Toronto Star

Commodity prices from copper to corn slide as on worries of faster inflation.

From copper to corn, warning signs are starting to crop up

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One of the biggest commoditie­s booms in decades is looking for a fresh reason to power higher.

Markets from copper to oil to corn surged recently as monetary stimulus and a recovery from the pandemic tightened supplies, fuelling a debate about whether raw materials are in a new supercycle.

But the rally is now wavering on worries about faster inflation, the U.S. Federal Reserve’s hints at easing stimulus and China’s warning over measures to cool price spikes.

Commoditie­s slid across the board on Wednesday on those concerns, in a wild day for markets that also saw huge swings in cryptocurr­encies. Yet many reasons for higher prices — from a stronger global economy to a coming wave of green spending — are still intact. Plus, a big shift in monetary policy may be unlikely with economies in an uncertain stage of recovery.

“The commoditie­s bull run is definitely not done yet,” said Eric Liu, head of trading at Chinese copper trader ASK Resources Ltd. “Every country is grappling with rising inflation, but as long as they don’t actually tighten monetary and fiscal policies, commodity prices can hardly cool off.”

There was a steadier tone on Thursday, with base metals mixed and grains markets edging higher, although iron ore futures fell and Brent crude extended declines. The oil market has been rattled by the prospect of a deal to end sanctions on Iran’s exports, while the coronaviru­s continues to hurt Indian demand.

A Bloomberg gauge of spot commoditie­s prices slid 1.8 per cent on Wednesday as minutes of the Fed’s April meeting showed some policy-makers were open to a debate on tapering at future meetings.

Also, China issued a fresh warning of measures to curb rising prices, saying more needs to be done to prevent rising costs from being passed through to consumers.

The stronger rhetoric risks weighing on materials from copper to iron ore, which reached record highs this month on surging demand. Top commoditie­s-user China has also been buying huge amounts of crops, which helped push grains markets to multi-year highs, before the rally stalled.

Recent declines are “partly driven by a reversal of macroecono­mic sentiment in the world, as some of the fundamenta­l factors that helped push up asset prices eased,” said Zhang Chenfeng, a researcher at Chinese commodity hedge fund Shanghai Chaos Investment.

With markets looking for fresh drivers to resume the rally, energy bulls can point to the coming U.S. flying and driving seasons as lockdowns ease, as well as solid demand from Asia. Crops need almost perfect weather this summer in the U.S. and later in Brazil and Argentina for harvests to meet world demand, so any adverse weather could again cause price spikes.

Metals have benefited from a rush to replenish manufactur­ing supply chains and the prospect of years of green spending, which helped send economic bellwether copper above $10,700 (U.S.) a ton this month. Whether prices go higher partly depends on a clearer picture of infrastruc­ture spending and how long loose monetary policies will last.

Wall Street has issued bullish outlooks. Citigroup Inc. sees copper heading past $12,000 in the coming months. Major traders Glencore Plc and Trafigura say prices could jump much higher to spur enough supply to meet future demand from renewables and electric cars.

“I’m certainly in the camp of this being a healthy pause” for commoditie­s, said Daniel Hynes, a strategist at Australia & New Zealand Banking Group.

“Any disappoint­ing data or headwinds were always going to see some profit-taking, and I think the whole sector still has some upside.”

 ?? BOB FILA TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE FILE PHOTO ?? Corn is harvested near Hector, Minn. Top commoditie­s-user China has been buying huge amounts of crops, which helped push grains markets to multi-year highs, before the rally stalled.
BOB FILA TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE FILE PHOTO Corn is harvested near Hector, Minn. Top commoditie­s-user China has been buying huge amounts of crops, which helped push grains markets to multi-year highs, before the rally stalled.

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