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Business / Qatar Business

IN-DEPTH: Best quarter in three years on oil and industrial metal strength

Published: 01 Apr 2019 - 01:12 am | Last Updated: 01 Nov 2021 - 08:02 pm
Peninsula

Ole Hansen (Head of Commodity Strategy at Saxo Bank)

The commodity sector, just like most other asset classes, reported strong gains during the first quarter of 2019. The near-7 percent return in the Bloomberg Commodity Index was the best since Q2’16 when a rally across all three sectors supported a double-digit gain.

Several markets, including commodities, began the year on the defensive with growth concerns and Federal Reserve-led liquidity tightening raising concerns about the prospects for 2019. The year, however, was only a few days old before global policy panic set in with the Fed hitting the pause button in early January before calling a halt to further quantitative tightening at the end of the quarter.

As a result, the market has gone from expecting two rate hikes to an 80 percent probability of a cut before year-end.

The Bank of Japan and the European Central Bank followed suit with their own measures, while in China the government stepped in with various policy moves to stabilise its economy. The chance of a trade deal between US and China helped sentiment further.

Growth concerns and a flattening yield curve (which raises the risk of recession) provided some sporadic support to precious metals which otherwise were held down by surging equities and the consequent reduced demand for safe-havens and diversification.

Instead, it was the growth-dependent sectors of energy and industrial metals that provided most of the gains. Surging stock markets, Opec production cuts and Chinese stimulus helped to support a strong quarter for the energy and industrial metal sectors.

Palladium reached a record high on tight supply before suffering a 17 percent setback on speculative profit-taking

The agriculture sector was mixed with the US-China trade dispute as well as surging stocks providing continued headwinds. Some uncertainty about growing conditions ahead of the Northern Hemisphere Q2 planting season, however, provided some support. Arabica coffee hit a 14-year low as it continued to suffer from a weak Brazilian real and high Brazil output.

The uncertainty related to the outlook for agricultural commodities helped drive a record hedge fund short across key agriculture commodities. This development combined with a potential change in the fundamental and/or technical outlook could provide the sector with the tailwind to make up for lost ground into the second quarter.

During the past week, gold showed renewed signs of investor apathy as the price once again dropped back below $1,300/oz. The lack of a bullish tailwind following the recent uber-dovish Federal Open Market Committee statement and the subsequent drop in bond yields is a concern.

With the uptrend from early March broken, the risk of a deeper correction has once again emerged. The key level of support remains around $1275/oz, the 38.2 percent Fibonacci retracement and the January low.

After rallying 93 percent since August, palladium once again managed to attract a great deal of attention as it headed for its biggest weekly decline in more than three years.

Once $1,500/oz broke, the floodgate opened and the dismal liquidity in this metal became apparent. However, finding support ahead of $1,285/oz on the June futures tells us that this was nothing more than a weak correction within a strong uptrend, no matter how painful it seemed.

WTI crude oil is heading for its best quarter in a decade, and spent the week trying to break above $60/barrel on route to $62/b, its 200-day moving average. President Trump tried again to send the price lower via Twitter when he once again asked Opec - this time politely - to provide some additional barrels.

Opec and Russia are for various reasons very unlikely to reverse the current course of keeping production tight. With supply being cut, the biggest risk to oil is renewed worries about global growth and demand. This focus, however, will be kept down as long global stocks continue to rally like they did this past week on renewed trade deal and rate cut hopes.