Commodities Point To Stock Crash

 | Aug 14, 2015 01:00PM ET

I recently explained that it’s one thing for a central bank to artificially prop up its own stock market. It’s another thing entirely to even imagine doing something similar to falling oil prices. What’ll they do – buy oil futures? Give me a break.

Oil hit a six-year low this week. As I write this, it’s around $43, closer yet to the $42 target I forecast when oil bounced back to $63. After another tepid bounce, it will very likely fall to the $32 support level we saw in late 2008. John Kilduff, a leading oil analyst who will be speaking at our Irrational Economic Summit in Vancouver next month, sees this happening earlier than his original Christmas call.

But oil just got another kick in the shins this week when China decided to return to its old tricks again.

The People’s Bank of China's move to intentionally lowered its currency ‑- to fight the slowdown made all too obvious by an 8.5% decline in exports -- is fundamentally no different than injecting $0.5 trillion into its stock market’s bloodstream or buying empty condos to keep its real estate from tanking. It’s one economic manipulation after the other!

This raised concern over China’s demand for commodities. A weaker yuan probably means fewer imports, and so less demand. As a result, oil and other commodity prices slumped.

All of this might be just a segue way into a much greater point -- the overarching collapse in commodity prices that is already beginning to ravage the emerging world. This will only get worse in the years to come and will quickly take our own stock market down with it.

Commodity prices move in a 30-year cycle that has run like clockwork over the past century. Overall, it’s been pretty reliable since the early 1800s.

We’ve been in a “down cycle” since commodity prices peaked in mid-2008. And in line with the cycle, they won’t bottom out until around the early 2020s – likely by 2023 at the latest.

There are two major reasons for this:

No. 1: The demographic slowdown in developed nations, which affects demand.

And No. 2: The economic slowdown in China

The Chinese have dominated the consumption of industrial metals and energy for years to feed the country’s rapidly growing economy and global manufacturing export machine.

For these reasons, as much as commodities have fallen -- 57% overall and up to 80% in oil and 70% in iron and coal -- they still have further to fall in a series of continued crashes.

More importantly, this continues to be the best leading indicator of the global financial crisis ahead because it affects stock markets in both the emerging and developed worlds.

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Now, I’ve shown before how commodity prices move more in tandem with emerging market stocks. Much more so than a stock index like the S&P 500.

Look at the chart below. It compares two leading measurements for commodities and emerging stocks: the CRB Commodities Index and (ARCA:EEM), the ETF for emerging market stocks: