
403
Sorry!!
Error! We're sorry, but the page you were
looking for doesn't exist.
Commodities Report: Crude, Gold, And Grains See Mild Profit Taking
(MENAFN- Mid-East Info) Commodities:
Six weeks into 2025, the commodities sector remains strong, with the Bloomberg Commodity Total Return index trading at a 25-month high and showing a year-to-date gain of 7.7%, outperforming both the S&P 500 and the MSCI World Index by a decent margin. What is particularly notable so far is the broad nature of the rally, with all sectors showing gains, led by softs and precious metals. The top five BCOM members are Arabica coffee (+29.5%), US natural gas (+16.7%), HG copper (+14.7%), silver (+13.4%), and Gold (+10.4%). Part of the strong performance in the mentioned metals market, which are all based on New York futures prices, is due to recent squeezes amid fears over the impact of US import tariffs on key metals, which also include platinum. Last Friday, for example, the High Grade futures in New York surged to a nine-month high of 483 cents per pound, reflecting a 47-cent premium per pound or USD 1000 per ton over the corresponding price on the London Metal Exchange. Considering this spread in 'normal' times trades below 10 cents, it highlights upward pressure on prices in New York, which, for growth- and demand-dependent metals like copper and platinum, may not reflect their underlying fundamentals, which remains relatively soft for now.

Responding to the mentioned broad price strength, managed money accounts, which include hedge funds and CTAs, turned very strong buyers during December and January, driving up the net long across 27 major futures contracts to levels last seen in June 2022, near the end of the pandemic- and stimulus-led rally that saw the BCOM index more than double. However, in the last couple of weeks, some mild profit-taking has started to emerge, primarily driven by selling of crude oil, gold, soybeans, and corn, and only partly offset by renewed demand for natural gas, copper, and wheat. Forex: In the forex market, speculators sold USD at an accelerated pace, leaving the gross long versus eight IMM futures down 15% on the week but still at an elevated level of USD 26.5 billion. All the major currencies, except EUR, saw net buying, led by strong demand for JPY, which lifted the net long by 191% to a four-month high at 55k contracts. However, besides the JPY, only a small net long was held in MXN, while the remaining currencies continued to be traded with a short bias, most notably CAD and EUR.
Six weeks into 2025, the commodities sector remains strong, with the Bloomberg Commodity Total Return index trading at a 25-month high and showing a year-to-date gain of 7.7%, outperforming both the S&P 500 and the MSCI World Index by a decent margin. What is particularly notable so far is the broad nature of the rally, with all sectors showing gains, led by softs and precious metals. The top five BCOM members are Arabica coffee (+29.5%), US natural gas (+16.7%), HG copper (+14.7%), silver (+13.4%), and Gold (+10.4%). Part of the strong performance in the mentioned metals market, which are all based on New York futures prices, is due to recent squeezes amid fears over the impact of US import tariffs on key metals, which also include platinum. Last Friday, for example, the High Grade futures in New York surged to a nine-month high of 483 cents per pound, reflecting a 47-cent premium per pound or USD 1000 per ton over the corresponding price on the London Metal Exchange. Considering this spread in 'normal' times trades below 10 cents, it highlights upward pressure on prices in New York, which, for growth- and demand-dependent metals like copper and platinum, may not reflect their underlying fundamentals, which remains relatively soft for now.

Responding to the mentioned broad price strength, managed money accounts, which include hedge funds and CTAs, turned very strong buyers during December and January, driving up the net long across 27 major futures contracts to levels last seen in June 2022, near the end of the pandemic- and stimulus-led rally that saw the BCOM index more than double. However, in the last couple of weeks, some mild profit-taking has started to emerge, primarily driven by selling of crude oil, gold, soybeans, and corn, and only partly offset by renewed demand for natural gas, copper, and wheat. Forex: In the forex market, speculators sold USD at an accelerated pace, leaving the gross long versus eight IMM futures down 15% on the week but still at an elevated level of USD 26.5 billion. All the major currencies, except EUR, saw net buying, led by strong demand for JPY, which lifted the net long by 191% to a four-month high at 55k contracts. However, besides the JPY, only a small net long was held in MXN, while the remaining currencies continued to be traded with a short bias, most notably CAD and EUR.

Legal Disclaimer:
MENAFN provides the information “as is” without warranty of any kind. We do not accept any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images, videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright issues related to this article, kindly contact the provider above.
Comments
No comment