Wednesday, February 3, 2010

Copper: Market Top?

Copper, the metal with the Ph. D. in economics, has retreated some 12% over the last 4 weeks. Possible causes include: 1) slowing economic growth; 2) withdrawal of stimulus money worldwide especially in China; 3) supply demand imbalances; and 4) bubble dynamics that has seen excessive speculation in the metal.

Now this article courtesy of Bloomberg and Trader Mark at FundMyMutualFund blog: "Copper Market Set For 'Catastrophe', says Threlkeld". David Threlkeld is president of metals trader Resolved, Inc, and apparently he gained notoriety in 1996 by calling the top in copper. He believes that similar dynamics - excessive supply and speculation -- exist in the current copper market that could lead to prices dropping over 50% from the current levels.

Possible? Anything is possible. So let's look at the technical picture to see what is really going on.

Figure 1 is a weekly chart of a continuous copper contract (symbol: @HG.C) stretching back to 1989. The indicator in the lower panel measures the number of negative divergence bars occurring between price and an oscillator that measures that price action. As we have shown many times before (see this link and this link) across multiple markets, a clustering of negative divergence bars implies slowing price momentum. Often, a cluster of negative divergence bars is a technical finding seen at market tops, but it doesn't have to be part of every market top. In any case, we now have a clustering of negative divergence bars, and this technical pattern was also seen at the 1996 top in copper that Mr. Threlkeld references.

Figure 1. Copper/ weekly

Figure 2 is another weekly chart of a continuous copper contract. Key pivot points are designated on the chart by the teal dots within the black dots; normal pivot points are in red and teal. Key pivot points are special pivot points as they are a pivot point low occurring at a time when investor sentiment towards an asset is bearish. Typically, these price levels are an area of strong buying or selling that result in either support or resistance.

Figure 2. Copper/ weekly

The key pivot point at 3.0998 should have been support, but copper broke through this level and this area is now resistance. The next area of support comes in at 2.6299, and this also coincides with a rising trend line. This is about 12% below the current price.

Price dynamics or how price "should" behave would suggest that a bounce should occur. If this were to happen, then one could envision a head and shoulders topping pattern forming on the chart.

In sum, Mr. Threlkeld's "call" seems plausible. Technically, the warning signs are present. It seems likely that if such a scenario plays out, it will be months in the making.


2 comments:

Greg Merrill said...

Ironic that I just blogged about this from a fundamental angle. Hopefully copper will have a nice bounce from this selloff and I can initiate some short positions

http://merrillovermatter.blogspot.com/2009/12/how-many-more-days-until-copper.html

Anonymous said...

I have been wondering the high copper price while the LME inventory climbs to what is probably an all-time high. The value of the inventory is not very big, just 0.5 million tonnes * $6,000 = $3 billion. Quite little investment money for buying copper may affect the metal price substantially. The end result of the speculation should be a crash in copper price.

--McTurska