Quarterly Outlook
Macro Outlook: The US rate cut cycle has begun
Peter Garnry
Chief Investment Strategist
Head of Commodity Strategy
A year-long consolidation phase, following the 2020 to 2022 surge and subsequent correction, shows signs of maturing. In our Q2 Outlook published this past week we ask the question whether the correction in commodities. Since hitting a two-year low in late March, the Bloomberg Commodity Index has now rallied by close to 8% with the bulk of the increase seen during the past couple of weeks. There are multiple developments impacting individual commodities, some short while others may end up being more long-term supportive.
Gold and silver: This week, gold reached the USD 2,300 target we set out in our Q1 24 outlook titled “Year of the metals”, where we expressed our bullish views on gold, silver, copper, and eventually also platinum. It is, however, interesting to note the target was achieved without three important drivers, namely rate cuts driving a weaker dollar, lower real yields, and a pickup in demand for ETFs (Exchange Traded Funds) from real money managers. Neither of these has yet materialised, and instead, gold has been driven higher by hedge funds, or speculators enjoying the strong momentum that has been set in motion by strong demand from investors around the world responding to heightened geopolitical tensions and worries about financial stability in a heavily indebted world.
In the short term, both gold and silver may consolidate, but with rate cuts leading to dollar and yield tailwinds still awaiting on the horizon, we see gold potentially make an extension towards USD 2,500 and silver towards USD 30, the February 2021 high. The biggest threats to prices being the unlikely lowering of the geopolitical temperature, central banks pausing their aggressive gold-buying spree while adapting to higher prices, and hedge funds pairing back part of the near 300 tons of gold they accumulated through the futures market last month.
Crude oil continues to be supported by geopolitical uncertainty, which accelerated this past week on worries Iran would retaliate following a recent attack by Israel on an Iranian diplomatic compound in Syria. In addition, Ukraine drone attacks on Russian oil infrastructure have cut Russia’s refinery capabilities in the process tightening up the diesel and gasoline markets ahead of the spring and summer peak demand period. Adding to this the mentioned global growth and demand optimism, and suddenly OPEC+ production cuts have finally the desired positive impact on prices sought by producers, led by Saudi Arabia, with Brent being catapulted back above the USD 90 per barrel threshold.
On several occasions since December, when Houthi attacks on ships in the Red Sea raised the geopolitical temperature, we have seen the risk premium in crude oil ebb and flow, and the latest premium may deflate soon unless an unlikely event of Middle East supply disruptions occur. However, with the demand outlook into the northern hemisphere spring and summer showing signs of strength, the price risks seemed skewed to the upside, but in our opinion limited to around the mid-90’s where previous price peaks may provide some formidable resistance.
Copper and copper mining stocks continue to push higher with HG copper reaching a 14-month high at USD 4.25, while ETFs tracking copper mining stocks surged to a two-year high. Over the past six weeks, the metal has steadily climbed, buoyed by global growth and demand optimism, and material downgrades to 2024 mine supply increasingly tightening market conditions. Several mining companies have announced production downgrades due to factors like increased input costs, declining ore grades, rising regulatory expenses, and weather-related disruptions.
Supply concerns have been fuelled by Chinese smelters discussing jointly cutting production of refined metals to cope with shortages of raw material. China, the world’s largest copper production hub, has witnessed smelters vie for scarce supply by slashing their processing fees, resulting in a downward trend in treatment and refining charges to near zero.
Furthermore, the ongoing green transformation and increased use of AI applications are augmenting demand from traditional sectors like housing and construction. An anticipated initiation of a US rate-cutting cycle later this year may prompt companies, which depleted inventories last year to mitigate funding costs, to restock. We maintain our long-standing bullish stance on copper, and with copper miners also exhibiting signs of resurgence, the possibility of a fresh record high in the second half of the year appears achievable.
According to weekly positioning data collected by the CFTC in the US and ICE Exchange Europe, managed money accounts from hedge funds to CTAs on 26 March held positions in crude oil, gold, and copper futures valued at USD 81 billion, the biggest exposure in more than four years. The increase has primarily been driven by last month's aggressive accumulation of gold longs, close to 300 tons, while copper has only just started to attract some renewed interest following many months of sideways action. The main reasons why we focus on the behaviour of speculators, such as hedge funds and trend-following CTAs, are:
Do note that this group tends to anticipate, accelerate, and amplify price changes that have been set in motion by fundamentals. Being followers of momentum, this strategy often sees this group of traders buy into strength and sell into weakness, meaning that they are often found holding the biggest long near the peak of a cycle or the biggest short position ahead of a trough in the market. In other words, the short-term direction of these markets depends not only on the long-term fundamental outlook but probably more importantly on whether we can avoid a correction that sets the long-liquidation ball rolling once again.
Commodity articles:
4 April 2024: What's next as gold reaches USD 2,300
3 April 2024: Q2 Outlook: Is the correction over?
3 April 2024: Cocoa: A 50% farmgate price boost a step in the right direction
27 Mar 2024: Crude oil maintains support amidst array of bullish signals
26 Mch 2024: Gold's behaviour points to sustained demand
20 Mch 2024: Attacks on Russian refineries lift risk premium and crude prices
19 Mch 2024: How to add copper exposure to your portfolio
15 Mch 2024: Commodity weekly: Green shoots seen across key sectors
13 Mch 2024: Lack of catalyst pushes crude into tightening range
8 Mch 2024: Commodity weekly: Gold and silver steal the limelight
8 Mch 2024: Investing with options - Gold optionality
6 Mch 2024: How to add gold exposure to your portfolio
6 Mch 2024: Video: What happened to the gold prices?
1 Mch 2024: Grains dip, cocoa soars, gold and oil see rays of strength: February’s commodity mix
Previous "Commitment of Traders" articles
2 Apr 2024: COT: Gold and crude longs maintained amid strong underlying support
25 Mch 2024: COT: Hedge funds zoom in on crude, copper and silver
18 Mch 2024: COT: Hedge funds buying expands from precious metals to copper and grains
11 Mch 2024: COT: Specs rush back into gold, elevated yen short in focus
4 Mch 2024: COT: Underinvested speculators fuel gold's latest surge