Cape Times

Raw materials revisit 2008

- Debarati Roy

ATTENTION commoditie­s investors : Welcome back to 2008! The meltdown has pushed as many commoditie­s into bear markets as there were in the month after the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings, which spurred the financial crisis seven years ago.

Eighteen of the 22 components in the Bloomberg commodity index have dropped at least 20 percent from recent closing highs, meeting the common definition of a bear market. That’s the same number as at the end of October 2008, when deepening financial turmoil sent global markets into a swoon.

A stronger US dollar and China’s cooling economy are adding to pressure on raw materials. Two of the index’s top three weightings – gold and crude oil – are in bear markets. The gauge has bounced off 13-year lows for the past month.

Four commoditie­s – maize, natural gas, wheat and cattle – have managed to stay out of bear markets, due to bad weather and supply issues.

Hedge funds are growing more pessimisti­c as the year has gone on. Money managers have slashed bets on higher commodity prices by half this year, anticipati­ng lower oil and gold prices. – Bloomberg

 ?? PHOTO: BLOOMBERG ?? Molten gold cools in molds. The recent meltdown in the value of bullion has cost Russia and China combined close to R70 billion in the valuation of their gold reserves.
PHOTO: BLOOMBERG Molten gold cools in molds. The recent meltdown in the value of bullion has cost Russia and China combined close to R70 billion in the valuation of their gold reserves.

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