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Another Major Commodity Index Drops To 2009 Lows
Like the CRB before it, the S&P GSCI Index has dropped all the way back to its 2009 lows; will it find support there?
Another index bites the dust of the deflationary spiral. On August 3, we noted that the popular Reuters/Jefferies Commodity Research Bureau Index (CRB) had reached a dubious milestone. The index had gotten bludgeoned so badly that it had lost its entire roughly 85% gain following its 2009 low. Well, it took another 4+ months, but it has now been joined in that distinction by another major commodity index, the S&P GSCI index (GSCI). The GSCI made a low in 2009 at 305. It closed yesterday at 305.013.

What do we do with this information? Probably nothing, to be honest. It’s likely more of a trivial tidbit than anything else. Sure, it is quite likely that, looking out several months to a few years, the index has a good shot to be higher than it is now. That is merely a comment on its “oversold” condition, however.
As for the potential of this area to provide some sort of support, we’re not going to make that reach. The CRB kept slicing right through its 2009 low once it reached it. One factor that may potentially give the GSCI a better shot at finding support at its prior lows is the fact that more money is tied to this index. That is, more funds, etc. track the GSCI than the CRB. Thus, if there is a technical case to be made for support coming in at the 2009 lows, it is stronger for the GSCI than it was for the CRB.
Outside of that long shot, finding a commodity bottom continues to be about as difficult as finding Keyser Soze.
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Looks to me like a 10 trillion dollar derivatives ship about to capsize. I'm just saying.
It's been a very difficult few years for those of us trading paper for real stuff (i.e. commodity investors). I don't see it turning around anytime soon, either.
-Argenta
When it does turn, it'll happen when you least expect it and 'asymmetrically' - in the case of the U.S., foreign policy...
94 million barrels of oil are produced everyday in this world. Oil prices are down about $90 a barrel. That works out to a revenue loss of $3.1 trillion out of a world GDP of $70 trillion or so,
Commodities will suffer until oil recovers
Falling oil prices and the plunging ruble are not some kind of free market accident brought on by oversupply and weak demand. That’s baloney. They’re part of a broader geopolitical strategy to strangle the Russian economy, topple Putin, and establish US hegemony across the Asian landmass. It’s all part of Washington’s plan to maintain its top-spot as the world’s only superpower even though its economy is in irreversible decline.
http://www.globalresearch.ca/did-the-u-s-and-the-saudis-conspire-to-push...
The anniversary of 9/11 approaches and I don't usually buy in to conspiracy theories, but did you spot that if you add 9 and 11 you get 20.
And that is curiously the average IQ of an American
Happy Holy Days to all ZH'ers
.. and all your children are above average./s
Silver.