Baltic Dry

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Baltic Dry Drops Another 4%, Below 2000, Longest Decline On Record Enters 31st Day





The Baltic Dry, which contrary to what some may claim, actually is one of the best leading indicators on global trade and thus the health of the economy, continues to plunge, and is now below 2000, hitting fresh 14 month lows, at 1940. It is now at the levels last seen during the March 2009 "generational" low, and just after the Lehman bankruptcy. Yet futures are up as initial claims beat expectations by 6,000 very statistically relevant people.

 
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Baltic Dry Index Slides 5% To 14 Month Low, 30th Consecutive Day Of Declines





After slumping 4% yesterday to close at 2,127, the Baltic Dry has plunged yet another 5% today, to close just above 2,000 at 2,018. This is the lowest level for the index in 14 months since May 5 of 2009 when it last traded by 2,000 and a reason for all Chinese trade "resurgence" bulls to reevaluate their thesis. Did China outsmart everyone, with the Yuan "reval" coming at a time when planned foreign trade would be de minimis? In the meantime, this is bad news for Australia and Brazil, and especially the AUD and the BRL, but who cares about facts anymore.

 
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Baltic Dry Index Dropping 4%, Posting Longest Consecutive Loss In 6 Years, Refutes Australian Optimism





The biggest reason for the runup in the JPYAUD and its immediate secondary carry derivative, the stock market, was the earlier announcement out of the RBA claiming all is clear, there is no bubble in China, there is no bubble in OZ real estate, and all the other usual talking points one would expect out of a central bank whose future is inextricably linked to the endless commodity stocking in China. And indeed, one glance at the far more neutral indicator of the Baltic Dry index paints a far more dire picture: the BDIY plunged 4% overnight to 2,127, posting the longest consecutive decline in 6 years at 28 days. Despite the optimism from the conflicted money printers, those whose livelihood actually depends on a ceaseless influx of goods into China and broader commodity trading in general, are not nearly quite so happy, having seen a drop in their margins by almost 50% in just over a month.

 
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Baltic Dry Approaching Sea Level, Just Above 1 Year Lows





The decoupling theorists are about to experience a second smackdown in 3 years. After the biggest bubble of 2008 blew up spectacularly and made beggars out of the Greek CEOs of various dry bulk shippers, only to see their fortunes go back to unchanged again, it looks like they may be retesting the benevolence of NetJets repo men for the second time. The BDIY chart has now completed a rather mutated head and shoulders, after dropping nearly two thousand points in the span of a month - the fastest plunge since the S&P 666 days.And with the Bank of China in liquidity salvage mode as reported earlier, look for much more gravity to come in this index.

 
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Baltic Dry Index Rolls Over





The Baltic Dry index, which is the closest proxy for China's bubbleliciousness, has dropped to one month lows, and continues accelerating its drop to the downside. The dry bulk shipping sector, which was the bubble of late 2007 and early 2008, does not appear poised to make a repeat appearance just yet. As concerns over commodity overstocking in China, and Australian extraction concerns courtesy of the recent supertax, keep investors awake at night, is CNBC's "favorite" index about to retrace its 2009 lows? Furthermore, if the recent Afghanistan raw material discovery is even close to scale, the next big "thing" in Asia will be the Railroad Dry index, as construction of the world's biggest railway hub in Kabul is likely already underway. Throw in a few nuclear power plants, a couple of smelters, discover some bauxite and soon Afghanistan will eclipse Australia and Brazil as the premier commodity production center in the world. Is it time for Jim O'Neill to rebrand the N-11 index, formerly known as the BRICs, to the A index?

 
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Baltic Dry Index Drop Accelerates





One word: Reundecoupling (was also very appropriate last year when the China thesis plummeted, but investors have 24 hour long-term memory).

 
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