Please watch my new YouTube video: You should own more commodities

Please watch my new YouTube video: You should own more commodities

I’m starting up my videos on JubakAM.com again–this time using YouTube as a platform. My one-hundredth-and eighth YouTube video “You should own more commodities” went up today. We all know that oil and gas prices will rise even more as a result of the invasion and you’ve probably added oil and natural gas stocks to your portfolio. I recommended that you do that back in January. But did you know that aluminum prices will soar too? Same with zinc. And wheat. The list goes on. There are a few individual stocks – like LNG and AA – I recommend to get yourself on top of this situation, but I also recommend looking at commodity ETNs like DJP which include agriculture as well as energy stocks in one basket.

Please watch my new YouTube video: Quick Pick Alcoa

Please watch my new YouTube video: Quick Pick Alcoa

I’m starting up my videos on JubakAM.com again–this time using YouTube as a platform. My one-hundredth-and third YouTube video “QuickPick Alcoa” went up today. This week, my Quick Pick is Alcoa (AA). Like in other commodities, with aluminum we are seeing a supply deficit amidst growing demand. Plus, Alcoa is paying down its debt, and generating a positive cash flow which has led the company to announce a dividend payment and re-institute stock buybacks.

I’m adding Alcoa to my Jubak Picks Portfolio as a hedge against Ukraine risk and as a commodity boom play

I’m adding Alcoa to my Jubak Picks Portfolio as a hedge against Ukraine risk and as a commodity boom play

Today I’m adding shares of Alcoa (AA) to my Jubak Picks Portfolio. At 3:10 p.m. today, February 18, the shares were up 2.01% on the day. My target price for the shares is $93. The pick is a short-term hedge against sanctions against Russia if the Ukraine/Russia conflict escalates further. Russia supplies 6% of the world’s aluminum and I’d expect European and U.S. sanctions to hit those exports. The pick is longer term bet on the continued rise in demand for aluminum and a continued and growing shortage of supply.

Copper is back on a roll–adding shares of First Quantum Minerals to Millennial Portfolio tomorrow

Copper is back on a roll–adding shares of First Quantum Minerals to Millennial Portfolio tomorrow

Copper prices rose 3.54% on the London Metals Exchange today to $10,064 a metric ton. And that looks like just the beginning of a classic commodity run based on supply shortages in the copper industry and increases in demand from growth in electric cars and renewable energy technologies. Inventories at the London Metals Exchange now sit at multi-year lows. Goldman Sachs recently increased its forecast for copper to $12,000 a metric ton and sees a 20% upside for copper in 2022. Bank of America recently put a $20,000 price target on copper by 2025. Today, January 12, copper stocks were on the march.

This coffee ETN is up 73% in 2021 to date and looks to have more potential ahead

This coffee ETN is up 73% in 2021 to date and looks to have more potential ahead

But 2021 has been very, very good to the iPath B Bloomberg Coffee Total Return ETN (JO). A series of disruptions–weather in Brazil and Colombia, a shortage of shipping containers that curbed exports from Vietnam, a civil war in Ethiopia–sent coffee prices to a 10-year high on November 30. Despite the global Pandemic depressing demand from consumers who didn’t venture out of coffee shops during the worst of the virus outbreak. Now after a 73% gain for 2021 to date the question for investors after the is how much higher can coffee prices and this coffee ETF go?

The trend for the next year or two looks positive.

China Evergrande contagion spreading to rest of Chinese economy

China Evergrande contagion spreading to rest of Chinese economy

In September new home prices across 70 cities in China fell for the first time in six years. The drop of 0.08% is more significant than the absolute number seems because China counts on property-related industries for almost a quarter of its GDP. And because real estate is a primary source of budget cash for local governments. The timing is troubling. September is traditionally a peak season for the China’s new home market.

People’s Bank supports markets (and Evergrande) a little bit

People’s Bank supports markets (and Evergrande) a little bit

I’d call the policy being followed by the People’s Bank in the China Evergrande crisis “Try to support the markets but see how little we can get away with.” Today Chins’s central bank supplied liquidity to the country’s financial markets with an injection of short-term cash. But the move fell far short of the kind of “Charge of the People’s vanguard” that the bank has mustered in earlier crises. And, importantly, there was no big statement of market support to go with today’s actions.

Adding MOO to the Perfect 5 ETF Portfolio

Adding MOO to the Perfect 5 ETF Portfolio

It’s tempting right now to say “To hell with diversification; let’s put everything into U.S. stocks. After all, they’re outperformed most asset classes for most of 2020 and for the year to date.” That’s exactly the kind of thinking, however, that gets an investor into trouble when an asset class is trading near a historic high. A time like this, like now, is exactly when you should be looking to make sure that you’ve got decent balance in your portfolio. And, to the degree you can, own stuff that will go up when other stuff goes down. Which is why I’m adding shares of the Van Eck Agribusiness ETF (MOO) to the Perfect 5 ETF Portfolio today

Today the market looks a lot like “before the Fed Wednesday”

Today the market looks a lot like “before the Fed Wednesday”

Remember way back at the beginning of last week? That is before the Federal Reserve signaled on Wednesday that more of the members of its Open Market Committee were thinking about raising interest rates sooner than previously expected. Re-opening stocks, value stocks, and cyclical stocks led the market. The small cap Russell 2000 was the best performing of the major indexes. Well, they’re back