Commodities Weekly: Gold Pops, Oil Drops as Covid-19 Maintain its Grip

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An index tracking the performance of leading commodities reached a four-month high this week with the sector being supported by gains among industrial metals and grains, most noticeably wheat and copper.

Gold meanwhile made a small but nevertheless very important move higher to the highest level since 2011 above $1800/oz. However, the Bloomberg Commodity Index, which tracks a basket of major commodities in energy, metals and agriculture, weakened ahead of the weekend as the market grew increasingly nervous about the surging coronavirus cases around the world.

In the U.S., where the three biggest fuel-consuming states are all seeing a surge in cases, real-time indicators are suggesting that consumers are changing their behavior again. In Europe, we are beginning to see signs of an acceleration in new cases, with countries such as Portugal and Bulgaria paving the way for a potential resurgence with tourism beginning to pick up over the next two months.

The risk appetite seen up until now this month was led by an eight-day government-supported buying frenzy in Chinese stocks and fresh record highs in the technology-heavy Nasdaq 100 index. With margin debt from Chinese speculators hitting levels last seen during the 2014 to 2015 doubling of the CSI 300 and subsequent 40% collapse, the government and state media stepped in with actions and warnings to stem the buying.

Grain

Grain traders are looking ahead to Friday’s ‘World Agriculture Demand & Supply’ (WASDE) from the U.S. Department of Agriculture for confirmation that the recent 10% rallies in corn and wheat can be sustained. Short covering has been the main driver, with demand for corn having been triggered by the recent lowering of the US planted acreage. The Chicago wheat future leapt to its highest price in more than two months as the latest crop estimates in major exporting countries such as Argentina, France and Russia raised questions about the level of global supply.

Spot gold

Gold finally broke above $1800/oz, thereby succeeding in what it failed to do on two previous occasions, most recently in 2012. At the same time, with silver breaking resistance at $18.40/oz, the paths towards higher prices have now opened up. The break could signal an extension for gold towards the 2011 record high at $1920/oz while silver, for now, has found resistance at $19/oz ahead of the next level at $19.65/oz.

Apart from virus-related worries adding support, another major development supporting the latest move higher has been recent movements in U.S. yields. While the nominal yield on ten-year notes remain anchored in a relatively tight range, we have seen breakeven yields, an expression of inflation, move higher leading to a drop in real yields to the current -0.8%. These developments basically highlight what a U.S. market with yield-curve control would look like heading into a rising inflation scenario.