices appear to have been forming a bottom since the beginning of the year, and in surging past the 85 cents-a-pound level, May Orange Juice futures hit four-month highs.


So is it time to buy?  Let's break it down.

Bullish factors for OJ:
  • Renewed weakness in the US dollar could buoy commodity prices
  • Dry conditions in Florida could hurt supply
  • There are reports of a weaker orange crop in Brazil
  • The technical setup looks quite good
Bearish factors for OJ:
  • The deflationary environment that sent almost every asset down 50% last year may still be in place
  • Good news on the Florida crop could cause this rally to quickly reverse course
  • OJ may be overbought and due for a short term pullbck
OJ futures are quite volatile, so proceed with caution if you're new to trading them.  Contract sizes for OJ futures are smaller than most other softs, so I'd recommend starting with a light position and keeping wide stops to ride out potential swings.

BOTTOM LINE: At current price levels - which are historically cheap - the risk/reward of a long position in Orange Juice looks quite attractive.  We've been watching all of the softs closely, and OJ looks the best right now from a technical and fundamental standpoint.  We're buying this 3-month breakout.

Editor's Note: This article was just published by Seeking Alpha.


Current Futures Positions

On Wednesday, we picked up a July Orange Juice contract at 81.95.

Date Position Qty Month/Yr Contract Entry Last Profit
04/08/09 Long   1 JUL 09 Orange Juice 81.95 85.60 $547.50
02/27/09 Long  MAY 09  Sugar #11  13.79  12.75  ($1,164.80)

Net Profit/Loss On Open Positions ($617.30)

Current Account Value: $25,092.51

Cashed out: $20,000.00
Total value: $45,092.51
Weekly return: 2.4%
2009 YTD return: -50.6%

Prior year's results:
2008: -8%
2007: 175%
2006: 60%
2005: 805%

Initial stake: $2,000.00

Sunday, March 22, 2009

Weekly Commodities Report - Dropping Dollars From Helicopters

Bernanke Fires Up the Printing Presses

Earlier this week, Ben Bernanke announced the US Federal Reserve will buy up to $300 billion of US long-term Treasury securities over the next 3 months.  Where will the Fed get that money?  It will essentially create it out of thin air - also known as "printing money."


Surprisingly, the markets were not amused by Ben's announcement, as the dollar suffered it's largest one-day decline since 1971, while gold got a nice pop, rallying from sub $900, currently sitting around $950 as I type.  

Gold's recent rally may have had something to do with the fact that it, unlike the US Dollar, cannot be created out of thin air.

Amusingly, this accouncement comes on the heels of a key Chinese official lamenting the bad stench emanating from US Treasury Bonds.  Some reports I've seen recently suggest that foreign investment in US debt has fallen precipitiously, and this represents the Fed's last gasp to hold interest rates low - possibly attempting to drive them all the way down to zero.

If you've been thinking that deflation would rule the day, I'd highly recommend revisiting an important guest piece penned for us by Bud Conrad about this epic battle between inflation and deflation.


If You're Short the Yen, You're Long the Dollar - Oops

The past couple weeks I've been on my soap box, calling the demise of the Japanese Yen.  I made the case that the Yen was circling the toilet bowl at a faster rate than the US Dollar.

Oops.

The Yen spiked sharply, and unfortunately I was stopped out of my short position at a large loss.  After I was stopped out, then Yen continued to rise a bit, and has since corrected back down.


This is why my wife yells at me for trading currencies.

Ah well, sucks, but have to respect your stops.

I have to admit, this trade gone awry may have killed my appetite for currency trading for awhile.  It was easy when the dollar was on a one-way trajectory to the cellar.  

Things are just a bit too crazy in the currency markets right now for an armchair trader like me to figure out.


Depression Economics for Kids

And just when you thought things couldn't get any stranger in the financial world, Disney announces a new exhibit at EPCOT center called "The Great Piggy Bank Adventure".

The exhibit will teach kids such valuable life lessons as staying ahead of inflation, and diversifying your investments.  

You can't make this stuff up.


Current Futures Positions

Date Position Qty Month/Yr Contract Entry Last Profit
02/27/09 Long  MAY 09  Sugar #11  13.79  13.42  ($414.40) 

Net Profit/Loss On Open Positions ($414.40)

Current Account Value: $25,312.72

Cashed out: $20,000.00
Total value: $45,312.72
Weekly return: -12.7%
2009 YTD return: -50.2% (yikes)

Prior year's results:
2008: -8%
2007: 175%
2006: 60%
2005: 805%

Initial stake: $2,000.00

Saturday, January 17, 2009

Sugar Prices Continue Rise; China, India May Increase Imports

Jan. 16 (Bloomberg) -- Sugar prices rose, posting their fourth straight weekly gain, on speculation that demand for imported supplies will increase this year in China and India, the world’s largest consumer.
...

Also worth noting:

Reduced supplies from India likely will widen a global market deficit that Czarnikow Group Ltd. estimates will be 5.8 million tons this year, said Michael Ferrari, a vice president at Weather Trends International Inc. in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania.

Global market deficit! Music to a commodity trader's ears.

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Paladin Capital Group Invests in Sugar Based Ethanol

Here's another news bit that appears to be medium-long term bullish for sugar futures. I recall reading that sugar based ethanol is cost competitive with oil at $50 or above, so even with the recent correction in oil, the sugarcane based ethanol industry of Brazil continues to boom.

peHUB: Paladin Puts Sugar in the Gas Tank
The Brazilian ethanol market is booming, due to both the cost-effectiveness of sugarcane and a national adoption of ethanol as the power source of choice. Ninety percent of new cars sold in Brazil are flex-fuel, and new plants keep popping up to satisfy demand. VREC will focus on building new production plants, which will include co-generation facilities that can sell gas byproduct into the Brazilian power grid.

Wednesday, November 05, 2008

Is Sugar Breaking Out?

Sugar!

Is that you, Baby Girl?

It's your old, pal, SugarHigh - remember me? Yeah. It's been awhile.

We had some good times back in '05-'06. You said you needed some time to get your life back together.

I know we got a little ahead of themselves back in '05...all the way up to $0.20 and all. But you gotta admit, we had a good run together.

Hey, I'm glad you're getting your life back together. Supply/demand is looking better...you've still got it, baby.

No, no - cotton didn't mean anything to me. And no - coffee's too volatile - she's nuts, too much baggage.

I make mistakes too. Now I'm looking for someone to settle down with - a nice, slow upward climb, just like old times.

Shhhhhhhh. Don't give me your answer now. If you love me - if it's meant to be - just hold the 13-cent mark for me. And I'm all yours.


Short term and medium term sugar price charts

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

A Couple Jim Rogers Interviews


Some good recent hits from Jim Rogers:
Says he's currently long the Swiss Franc, Japanese Yen, and airline stocks (as a contrarian play).

Also thinks coffee, cotton, sugar, silver, and zinc look potentially attractive (this is usually Rogers' code for - these are screaming buys).

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

Indian Farmers Turning Away From Sugar

Looks like the specs are piling into the near-term sugar contracts, based on forecasts that India will be a net importer of sugar.

Their farmers are forgoing sugar in favor of higher priced crops. Well gee, it's about damn time!

Not quite to a breakout yet - we'll see if this gap up holds.

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