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Is The Bottom In For Lean Hogs?

By Nico Isaac
Thu, 09 Jul 2009 14:15:00 ET
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Over the last few months, lean hog prices have gone to slaughter: Up until late June, the market was hovering near its lowest level in six years.
It took the mainstream experts approximately .009 seconds to call out the giant pink Pig in the room: Swine Flu. Truth be told, the H1N1 virus is the fundamental Grand Pooh-Bah. Nothing tops this event in terms of its suggested negative influence on the pork industry. Already, hundreds of thousands of pigs have been culled, several countries have placed import bans on pig meat, and widespread panic has crippled its demand.
Here, the following news items from the first half of 2009 put two-and-two together:
  • "Swine Flu Story Will Dominate Lean Hog Futures. In the short-term, markets will react to the downside, possibly violently to the downside." (Inside Futures)
  • "Swine Flu Jitters Spark Sell-off In US Hogs." (Reuters)
  • "The loss of demand due to the H1N1 flu virus has likely been the single most significant factor in causing the failure of a spring pork price rally." (AP)
Nice theory. Problem is it doesn't pan out in reality.
(Lean Hogs: SEEN, not heard.The July 8 Daily Futures Junctures presents in-depth analysis and labeled close-ups that show where the next big move in hogs could be -- independent of the H1N1 rumors. Click HERE for the complete text)
Here are the facts: The lean hog market was "reacting to the downside" long BEFORE the words "Swine Flu" became synonymous with "Pandemic," "Panic," or "Plague." Hog prices broke out of a multi-month long sideways crawl on April 9, more than one week before the Center for Disease Control & Prevention (CDC) reported the first case of swine flu in the United States. (On April 17) On April 21, the CDC announced that "human-to-human transmission of this new influenza virus has occurred."
In the April 7 Daily Futures Junctures, long-time editor and Elliott Wave International's chief commodity expert Jeffrey Kennedy used NOT a flu strain, but a wave structure to gauge the bearish "internal" health of lean hogs. In that publication, Jeffrey presented the following close-up of hogs and wrote:
"Short-term wave patterns suggest that the end of a second wave [rally] is close at hand. One more modest push beyond 73.90 is all that is needed to finalize this wave... and signal that the decline from the March high is continuing. "
Now, after the tidal wave of selling, many mainstream experts suggest the end of hogs downtrend is here. "Russia's decision to lift a ban on live pigs and uncooked pork imports" is positive for the market, suggests one July 2009 Reuters. "There are further thoughts that a bottom is in."
Sorry Charlie: If the outbreak of swine flu didn't cause the fall in lean hog prices, its alleged waning isn't not going to ignite a rise either.
Don't fall into the fundamental trap. Find out what the objective analysis has to say via July 8 Daily Futures Junctures. Click HERE to get started with a risk-free subscription.

Tags: Commodities, lean hogs, Hogs, swine flu

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