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Get Ready for a Boom in Copper

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chaikinanalytics.com

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Tue, Aug 6, 2024 12:47 PM

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A new crime wave is sweeping across the U.S... Thieves are robbing urban infrastructure for copper.

A new crime wave is sweeping across the U.S... Thieves are robbing urban infrastructure for copper. [Chaikin PowerFeed]( Editor's note: Today, we're introducing you to the newest member of the Chaikin Analytics team... Joe Austin just joined our team as a senior analyst. Before that, he spent four decades in the financial-services industry... Joe began his Wall Street career as a research analyst for the technology sector in 1984. He also served as a senior portfolio manager on a more than $10 billion value equity product and a $80 million long-short science and tech hedge fund. And he provided research coverage of the tech sector for a $5 billion hedge fund. In the second half of his career, Joe moved into marketing and business development for alternative asset managers. In this role, his strategies included global long-short equity, distressed debt and activist equity, and a natural resource-focused private equity fund. Joe has worked with all sorts of investors in his long career – including endowments, foundations, pension funds, investment consultants, and some of the country's wealthiest and most prominent families. And now, Chaikin Analytics founder Marc Chaikin brought Joe on board to share his knowledge with individual investors like you. We're excited to share insights from Joe here at Chaikin Analytics – including his first essay today... Get Ready for a Boom in Copper By Joe Austin, senior analyst, Chaikin Analytics A new crime wave is sweeping across the U.S... Thieves are robbing urban infrastructure for copper. They're removing streetlamps and stealing the wires, leaving highways and bridges dark. And they're cutting fire hydrants off their bases to get to the copper material inside... leaving entire neighborhoods without emergency water. That's not all... Thieves are even raiding cemeteries for memorial statues and plaques made from copper. It comes down to high copper prices. And as I'll explain today, this issue isn't going away... Recommended Links: [RELEASING THIS MORNING: Biggest Breakthrough in 25 Years]( "This is how I'd invest $1 million right now," says legendary investor Whitney Tilson. He'll be using the Monte Carlo method to see which of 4,817 stocks could double your money. [Click here to learn more, before it goes offline in 72 hours](. [BEWARE: 'The Most Dangerous Investment in America Today']( MarketWise CEO Porter Stansberry accurately predicted the world's largest mortgage brokers – Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac – were headed toward bankruptcy. He did the same with General Motors in January 2007. Now, he's issuing a new warning about what you should sell immediately (this will surprise you). [Find out more here](. Copper prices have been rising in recent years. In fact, over the past five years, they're up about 54%. Meanwhile, consumers of copper are already worried about shortages. And there could be major struggles over supply ahead... Keep in mind that new mines take about 18 years on average to start production. Chances of some new, big sources of supply becoming available are remote. That means a tight market, if not worse, for the foreseeable future. And copper is widely used. It's in houses, cars, electronics, and much more. The International Copper Study Group ("ICSG") says the world will consume around 27 million metric tons of copper this year. That's up about 2% from 2023. Right now, supply and demand aren't far out of balance. But farther out, things get tricky... According to the International Energy Agency ("IEA"), the supply of copper will peak sometime in the next two years. Then, it will start to decline. That means big gaps going forward. By 2035, the IEA believes that gap could be around 7 million metric tons. That's about a third of the forecast output for that year. For decades, copper demand grew and fell along with the economy. The metal has even been called "Doctor Copper" since it's historically a good measure of economic health. But that all started changing about 10 years ago... Across the globe, countries were thinking harder about reducing dependency on fossil fuels. Demand for copper accelerated. Copper's previously cyclical growth became steady growth. And that growth looks even more steady going forward. One of the biggest drivers is "green" energy. These technologies use a lot of copper... For example, electric cars contain between 3 and 5 times the copper as gas-engine cars. To generate a megawatt of power, solar and wind power plants take anywhere from 4 to 6 times as much copper as their fossil fuel-based counterparts. In fact, the chief operating officer of copper giant Rio Tinto (RIO) thinks that green energy will account for about 25% of total copper demand by 2050. Consider the power grids, too... They carry electricity from producer to consumer. But across the globe, they've suffered from decades of under-investment. Many power grids are unreliable today. They're trying to carry far more electricity than they were ever intended to. Grid upgrades are critical. And they'll need to happen sooner rather than later. Upgrading and expanding the power grid will take a lot of copper. According to the IEA, copper demand for grid lines is expected to more than double in the next decade-plus. Put simply, grid upgrades and expansion will account for massive demand. On the supply side, the world is already producing pretty much all we can annually. Copper is a highly developed resource, so we also have a decent idea of what's left in the ground. By 2040, the available supply of copper will be roughly two-thirds of what we produce today. But by then, the demand for copper will have soared far higher than where it is today. Half of that increase comes from economic growth. The other half comes from grid investment and green-energy expansion. There's a wild card, too... I'm talking about China. Since 2000, the country's share of global copper consumption has soared. Specifically, it's up from a single-digit percentage back then to more than half of all consumption today. Meanwhile, Chinese manufacturing has been lower overall for the past couple of years. If it bounces back, an equilibrium in copper today could turn into a deficit sooner than we think. Putting it all together, copper demand is set to take off in the years ahead. And from an investing standpoint, we can't ask for a better outlook... Amid higher demand for copper, I've got my eye on the United States Copper Index Fund (CPER). Unlike other copper-themed exchange-traded funds ("ETFs"), CPER tracks the price of copper through the futures market. Good investing, Joe Austin Market View Major Indexes and Notable Sectors # Hld: Bullish Neutral Bearish Dow 30 -2.6% 4 19 7 S&P 500 -2.98% 93 305 98 Nasdaq -3.0% 11 56 32 Small Caps -3.22% 430 1124 411 Bonds +0.53% — According to the Chaikin Power Bar, Small Cap stocks are somewhat more Bullish than Large Cap stocks. Major indexes are mixed. * * * * Sector Tracker Sector movement over the last 5 days Utilities +1.09% Real Estate -0.83% Staples -1.04% Health Care -2.15% Communication -2.5% Materials -3.78% Industrials -4.28% Energy -5.24% Financial -5.79% Discretionary -7.75% Information Technology -8.09% * * * * Industry Focus Capital Markets Services 13 45 5 Over the past 6 months, the Capital Markets subsector (KCE) has outperformed the S&P 500 by +5.30%. Its Power Bar ratio, which measures future potential, is Strong, with more Bullish than Bearish stocks. It is currently ranked #7 of 21 subsectors and has moved down 2 slots over the past week. Top Stocks [rating] PIPR Piper Sandler Compan [rating] BK The Bank of New York [rating] VIRT Virtu Financial, Inc * * * * Top Movers Gainers [rating] K +16.23% [rating] TSN +2.09% [rating] CRWD +1.91% [rating] AMD +1.75% [rating] CEG +1.73% Losers [rating] CZR -6.9% [rating] WBA -6.62% [rating] ETSY -6.57% [rating] INTC -6.38% [rating] NVDA -6.19% * * * * Earnings Report Reporting Today Rating Before Open After Close SRE, HSIC FOXA, DUK, J, BAX, MKTX, MPC, CEG, TAP, TDG, CAT, BR, VMC, WAT, BLDR ABNB, AIZ, AMGN, AXON, DVA, DVN, IFF, MOS, SMCI, STE, WYNN KVUE, YUM, UBER, TRMB, IDXX, FIS EXPD, ZTS No earnings reporting today. Earnings Surprises [rating] TSN Tyson Foods, Inc. Q3 $0.87 Beat by $0.20 [rating] O Realty Income Corporation Q2 $0.30 Missed by $-0.08 [rating] WMB The Williams Companies, Inc. Q2 $0.43 Beat by $0.06 [rating] PLTR Palantir Technologies Inc. Q2 $0.09 Beat by $0.01 [rating] OKE ONEOK, Inc. Q2 $1.33 Beat by $0.14 * * * * You have received this e-mail as part of your subscription to PowerFeed. If you no longer want to receive e-mails from PowerFeed, [click here](. You’re receiving this e-mail at {EMAIL}. For questions about your account or to speak with customer service, call [+1 (877) 697-6783 (U.S.)](tel:18776976783), 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. Eastern time or e-mail info@chaikinanalytics.com. Please note: The law prohibits us from giving personalized investment advice. © 2024 Chaikin Analytics, LLC. All rights reserved. Any reproduction, copying, or redistribution, in whole or in part, is prohibited without written permission from Chaikin Analytics, LLC. 201 King Of Prussia Rd., Suite 650, Radnor, PA 19087. [www.chaikinanalytics.com.]( Any brokers mentioned constitute a partial list of available brokers and is for your information only. Chaikin Analytics, LLC, does not recommend or endorse any brokers, dealers, or investment advisors. Chaikin Analytics forbids its writers from having a financial interest in any security they recommend to our subscribers. All employees of Chaikin Analytics, LLC (and affiliated companies) must wait 24 hours after an investment recommendation is published online – or 72 hours after a direct mail publication is sent – before acting on that recommendation. This work is based on SEC filings, current events, interviews, corporate press releases, and what we've learned as financial journalists. It may contain errors, and you shouldn't make any investment decision based solely on what you read here. It's your money and your responsibility.

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