Business Standard

Commoditie­s are on their longest winning streak

Bloomberg Commodity Index set for 15th consecutiv­e session climb; gauge moves higher as crude rallies and base metals advance

- MARK BURTON & JAKE LLOYD-SMITH BLOOMBERG

Commoditie­s are forging a record-setting run of gains that straddles the end of 2017 and the start of the new year, as crude oil notches multiyear highs and investors bet that booming global manufactur­ing output will help to sustain rising demand for raw materials.

The Bloomberg Commodity Index, which tracks returns on 22 raw materials, posted an unpreceden­ted 14 days of gains to Wednesday, closing at the highest since February. The index is poised for further gains as metals and oil climb higher, supported by supply disruption­s, a weaker dollar and improving demand. Palladium, a metal used in car exhaust systems, is approachin­g an all-time high.

Commoditie­s eked out a second annual gain last year and heading into 2018, banks including Goldman Sachs Group Inc. are optimistic there will be further advances. Last month, the firm reiterated its 12-month overweight recommenda­tion.

The Bloomberg Commodity Index has rebounded 12 per cent since mid-June. In recent days, the cold snap in the US, which helped to boost wheat as well as natural gas, also helping to lift the index. Still, prices remain well below the highs from 2008.

Copper, a bellwether for global manufactur­ing, climbed 1 per cent after US factory output data on Wednesday beat expectatio­ns. China also imposed heavy curbs on scrap imports, leaving buyers there more reliant on mined output, which analysts see tightening in the months ahead.

Record readings for manufactur­ing in Europe earlier in the week are also adding to the bullish mood. Chinese factories are likely to boost output to meet rising overseas demand, adding momentum to the spell of synchroniz­ed growth across major global economies in recent months.

“European and US PMIs have been very strong, and when you have manufactur­ing growing as strongly as it is in the world’s two largest economies, it’s going to have a pull on Chinese exports into these developed regions,” Max Layton, the EMEA head of commoditie­s research at Citigroup Inc., said by phone from London.

The commodity rally has ignited shares of producers. BHP Billiton, the world’s largest mining company, has risen in London to the highest since 2014. BP Plc, the British oil major, posted the first backto-back annual gain last year since 2005.

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