Printed and electronic copies are for personal use. Any unauthorized distribution by fax, email or any other means is prohibited and is in violation of copyright. If you are interested in redistribution, reprints or a subscription, please contact us at subscriptions@indexuniverse.com or 212.579.5833.

  

The Looking Glass: Shopping For Commodities
Written by Joseph Clark  -  August 20, 2008 14:35 PM
Related ETFs: DBA / EWZ / IEZ / IYM / SLX

 

The rapid rise in commodity prices in the second quarter made no sense whatsoever from an honest supply or demand perspective. Speculators jumped on the opportunity to profit in the commodities market just as they would any stock that was rising or dropping in value. 

Unlike long-term investors, of course, speculators exit the ride when the trip is over. And for now, they've left the commodity patch—at least for awhile.

As of early Wednesday, oil was trading around $116 a barrel. That was down from $147 near the end of last quarter. And after corn had gotten up to close to $8 per bushel, it's now trading at about $5.65 a bushel.

A handy way to measure oil's rise and fall is to check the U.S. Oil Fund (AMEX: USO). The exchange-traded fund's share price hit $118 in the first week of July before falling to $92.74 on Tuesday.

If you were long oil, you've been spanked in the past five weeks. The same holds true for any of the commodities ETFs and exchange-traded notes. For example, the Market Vectors Steel ETF (AMEX: SLX) peaked at $114 a share in May. Today, it's trading around $78, representing more than a 30% drop.

A way to play agriculture is through the PowerShares DB Agriculture (AMEX: DBA). The exchange-traded fund was trading at $26 per share in August 2007. By this February, it was up to $41 per share; now it's around $35 a share. The ETF owns not only corn but wheat, soybeans and sugar.

Demand Vs. Speculation

If you're a long-term investor, you should understand that commodities markets of all types are going to see a lot of fluctuations in pricing over time. Given the nature of this beast, it's important to focus on real long-term demand characteristics of these markets. Try to separate those from more short-term speculation that tends to creep into global commodities pricing.

My suggestion would be to pause and prepare a shopping list and wait for at least Christmas or Thanksgiving. In the third quarter, you often have events come together in a perfect storm. A lot of the professional traders are on vacation or take a break from watching markets every day. Often in this quarter, stock market leaders earlier in the year pause and catch their breath.

We've already seen that play out in natural gas, steel and international exchange-traded funds. But it might take longer for this market to shake out. Trying to time when all of its moving parts will create a perfect storm in the short term is a fool's game.

We know that speculation has driven much of the run in commodities. Whether those prices settle for a month or a year is relative—what we're trying to add to our shopping list are the ETFs that add true value and are driven by real demand as measured by long-term demographic trends.


 

My shopping list in this case should probably have some iShares Dow Jones U.S. Basic Materials (NYSEArca: IYM). It has already been battered by speculation as its share price hit a high of $89 in early July and now trades around $73.

This fund has Monsanto as its top holding, and more than 50% of this index is in chemicals. So it stands to gain from a gradual rise in agricultural and commodities demand over time. And we think that the longer-term demand picture for IYM is very strong.

Also on our long-term shopping list would be some iShares MSCI Brazil Index (NYSEArca: EWZ). The ETF is linked to my favorite "emerged market." The great Brazilian oil company Petroleo Brasileiro SA Petrobras is the top holding in EWZ. It represented more than a 23% exposure in the ETF as of July 31. Clearly, EWZ will benefit with ever-increasing global demand for oil.

Equation 101

In our portfolios for clients, we're also considering sprinkling in a touch of DBA. To some degree, it figures to piggyback off the plight of IYM. In a sense, IYM is to DBA what EWZ is to the iShares Dow Jones U.S. Oil Equipment Index (NYSEArca: IEZ).

As a broader-based agricultural play, DBA is exposed to four commodities, while some of the manufacturers in IYM provide the technology and other resources that producers of these commodities need.

IEZ might make our shopping list as well. Not only do we get more exposure to oil producers in this ETF, we also have exposure to the companies that service them.

We already own a few of these funds, but we're still looking for some more "specials" before filling the cart. If you like to cook, you understand that you are constantly working on recipes that will make your guests' mouths water from the smell alone. Even though you have your list of goodies, you may not go to the store today.

Keep in mind that given the present situation, the plan we would implement is to keep these for a longer-term purchase. But you've got to take out the looking glass and make sure the underlying holdings in each ETF meets with your approval before purchasing.


Joseph "Big Joe" Clark is managing partner of the Financial Enhancement Group LLC. He's a regular contributor to IndexUniverse.com and can be reached at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it .