Odd Lots - Jeff Currie on the Crazy Surge in Metals, And Why The Supercycle Has Years to Run
Episode Date: January 30, 2026The big story this year is the surge in metals. And it's really all metals. The ultimate industrial metal, copper, has been on a massive tear, but so has gold, which has very few industrial uses. And ...then, of course, silver has seen a blistering rally, in part due to massive buying in China. On this episode, we bring back the man who saw this coming years ago, Carlyle partner Jeff Currie. Prior to joining Carlyle, Currie was a top commodities analyst at Goldman Sachs, and has been calling for the emergence of a brand new supercycle for years now. In this episode, he explains the drivers of this supercycle, and why he thinks we're in the very early days of what will be a multi-year run. Read more:Gold Retreats in Sudden Selloff After Breaking Through $5,500China’s Metals Mania Sends Copper Soaring Past $14,500 a Ton Only http://Bloomberg.com subscribers can get the Odd Lots newsletter in their inbox each week, plus unlimited access to the site and app. Subscribe at bloomberg.com/subscriptions/oddlots Subscribe to the Odd Lots NewsletterJoin the conversation: discord.gg/oddlotsSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hello and welcome to another episode of the Odd Lots podcast. I'm Joe Wisenthall.
And I'm Tracy Allo. Tracy Meadows.
That's it. That's the episode.
It's the title.
No, you're right.
There's a lot happening in the metals space.
So we have gold above $5,500 an ounce, which is a record.
We have silver above $120 an ounce, also a record.
And now we have copper at over $14,400 a ton.
Yeah.
So this is something that's super interesting to me.
And I think it's a very important dimension, which is that copper is the ultimate industrial metal, right?
Right.
And for, you know, Dr. Copper tells us about the economy.
Probably a little overstated its reputation, but it's the ultimate industrial.
metal. Gold is the ultimate metal with no industrial uses, right? It's primarily a store of value,
a sort of form of money that's existed for thousands of years. And then silver is a little bit in the
middle. It's more of a safe haven, but we know it has, it's used in solar, it's used in photography.
Not that that really exists anymore. But you don't have a saying. So it's like, it's interesting
to see like, why are they all flying at the exact same time? Yeah, I was going to say the exact same thing.
So each of these metals historically would tell you something very specific about the state of the economy.
And copper certainly would be screaming people are bullish on economic growth.
Silver, you know, something kind of in the middle.
And gold, gold soaring is something that you traditionally associate with stress points either in the financial system or the broader global economy.
And yet here we are.
Yeah, it's all happening in once.
And, like, you know, you could say like, oh, dollar debasement, right?
And we know the dollar has been weak against other currencies.
It's not like inflation as measured, you know, is like raging hot.
So it's not just a simple story of like the dollar becoming worthless.
So the, you know, the denominator or whatever going up or whatever the other way around is, et cetera.
There's something going on with metals.
Maybe they're just the new meme stocks, et cetera.
But we have to, we have to dig in.
Yeah, let's do it.
All right.
Well, I have to say we really do have the perfect guest on the perfect day.
Again, we're recording this the morning of January 29th.
We're going to try and get it out ASAP.
But there's headline, copper surging 10%, unbelievable headlines.
We've had them on multiple times in the past, a believer in super cycles, a vindicated man in many respects with many of his calls.
He's a Goldman a long time.
We're going to be speaking with the one and only Jeff Curry, who is now a partner at
Carlisle knows commodities as well as anyone else we talked to. So Jeff, thank you so much for coming
back on the Outlots podcast. Great. Well, thank you having me. Commodities are up and back in favor.
It was a rough last couple of years to say the least. What do we, what do we just ask,
is this going to be the peak? Is this the peak? Yeah, that's the question. Is this the peak?
You're back on. Everyone's going to ask, is this the peak? Oh, did Adlauds get the peak? Because they called,
they ring Jeff Curry. So let's just get this out of the way. By the way, I love that. We're in the
foothills of the Himalayas right now. So we're not even close to the real mountain peaks yet.
Really? Yes. Okay. So I'm going to ask the obvious question, which we alluded to in the intro,
but why are all three of these things moving in the same direction all at once?
When you look at the commodity complex, you take anything that has an atomic number to it that's
in the periodic table, it's going up right now. Even nickel and zinc have joined the party.
if it is a molecule and it has a carbon in it, carbon hydrogen, a C-H in it, it's been struggling.
So that includes hydrocarbons as well as carbon hydrogens, like corn, wheat, and so forth.
So that space, the molecules have been struggling, yet you have the things that are primarily critical minerals,
things that are in the periodic table, the atomic number have all done well.
And the fundamentals in copper are not that much tighter than what you have in oil.
What's going on in the metal space is hoarding, given the concerns over having availability of these critical minerals.
And you threw out the idea of debasement.
And I want to throw in three other Ds, D dollarization and diversity to your debasement.
So debasement, de-dollarization and diversity is what's driving all of these.
different metals. And when we think about the de-dollarization, and that goes back to
2022 when the U.S. and Europeans froze the central bank assets of Russia, every emerging
market goes, uh-oh, I don't want to be owning any dollar-denominated assets because look what
happened to the Russians. And as a result, they're moving as fast as they can out of dollar
assets into assets that cannot be seized. And precious metals and metals are part
part of that. And then when you have the geopolitical risk as high as they are right now on a
global basis, whether it was U.S. cutting off Venezuelan oil supply to China, India, and Europe,
or it was the Chinese cutting off critical mineral supply to the U.S. and its allies, or it's
Russia cutting off supplies and natural gas. It's a dangerous time to be dependent upon foreign
commodity supply. And as a result, we have stockpiling. And everybody talks about the
squeeze in silver, running it up to $120 an ounce, the reality is this is a squeeze by the
population of the people in China. They're hoarding the silver over concerns around export
controls and things of that nature. So you mentioned China just then, and this is exactly what
we wanted to ask you about, which is if you've stripped out what's going on in China,
how much of the rally would disappear in something like gold? I mean, the vast majority of it is
not just China, but emerging market, central bank, buying, basically reduce their holdings of
Western bonds that can be frozen similar to what happened with the Russians. So do not underestimate
the impact that China's had. In fact, if anything, China and the other emerging markets have
squeezed other participants in the gold market out. And you still have a long ways to go.
I like to point out that in 1970, when Nixon took the U.S. office,
the gold standard, central bank reserves and gold stood at around 40%.
Last time I calculated late in the last year was in that 27 to 28%, but the run up in the last
couple of days could be as high as 30 by now.
But I think the key message is there's still a lot more buying by central banks who
diversify themselves out of dollars.
I'm still a little bit confused.
What is it about silver particularly that's so desirable right now from the population in
China. Because just let's talk about hoarding and some of these issues. It's totally understandable why
China wants to hold certain strategic assets, right? It wants to accumulate a lot of oil,
in part because of defense purposes, because in the event of a war, for whatever reason,
they may get shot out of oil, so they need a lot. What is it about silver in the population context
that makes it so desirable? And by the way, I'm looking at a chart, this is from two days ago,
But the Shanghai silver premium, buyers in China paying more than $5 an ounce versus everyone else
in the rest of the world.
But explain what is it this driving, this purchase from the public in China?
Okay.
First, let's talk about its role as a critical mineral.
It goes into the production solar PV.
And that makes it, as you pointed out at the beginning, 50% an industrial metal and then 50%
of a store of value like gold.
So the fact that it has these dual uses, it's a.
critical mineral and important to the electrification process on a global base.
Remember, it's a superconductor.
Actually, let me go back to answer your question.
Tracy, you said, what do gold, silver, and copper all have in common?
They're superconductors.
I know people say, well, Jeff, copper isn't exactly a definition of a superconductor.
It's not as strong as silver and gold, but it sits up there in that electrification process.
And so when we think about silver, it's critical for the industrial base.
of China, given the importance of solar panels as a part of the industrial manufacturing
process in China.
So, you know, if you're the PBOC or something like that, you're going to be very focused
on making sure there's adequate silver supplies inside of China.
So the fact that it also then has the store value like gold and accessible by many
parts of the population, because even at, you know, $100 an hour, $120 an ounce as wherever
this morning, it still makes it a lot.
much more affordable, you know, a store value. So I think that are two key points for China
and why silver is so important is its role as a critical mineral and as a superconductor.
And given the importance of solar panels and other types of renewable investments to the
Chinese industrial base, having a secure supply of silver is absolutely critical to the Chinese
economy. Second of all is when you look at the price of silver, even at $120 an ounce, it is still
very affordable to many of the population as a store of value similar to gold. And also given the
recent price trends, people feel comfortable in holding it. So it has those two components that
make it critical to the Chinese economy. Some people would say that like, all right, you can look at
all these things surging and tell a story about debasement.
and electrification and what the future world is going to look like.
Some other people would say, well, you could tell an even simpler story,
which is that one of these markets is wrong, right?
So maybe copper sees economic growth going to the moon,
although it seems kind of unlikely to me.
Maybe silver is somewhere in between.
Maybe gold is wrong about the debasement thesis, whatever.
How do we know that we're just not seeing investors get this one wrong?
People are just going in for momentum.
Or the meme coinification of precious metals.
Well, I do think when we talk about a commodity super cycle, the S word, which, by the way,
is nothing other than a commodity cap-ax cycle or a big global cap-ax cycle.
And we're seeing that, you know, whether it's an investment in defense, investment into AI,
data centers, a list goes on.
This is a world-scale cap-ax boom.
We're now entering.
And that typically is when you see the big commodity super cycles, one in the 70s, one in the 2000s.
And just take the defense spending in Europe alone.
It's likely to be 9 trillion euros over the next decade.
To put that in perspective, the Chinese boom in the 2000s was 10 trillion U.S.
Today it's about 15.
So even just Europe on a loan, we haven't even factored in data centers in AI.
So when that occurs, typically what we see is a real.
repricing and re-rating towards asset-heavy industries in commodities.
Or another way to think about it as short duration.
It strangely is when interest rates are low, everybody thinks, oh, you would be doing
cap-x cycles.
No, you do them when their interest rates are high because the interest rates are high.
They're telling you, you need to put money into the ground.
And so we're moving into one of these repricing towards asset-heavy industries,
which is why it'll ultimately be sustainable across the entire commodity complex.
And I just want to take a step back and talk about these repricings because in my career,
I've lived through two.
The first one was in that call it 02 through like 04 time period.
And that's what we coined the term revenge of the old economy.
Old economy is asset heavy, new economy is asset light.
And that asset light in the late 90s, 2000s was really about the.
scalability of software. You don't need to have put a lot of money into the ground to be able to
create growth. And that was the whole asset light model. But eventually, we ran out of all of these
heavy industries that you need to make the investments in. And then China came on the scene and
became clear we need to make those investments. And that happened over that decade. But that
repricing, re-rating was a violent process as you moved out of new economy or into the old economy.
The next time we saw that was in 1415, where we moved out of the old economy and into the new economy.
Why? Because it was clear China was at the end of the track.
And if you remember that time period, we'd go through there.
The euro went from like 1.4 to parity in the course of like 18 months.
I remember the period.
Oil was coming down $7 a barrel like every other day.
Everybody's what's going on, what's going on.
But I want to make a point here to get to your point about why is this sustainable across all these
commodities. And when we look at, I'm going to take like a private equity pitch book in 2012 of a
Canadian oil asset. They value the asset at $110 a barrel. The IRR of that asset, that this oil
field, was 25% at 110. Now fast forward to 2016 after the macro repricing. Oil was sitting around
$40 a barrel. Now let's go repriced the IRR of.
that asset. What do you think it is? Immediate responsible people go, oh, it was negative IRR. No,
it was around 18, 19 percent. It didn't come down much. Why? It's because the Canadian dollar
repriced, so wages went down. You had a repricing of the cost of capital. You had a repricing
of copper, iron ore. They all came down. And so your cost basis came down such that the IRR was
far more stable over that repricing. And that's ultimately what we're starting to see happen across
this space right now. And I believe we're in one of these repricings. We're going to move back
into the asset heavy space. I want to make one last point before moving on this during this.
It's going to make this one really different from ones in the past. I want to go back to the 1960s
because it's similar to today. And that was at the least in the modern data, the first big commodity
super cycle. The asset light space back in the 60s was companies,
like Coca-Cola. In fact, all the nifty-50 were brands. What do brands have similar to, let's say, Microsoft,
infinitely scalable at zero marginal cost. And so Coca-Cola was the world's darling right now,
and all of the big commodity producers, the miners, the oil companies were at the bottom.
And then you had the Arab oil embargo create that catalyst to reprice. Now, what happened here
is that that's different today. So you think about that asset light space,
It was Coca-Cola then, and then in 2000, it was Microsoft, and today it's Google and the hyperscalers.
Now, here's where it gets really different in the power of what's going to happen now, is the asset light space is getting into the asset heavy space, i.e. these hyperscalers are putting steel into the ground.
And by the way, you're no longer an asset light, infinitely scalable software company.
You're a minor.
You're a oil company.
You are a commodity producer.
Your multiple is going to get re-rated.
And so what we have is the asset light space this time is moving into the asset heavy space
in putting steel in the ground.
So this is going to be a real violent transition.
So you ask about copper and silver and the rest of these things.
What are the restrictions on their big cap-ex budgets is the availability of transformers?
What are transformers?
Big chunks of copper.
And so we have a difference in this cycle than once in the past is the asset light space is
colliding in the physical space at the exact same time, which is what I tend to think that this
repricing is going to be more violent, more sustainable, and what you're going to see,
and it goes to a simple point that I observed in the 2000s was when oil first went out,
because, oh, it's a bunch of investors buying oil. It sits at $60 a barrel that's supernatural
returns. No, you actually had capital rotate out of the asset light space and into the oil
space during 0405, such that the cost basis actually rose, and there was no supernatural return.
So go, Tracy, back to your point, how sustainable is this? Well, what we're seeing is all the
capital flowing into this asset heavy space, and it's going to fill the ground underneath these
prices and support them from a relative cost basis. And so when we think about $14,000 a ton
copper, doesn't mean these guys are earning supernatural returns because we see so much capital
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I absolutely love that comparison of the software companies to the Coca-Cola's
and this idea that like there are certain business models that can scale incredibly
with very little physical needs.
And the way you frame that, I thought it was very helpful to understand.
And we've certainly talked a lot on the podcast about the hyperscalers getting
into the real business of things and, you know, going up the chain.
and in some cases, getting into the power production, investing in their own nuclear plants and hiring power traders.
So all of this feels very real.
Let's just like, you say we're in a super cycle.
You say we're at the foothills of the Himalayas.
What is history or your work say about how big and how far this can go?
Well, I mean, historically, these cycles last summer around 12 years.
The one in the 70s did, the one in the 2000s did.
You know, one of the 70s from 68 to 1980, the one in the 2000s from essentially 2002 to 2014.
A lot of people say, oh, the world's different today than in those other points time.
Putting steel in the ground still takes about the same amount of time, technology or no technology.
I like to point out, where do you get the 12 years?
You know, the first three years are getting people to believe it before they start to really invest earnestly.
And I would say this one started in 2020.
And so the fact that we lost two years in 23 and 25, whether it was copper oil,
and part of the reason for that was the rally in prices was so steep after that Russian-Ukrainian invasion.
The policy response globally was incredibly swift.
I want to point out that policy response in 22 and 23 was not so much the rise in interest rates,
but the creation of supply.
And I say that is because you had inflation come down everywhere in the world in a synchronous manner.
And it did it against record commodity demand and really strong GDP growth in the United States.
What does I tell you?
It simply could not have been interest rates in the demand side.
It had to come from a supply side.
Where did they get new supply?
Russia, Iran, Venezuela, you know, some of the issues that are facing a state.
and they got it through increased immigration on the labor side.
There was a lot of ways they created supply all over the world to be able to deal with that.
Now, the point this time around, and everybody's bought into this oil supply glut, we don't have a problem,
is that those easy fixes are not going to be available next time around.
So this one's going to take longer than normal.
But I also want to go, why I'm comfortable with this being a super cycle is all of these things are all policy driven.
The one in the 70s was due to the LBJ's war on poverty, the big defense spending, sound familiar, and then you had the Arab oil embargo.
If you look at what happened in the 2000s, it was the decision to admit China and the WTO, a policy decision.
Here, the policy decisions is the war on free trade, and it's not just the U.S. doing it, everybody's doing it, you know, curtailing commodity supply around the world.
In fact, the three points we laid out in 2020, in fact, it was on this show.
We laid them out.
They're still very much valid today.
And they were all policy decisions.
One was de-globalization, the war on free trade.
I mean, if anything, it's been turbocharged now from five years ago.
And when we think about it, it's all policy decisions.
It's not just inside the United States where we're seeing this.
You know, the Chinese cutting critical mineral supply, you know, Europeans focused on, you know, protecting themselves, defense, spending
the list goes on. Let's go to the second one at the time, decarbonization or electrification.
And I know a lot of people are going to look at, oh, well, didn't the U.S. backtrack on that with,
you know, the recent political shifts? The answer is absolutely not. The rest of the world is
doubling down on electrification for both. When we think about the electrification of the world,
where it wasn't decarbonization was not the motivator today. It wasn't then and then going back in time.
Why do I say that? Why did China build
cutting-edge technologies and nuclear power, solar, wind, batteries, and the rest of it,
they did it for energy security. Kind of goes into the de-globalization point. They want their own
secure energy supply. In fact, Carter coined the term energy transition and wanted to transition
out of oil into renewables in 1977, not because they wanted to save the world, but because
of energy security. One last point on this is France, lowest carbon footprint in the world. It didn't
get there because it wanted to save the planet. It got there because it wanted nuclear power,
so it was Charles de Gaulle's decision to rid itself of the oil trade. So this story,
regardless of what's going on in the political pushback, and I don't think Green was ever probably
the right way to phrase this. It's renewable. It's a secure source. Nuclear powers are secure
resource. Throw data centers, AI, all on top of it. It's turbocharged from the last time we talked
about. And then finally, the third point was redistribution of the war on income inequality.
Yeah. With the K economy, this is alive and kicking.
Wait, say more about that last point. Well, when we think about commodities, and actually,
Tracy, I've seen you even make this point that I made back five years ago was that when you see
inflation and you see commodity demand, it has to be coming from the low income groups.
This is the point that people get backwards. Right. Inflation is.
bad for the high-income groups. And the reason why is because the low-
This was a great call that you made, by the way. Yeah. And the low-income groups are the ones
that actually think about this in corn. A high-income person will consume the same amount of corn
at any point in time. The marginal demand has to come from the low-income groups. And so when you
give them money, like fiscal transfers and, you know, to keep the masses happy in certain
situations, what are they going to do? They're going to spend it. They're going to spend it on
commodities and physical goods. And that ends up creating that inflation. And then the high income
people suffer because the visit the response by policymakers to the higher rates is wealth comes down.
The other way to think about all inflation is as a wealth transfer between the high income groups
and the low income groups and then they go out and spend it. And so when we think about the demand
here is that third one, which is this war on income inequality, it's just going to demand more and more
types of transfers to the lower income groups to be able to deal with the civil unrest.
And it's alive and kicking everywhere in the world right now. And so I would assume, you know,
if you liked any of these three stories back in 2020, you've got to love them today.
Just going back to the super cycle thesis and the role of policy, how do we know that the importance
of a lot of these metals, the strategic importance, how do we?
we know that that won't end up increasing supply faster than we expect? You know, part of the story,
especially in copper, is that it's not that many people are pulling it out of the ground anymore.
It takes forever to get a new mine started. How do we know that governments aren't just going to make it
easier to get this stuff? And so you'll see a supply response faster than perhaps you saw previously.
Let's go back to my point. You know, these are 12-year cycles. It's just putting steel in the ground takes a long time.
Even if you got rid of all of the bureaucracy and red tape, it's going to take time.
But let's go to the critical minerals.
Why does China dominate these?
They did it because the Soviets and the Americans didn't want to touch the downstream processes because of not in my backyard for NIMBY reasons.
I mean, even the Soviets, I say the Soviets because this decision was made in the 70s.
Remember, the EPA, the Superfund sites and all of that?
The Americans and the Soviets used to do this.
They quit doing it and farmed it out to the Chinese because they did.
didn't like doing it in their backyards. There's a really highly toxic processes. And so if you're
going to onshore them and bring them back, you've got to figure out technologies to do this in a way
that's going to deal with those nimby problems that people didn't want to deal with 50 years ago.
So it's going to be very expensive, time consuming. There's ways to get around it. But, you know,
whether I heard, you know, you can build these facilities on Army land in the United States,
you don't get any of the bureaucracy around environmental problems. But even so, and it's
The last thing, you know, if you didn't like it in the 70s, you're still not going to like it today.
So it's not something that can be resolved overnight.
It's going to take a long time.
It's going to take an enormous amount of capital, new technologies, created rerouting supply chains around the world.
That's why I say that we're just the tip of the iceberg on what needs to be done here,
which is why I think it's going to go on for at least another decade.
And one last point about the super cycle, the 70s and the one in the 2000s.
sequences of price spikes. They weren't a steady upward trend. You had one in 73, another one in 77,
78, and another one in 80. In the 2000s, you had one in 0405, another one in 08, and then the final finale
in 11, or late 10 and 11. It was with Libya and then copper top 11,000. So everybody thinks
they're like this steady upward trend in prices and assets. The realities are sequence of price spikes.
And this one will be more bubbly in nature.
I like to say it's a bubbling cauldron of supply and demand and balances.
And part of this is because of what happened with the surge in investment around, let's call it the green investment around net zero 2050.
I like to say that that investment occurred from around 2015 through about 21, 22.
It created an environment where you have lots of, let's say, renewable wind in places like Germany or Spain, but you don't.
have the batteries, the grid, and the rest of it. So what that creates is these pockets where you can
see big shifts where you have negative prices of power at some point, explosive prices on the other
side. So the one thing about this time around is going to create much higher levels of volatility
across the commodity space. Like silver, you can see, you get into these pockets where it'll
go up and down. And, you know, whether if it was California power in the 2000s and that commis cycle,
which sure reminds me what silver is doing today, is you end up,
with an environment in which the volatility gets higher, the volatility then scares investors away,
the lack of investment then reinforces the higher volatility.
And I think that that dynamic in this bubbling caldron of supply and demand imbalances
is just going to be that much more vicious this time around than in the past.
Jeff, you're my favorite person to talk to about commodities.
But my second favorite person to talk to about commodities is the Uber driver that I had in 2022,
who when he was dropping me off at Bloomberg, and I mentioned this on a previous episode,
he's like, oh, I have a thesis.
I'm really long silver because it has all these industrial uses.
But silver is frequently mined as a byproduct of copper production, and there isn't a lot
of new copper production happening at this current state.
And therefore, we're not going to see a big supply response be elicited on the silver
side.
And so you're going to get this mega squeeze.
So here's my second favorite one.
That was 2022.
to now in January 2026, I mean, clearly the price was right, but this phenomenon, as he described
it, does that sound pretty accurate to you? Absolutely. I mean, with all of these,
by the way, you can get the supply. It's not a scarcity of the commodities, whether it's critical,
metal, even copper, it's like it's the access. It is the political access to where the resources,
but more importantly, it's the willingness of capital to provide the money.
I like to say it's not about the supply and demand of the molecules or of the metric tons or the
bushels. It's about the supply and demand of the capital used to create the production.
Therein lies the core problem. And the capital has not moved in. So Tracy, back your point,
how long has it ago? We haven't even moved the capital in yet. The capital is still sitting in the new
economy or asset light world. And the returns, you know, by the way, I've asked people,
I go, like, this is in like 23, 24. I go, hey, why don't you want to put money into these space?
The answer was, Jeff, I agree with your story. The problem is the tech space is providing such
very good returns that if I am underweight the space, I got a problem. And I'd rather be
putting the money into what's out before me. That was the case in 23, 24, 25. Just to be
clear since the last time we talked to, there has not been a ton of activity in terms of
let's actually start digging. No, because the pullback in late 22 and early 23 was so vicious
across this entire space that the money, they looked at it, go, I got beaten up. You know,
Curry, you told me to go in back in 20 and 21, worked for about a year and a half. I got
absolutely cremated on the backside. I'm not going to do that again. And so they got beat.
up over that time period, their willingness to go back in and believe the story is not that
high. They're going to have to see it. And now that's moved so quick, so fast like it did in 22,
that they're going to look at it and go, oh, I've missed it. And I think, you know, it's like Tracy's point
is how much further this go? How sustainable is it? And I think the key point there is it's got,
it's that volatility is discouraging them. And that's why I tend to think what is going to
force the money into the space is you're going to have to have the returns in the asset
light tech or whatever you want to call it world get to a point that they're going looking
at the old economy going, I'm willing to take that risk and go in it because that's the only place
that has returns. And when they do that, that's when you're going to end up seeing the rotation.
And I also want to go back to a point here is the market is so severely underweight all of this
stuff because it's been so hated for so long that when the money rotates.
Anti-goldbug.
But when the money rotates, it's going to be playing catch-up.
Whether it fits, you know, the two and a half percent weighting of energy in the S&P 500
versus what a seven or eight percent waiting on revenues.
The market cap is too small.
And what if it's in metals and mining, critical money?
These things are just so tiny.
It's like I was talking the other day.
pick FCX and let's see, Ivanhoe Mines and some of the other smaller copper producers.
So what is their market cap is all together, $200 billion versus Navidia at $4.5 trillion?
Now all of a sudden you take that money out there and it has to go chase this space.
And so you're asking how high can it go?
You can go really high because you're talking about moving trillions of dollars out of asset light
into asset heavy when nothing's been here for over a decade.
Jeff, very, very quickly. Are there any risks to the structural super cycle thesis? Is there any
indicator that you're watching to suggest that, okay, maybe it's not going to happen or maybe it's
not going to happen at the moment that you're currently predicting?
I first want to talk about the difference between equities and commodities. Commodities are
driven by the real physical supply and demand and equities in financial markets are driven by
expectations. Expectations can or cannot happen. I'm trying to figure out what the next person is going
to do and what they're going to buy. Actually, it can be modeled and thought through, but it's less
predictable. Long-term supply and demand balances of commodities, you know when you have a problem.
Anyway, people don't push back. I mean, when I think I said on the last time here, copper is the
best trade I've seen in terms of fundamentals. Stan Drucker Miller recently, he made the same comment
that, hey, it's tight. Yeah, it's really tight. But it may not
work today, tomorrow, the next day. I know if I sit on position and hold it long enough,
eventually you'll get to that point where it does pay out. Because you know the physical
supply and demand, the rubber meets the road, and you see the rise in prices. Now, the question is,
can you stay liquid long enough before that event occurs? So, first of all, the reason why I'm so
confident in these stories is the forward on these markets are incredibly unbalanced, whether
if it is in copper, you know, the industrial metals, you know, the critical minerals, oil,
all of them are really inbound. So, because that's the thesis, why my confidence. Now, what is the
near-term risk? It's not that, you know, that you're going to, because we're going to electrify
the world. You don't have enough copper to electrify the world. The risk is, like, the demand for
housing demand in China collapses. But that happened in 23 and 24. So you've already paid the price on
that one. So when I think about these risks that you're talking about, they might come from the
demand side because you cannot create supply from thin air. So it has to be demand coming down.
But that demand coming down just ultimately delays how long it'll take before you run into
the problems. The main reason why copper didn't perform in that 23, 24 time frame is we underestimated
the severity of the property contraction in China. And part of that was the high interest rates
West forced the Chinese to keep interest rates too high because they can to prevent capital
outflow. And as a result, it really hurt that property sector. So that would be, you know,
it's different than the financial markets because the expectations can change on a moment
in their hard to forecast. Bottom line, you need this investment. Jeff Curry, perfect guest,
perfect day. Thank you so much for coming back on Outlaw. Great. Thank you for having me.
It's quite enjoyable. Truly the perfect guest. And congrats on
all your structural theses that seem to be playing out.
Great, thanks. Take care you all.
I love that.
Jeff's just the best.
He's so good.
He's so good.
I'm so glad we could get him on today in particular.
I should just mention we're recording on January 29th.
The price of medals is going up so quickly.
Who knows what it's going to be tomorrow?
I think the most, I mean, there are so many powerful ideas and compelling notions.
To my mind, one of the strongest ideas that I think is sort of under discussed in the debate is the
intersection of the commodity rally and the war on free trade, right? And, you know, we look at things,
they're getting a little bit more expensive here. People sort of look like, oh, it's the tariffs being
passed through, et cetera. But this deeper dynamic that if you don't have a world of sort of relatively
open trade, then that forces everyone to stockpile and that forces everyone to build their own
version. And that all, I'm going to build a chip plant here and I'm going to build a chip plant there
and I'm going to build a chip plant there because we're also worried you have that duplication, that it's the war on free trade that whether it's public or private forces all of this commodity intensive spending.
Yeah. All I'm going to say is it's good to hold gold and silver coins right now.
Stop rubbing it in. Stop rubbing it in. Well, the problem is it feels good. It feels good. It feels good. But, well, that's the thing. I don't even know how to sell. Like I would have to carry a bunch of gold coins through New York and find a dealer or something.
You know what? We need to take another trip through the diamond district where there are plenty of science on their windows. We buy gold and so forth.
Well, I would actually do an episode on buying physical gold.
Let's do an episode on selling physical gold. Yeah, both. Yeah. Okay.
How do you actually do that? Are there certain ways to do it that are better than others and all of that?
Yeah. I totally do that.
Let's do it. That sounds like a great episode.
I have a silver bar somewhere too. I need to find that. I'm going to bring it in and use it as a paperweight just to annoy it.
Well, I have my, I have my, what's it called?
Tungsten.
I have my Tungsten cube on my day.
That metal that you were obsessed with and now you've forgotten the name.
I should have asked if that's my one, that's my main exposure to hard assets is that
tungsten cube that I use a paperweight.
I think so.
I mean, he said every element in the, he said the story is that if it's an element in the periodic
table, it's gone up in price.
And I actually think Tungsten has gone up quite a bit in price.
But I didn't exactly buy in size.
I think my cube costs about 300.
dollars, just something like that.
Okay.
Shall we leave it there?
Let's leave it there.
This has been another episode of the Odd Lots
Podcast. I'm Tracy Alloway.
You can follow me at Tracy Alloway.
And I'm Joe Wisenthall.
You can follow me at the stalwart.
Follow our producers, Carmen Rodriguez,
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