

The Baltic Dry Index, which measures the cost of shipping commodities, climbed 25.4 percent to its highest level since Sept. 26, 2008. Demand in the second quarter “looks good”. The Baltic Exchange's main sea freight index .BADI., which gauges the cost of shipping resources including iron ore, cement, grain, coal and fertilizer, rose on Thursday to an eight-month high, helped by China's demand for goods.
MSCI’s Asian index climbed 12 percent in May, also its third monthly advance. The rally since March has driven the average valuation of companies on MSCI’s Asian index to 1.4 times the book value of assets, 17 percent higher from at the end of 2008.
Japan’s industrial output rose 5.2 percent in April, the most in 56 years, the Trade Ministry reported. Confidence among U.S. consumers rose this month to the highest since September, according to a Reuters/University of Michigan index. India’s economy, Asia’s third-biggest, grew 5.8 percent in the first quarter, the government reported.

Stronger economic data imply better demand for commodities, especially cyclical ones like base metals. Nickel climbed 3.3 percent to $13,945 a ton. Tin jumped 4.8 percent to $14,300 a ton.
Palm stocks in the world’s No.2 producer of the vegetable oil dropped 5.37 per cent to 1.29 million tons in April — which is nearly 8 per cent below the 1.4 million tons needed for palm industry to operate normally.
Focus on Commodity base for better return. Soup of the day please watch on metal, coal and cpo related like ANTM, TINS, INCO, PTBA, UNTR, ADRO, BUMI, PGAS, INDF, AALI, LSIP, and SGRO. Speculating: TRUB, DEWA, KIJA and BKSL.
“WAKE UP BULL - I KNOW YOU CAN DO IT”.
[Personal Opinion ]
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DISCLAIMER: This report is issued by [BRIGHT INFO]. Although the contents of this document may represent the opinion of [BRIGHT INFO]. We cannot guarantee its accuracy and completeness.
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