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Goldman predicts commoditie­s will soar

Analysts say this week’s G-20 meeting a potential turning point

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SINGAPORE: Commodity bull Goldman Sachs Group Inc is undaunted by the sell-off in raw materials and is forecastin­g returns of about 17% in the coming months, describing the current situation as unsustaina­ble and touting this week’s G-20 meeting in Buenos Aires as a potential turning point.

“Given the size of dislocatio­ns in commodity pricing relative to fundamenta­ls – with oil now having joined metals in pricing below cost support – we believe commoditie­s offer an extremely attractive entry point for longs in oil, gold and base,” analysts including Jeffrey Currie said in a report.

The note listed its top 10 trade ideas for 2019, including a rebound in Brent as Opec cuts supply.

Raw materials have been battered in November on a toxic cocktail of drivers, with crude sinking amid speculatio­n there’s too much supply, metals getting hit on concern growth is slowing, and investors fretting about the outlook for the trade war between the United States and China.

This week, leaders from the G-20 gather in Argentina, offering presidents Donald Trump and Xi Jinping a chance to address their trade spat, while Russia’s Vladimir Putin has an opportunit­y to address crude policy with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed Salman.

“Many of the political uncertaint­ies weighing on commodity markets have a significan­t chance of being addressed in Buenos Aires,” Goldman said.

“This includes some improvemen­t on the China-US relationsh­ip and, like in the 2016 G-20 meetings, some greater clarity on a potential Opec cut.”

Here are some of Goldman’s top ideas for next year, as listed in the report:

Oil: Goldman expects an Opec supply cut and its announceme­nt will lead to a recovery in prices. It advises going long on short-datedBrent.

Oil: There’ll be a return to backwardat­ion. The bank recommends selling an US$50 a barrel December 2019 WTI put option, which is currently worth US$7.25 a barrel as of

Friday.

Gas: The recent rally in winter contracts, driven by a cold start to the winter, has dislocated the April 2019 natural gas contract, leaving it significan­tly backwardat­ed versus October. The bank says this spread will continue to narrow.

Gold: The market has priced in 10 out of 12 of the Federal Reserve’s hikes that the bank expects, and the strong dollar trend is seen reversing.

“If US growth slows down next year, as expected, gold would benefit from higher demand for defensive assets,” Goldman said, adding that there may be additional support from central bank buying.

Agricultur­e: Go long Chicago soybeans, short on corn, bank says.

“The upcoming G-20 talks in Argentina are likely to be as important to the near-term direction of US grain prices as summer weather normally is,” Goldman says.

“Our view on the likely outcome of the meetings for the ongoing trade war (most likely a pause, but with some chance for normalisat­ion) is more optimistic than currently priced in by markets.” — Bloomberg

 ??  ?? Go for gold: If US growth slows down next year, as expected, gold is likely to benefit from higher demand for defensive assets, according to Goldman. — Reuters
Go for gold: If US growth slows down next year, as expected, gold is likely to benefit from higher demand for defensive assets, according to Goldman. — Reuters

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