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Monday, October 5, 2009
Open Interest Surge Signals Peak as Traders See Slump
Investors are snapping up commodities at the fastest pace in 18 months just as stockpiles of raw materials rise and shipping rates plunge, signaling that prices may be poised to fall. Open interest, or contracts yet to be closed, liquidated or delivered, rose 6.6 percent in the third quarter for the 20 most traded U.S. commodities, exchange data compiled by Bloomberg show. That’s the steepest gain since the first three months of 2008, just before the credit market freeze sent prices plunging from records.
While the U.S. economy shows signs of bottoming after the deepest financial crisis since the Great Depression, supplies of raw materials are growing faster than demand. Oil inventories rose 15 percent in the past year, Energy Department figures show. The Baltic Dry Index, a barometer for raw material demand, slid 41 percent in the third quarter. Alcoa Inc., the largest U.S. aluminum company, will report an adjusted loss of 83 cents a share this year, based on the average estimate of analysts. “We’ve been moving out of our commodity holdings and into cash,” said Peter Sorrentino, who.....Read the entire article
Labels:
Alcoa,
Baltic Dry Index,
Bloomberg,
commodities,
Peter Sorrentino
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