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Agribusiness Outshines Gold
Written by Brad Zigler   
November 13, 2007 12:25 pm EST


Agribusiness, in fact, has been outshining gold over the past year, cranking out twice the yellow metal’s appreciation. A year ago, gold’s price was fixed by London dealers at $623 an ounce. Yesterday, an ounce of bullion fetched more than $803. Holding gold, before costs, would have afforded an investor a nearly 2 % gain for the year.

Not bad. Especially in light of the contemporaneous, and tepid, 4% gain notched by domestic blue-chip stocks.

The DAXglobal Agribusiness Index (DXAG)—a benchmark 37 stocks wide—grew 66% in the past 12 months alone. DXAG is maintained by Germany’s Deutsche Boerse, and represents a cross section of global companies involved in agrichemical and biofuel production as well as livestock, grain and oilseed operations. Equipment manufacturing also figures prominently in the DXAG mix.

Increasing demand for farm products from consumers and industry has translated into revenue growth for agrichemical companies such as Monsanto Corp. (MON), Mosaic Co. (MOS) and Potash Corp (POT). Mosaic’s NYSE-listed share price has tripled over the past year as a result.

Likewise, inventories of farm equipment from Deere Co. (DCO) and Komatsu Ltd. (KMTUF) are being worked off. A near-doubling of Deere Co.’s stock price occurred in the past year.

The ascent in the stock price of producer Bunge Ltd. was recently chronicled in a HardAssetsInvestor.com commentary (see “I Wanna Be A Producer,” HAI News and Views, October 31, 2007).

Currency rates and U.S. trade policy are at the index’s back, too. Repatriating foreign sales into greenbacks has boosted profits of some U.S.-based component companies.

(More information on the DXAG index can be found at the Deutsche Boerse Web site).

 

 

Many speculators are being warned about the frothiness of the gold market. “What goes up must come down,” say old hands who’ve lived through commodity market cycles before. But what of commodity equity prices? Will agribusiness company stocks peak with gold?

There are no hard-and-fast rules to follow. In fact, George Bernard Shaw’s dictum says we shouldn’t even look for them: “The golden rule is that there are no golden rules.”

Stay tuned.



 

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Comments (5)

 Thursday, 15 November 2007 22:41 EST - Posted by Ken Burke

 
Dear Mr. Zigler:

A petty comment to be sure; however, if you are quoting The Bard, the word is glisters, not glitters. Not a very important distinction when someone is attempting to surgically extract a pound of flesh from you person. I enjoyed your George Bernard Shaw quote; I thought it was golden.

KB

 Friday, 16 November 2007 9:11 EST - Posted by Brad Zigler

 
Thanks, KB

I wasn't quoting Shakespeare; merely asking for a recitation.

The Bard, indeed, used the word 'glisters,' but I doubt his reference was to agribusiness. After all, his thought, 'Gilded tombs do worms enfold,' seems to refer to a market that's moribund, if not already dead.

 Saturday, 19 January 2008 1:00 EST - Posted by Mike

 
I've been looking for a mutual fund consisting of companies that supply, service, and participate in agriculture. To this point, I haven't been able to find any. Do you or someone else there know of any?

 Sunday, 10 February 2008 12:14 EST - Posted by Don

 
You may try having a look at the Saskatchewan wheat pool VT.TO it is a retailer to farmers in the Canadian grain belt,also is involved in shipping and storeage of grain products.distribution of fertilizer.it has been holding up well lately

 Wednesday, 13 February 2008 3:29 EST - Posted by Brad Zigler

 
The Market Vectors Agribusiness ETF (Amex:MOO) is based upon the DAXglobal Agribusiness Index, a 40-stock benchmark of worldwide companies involved in agrichemical production, agricultural/livestock operations and equipment manufacturing.



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  About Brad
Brad Zigler's stints as a contributing
editor for the Corporate Communica-
tions Broadcast Network, the Journal
of Indexes, and CRB Trader have set
the stage for his current role as manag-
ing editor of HardAssetsInvestor.com.

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