Sharp opinions about mines and mining from Jack Caldwell
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Supercycle Bust II: stories from the mining industry

I can no longer resist commenting on the fall in metal prices that seems to be making a liar of every mining investment pundit. Here from InfoMine are some signals that things may be slowing down.

We currently have eight geologists who analyze mining company data and post it in a database that is accessible for a large fee. More and more people are signing up for this service. Seems there is an extraordinarily growing interest in data about mining companies on the part of investors.

I cannot help wondering if that means that fundamentals are suddenly coming back into fashion as a reason to sell or buy stock. Seems like the higher the metal price, and the higher mining stocks, the fewer the number of people who look at the mining company fundamentals before buying stock. Seems as though in times of high prices, people are buying on faith or simply following a herd instinct. In a falling market, they get selective.

Because of the increased demand for the InfoMine service, we are looking to hire more geologists, mining engineers, or intelligent people to undertake the analyses. Normally we cannot raise even a single resume from the mining industry-employed folk. Last week we were flooded by applicants for the new jobs. Seems that every single one of them is working for a junior mining company and every single one of them is terrified they are going to be laid off. Simply put: the job market is slackening.

InfoMine has a section called EduMine. It provides on-line courses on mining topics. Again the demand for these courses has soared. Just like, apparently, the number of people seeking to enroll in MBA courses has soared. Two similar indications of people’s insecurity about the security of their jobs. I believe that we are instinctively sensitive to unquantifiable factors that may affect our incomes and security. So we “see” or “feel” the downturn coming well before we can articulate it. Seems a lot of people are “seeing” things regarding jobs security. You decide if this is the cause, result, or predictor of metal price movement and share value.

Then there is the even more gloomy fact that we have now seen both presidential hopefuls in action in a church. And we realize that both are more interested in faith, redemption, and revenge than in the economy. The only difference between them is how quickly they will go to war, how soon they will prosecute a woman and her doctor for what is currently legal, and whom they will appoint to the Supreme Court. Neither seems to have a clear handle on, or for that matter an interest in, what to do to the energy issues or hence the economy and metal and share prices. The one will deliberate; the other will tell stories. Neither a good way to lead an economy or boost metal prices.

   PS: Then again this may all be the fault of the Chinese and the Olympics and soon enough all will get back to abnormal.  As one commenter puts it: “I have been looking for commodities as an asset class to bottom out as the Olympics come to an end. Beijing has effectively shut down 350 industries and an estimated 7 million cars are off the roads. No wonder world oil consumption is down. Just a 1-million-barrel swing in demand can swing the worlds marginal demand from a shortage to a surplus condition.”

1 comment

1 Martin { 08.21.08 at 6:56 am }

Well mining is real booming in Australia its not on a slow down. Websites providing mining information are getting a lot of traffic. New websites are coming up with unique ways to provide information for the mining industry some combining directory services with mining jobs and business networking, one such website is http://www.miningplazza.com.au.

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