I am a professional ICT personnel, Chief System Analyst, blogger, Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer at Gatmond Internationals inc. and Country Director at Wake Up For Your Right Internationals USA (Nigeria Branch).
For
industrial metals and their producers, the uncertainties generated by
Donald Trump’s shock electoral victory come with a more than $500
billion silver lining.
That’s the amount Trump has signaled he’ll
spend to rebuild U.S. infrastructure and the reason copper rose to a
15-month high on Wednesday. Metal producers such as Freeport-McMoRan
Inc. and U.S. Steel Corp. soared while construction and mining equipment
maker Caterpillar Inc. climbed as much as 10 percent, the steepest
intraday gain in seven years.
While Trump vowed during the
presidential campaign to renegotiate trade deals and build a wall along
the Mexican border, he also pledged
to at least double Hilary Clinton’s estimated $275 billion, five-year
plan for roads, airports and bridges. That’s going to increase demand
for copper and other mined commodities, according to Jefferies Group
LLC.
“Both
candidates agreed that infrastructure spending is needed in the U.S.,
but Trump’s plan is more aggressive,” Jefferies analysts including Chris
LaFemina wrote in a note to clients. “He has called for $1 trillion of
infrastructure investment over the next decade, and he reiterated the
importance of infrastructure spending in his victory speech this
morning.”
“Trump is high risk but should be positive for Freeport,” the analysts wrote.
Freeport,
the largest publicly traded copper producer, rose as much as 9.3
percent to $13.22 Wednesday, sending its year-to-date rally beyond 90
percent. It is among the top-10 gainers on the S&P 500 Index for
2016. Jefferies expects Phoenix-based Freeport to break through $15 a
share over the next year.
Copper for delivery in three months rose
3.4 percent to settle at $5,413 a metric ton at 5:51 p.m. on the London
Metal Exchange after touching $5,443 a ton, its highest since July
2015. Most industrial metals recovered from earlier losses.
Steel Surge
Miners
are emerging from the worst commodities slump in a generation that
pummeled their debt metrics. Freeport lost 71 percent last year.
Steelmakers
fared even better on Wednesday, with U.S. Steel Corp. jumping as much
as 20 percent. The U.S. steel industry should stand out as “unique
beneficiary” of a Trump presidency, Jefferies analyst Seth Rosenfeld
said in a note, projecting protectionism to rise significantly.
Trump,
a Republican who has never held public office, defeated Democrat
Hillary Clinton after a campaign that exposed searing divides in the
American public. Trump will have a Republican-controlled Congress behind
him after the party shocked Democrats by keeping control of the Senate.
“Infrastructure
spending appears to be a top priority, and that was something
consistent through the entire election process,” Jason Bloom, director
of commodities and alternative products strategy at PowerShares in
Chicago, said in a telephone interview. “With significant infrastructure
spending in the U.S. and a Republican controlled Congress to work with,
it definitely makes sense industrial metals and materials would be
bullish.”
Volatility Forecast
Brazil-based steelmaker
Gerdau SA, which generates nearly 50 percent of its revenue from its
North American operations, isn’t worried the new U.S. president will
dramatically change the North American Free Trade Agreement.
“We
hope that President Trump’s government invests and this really affects
the steel sector and demand related to infrastructure," Andre Gerdau,
the company’s chief executive officer, said during a conference call to
discuss third-quarter results.
The Trump victory is likely to
drive volatility in metals and miners, Citigroup Inc. said in a note.
“We would expect the miners could outperform on a relative basis given a
backdrop of positive data coming out of China.”
Bullion,
meanwhile, surged as much as 4.8 percent to $1,337.38 an ounce in
London as investors sought haven assets, before paring gains as stock
markets curbed losses. A gauge of 16 senior gold producers rose as much
as 5.9 percent, the most since July, led by Newcrest Mining Ltd. and
Sibanye Gold Ltd.
While agreeing Trump’s victory will please gold
miners, Paul Conibear, CEO of industrial-metals miner Lundin Mining
Corp., said Trump’s victory is a setback for industrial metals which had
only recently begun to climb from the bottom of a multi-year rout.
“People
were getting more confident in improved demand in economies around the
world and I think this could set us back about a year," Conibear said
Wednesday in a phone interview from Boston.
That’s the amount of
time he believes it will take for Trump to put a new team in place,
enact new policies, and have the markets gauge the impact of those
policies.
“I think we’re going to see a lot of volatility until
Trump’s policies are clarified, until we see really what he’s going to
do with international relations,” Conibear said.
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