Nvidia leads the plunge

Stocks plunged after Nvidia (NVDA) fell by 9.5% on reports that the US Department of Justice subpoenaed the chipmaker over complaints that it is violating antitrust laws. (Quartz)

Weak US and China manufacturing activity has also been cited as a cause for market bearishness, but that seems unlikely.

Stocks

Selling in Nvidia [cerise] soon spread to other big-name stocks, with all seven mega-caps closing lower on Tuesday.

Top 7 Technology Stocks

The fall breached short-term support on the S&P 500 at 5550, signaling a correction to test 5400.

S&P 500

The equal-weighted index ($IQX) retraced to test support at 7000. Trend Index troughs above zero indicate longer-term buying pressure. Breach of support would offer a target of 6800, but respect is as likely to confirm our target of 7400.

S&P 500 Equal-Weighted Index

Small caps also weakened, with the Russell 2000 iShares ETF (IWM) breaching support at 215 to indicate another test of long-term support at 200. A Trend Index peak at zero warns of selling pressure.

Russell 2000 Small Cap ETF (IWM)

ISM Manufacturing

The ISM Manufacturing PMI edged up to 47.2% in August. Although the cyclical sector is a relatively small percentage of the overall economy, it has a disproportionate impact during recessions as it sheds a large number of jobs. This is the sixth consecutive month of contraction (below 50), but the uptick indicates the contraction is slowing.

ISM Manufacturing PMI

New Orders are also contracting, indicating further headwinds ahead.

ISM Manufacturing New Orders

Also, the Prices sub-index continues to expand, warning of persistent inflationary pressure.

ISM Manufacturing Prices

However, the bearish outlook for manufacturing is offset by solid growth in other cyclical sectors, with combined employment in manufacturing, construction, and transport & warehousing reaching 27.85 million.

Manufacturing, Construction, and Transport & Warehousing

Non-residential construction spending continues to strengthen even when adjusted for inflation, benefiting from government programs to re-shore critical supply chains.

Non-Residential Construction Spending adjusted for inflation

China Manufacturing Activity

The official National Bureau of Statistics manufacturing PMI for China fell to 49.1 in August, indicating contraction. However, the downturn is contradicted by a rise in the private sector Caixin PMI to 50.4%:

Caixin China Manufacturing PMI & NBS China Manufacturing PMI

Financial Markets

Credit markets still reflect easy financial conditions, with Moody’s Baa corporate bond spread at a low 1.69%. Spreads above 2.5% indicate tight credit.

Moody's Baa Corporate Bond Spreads

However, Bitcoin has respected resistance at $60K [red line], warning of shrinking liquidity.

Bitcoin (BTC)

Treasury Markets

Ten-year Treasury yields are again testing support at 3.8%. Trend Index peaks below zero warn of long-term selling pressure. Breach of support would indicate another attempt at 3.7%.
10-Year Treasury Yield

Low LT yields are bearish for the Dollar and bullish for gold.

Dollar & Gold

The recent rally in the Dollar Index is losing steam. Tuesday’s weak close suggests another test of support between 100 and 101.

Dollar Index

Gold is retracing to test support at $2,475 per ounce. Trend Index troughs high above zero indicate long-term buying pressure. Respect would indicate another advance to test $2,600. Breach is less likely but would warn of a correction.

Spot Gold

Silver is more bearish, and a breach of support at $27.50 per ounce would test the August low at $26.50.

Spot Silver

Energy

Brent crude broke support at $76 per barrel and is headed for a test of long-term support at $73.

Brent Crude

Nymex WTI crude similarly broke support at $72 per barrel, offering a target of $68. We expect the DOE to increase purchases to re-stock the Strategic Petroleum Reserve below $70, providing support for shale drillers whose margins are squeezed at these levels.

Nymex WTI Crude

Uranium

Uranium continues its downtrend, with the Sprott Physical Uranium Trust (SRUUF) headed for another test of support at 17.

Sprott Physical Uranium Trust (SRUUF)
However, we are bullish on the long-term prospects as resistance to the expansion of nuclear energy fades.

EU's New Pro-Nuclear Energy Chief

Base Metals

After its recent rally, copper is testing short-term support at $9,000 per tonne. Breach is likely and would warn of another decline as China’s economy slows.

Copper

Aluminum leads the way, breaking short-term support to warn of another test of the band of long-term support between $2,100 and $2,150 per tonne.

Aluminum

Iron & Steel

Iron ore recovered above $100 per tonne, but respect of the descending trend line would warn of another decline. Reversal below $100 would confirm our target of $80.

 

Iron Ore

Conclusion

Investors are jumpy as mega-cap stocks trade at inflated prices, boosted by passive investment inflows from index ETFs. We expect the S&P 500 to find support at 5400 and maintain our target of 6000 before the end of the year.

One factor that could upset the apple cart is tightening liquidity. However, the Fed and Treasury will likely support liquidity in financial markets, at least until after the November elections. If they withdraw support, then all bets are off.

Falling crude oil prices will likely ease inflationary pressure, while a slowing Chinese economy is expected to add deflationary pressure. Long-term interest rates are expected to remain low, weakening the Dollar. Gold will likely benefit, with another attempt at our target of $2,600 per ounce.

Acknowledgments

Another S&P 500 advance likely

Stocks are poised for a breakout, signaling a fresh advance on the S&P 500. All eyes are focused on the September 17-18 FOMC meeting, with an expected rate cut of at least 25 basis points.

Stocks

The S&P 500 is testing resistance at its previous high of 5670, while Trend Index troughs above zero indicate buying pressure. Breakout would offer a target of 6000.

S&P 500

The equal-weighted index ($IQX) has already broken resistance. Retracement respected support at 7000, confirming our target of 7400.

S&P 500 Equal-Weighted Index

The Russell 2000 Small Caps ETF (IWM) lags, with the Trend Index struggling to recover above zero. A breakout above 225 would offer a target of 250.

Russell 2000 Small Cap ETF (IWM)

Financial Markets

Liquidity in financial markets is gradually tightening, which could act as a handbrake on any advances. A contracting Fed balance sheet, net of TGA and reverse repo (RRP) liabilities, shows the effect of regular monthly QT reductions.

Fed Assets net of TGA & Reverse Repo (RRP) Liabilities

Commercial bank reserves are shrinking as a result.

Commercial Bank Reserves at the Fed

Bitcoin struggles to hold above support at $60K, highlighting the effects of tightening liquidity.

Bitcoin (BTC)

Treasury Markets

Ten-year Treasury yields are rallying to test resistance at 4.0%, but long-term buying pressure—signaled by Trend Index peaks below zero—is expected to keep yields low for the next quarter.

10-Year Treasury Yield

Bank of Japan

A wild card that could disrupt the system is BOJ monetary policy. The last rate hike, to 0.25%, caused the Dollar to fall sharply against the Yen and a sell-off in US financial markets as carry trade positions were unwound.

Japanese Yen

Further rate hikes are on the cards, with the next BOJ meeting scheduled in October. Jim Grant from Grant’s Interest Rate Observer:

CPI excluding fresh food in Japan’s capital grew at a 2.4% annual pace in August, data released yesterday show, topping the 2.2% consensus expectation and marking its fourth consecutive sequential increase. That data series typically serves as a leading indicator for broader price pressures in the world’s fourth-largest economy; nationwide CPI data is due on Sept. 19.

Pointing to transitory factors including expiring government subsidies for utility bills and rice shortages, Norinchukin Research Institute chief economist Takeshi Minami predicted to Reuters that “the underlying inflation trend will continue to moderate in coming months.”

However, percolating wage growth – with average pay rising 5.2% this year per data compiled by Japanese Trade Union Confederation, the highest in more than three decades – could bolster the Bank of Japan’s appetite for further tightening following the July 31 rate increase to 0.25% from a 0% to 0.1% range, as BoJ chief Kazuo Ueda suggested to parliament last week.

Considering the acute financial spasm which followed that rate adjustment and accompanying unwind of yen-funded carry trade positions, the prospect of a sequel would presumably be front of mind for Mr. Market. Investors remain confident that such an outcome is in fact far-fetched, with interest rate futures assigning only 9% odds of further tightening at the BoJ’s Oct. 18 meeting.

Some observers aren’t so sure. “My money is on another rate hike in October,” Moody’s senior economist Stefan Angrick told CNBC Friday, further predicting at least one further uptick early next year. Bloomberg economist Taro Kimura likewise anticipates an October shift to 0.5%, writing that Thursday’s data illustrate “a broad upswing in service prices,” and “increases the risk that the BoJ can’t afford to wait to pare stimulus.”

The destabilizing effect of further BOJ rate hikes should not be underestimated.

Inflation

US inflation, on the other hand, remains subdued. Core PCE inflation ticked to 2.6% for the 12 months to July, but the Trimmed Mean PCE rate declined to 2.7%.

PCE, Core PCE & Trimmed Mean PCE

Monthly core PCE and the headline rate for July are more encouraging, with both growing at an annualized rate below 2.0%.

PCE Inflation - Monthly

Dollar & Gold

The Dollar Index remains in a strong downtrend, with Trends Index peaks below zero, warning of long-term selling pressure. We expect the latest rally to encounter resistance at 102.50.

Dollar Index

Gold retraced to $2,500 per ounce, with a likely test of support at $2,475 as long-term Treasury yields rally and the Dollar strengthens. However, the precious metal is in a strong up-trend, and respect of support would confirm our target of $2,600.

Spot Gold

Silver is weaker than gold because of weak industrial demand from China’s solar industry. A breach of its current support level near $29 per ounce would warn of a decline to test long-term support at $26.50.

Spot Silver

Crude Oil

Brent crude continues to build a base between $76 and $82 per barrel. Low crude prices ease inflationary pressures in the global economy and improve the prospect of lower interest rates.

Brent Crude

Base Metals

Copper penetrated its descending trendline, suggesting that a base is forming. A correction that respects support at $8,600 per tonne would strengthen the signal.

Copper

Aluminum rallied strongly, indicating improving industrial demand. A breakout above $2,500 per tonne would be a bullish sign for copper.

Aluminum

Conclusion

Financial markets warn of gradual tightening, but low long-term interest rates, subdued inflation, and the prospect of a Fed rate cut at the FOMC meeting on September 17-18 are all bullish for stocks. We expect the S&P 500 to break through resistance at its previous high of 5670, confirming our target of 6000.

However, investors need to be aware of the risks ahead in 2025.

After the November elections, Treasury is expected to shift its quarterly funding towards longer-term coupons to take advantage of lower yields. The resulting increase in supply could drive up long-term yields while reducing liquidity in financial markets. On the other side of the Pacific, further rate rises by the Bank of Japan could spark a sell-off in US financial markets as more Yen-financed carry trades are unwound.

Either of the above actions could contract liquidity in financial markets, causing another stock sell-off.

We remain bullish on gold as long as long-term interest rates remain low, weakening the Dollar. Silver is likely to underperform due to weak industrial demand.

Acknowledgments

Death of the Yen carry trade

Markets seem convinced that the recent stock sell-off in the US is due to growth concerns — after a weak labor report. We think they are mistaken. The real cause of the sell-off is the unwinding Yen carry trade.

Hedge funds have been making a killing on the Yen carry trade, but they just got killed. Borrowing cheaply in Yen and investing in stocks and Treasuries in the US, the trade benefited from ultra-low interest rates in Japan, far higher short-term rates in the US, massive appreciation in the top ten stocks on the S&P 500, and a rapidly weakening Yen against the Dollar.

But the Bank of Japan just pulled the rug from under them, raising interest rates and indicating that they plan to normalize monetary policy over time. The move caused a sharp rise in the Japanese Yen, with the US Dollar plunging below 150.

USD/Japanese Yen

Japanese stocks followed, possibly due to concerns over the impact of a strong Yen on export sales.

Nikkei 225 Index

The contagion soon spread to neighboring markets.

South Korea KOSPI 100 Index

Stocks

Unwinding carry trades caused a sell-off in US stocks as traders hastily closed their leveraged positions. The S&P 500 broke support at 5400, and the Trend Index crossed to below zero, warning of a correction to test 5200.

S&P 500

The equal-weighted index ($IQX) similarly broke support at 6800, offering a target of 6600. The long tail indicates strong buying pressure but this often fails, or takes several days, to reverse a sharp market fall.

S&P 500 Equal-Weighted Index

There was nowhere to hide, with the Russell 2000 Small Caps ETF (IWM) also breaking support and the Trend Index dipping below zero.

Russell 2000 Small Cap ETF (IWM)

Treasury Markets

The Fed left rates unchanged this week but indicated that rate cuts will likely commence in September. Treasury yields fell but the primary driver was the strong flight to safety from the stock sell-off, with the 10-year yield plunging to a low 3.8%. We expect retracement to test resistance at 4.0% but the Trend Index peak below zero warns of strong buying, with downward pressure on yields.

10-Year Treasury Yield

Financial Markets

Financial market liquidity remains steady. The Chicago Fed Financial Conditions Index declined to -0.58, indicating further monetary easing.

Chicago Fed Financial Conditions Index

Commercial bank reserves at the Fed edged lower for the third consecutive week but the changes were marginal.

Commercial Bank Reserves at the Fed

Bitcoin is retracing to test support at $60K but shows no sign of a significant liquidity contraction at this stage.

Bitcoin (BTC)

Dollar & Gold

Unwinding carry trades also caused a sharp fall on the Dollar, with the Dollar Index testing support at 103.

Dollar Index

Gold failed to get much of a lift from the flight to safety, with most of the flow going to Treasuries.

Spot Gold

Silver, likewise, failed to benefit.

Spot Silver

Energy

Ismail Haniyeh was assassinated in Tehran, presumably by Israel. Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, vowed that Israel would pay a price for killing the Hamas leader on Iranian soil, raising fears of escalation.

However, concerns over Middle East supply failed to move crude prices, with markets dominated by record US production of 13.3 million barrels per day.

EIA Crude Field Production

Nymex WTI crude is headed for a test of support between $72 and $73 per barrel. Breach would offer a target of $68. The US Department of Energy will likely support prices at this level, refilling the strategic petroleum reserve (SPR), as many shale producers’ cash costs are around $60 per barrel. Lower prices risk a drop in production as producers shut marginal wells.

Nymex WTI Crude

Uranium

Sprott Physical Uranium Trust (SRUUF) retreated below support at 18.00, confirming a bear market for uranium. Trend Index peaks below zero warn of strong selling pressure.

Sprott Physical Uranium Trust (SRUUF)

Base Metals

China over-invested in manufacturing capacity in an attempt to compensate for falling investment in their troubled real estate and infrastructure sectors. They now face resistance from international trading partners, unwilling to accept the massive surge in Chinese exports of manufactured goods and surplus steel and base metals. The dispute will likely cause increased trade protection and a sharp decline in global trade.

The down-trend in copper and aluminum is expected to continue.

Copper & Aluminum

Labor Market

A weak July labor report reinforced the Fed’s stance on early rate cuts, with job growth slowing to 114 thousand in July.

Employment Growth

The normally reliable Sahm recession indicator broke above 0.50 to indicate a recession. But the unemployment rate is rising off an unusually low base, so this time could be different.

Sahm Recession Indicator signals the start of a recession when the three-month moving average of the national unemployment rate (U3) rises by 0.50 percentage points or more relative to the minimum of the three-month averages from the previous 12 months. (Claudia Sahm)

Sahm Rule & Unemployment

Layoffs fell to 1.5 million in June which is different from what one would expect when the unemployment rate rises.

Layoffs & Discharges

Average weekly hours fell to 34.2, however, usually a warning that economic activity is slowing.

Average Weekly Hours

Job openings of 8.2 million in June are still above unemployment, indicating a tight labor market.

Job Openings

Continued claims for unemployment remain below 2.0 million, also indicating a tight labor market. Above 3.0 million would warn of recession.

Continued Claims

Average Hourly Earnings

Average hourly earnings growth declined to an annualized 2.75%, indicating that inflationary pressures are easing.

Average Hourly Earnings

Economy

Aggregate hours worked are growing at 1.3% year-on-year, suggesting low but positive GDP growth in the third quarter.Real GDP & Total Hours Worked

Heavy truck sales also held up well in July, indicating sustained economic activity.

Heavy Truck Sales

Employment in cyclical sectors — Manufacturing, Construction, and Transport & Warehousing — also grew by 40 thousand jobs in July, showing no sign of a recession.

Employment in Cyclical Sectors: Manufacturing, Construction, and Transport & Warehousing

ISM Manufacturing

ISM manufacturing PMI declined to 46.8% but remained above the 42.5% threshold typically accompanying a recession.

ISM Manufacturing PMI

Though declining new orders indicate some slowing ahead.

ISM Manufacturing New Orders

Conclusion

Stocks are expected to undergo a correction, with the S&P 500 testing support at 5200. Sales are fueled by unwinding carry trades as the Japanese Yen sharply strengthened after the Bank of Japan raised interest rates and indicated that they plan to normalize monetary policy.

The sell-off in stocks fueled a flight to safety which mainly benefited Treasuries, causing a sharp fall in the 10-year yield to 3.8%.

Gold and silver were left on the sidelines but could still benefit from low long-term interest rates and a weakening Dollar.

Declining crude oil and base metal prices warn of weak industrial demand from China. China’s efforts to compensate by exporting excess production is likely to meet stiff resistance from trading partners. Increased trade barriers are expected to further slow Chinese manufacturing and commodity imports, impacting Australia and other resource-based economies.

The Sahm rule warns of a US recession but the unemployment rate is rising from an unusually low base and there are plenty of signs of continued robust economic activity in the US economy. Expectations of a recession are likely premature, with a slow-down more likely to occur in 2025.

The full impact of a hawkish Bank of Japan monetary policy on US Treasury and financial markets should not be underestimated. However, the change is likely to be gradual, with frequent consultation with the US Treasury to minimize disruption after the initial impact of unwinding carry trades.

Acknowledgements

Stocks and precious metals headed for a correction

Stocks are retreating across the board after climbing to dizzy heights in recent weeks. They continue to enjoy support, however, from falling Treasury yields and robust financial market liquidity. Support from crude oil is less certain, with a potential up-trend that could delay interest rate cuts.

Gold and silver are also retreating after strong gains in recent weeks. The correction appears to be a secondary movement. Base metals copper and aluminum are also weakening but the sell-off appears far stronger.

Stocks

Three out of seven mega-caps in the S&P 500 (Nvidia, Tesla, and Meta Platforms) show gains on Thursday, while four declined.

Top 7 Technology Stocks

The S&P 500 as a whole declined steeply, headed for a test of support at 5500.

S&P 500

The equal-weighted index ($IQX) took a similar pounding, breaking support at 6900. Retracement that respects the new resistance level would confirm a target of 6600.

S&P 500 Equal-Weighted Index

The retreat is across the board, with the Russell 2000 Small Cap ETF (IWM) [pink] falling faster than Russell 1000 Large Caps ETF (IWB) [blue] after spectacular gains earlier in the week.

Russell 1000 Large Cap ETF (IWB) & Russell 2000 Small Cap ETF (IWM),

Treasuries

Ten-year Treasury yields are retracing to test resistance at 4.2%. Respect is likely and would confirm our short-term target of 4.0%. Declining Trend Index peaks below zero continue to warn of downward pressure on yields. The low inflation outlook is bullish for bonds.

10-Year Treasury Yield

Financial Markets

Commercial bank reserves at the Fed finished largely unchanged for the week ended Wednesday, July 17, suggesting stable liquidity levels.

Commercial Bank Reserves at the Fed

Bitcoin is retracing to test support at $60K; respect would signal rising liquidity in financial markets.

Bitcoin

Labor Market

Initial claims climbed to 243K for the week ended July 13. This still well below levels normally seen leading up to a recession.

Initial Claims

Continued unemployment below 2.0m indicate a tight labor market.

Continued Claims

The Conference Board Leading Economic Indicator shows signs of a recovery after initially warning of a recession with a fall below -5.0%.

Conference Board Leading Economic Indicator

Dollar & Gold

The Dollar index reversed its sharp fall from Wednesday. Penetration of the descending trendline would warn of another test of 105 but we think this is unlikely considering the fall in Treasury yields.

Dollar Index

Gold retreated below support at $2,450 per ounce, indicating another test of $2,400. Respect of $2,400 would signal another attempt at $2,500, while breach would warn of a correction to $2,300.

Spot Gold

Silver followed through below $30, headed for a test of primary support at $29.

Spot Silver

Declining Trend Index peaks warn of medium-term selling pressure. But respect of support at $29 per ounce would suggest a target of $35 per ounce.

Spot Silver

Crude Oil

Nymex WTI crude steadied at close to $83 per barrel. Respect of resistance at $84 would be a strong bear signal.

Nymex WTI Crude

Brent crude is similarly testing resistance at $86 per barrel. Breach of support at $84 would be a strong bear signal.

Brent Crude

Base Metals

Copper broke support at $9,400 per metric ton. Expect retracement to test the new resistance level but respect is likely and would confirm the long-term target of $8,000.

Copper

Copper and aluminum track each other closely. The down-trend below has a likely target of $2,200 and is bearish for copper.

Aluminum

Conclusion

Stocks and precious metals appear headed for a much-needed correction after climbing to dizzy heights in recent weeks.

Of the three pillars, falling Treasury yields and robust financial market liquidity continue to support stocks. But crude oil is less certain, with a potential up-trend that would threaten higher inflation and could delay interest rate cuts.

Gold and silver are also retreating, after strong gains in recent weeks, in what appears to be a secondary correction. Support would provide a base for further gains.

But weakness in copper and aluminum is more concerning, signaling slowing demand from China which could easily trigger a global recession.

Acknowledgements

Small caps signal Risk On

Falling Treasury yields and a surge in liquidity in financial markets is bullish for stocks, bonds and precious metals. The rotation from growth to value has slowed, while increased interest in small caps signals risk on for stocks.

Crude and base metals are weakening as demand from China slows. Uranium prices are also testing support, despite long-term growth prospects.

Financial Markets

Bitcoin rebounded from $56K to $64K, confirming a resurgence of liquidity in financial markets. Retracement that respects support at $60K would strengthen the bull signal.

Bitcoin

Treasuries

Ten-year Treasury yields are testing support at 4.2%, reflecting optimism over an early rate cut. Breach of support is likely and would offer a target of 4.0%.

S&P 500

Stocks

The sector rotation between growth and value has slowed, with both the Russell 1000 Growth ETF (green) and Value (blue) advancing at a similar rate.

Russell 1000 Growth ETF (IWF) & Russell 1000 Value ETF (IWD)

The S&P 500 made a small gain but the weak close and declining Trend Index warn of selling pressure.

S&P 500

The equal-weighted index ($IQX) shows a similar weak close, retracing to test support at 6800.

S&P 500 Equal-Weighted Index ($IQX)

But the rotation into small caps continues, with the Russell 2000 Small Caps ETF (Pink) closing the gap with the large cap Russell 1000 ETF (blue).

Russell 1000 Large Cap ETF (IWB) & Russell 2000 Small Cap ETF (IWM)

Precious Metals

Gold respected support at $2,400 per ounce, signaling another test of $2,450. Rising Trend Index troughs continue to signal buying pressure.

Spot Gold

Silver remains below resistance at $31 per ounce, with a lower Trend Index peak warning of secondary selling pressure. Another test of $30 is likely.

Spot Silver

Crude Oil

Nymex WTI crude continues to test support at $82 per barrel. Breach of $80 would be a strong bear signal.

Nymex WTI Crude

Brent crude retreated below support at $86 per barrel. Breach of $84 would offer a similar strong bear signal.

Brent Crude

Falling crude prices would ease the prospect of resurgent inflation and increase the likelihood of an early Fed rate cut.

Base Metals

Aluminum broke support at $2,420 per metric ton, warning of another decline. Retracement that respects the new resistance level would strengthen the bear signal.
Aluminum

Copper and aluminum tend to track each other closely, so the breach is bearish for copper as well.

Copper

Uranium

The Sprott Physical Uranium Trust (SRUUF) respected resistance at $20.50, signaling another test of support at $18.50. Breach of $18.50 would signal a down-trend for uranium prices.

Sprott Physical Uranium Trust (SRUUF)

Several uranium stocks, apart from Canadian miner Cameco (red), are testing support levels. Uranium Stocks

Conclusion

Treasury yields are declining as prospects for an early rate cut grow. Stock prices are also supported by rising liquidity in financial markets.

The rotation from growth to value sectors has slowed but the move to small caps is accelerating, signaling a more aggressive risk on stance from investors.

Weak crude prices are also bullish for stocks and bonds. The prospect of lower inflation is likely to result in lower Treasury yields.

Gold respected support at $2,400 per ounce, indicating another test of $2,450, boosted by the prospect of falling Treasury yields and a weaker Dollar. Silver lags behind, encountering stronger selling pressure and less domestic demand from China.

Aluminum broke support, signaling a down-trend. This is a bear signal for copper which tends to track closely.

Uranium is also looking bearish, with several stocks testing support levels.

Acknowledgements

Crude and commodities test support

Nymex Light Crude is testing primary support at $92/barrel while 13-week Twiggs Momentum (below zero) warns of a down-trend. Brent Crude is also approaching primary support, at $99/barrel. Breach of support would confirm a down-trend.

Nymex WTI Crude

Commodity prices are falling as the Dollar strengthens. Dow Jones UBS Commodity Index is approaching primary support at 122, while 13-week Twiggs Momentum (below zero) again warns of a down-trend. Breach of primary support would confirm.

Dow Jones UBS Commodity Index

Aluminum alloy, however, continues its primary advance.

Alumina

And nickel is likely to follow, having broken resistance at 18500.

Nickel

Crude and bulk commodities fall but nickel, aluminum rally

Crude oil prices are falling. Nymex Light Crude is testing primary support at $92/barrel and Brent Crude at $99/barrel. Breach of support would signal a down-trend.

Nymex WTI Crude

Commodity prices remain low, in line with sluggish world trade.

But that does not tell the full story.

Bulk commodity prices are falling as Chinese construction slows…

Bulk Commodities

…While copper prices recovered above 7000/tonne. Penetration of the declining trendline suggests that the down-trend is slowing. Breakout above 7400 would strengthen the signal.

Copper

And aluminum alloy…

Alumina

…and nickel show surprising strength, signaling an up-trend.

Nickel

The China-driven commodities super-cycle debate: Nomura edition

Nomura: We have performed a detailed analysis of metal intensity of GDP for steel, copper and aluminium in the following pages, which we believe clearly outlines our view that China’s economy is not large enough (in GDP terms) to support a continuation of the rapid growth in metal consumption seen in 2000-11.

Our conclusions are based on an analysis of China’s metal intensity of GDP rather than metal consumption per capita, and reflect a simple premise that while a country’s population size may be an important indicator of a country’s potential demand for industrial metals (per capita), the ability to meet potential demand is determined by the quantity of metal consumed in relation to the size of economic output (ie, GDP, not GDP per capita). Hence, in our view, metal intensity of GDP is a more important variable to monitor than per capita metal consumption.

Zarathustra: The reason is that, according to Nomura, the per-capita analysis ignores the composition of China’s GDP growth. China’s investment driven growth is very metal intensive.

via The China-driven commodities super-cycle debate: Nomura edition.