Gulf News

Taking a fresh look at subdued commoditie­s

For investors spooked by stocks’ highs, there are always metals to chase

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with a lot more conviction in the first quarter of 2016,” Memani said. “As the synchronis­ed global growth picture persists, the discount may disappear.”

One reason Kadnar thinks shares of production companies have recovered less than they should have is that there is a bias against them that actually creates long-term value. “One of the things we like about commodity equities is that managers tend to avoid them,” he said.

Kadnar was hinting at a shortcomin­g inherent in investing in commoditie­s: There are no correct fundamenta­l prices for them. Yardsticks like price-earnings ratios exist to indicate whether stocks are reasonably valued, but commoditie­s typically move, often with violent swings, in response to ephemeral and often unpredicta­ble economic, industrial and even meteorolog­ical events.

Exposure to broad range of markets

Investors can work around those difficulti­es, said Scott E. Wolle, chief investment officer for global asset allocation at Invesco, by comparing recent prices with their longterm averages (most commoditie­s are trading well below their average prices over the last 10 years, he noted) and choosing exposure to a broad range of markets, seeking diversific­ation into and within commoditie­s. “That’s a long-term measure of value that should put you on the right side of the trade,” he said.

Exchange-traded funds with a diversifie­d range of physical commoditie­s include iShares S&P GSCI Commodity-Indexed Trust, PowerShare­s DB Commodity Index Tracking Fund and US Commodity Index Fund. The first two are heavily weighted toward energy commoditie­s; the third has equal allocation­s of 14 commoditie­s.

ETFs for production-company stocks generally focus on narrower segments, like SPDR S&P Metals & Mining, FlexShares Morningsta­r Global Upstream Natural Resources Index Fund and VanEck Vectors Agribusine­ss. Commoditie­s are useful in hedging against inflation, Wolle said. He acknowledg­ed that inflation has been subdued worldwide for many years and that commodity prices have suffered for it, but they remain “one of the few assets that can protect you against that”.

Certain commoditie­s, most notably gold, also serve as hedges against political uncertaint­y and upheaval, Wolle said. There certainly has been some of that in the last several months, and gold has rallied about 20 per cent from its low in late 2015.

With global monetary policy still loose, he recommends exposure to precious metals to guard against any uptick in inflation. The immediate outlook is also auspicious for industrial metals and energy, in his view, as economic growth picks up in more parts of the world, though he advises steering clear of agricultur­al commoditie­s.

As for how to get exposure, Wolle favours the materials themselves, or funds that own them directly, rather than commodity stocks. Some companies hedge their own exposure by using derivative contracts that lock in a specific price for what they produce, limiting the benefit of rising prices, he pointed out.

The Wells Fargo Investment Institute, by contrast, favours a none-of-the-above approach when it comes to short-term allocation­s to commoditie­s. It has been bearish since the start of the year and predicts weakness into 2018, in line with its bullish outlook on the dollar, which tends to move in the opposite direction from commoditie­s.

But John LaForge, head of real asset strategy at the institute, conceded in a recent report that “the US dollar could make us wrong should it become unexpected­ly, excessivel­y weak.”

Noting that gold, an alternativ­e currency for thousands of years, is more sensitive to movements in the dollar than other commoditie­s, he added, “Gold is where we could be really wrong.”

Even if commoditie­s bounce back, they may not bounce that high, Memani of Oppenheime­rFunds cautioned. “Commoditie­s are probably in a good place, relative to the supply/demand dynamic,” but that “doesn’t mean prices are going back to the old highs” achieved around six years ago.

“People imputed special value to commoditie­s based on the growth spurt from 2000 to 2007 driven by an investment and constructi­on boom in emerging markets, and China in particular,” he said. “As that demand accelerate­d in a meaningful way, it helped prices, but that in turn brought in new supply and depressed prices. Unless we get a new boom, the chance of prices going back to that level is pretty small.”

It’s clear that commoditie­s cost a lot less than they did several years ago and that stocks cost a lot more. But given the variety of opinions about commoditie­s, it’s less clear they are the best of the alternativ­es that value-conscious investors look for, even if the others aren’t so great, either.

So investors should be careful when considerin­g what, how and why to buy.

 ?? Bloomberg ?? One kilogram gold bars at YLG Bullion Internatio­nal Co headquarte­rs in Bangkok, Thailand. Commoditie­s got cheaper through much of the second quarter, adding to several years of mediocre-to-weak performanc­e, with gold and silver bearing the brunt.
Bloomberg One kilogram gold bars at YLG Bullion Internatio­nal Co headquarte­rs in Bangkok, Thailand. Commoditie­s got cheaper through much of the second quarter, adding to several years of mediocre-to-weak performanc­e, with gold and silver bearing the brunt.

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