Metals and natural gas propel asset class to quarterly gain

Commodities
Ole Hansen

Head of Commodity Strategy

Key points

  • Commodities sector experienced consolidation in June driven by profit-taking following three strong months.
  • Bloomberg Commodities Index Total Return gained 6% year-to-date, somewhat less than the MSCI World which delivered a 11% return.
  • Industrial metals and precious metals led quarterly gains, while agriculture faced losses due to weak grain performance.
  • US and European natural gas prices rose significantly, supported by production cuts and increased competition for LNG.

Q3 Outlook Webinar: Sandcastle economics

As we enter Q3 2024, economic growth remains robust, sectors such as defence, AI and obesity drug manufacturing are booming, and asset prices are at an all-time high. But could factors such as unsustainable fiscal spending in the US, geopolitical shocks or gloomy demographic trends destroy our fragile sandcastle economy?

Join SaxoStrats for an Outlook webinar on Monday 1 July at 11:00 GMT as they discuss the general macro-outlook while focusing on the individual asset classes from equities and bonds to forex and commodities.


The commodities sector spent the month of June consolidating after a strong rally in the previous three months saw traders switch their focus to profit-taking amid signs some of the strong gains had occurred without support from underlying fundamentals. The most notable examples being copper, which by mid-May traded up 32% on the year, with other examples being silver, natural gas, and wheat.

Overall, the Bloomberg Commodities Index Total Return index, which tracks the performance, including roll yields, of 24 major commodity futures contracts spread almost equally between energy, metals, and agriculture, nevertheless managed a back-to-back quarterly gain bringing the year-to-date return to 6%, somewhat less than the MSCI World which delivered an 11% return. Also worth noting is that the first half of the year has seen the dollar gain close to 5% while US 2024 rate cut expectations have slumped from around seven to just two 25 basis point cuts, thereby keeping the cost of funding relatively elevated, preventing a long-awaited period of industry restocking of key commodities.

Status on the global economy ahead of Q3 2024

Heading into the third quarter, the macroeconomic landscape remains mixed. China remains a concern, despite efforts to bolster activity and address challenges in its property sector, while US economic growth remains robust and around trend growth with historically loose financial conditions, reflected in low credit spreads, despite an aggressive increase in monetary policy rates. The combination of excessive US fiscal policy since the pandemic and strong investments in artificial intelligence, defence, semiconductors, and obesity drug manufacturing has created surprisingly resilient economic growth.

Labour markets in Europe and the US are cooling but still as tight as they were before the pandemic, while inflation in the US and Europe has turned out to persist at a higher level than initially thought. But it is easing to levels that are causing people to recoup some of their lost real income during the inflation spike, creating income-driven economic growth. While some central banks in major economies have changed their tune to signal additional rate hikes amid persistent high inflation, the ECB has made its first cut without committing to more, while the US Federal Reserve is still sitting on the fence, projecting just one 25 basis point rate cut this year as opposed to the market's expectation for two cuts.

Commodities sector performance

Industrial metals topped the table with a second quarter gain of 10% (8% YTD) being driven by strong gains in zinc and tin, and despite giving back half its October to May gain, copper still managed to return around 11%. Precious metals came second, led by silver's 18.5% gain (21% YTD) followed by gold’s 5% (12.5% YTD); the latter reached a fresh record high before settling into a wide range, while silver's rally to an 11-year high, supported by surging copper, saw it break above USD 30 before running out of steam as copper retreated. The energy sector came third, with a strong rally in natural gas being only partly offset by weaker fuel prices and a rangebound crude oil market.

The agriculture sector recorded a quarterly loss driven by continued weakness in grains, down 4% on the quarter and 12% YTD, and pressured by a large carryover of stocks from last year’s harvest. Partly offsetting those losses were a mixed softs sector that saw adverse weather-related gains in coffee being partly offset by ample supply of sugar and cotton, as well as profit-taking in cocoa following its 126% first quarter surge.

Strong natural gas quarter

US and European natural gas were two of the top performers during the quarter, with US prices being supported by the decision by several producers to make temporary production cuts in order to boost prices after the Henry Hub benchmark contract spent a three-month period until April trading below USD 2 per MMBtu (EUR 6.4 MWh). Despite a large carryover of stocks following a mild 2023/24 winter, the Dutch TTF benchmark rose to trade around EUR 35 per MWh (USD 10.9/MMBtu) supported by hot weather demand in southern Europe, concerns about Russian supplies, and not least increased competition with other major gas consumers, especially in Asia, for liquified natural gas cargoes (LNG). A fraught geopolitical situation in Europe could still end up with Russia cutting its remaining supply through Ukraine, and it will force the EU to compete even harder for more LNG, potentially at higher prices.

Rangebound crude

Crude oil futures in New York and London remain stuck in their tightest ranges since 2021, and the narrowing range has during the past year resulted in a succession of lower highs and higher lows. In fact, since Q4-2022 Brent, the global benchmark, has been averaging close to USD 83.50 per barrel, just a few dollars below the current price, and overall it highlights how production restraint by OPEC+ since April last year has helped deliver a period of stable prices, most likely at lower levels than originally anticipated by the group, many of which need prices of Brent, the global benchmark, to trade closer to and preferably above USD 90 per barrel in order to balance their budgets.

From a relatively weak start to the year amid concerns about Chinese demand and the negative impact of high funding costs following the most aggressive rate hiking campaign by the US Federal Reserve in decades, the crude oil market has since moved higher with most of the major movements being driven by the ebb and flow of a geopolitical risk premium, and with that the buying and selling from hedge funds looking for momentum.

We maintain a constructive view on demand into the third quarter amid strong summer demand for fuel towards mobility and cooling, followed by a focus on OPEC+ and their ability to carry out the announced production increase starting October. Overall, a massive gap in the 2024 demand growth expectations between OPEC (2.2mb/d) and the IEA (<1mb/d) needs to narrow, and the price direction will be determined by who is correct. Overall, we see a limited risk of Brent trading outside the USD 80’s in the coming months.

Source: Saxo

Gold and silver bulls have yet to be challenged

Gold reached a fresh record at USD 2450 on May 20, almost reaching our revised 2024 target of USD 2500 before running out of steam, in part following news that the People’s Bank of China, after 18 months of non-stop buying, paused their purchases in May. China, a major driver of the gold rally in the past two years, is in our opinion nowhere near done buying gold, but the pause shows they are balking at the prospect of paying record prices. Also, the recent attention paid to Chinese private buying has likely thrust them into a spotlight they normally avoid. Overall, gold is still consolidating, and the news will likely prolong that phase, but overall, the long-term bullish outlook has not changed.

Multiple geopolitical hotspots remain with focus on Russia-Ukraine, Israel-Hamas, a brewing trade war between China and Europe/USA, and not least the upcoming US presidential elections where the US voter has to choose between two increasingly unpalatable candidates.

For now, gold remains stuck in a wide range with support continuing to emerge below USD 2300 while resistance has been established ahead of USD 2400. From a continued bullish perspective, traders will be watching gold’s ability to avoid a larger correction, thereby managing to hold above technical levels which otherwise may trigger long liquidation from managed money accounts, currently holding an elevated speculative long in the futures market.

Wherever gold goes, silver tend to go faster, and that has most certainly been the case this year after silver supported by gold and importantly also copper strength surged to an 11-year high before running out of steam as gold paused and copper went through a sizable correction. Looking ahead, the prospect for continued gold support and copper eventually stabilizing could see silver break higher later this year, potentially not until the final quarter.

Source: Saxo

Copper stabilising following premature surge

Copper is currently undergoing a prolonged consolidation phase following May’s speculative, but unsustainable, surge to record highs in London and New York. A rally that occurred while Chinese stockpiles reached a four-year high, reminiscent of the Covid demand collapse. Additionally, the premium Chinese importers normally pay over LME copper disappeared, another sign of an oversupplied market with Chinese exporters now pushing copper back into the global market, leading to rising stocks at warehouses monitored by the London Metal Exchange

While the medium to long-term outlook points to higher prices, the timing of the latest surge was wrong given the need for fundamental support to support a sustained price increase. Recent mentions of AI and anticipated power demand for data centres attracted new investors to copper, though some may not fully understand commodity dynamics, where prices are driven by current supply and demand balances. Long-term fundamentals support robust future demand for copper from electric vehicles, grid infrastructure, and AI data centres, while production may struggle to meet demand, leading to potential supply deficits. Miners need higher prices to justify investments in new discoveries, which take over a decade to yield returns.

Wheat going full circle

Wheat prices have gone full circle this quarter, initially rallying more than 35% from a four-year low on Russian weather-related crop production concerns, only to be forced back down amid US harvest pressure and rains in Russia easing concerns. While the weather in the US remains non-threatening to the different crops, these developments highlight another volatile weather season which may still spring price surprises. On June 28, the USDA will publish its quarterly stocks report and due to a large carryover from last year and tepid export demand, expectations if realised would bring soybean stocks to a 2-year seasonal high, wheat to a 3-year high and corn to a 4-year high. Responding to months of weak price actions, hedge funds are currently holding net short positions in all the three major crops, and it will need a change in the technical and/or fundamental outlook for them to turn price supportive buyers.

Source: Saxo

Recent commodity articles:

26 June 2024: Crude seeks support from seasonal demand strength
24 June 2024: Copper's resilience despite China weakness
18 June 2024: 
Precious metals go through prolonger period of consolidation
17 June 2024: 
COT: Dollar long jumps; Funds start rebuilding crude long
14 June 2024: 
Commodity weekly: Energy sector gains counterbalance metal consolidation
13 June 2024: 
Oil prices steady amid divergent OPEC and IEA demand projections
10 June 2024: 
COT: Brent long cut to ten-year low; metals left exposed to end of week slump
3 June 2024: 
COT: Crude length added before OPEC+ meeting; gold and copper see profit-taking
31 May 2024: 
Commodity weekly: Strong month despite late decline in crude and fuel
27 May 2024: 
COT: Gold and crude see increased demand as dollar longs plummet
24 May 2024: 
Commodity weekly: agriculture surges, metals fall on fading rate cut hopes
23 May 2024: 
Podcast: 2024 is heavy metals
22 May 2024: 
Crude oil struggles near two-month low
17 May 2024: 
Commodity weekly: Metals lead broad gains 
16 May 2024: 
Gold and silver rally as soft US data fuels market optimism
15 May 2024: 
Copper soars to record high, platinum breaks out
14 May 2024: 
COT: Crude long slump; grain purchases surge
8 May 2024: 
Fund selling exacerbates softening crude outlook
8 May 2024: 
Grains see bumpy start to 2024 crop year
6 May 2024: 
COT: Commodities correction spurs muted selling response
3 May 2024: 
Commodity weekly: Grains boost, correction in softs and energy
2 May 2024: 
Copper's momentum-fueled rally halts amid weakening fundamentals


Haftungsausschluss

Die Unternehmen der Saxo Bank Gruppe sind jeweils reine Ausführungsmakler und bieten Zugriff auf Analysen, über die Personen auf der oder über die Website verfügbare Inhalte ansehen und/oder nutzen können. Dieser Inhalt ist nicht dazu bestimmt, den reinen Ausführungsdienst zu ändern oder zu erweitern, und ändert oder erweitert ihn auch nicht. Der besagte Zugriff und die besagte Nutzung unterliegen jederzeit (i) den Nutzungsbedingungen, (ii) dem vollständigen Haftungsausschluss, (iii) der Risikowarnung, (iv) den Einsatzregeln und (v) den Hinweisen zu Saxo News & Research und/oder dessen Inhalten, zusätzlich (falls zutreffend) zu den Bedingungen für die Nutzung von Hyperlinks auf der Website als Mitglied der Saxo Bank Gruppe, über die der Zugriff auf Saxo News & Research erfolgt. Die besagten Inhalte dienen daher lediglich zu Informationszwecken. Insbesondere ist es von keinem Unternehmen der Saxo Bank Gruppe beabsichtigt, Beratung zu erbringen oder zu unterstützen oder dass sich Personen auf eine solche Beratung verlassen; ferner sind die Inhalte nicht als Aufforderung oder Anreiz für die Zeichnung oder den Verkauf oder Kauf irgendeines Finanzinstruments auszulegen. Sämtliche von Ihnen durchgeführten Handelstransaktionen oder Investitionen müssen auf Ihrer eigenen unaufgeforderten, fundierten und selbst bestimmten Entscheidung beruhen. Daher trägt kein Unternehmen der Saxo Bank Gruppe die Verluste und kann auch nicht für Verluste haftbar gemacht werden, die Ihnen infolge einer Anlageentscheidung entstehen, die Sie aufgrund von über Saxo News & Research verfügbaren Informationen treffen, oder für Verluste, die Ihnen infolge der Nutzung von Saxo News & Research entstehen. Erteilte Orders und ausgeführte Trades gelten als für das Konto des Kunden bei demjenigen Unternehmen der Saxo Bank Gruppe erteilt bzw. ausgeführt, das in der Jurisdiktion tätig ist, in der der Kunde wohnhaft ist und/oder bei dem der Kunde sein Handelskonto eingerichtet hat und führt. Saxo News & Research enthält keine von der Saxo Bank Gruppe angebotene, empfohlene oder unterstützte Finanzberatung, Anlageberatung, Steuerberatung oder Handelsberatung oder Beratung irgendeiner anderen Art (und es ist auch nichts so auszulegen, dass Saxo News & Research eine solche Beratung enthält); ferner ist Saxo News & Research nicht als Aufstellung unserer Tradingkosten oder als Angebot, Anreiz oder Aufforderung für die Zeichnung, den Verkauf oder Kauf irgendeines Finanzinstruments auszulegen. Soweit irgendein Inhalt als Anlage-Research ausgelegt wird, müssen Sie beachten und akzeptieren, dass dieser nicht in Übereinstimmung mit den rechtlichen Anforderungen zur Förderung der Unabhängigkeit von Anlage-Research erstellt wurde und dass er daher gemäss den einschlägigen Gesetzen als Marketingkommunikation angesehen werden würde.

Bitte lesen Sie unsere Haftungsausschlüsse:
Mitteilung zum unabhängigen Anlage-Research (https://www.home.saxo/legal/niird/notification)
Vollständiger Haftungsausschluss (https://www.home.saxo/legal/disclaimer/saxo-disclaimer)
Vollständiger Haftungsausschluss (https://www.home.saxo/legal/saxoselect-disclaimer/disclaimer)

Saxo Bank (Schweiz) AG
The Circle 38
CH-8058
Zürich-Flughafen
Schweiz

Saxo kontaktieren

Region auswählen

Schweiz
Schweiz

Wertschriftenhandel birgt Risiken. Die Verluste können die Einlagen auf Margin-Produkten übersteigen. Sie sollten verstehen wie unsere Produkte funktionieren und welche Risiken mit diesen einhergehen. Weiter sollten Sie abwägen, ob Sie es sich leisten können, ein hohes Risiko einzugehen, Ihr Geld zu verlieren. Um Ihnen das Verständnis der mit den entsprechenden Produkten verbundenen Risiken zu erleichtern, haben wir ein allgemeines Risikoaufklärungsdokument und eine Reihe von «Key Information Documents» (KIDs) zusammengestellt, in denen die mit jedem Produkt verbundenen Risiken und Chancen aufgeführt sind. Auf die KIDs kann über die Handelsplattform zugegriffen werden. Bitte beachten Sie, dass der vollständige Prospekt kostenlos über die Saxo Bank (Schweiz) AG oder den Emittenten bezogen werden kann.

Auf diese Website kann weltweit zugegriffen werden. Die Informationen auf der Website beziehen sich jedoch auf die Saxo Bank (Schweiz) AG. Alle Kunden werden direkt mit der Saxo Bank (Schweiz) AG zusammenarbeiten und alle Kundenvereinbarungen werden mit der Saxo Bank (Schweiz) AG  geschlossen und somit schweizerischem Recht unterstellt.

Der Inhalt dieser Website stellt Marketingmaterial dar und wurde keiner Aufsichtsbehörde gemeldet oder übermittelt.

Sofern Sie mit der Saxo Bank (Schweiz) AG Kontakt aufnehmen oder diese Webseite besuchen, nehmen Sie zur Kenntnis und akzeptieren, dass sämtliche Daten, welche Sie über diese Webseite, per Telefon oder durch ein anderes Kommunikationsmittel (z.B. E-Mail) der Saxo Bank (Schweiz) AG übermitteln, erfasst bzw. aufgezeichnet werden können, an andere Gesellschaften der Saxo Bank Gruppe oder Dritte in der Schweiz oder im Ausland übertragen und von diesen oder der Saxo Bank (Schweiz) AG gespeichert oder anderweitig verarbeitet werden können. Sie befreien diesbezüglich die Saxo Bank (Schweiz) AG von ihren Verpflichtungen aus dem schweizerischen Bank- und Wertpapierhändlergeheimnis, und soweit gesetzlich zulässig, aus den Datenschutzgesetzen sowie anderen Gesetzen und Verpflichtungen zum Schutz der Privatsphäre. Die Saxo Bank (Schweiz) AG hat angemessene technische und organisatorische Vorkehrungen getroffen, um diese Daten vor der unbefugten Verarbeitung und Offenlegung zu schützen und einen angemessenen Schutz dieser Daten zu gewährleisten.

Apple, iPad und iPhone sind Marken von Apple Inc., eingetragen in den USA und anderen Ländern. App Store ist eine Dienstleistungsmarke von Apple Inc.