David Fuller and Eoin Treacy's Comment of the Day
Category - Precious Metals / Commodities

    The Green Energy Transition Has a Chilean Copper Problem

    This article from Bloomberg may be of interest to subscribers. Here is a section: 

    Codelco’s production is down by about a fifth from only six years ago. After a double-digit-percentage drop in 2022, it’s expected to fall as much as 7% this year, to 1.35 million metric tons.

    Ore quality is deteriorating around the world as existing deposits are depleted and new ones are more difficult and costly to develop. “There’s no easy mining left—not in Chile nor the rest of the world,” said Sougarret at a shareholders meeting on May 2.

    Because Codelco is the world’s biggest copper supplier, its production wobbles have greater impact on a market where warehouse inventories are near their lowest levels in 18 years. The company’s travails also have tremendous impact on Chile’s economy: Copper accounts for more than half of the country’s exports and a significant share of the government’s income. President Gabriel Boric’s administration is budgeting a 40% drop in tax revenue from Codelco in 2023 at a time when it’s trying to boost social spending.

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    Dollar on Pace for Best Day in Nearly Two Months

    This article from Bloomberg may be of interest. Here is a section: 

    The US dollar is on pace for its biggest rise in nearly two months as concerns about a slowing US economy, hawkish policy messaging, a US debt-ceiling standoff and the solvency of regional banks supported havens. The pound fell after the Bank of England lifted its policy rate 25 basis points and indicated more hikes may be required to slow inflation.

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    Australia Pledges $1.4 Billion in Bid to Be Hydrogen Superpower

    This article from Bloomberg may be of interest to subscribers. Here is a section: 

    As countries compete for capital, investors and developers have said aggressive subsidies like the US Inflation Reduction Act — which provides $374 billion in funding for clean energy — will be needed to attract the vast investment required.

    The new measures are a “great first step,” Fortescue Metals Group Ltd. said in a statement on Wednesday. The Australian iron ore miner has ambitions to become one of the world’s biggest green hydrogen producers and plans to reach final investment decisions on five projects around the world this year.  

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    Platinum investors are finally taking note of South Africa's power problems

    This note from Heraeus may be of interest to subscribers. Here is a section: 

    Platinum ETFs saw heavy buying at the end of April from South Africa based funds. Year-to-date regional inflows into platinum funds in South Africa (+333 koz) are the standout when compared to the US (-107 koz), the UK (-18 koz) and Switzerland (-17 koz). Net flows have been positive every month this year so far, as South African investors are more acutely aware of the electricity supply issues being faced by PGM producers. Total global holdings stand at 3.3 moz, up from 3.0 moz at the beginning of the year, although that was down 1 moz from the peak level of holdings in July 2021.

    These investors bought into the recent price rally and hope for more. The platinum price had risen more than 20% since late February before the recent correction. Supply issues in South Africa (~75% of mined supply) are well documented. The regularity and severity of load-shedding in 2022 was unparalleled, with the situation unlikely to improve significantly during 2023. Load-shedding resulted in the build-up of above-ground stocks of unrefined PGMs last year and could lead to an estimated loss of ~250 koz of platinum production this year as the Southern Hemisphere winter begins to bite. Available first-quarter results of major South African PGM miners all cite load-shedding as impacting refined output to some degree.

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    Copper Mine Flashes Warning of 'Huge Crisis' for World Supply

    This article from Bloomberg may be of interest to subscribers. Here is a section: 

    Take not just Chile, with its revisions to fiscal policies for miners, but Peru, a country long considered crucial to the next wave of copper production, where the mining sector has been battered during lengthy social unrest. Rio in late March agreed to sell a controlling stake in its Peruvian mine La Granja to First Quantum.

    “What the market never predicted was how difficult South America would become,” said Radclyffe. “The uncertainty out of both Chile and now ongoing in Peru, that’s just added an extra level of complexity that the market never expected, and that hasn’t really been resolved.”

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    Bolivian Bonds Jump After Senate Approves Bill to Monetize Gold

    This article from Bloomberg may be of interest to subscribers. Here is a section:

    The country has burned most of its international reserves and recently faced difficulties to pay for fuel imports. The central bank stopped publishing reserves data in early February, when they stood at about $3.5 billion, out of which $2.6 billion was gold, suggesting only the precious metal is left.

    While the Arce administration says the ability to operate with its gold in markets will halt the “low liquidity” Bolivia is going through, opposition lawmakers criticized the bill by saying it’s not a structural solution to the current economic crisis.

    Senator Silvia Salame called it a “patch” to allow Arce’s administration to stabilize the country’s situation until the 2025 presidential elections.

    Finance Minister Marcelo Montenegro said the gold reserves will be replenished by buying the commodity from local producers
    in bolivianos.

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    US Vacancies Fall, Layoffs Jump in Sign of Softer Job Market

    This article from Bloomberg may be of interest to subscribers. Here is a section: 

    Vacancies at US employers fell in March by more than forecast and layoffs jumped, indicating softening demand for workers.

    The number of available positions decreased for a third-straight month to 9.59 million from nearly 10 million a month earlier, the Labor Department’s Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey, or JOLTS, showed Tuesday. That was the lowest in nearly two years and fell short of the median estimate in a Bloomberg survey of economists.

    The data point to a gradual moderation in labor demand, which should eventually bring the job market into better balance and alleviate upward pressure on wages. While some companies — notably in technology and finance — have cut employees, the labor market as a whole remains resilient and has been a stalwart between the US and recession.

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    Email of the day on combustion risk from EVs

    Email of the day on why uranium is not doing better.

    Dear Eoin, Why do you think the Uranium Miners ETF you have been holding has been disappointing of late? Is it all about "risk-off" and withdrawal of liquidity from the market? What makes you continue to hold? What would make you sell? Thanks! Kind regards, 

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    Email of the day on the timing of a gold bull market

    Dear Eoin-Hope you are doing well. You often mention in your daily videos that you expect a recession within the next 18 months and that you also expect gold to move considerably higher in a not too distant future. If I am not mistaken in the previous recessions gold went down considerably. I know timing is always very difficult if not impossible, but do you expect gold to break upwards before the recession or after the recession. As always thanks very much for your wonderful service. Best rgds

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