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gfp927z

06/26/23 7:44 PM

#288 RE: bigworld #240

Bigworld, With the metals, it should be interesting to see if silver can hold at its 200 MA. I know you aren't a chart guy, but since last Sept the SLV chart (like the overall stock market) is back in uptrend mode, with higher highs and higher lows, and has formed a near perfect upward sloping channel. But I figure it might have one more move downward, to go below the 200 MA first before resuming the uptrend (as happened in March). That would put the SLV at 20, but either way it seems like silver is in a good area to add/accumulate for the longer term.



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gfp927z

06/27/23 12:43 AM

#290 RE: bigworld #240

>>> Playing Copper’s ‘Generational Shift’


ETF.com

by Heather Bell

February 14, 2023


https://finance.yahoo.com/news/playing-copper-generational-shift-213000235.html


A “generational shift” may be coming to copper markets thanks to the net-zero energy trend, BNY Mellon’s Al Chua recently told CNBC. Investors may be curious to know how to participate as this unfolds.

Copper is a crucial metal for green technologies. Goldman Sachs analysts have gone as far as labeling it “the new oil” and “the most cost-effective conductive material” in a research piece published in May. S&P Global last year projected that copper demand may double by 2035.

While short-term demand is expected to strengthen as China’s economy reopens, global climate goals are likely to keep that demand high.

Every renewable energy pretty much needs copper, because if you’re talking about electrifying something and transmitting electricity, you need copper,” Chu said in the CNBC article.

Playing Copper

Four exchange-traded products—including two equity funds and two futures-based products—provide exposure to copper, and significant differences separate all of them. Since that Goldman research was published in May, the $1.9 billion Global X Copper Miners ETF (COPX) has pulled in more than $97 million, while both the futures-based products have seen outflows.

That’s not shocking —investors can be fickle about futures-based products largely due to their complexity and inherent risks.

The United States Copper Index Fund (CPER) has $154.6 million in assets under management and tracks an index that relies on an optimization process to select the futures contracts it rolls into in an effort to avoid the effects of contango. It comes with an expense ratio of 0.85% and is structured as a commodities pool.

The $67.8 million iPath Series B Bloomberg Copper Subindex Total Return ETN (JJC) is structured as an exchange-traded note, tracking an index that weights contracts by liquidity and production. It has an expense ratio of 0.45%.

Despite this, the two futures-based products exhibit fairly similar performance. Both are up about 7% year to date.

New Addition

Most recently, Sprott rolled out the Sprott Junior Copper Miners IETF (COPJ) at the start of February. That fund has very little in assets, but by targeting smaller-sized copper miners, it offers a slightly different perspective than COPX. These tend to be companies with a lot of growth potential because of their small size but also more risk because they are often not yet at the producing stage. As a result, they often fail.

If you’re looking for relatively hassle-free exposure to the performance of copper, COPX is probably the best choice. It’s also the least risky of the four products. Unlike with COPJ, its holdings are all established producers. In fact, there is no holdings overlap between the top 10 holdings of the two funds.

The two futures-based products, although they offer more direct exposure to the price of copper, carry the potential for the volatility that accompanies the performance of many commodities as well as the risk of contango and roll costs. And while CPER comes with the burden of a K-1 form at tax time, JJC, as an ETN, has counterparty risk attached to it.

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