Silver Drops To $19.00 Handle, Oil Exposed To US Manufacturing Miss

Talking Points

  • Gold and silver to extend falls as traders look past dovish Fed and Ukrainian tensions

  • WTI vulnerable to disappointing US manufacturing data sub-$100.00 handle

  • Commodities head into an historically weak period near key technical levels

Silver prices have plunged to the critical $19.00 handle while gold has resumed its declines with prices pushing below $1,290 in Asian trading. Ebbing geopolitical risks may spell further weakness for the precious metals as abating tensions in Eastern Europe sap safe-haven demand for the commodities. Crude oil may also face further selling pressure if upcoming US ISM Manufacturing figures continue the trend of disappointing US economic data.

Metals To Suffer Further As Traders Discount Geopolitical Risks

Gold and silver have seemingly fallen out of favor with investors as the precious metals continue their slide. This comes despite a dip in the greenback overnight on the back of a dovish lean from the FOMC policy statement and a weaker-than-anticipated US first quarter GDP print. The weakness for gold likely stems from traders looking past the ongoing Ukrainian turmoil with recent sanctions from the West potentially seen as an underwhelming response to the crisis.

In the absence of an escalation in Eastern Europe gold may be vulnerable to further declines. Additionally abating concerns over supply disruptions of key Russian commodity exports may bode ill for crude oil and palladium prices. The world’s largest energy producer supplies roughly one third of Western Europe’s oil, and accounts for over 40% of global palladium supply.

Crude Vulnerable To US Manufacturing ‘Miss’

The anemic US Q1 growth figures coupled with a rise to record levels for crude inventories has added to selling pressure on WTI. As noted in recent commodities reports; a glut of US supply paints a bearish picture for crude oil over the near-term. The growth-sensitive commodity is also vulnerable to continued disappointing US economic data prints via the demand side of the equation. This leaves oil exposed to further weakness on a miss from the upcoming US ISM Manufacturing figures.

Broader risk-trends have also offered additional bearings to oil prices in the past. However, we’ve seen the lift in sentiment (as demonstrated by near record highs for the S&P 500) fail to bolster demand for crude over April. Barring a complete shift to risk-aversion from investors, the supply and demand story may continue to be the dominant driver of price action for the commodity in the near-term.

Silver Drops To $19.00 Handle, Oil Exposed To US Manufacturing Miss
Silver Drops To $19.00 Handle, Oil Exposed To US Manufacturing Miss
  • Commodities Heading Into Period of Historical Weakness

  • Historically May is one of the weaker months for crude oil, on average over the past 10 years, the commodity rallied by only a third of a percent for the month, compared to average gains of almost 5 percent in February and March. Meanwhile May and June have been two of the worst performing months for the precious metals; with silver having posted a colossal average decline of 6.21 percent over the ten year period from 2003. The seasonality studies are presented below the technical analysis write-ups.