Health, Happiness, and Higher Rates

Health, Happiness, and Higher RatesHealth, Happiness, and Higher Rates

Health, Happiness, and Higher Rates. Now that the Fed has raised rates, there is more to celebrate than the holidays. Not only is the U.S. economy stronger, but 2016 may bring unique opportunities.

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Video Transcript

TOM BUTCHER: After much anticipation, the Federal Reserve (Fed) announced that it is raising short-term interest rates for the first time in nearly a decade. Jan, it looks as if we are wishing our clients health, happiness, and now higher rates this holiday season.

JAN VAN ECK: I think it is indeed a reason to celebrate because I think the Fed is saying that the U.S. economy is strong enough to withstand a normalization of monetary policy. It started a year ago with a roll-off of QE3, i.e., the third round of quantitative easing. Now it seems that the Fed is comfortable enough with U.S. labor statistics and the global economic situation, which had caused the Fed to delay this rate hike a couple of times in 2015. First, I think turbulence in Europe and the strengthening U.S. dollar against the euro concerned the Fed; then came [stock market] turbulence in China over the summer. Now there is reason to celebrate and things are relatively good.

The question is: What are the implications of the rate hike on our asset classes? I think there are few direct implications. With respect to commodities, there is still much consolidation that needs to wipe through the markets, and if a normal cycle is upon us, commodities should bottom in the first quarter of 2016 [see 11/25 post]. We think that this process will continue largely unaffected by the Fed’s rate hike.

Additionally, growth is slow in the developed markets and China is slowing; global growth has been weak for two years now. There are many headwinds, and we think these trends will persist as well.

What gets us excited for 2016 is what we call growth spots, meaning sectors in different countries that may grow 20% or more, regardless of whether global growth is only 2%. That’s how we are looking at 2016, and the Fed’s interest rate hike doesn’t really impact that outlook.

BUTCHER: Thank you very much.

When Will Commodities Recover?

When Will Commodities Recover?

When Will Commodities Recover? Commodities have been in a multi-year bear market, with especially sharp drops in the past year. As commodity investors, this begs the question: When will commodities bottom and begin to recover?

The history of markets suggests that an upward cycle in prices is inevitable. Putting aside the fact that the fundamentals, in general, may support a turnaround, if this is a traditional commodity cycle – and that is a big caveat – investors may continue to wonder when the mayhem will end. We believe that it could be reasonably soon.

Non-fundamental, or technical, analyses can be helpful for timing cycles. Markets often move regardless of what fundamentals may indicate. The third quarter was a prime example of this phenomenon. We saw a huge, sudden fall in commodity prices, but there were no material changes in global demand. Additionally, there was no significant change in China’s economic growth; China’s growth was slowing well before the third quarter and we believe this trend will continue.

Our Analyses Point to the First Half of 2016

Assuming this is a normal cycle, and unless commodity prices fall much further, most of our analyses suggest a bottom may occur during the first half of 2016, and most likely in the first quarter.

We examined two different indicators: the length of prior cycles and long-term price momentum.

1) Prior Commodity Cycles

First, we looked at commodity cycles historically, as shown below in Chart A. Prior cycles suggest to us that the end of March 2016 might be the time to start buying. Past commodity downturns have generally lasted approximately 18 months. We’re 11 to 12 months into the current downturn, and six months more bring us to March, or the end of the first quarter of 2016.

Chart A: Commodity Cycles Usually Last 18 Months

Measure: CRB Commodity Composite Price Index1

1See CRB Commodity Composite Price Index definition below.
Notes: Shaded areas are longer periods of falling commodity prices (> 10 months).
Source: Financial Times, Haver Analytics, Deutsche Bank Research. Data as of October 2015.

A Closer Look at Oil Prices

Let’s look specifically at historical oil prices. WTI crude oil returns are currently near historic lows as shown in Chart B below. The lows of trailing 18-month price returns for WTI have historically been tested at approximately -50%. We have already seen these levels this year: as recently as September, October, and November.

Taking a different perspective on oil, we note that price cycles generally last 15 months. The length of the current downturn is 15 months. At least one prior crude supply/oversupply cycle (1994-2003) suggests getting invested now.

Chart B: Oil Prices Don’t Typically Correct More than 50%

Measure: WTI Crude Oil Price Returns, Trailing 18 Months

Notes: Red Line at -50%: Lows have historically been tested at approximately -50%.
Dotted Yellow Line at -25%: Longest period of < -25%=”” trailing=”” return=”” is=”” 17=”” />
Average period of < -25%=”” trailing=”” return=”” is=”” 6=”” />
Current period of < -25%=”” trailing=”” return=”” is=”” approximately=”” 11=”” months=”” (nov.=”” 2014=”” to=”” />
Source: Bloomberg. Data as of September 30, 2015.

2) Long-Term Price Momentum

We also looked at a long-term commodities momentum signal: the 250-day moving average. This indicator signals a ”buy” when the current price is above the 250-day moving average. As shown below in Chart C, the Morningstar Long/Flat Commodity Index (which uses the 250-day moving average) currently is less than 2% invested/long exposure in commodities. Let’s look forward and assume two possible price scenarios: 1) a bullish scenario that assumes prices increase 20%; and 2) a flat scenario that assumes commodity prices stay at current levels. The bullish scenario indicates that the Morningstar Long/Flat Commodity Index signal would be more than 50% invested in commodities by April 2016. The flat scenario pushes this 50% invested date out to August 2016. If you are a bullish investor, we believe the time to invest is some time in the first quarter of 2016, well before the final signal in August should prices stay flat.

Chart C: Using a Longer-Term Signal to Get Reinvested in Commodities

Measure: Morningstar Long/Flat Commodity Index2

2See Morningstar Long/Flat Commodity Index definition below.
Notes: Calculation based on current commodity weightings in Index and uses each commodity’s 250-day moving average; Index weightings adjusted on third Friday of month.
Source: Morningstar, Van Eck Research. Data as of November 5, 2015.

Van Eck’s Approach

Here at Van Eck, we are generally bottom-up investors, i.e., we deal in fundamentals. More precisely, we focus most of our attention on companies that can provide shareholder return despite what the markets might be doing. Of course you cannot really escape the markets, but we focus on companies with quality management teams that have the potential to add value.

Supply Drives Markets, Not Demand

Similarly, when we look at commodity markets, we focus primarily on supply. We don’t believe demand drives markets. We think that supply drives markets and that analyzing supply is a bottom-up, fundamental exercise. We look at particular markets for commodities and whether supply will increase or decrease based on the behavior of suppliers and producers.

When it comes to timing cycles, however, fundamentals may not always be the best bet. We believe it makes sense to mix technical and fundamental analyses, and given our current findings, we believe you should give serious thought to allocating to commodities.

Video: Commodities Poised to Rebound in 2016

My colleague Roland Morris, Commodities Strategist, goes into greater depth on how the current supply dynamics in commodity markets are positioning the space for a likely rebound in 2016.

Van Eck Views Blog

November 25, 2015
by Jan van Eck, CEO

An innovator of investment solutions, Jan van Eck has created a multitude of strategies spanning international, emerging markets, and commodities opportunities. van Eck plays a very active role in helping to shape the firm’s mutual fund, ETF, and alternative investment offerings. As CEO, his approach is guided by the wisdom gained from the firm’s 60 year history.

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1NYSE Arca Gold Miners Index (GDMNTR) is a modified market capitalization-weighted index comprised of publicly traded companies involved primarily in the mining for gold. 2Market Vectors Junior Gold Miners Index (MVGDXJTR) is a rules-based, modified market capitalization-weighted, float-adjusted index comprised of a global universe of publicly traded small- and medium-capitalization companies that generate at least 50% of their revenues from gold and/or silver mining, hold real property that has the potential to produce at least 50% of the company’s revenue from gold or silver mining when developed, or primarily invest in gold or silver. 3Tail risk is the risk of an asset or portfolio of assets moving more than three standard deviations from its current price. 4S&P 500® Index (S&P 500) consists of 500 widely held common stocks covering industrial, utility, financial, and transportation sectors. 5Dot-com bubble grew out of a combination of the presence of speculative or fad-based investing, the abundance of venture capital funding for startups and the failure of dotcoms to turn a profit. Investors poured money into internet startups during the 1990s in the hope that those companies would one day become profitable, and many investors and venture capitalists abandoned a cautious approach for fear of not being able to cash in on the growing use of the internet. 6Source: Bloomberg.

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Too early to call definitive oil bottom

Too early to call definitive oil bottom

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