Iron ore taking a bit of a pounding and will affect the majors likes of BHP, RIO, VALE, FMG.AX In Australia these are paying dividends atm so will take a short term hit anyway. Looking back several years, 120 would be about my target for re-entry for iron ore stocks or a touch lower perhaps. 50% retrace maybe.
Ya it is going gangbusters and then today caught some more updraught with NWE.AX (natural gas). Holding is a good plan. So no complaints today even though mkt getting hammered elsewhere.
Life coming to an end for palladium which primarily is used in combustion engine catalytic converters? Price is rapidly peeling off atm.
Uranium’s resurgence from 10 years of obscurity Alex Gluyas Markets Reporter Sep 10, 2021 https://www.afr.com/markets/commodi...ce-from-10-years-of-obscurity-20210909-p58q44 Ten years ago, an earth-shattering magnitude nine earthquake sent a 15-metre tsunami crashing through the sea wall of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, disabling the power supply and cooling of three reactors, and triggering a nuclear meltdown. The chemical explosions that ensued sent radioactive material leaking into the atmosphere and Pacific Ocean, creating what is known as the second-worst nuclear calamity in history, behind the Chernobyl disaster 25 years earlier. Fukushima’s nuclear reactors were fuelled by uranium, which consequently suffered a demand shock and prolonged downturn as mines shut or entered care and maintenance. The spot price traded in a depressed range of $US20 to $US30 a pound – not nearly high enough to encourage production. But after a decade in the shadows, the sector has been jolted back to life within just a few weeks thanks largely to the Sprott Physical Uranium Trust (SPUT). The vehicle is in the midst of a buying frenzy of physical uranium, taking supply out of the market and boosting the spot price to $US40.40 a pound – its highest level in seven years. “There’s been so much fuel on the floor of the uranium market given it’s been such an undersupplied commodity,” the portfolio manager of Tribeca’s global natural resources fund, Ben Cleary, said. “The match to set this on fire has been Sprott buying spot [uranium].” The world’s largest energy consumer expects to reach 200 gigawatts by 2035, with six to eight new plants being approved every year from 2021 to 2025. “This year has been a watershed year for uranium as a baseload power for the green economy and a decarbonising world,” Mr Cleary said. Earlier this week, Taro Kono, who is a candidate to become the next prime minister of Japan, said restarting nuclear power plants was needed for the country to reach its net zero goals. Local players The surge in uranium’s spot price has sparked widespread upgrades for miners of the commodity that have already rallied this year. In a sector report this week, Shaw&Partners upgraded its long-term price forecast from $US52 to $US60 a pound. It assumes a multi-year price spike at $US85 a pound.