Merrill Lynch Commodities Income IT
18 May 2007
MERRILL LYNCH COMMODITIES INCOME INVESTMENT TRUST plc
All information is at 30 April 2007 and unaudited.
Performance at month end with net income reinvested
One Three Six One Since
Month Months Months Year Launch*
Net asset value 4.2% 15.4% 19.6% 15.0% 32.3%
Share price 2.7% 16.3% 16.4% 1.2% 22.1%
*Launched on 13 December 2005.
Sources: Datastream, BlackRock MLIM.
At month end
Net asset value*: 122.96p (includes revenue per share of 1.21p).
Share price: 115.75p
Discount to NAV: 5.9%
Net yield: 3.9%
Gearing: 7.3%
Total assets: £98.8m
Ordinary shares in issue: 75,600,000
Sector Analysis % of Total Assets Country Analysis % of Total Assets
Diversified 18.3 Global 18.2
Integrated Oil 15.9 Australia 15.7
Nickel 11.1 USA 15.1
Copper 8.3 Europe 11.7
Exploration & Production 8.1 Latin America 10.7
Refining and Marketing 5.9 Canada 9.7
Aluminium 5.0 Asia 7.1
Gold 4.3 South Africa 5.8
Coal 3.5 China 2.5
Zinc 3.5 Russia 1.2
Diamonds 2.7 Africa 0.1
Platinum 2.6 Current assets 2.2
Oil Services 2.5 ------
Uranium 1.9 Total 100.0
Tin 1.7 ------
Iron Ore 1.1
Distribution 0.9
Mineral Sands 0.5
Current assets 2.2
------
Total 100.0
------
Ten Largest Equity Investments (in alphabetical order)
Company Region of Risk
BHP Billiton Global
Chevron Global
CVRD Latin America
Eramet Europe
Freeport McMoran Asia
Jubilee Mines Australia
Neste Oil Europe
Rio Tinto Global
Valero Energy USA
Zinifex Australia
Commenting on the markets, Richard Davis, representing the Investment Manager
noted:
Commodity markets had another good month in April, with prices supported by
positive news flow on both the supply and demand side. In terms of demand,
first quarter Chinese GDP came in at 11.1%, above expectations of 10.4%. The
country's imports of refined copper hit a record level in March of over 200,000
tonnes. On the supply side, the threat of industrial action heightened market
fears of disruptions. Workers in Peru (a major copper, zinc, silver and gold
producer) and at the Grasberg copper mine in Indonesia threatened strike action
during the month. Copper, nickel and zinc all registered double-digit gains in
April. Supply shortfalls dominated much of the news flow in the energy sector
as well. Violence surrounding the Presidential elections in Nigeria and reduced
OPEC supply have supported crude through this 'shoulder' period of seasonally
weaker demand between winter and summer in the US. Meanwhile, supply growth
outside OPEC continues to fall short of expectations.
Latest information is available by typing www.blackrock.co.uk/its on the
internet, 'BLRKINDEX' on Reuters, 'BLRK' on Bloomberg or '8800' on Topic 3 (ICV
terminal).
18 May 2007
This information is provided by RNS
The company news service from the London Stock Exchange
*A Private Investor is a recipient of the information who meets all of the conditions set out below, the recipient:
Obtains access to the information in a personal capacity;
Is not required to be regulated or supervised by a body concerned with the regulation or supervision of investment or financial services;
Is not currently registered or qualified as a professional securities trader or investment adviser with any national or state exchange, regulatory authority, professional association or recognised professional body;
Does not currently act in any capacity as an investment adviser, whether or not they have at some time been qualified to do so;
Uses the information solely in relation to the management of their personal funds and not as a trader to the public or for the investment of corporate funds;
Does not distribute, republish or otherwise provide any information or derived works to any third party in any manner or use or process information or derived works for any commercial purposes.
Please note, this site uses cookies. Some of the cookies are essential for parts of the site to operate and have already been set. You may delete and block all cookies from this site, but if you do, parts of the site may not work. To find out more about the cookies used on Investegate and how you can manage them, see our Privacy and Cookie Policy
To continue using Investegate, please confirm that you are a private investor as well as agreeing to our Privacy and Cookie Policy & Terms.