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Citi: The Commodity Collapse Could Be "Subprime Part II"

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AllentownJake Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Nov-24-09 04:27 PM
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Citi: The Commodity Collapse Could Be "Subprime Part II"
So here’s the nightmare scenario, which we hope will not happen:
Thousands of very smart speculators have accumulated the biggest ever
speculative physical raw material positions ever witnessed in the belief that
either the dollar will collapse or an ongoing global ‘Supercycle’ will shake off
the effects of the credit crunch and resume business as usual. They are
funded in this venture by some of the lowest interest rates on record. What are
the threats to their thesis?. They are as follows :

1. Governments, having pumped huge amounts of money into the global
system, find they are running our of fire-power even while economies are
still at the incubation-stage of recovery (i.e. the kind of stage we saw
displayed last week in the poor USA housing starts data). Some
governments find that suddenly their bonds are considered to be ‘toxic’
and a far higher interest rate is demanded for ongoing participation.

2. The global economy not only experiences a slower upturn than the
consensus view, but after the recent inventory-restocking phase is over, it
relapses into a W-shaped recession. More jobs are lost and people who
have been unemployed but still able to keep up their mortgage payments
(because of near-zero interest rates) are suddenly defaulting. Banks finally
have to write down the value of these assets and housing markets around
the world are flooded with new inventory. New-build is out of the question.
Orders for new fridges, washing machines, stoves, taps and other items
that metals so depend on for demand, simply freeze.

3. The global commercial property market finally grinds to a halt. High-rise
buildings that began to be built 18 months ago, before the credit crisis, are
finally completed. Their last copper wiring and plumbing has been
installed (always the last phase), their aluminium windows all in place. Few
new high-rise buildings are started, awaiting the glut of space to be used
up

http://www.businessinsider.com/citi-heres-the-nightmare-scenario-for-commodity-bulls-2009-11

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