le GROS malaise de mai dernier , n'est donc pas le pétage d'une bulle spéculative , , bulle dont les Hedge Funds seraient à l'origine ( version caballas média servie à l'époque )
mieux encore; et pour le cuivre tant suspecté de folie spéculative des HF , ces plus hauts de 5 ans sont le fait des COMMERCIAUX et non des Large Spec qui eux sont de plus en plus shorts !!
si c'est pas de la pure désinformation ça !!! alors que pendt ce temps la,
les commerciaux futures or et argent métal ,maintiennent envers et contre tout et ,surtout quelque soit le trend , une NET short position depuis de tres nombreuses années (depuis 20 ans pour l'argent métal et 5 ans pour l'or !! )... ce sont les 2 seuls marchés où vous pourrez observer ce phénoméne ...bizarre isn'it? ____________________
source midas via prudentbear et bloomberg
Meanwhile, here is a
PrudentBear report card this weekend on the commodities bear market:
Commodities bear market? Wheat surged 13%, posting its biggest weekly gain in 10 years. Corn gained 16%, its strongest week since 1988. Orange juice rose almost 16%. Nickel this week traded to a 19-year high, tin a 17-year high and lead a record high. Gold gained 2.8% to $590.4 and Silver 4.5% to $11.68. Copper added 0.7%, increasing y-t-d gains to 77%. November crude declined $1.19 to end the week at $58.57. November Unleaded Gasoline fell 2.4%, and November Natural Gas sank 11.9%. For the week, the CRB index rallied 1.1% (down 8.6% y-t-d), and The Goldman Sachs Commodities Index (GSCI) gained 2.8% (up 0.7% y-t-d).
http://www.prudentbear.com/creditbubblebulletin.aspThat commentary was before today which saw the base metals SOAR:
*Aluminum was up 2.16%.
*Zinc was up 5.51%.
*Lead was up 1.8%.
*AND COPPER was up 4.36%, some 15 cents!
What a day. Commodity bubble burst??? Not only that, this
Bloomberg review of copper today suggests not only that the hedge funds are not long, they are getting shorter, something initially presented to Café members by MIDAS a while ago:
Copper for delivery in three months gained $270, or 3.6 percent, to $7,730 a ton on the LME. The contract for December delivery advanced 10.5 cents, or 3.1 percent, to $3.518 a pound on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange.
Hedge-fund managers and other large speculators increased their net-short position in Comex copper futures by 8 percent to 13,287 contracts in the week ended Oct. 10 from a week earlier, according to U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission data. A short position is a bet on price decline.
Miners, producers and other commercial users were net-long 15,011 contracts, an increase of 3,073 contracts, or 26 percent, from the previous week, the Washington-based commission said in its Commitments of Traders report Oct. 13. The LME doesn't report similar data…
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601012&sid=aHHKPjx5_B8A&refer=commodities
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