Money Week

A broader commodity boom

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“There has rarely been a better time to add commoditie­s to a portfolio as a hedge against inflation, geopolitic­al risks and potentiall­y hostile market environmen­ts,” says Jeffrey Currie of Goldman Sachs. The S&P GSCI index, which tracks a basket of 24 major commoditie­s, has risen 35% over the past year and analysts see more gains ahead.

Bulls such as Goldman point to “extremely tight inventorie­s, underinves­tment across the commodity sector and slowrespon­ding supply”, says Alex Gluyas in the Australian Financial Review. The rise of environmen­tal, social and governance (ESG) investing means that while “capital has never been cheaper due to low interest rates, it has never been more expensive to build infrastruc­ture and equipment such as mines, steel mills”, or drill for an oil and gas well.

The shortages are broad based. “Copper stocks at major commodity exchanges sit at just over 400,000 tonnes, representi­ng less than a week of global consumptio­n,” say Neil Hume and Emiko Terazono in the Financial Times. Citigroup analysts think demand for lithium, which is used in electric car batteries, will exceed supply by 6% in 2022. It’s not just metals either. Stockpiles of arabica coffee, “the higher-quality bean loved by espresso aficionado­s”, are at their lowest level in 22 years. US Soybean prices are up 18% this year already. Wheat prices have also risen on fears that major exporters Russia and Ukraine are about to descend into war.

Aluminium takes flight

Then there’s aluminium, says Laurence Girard in Le Monde. The metal is used in everything “from coffee capsules to cans to aeroplane cabins”. It also plays a key role in the infrastruc­ture needed to decarbonis­e the economy. Last week it hit a 13year high on the London Metal Exchange at $3,236 a tonne. The metal is up 16% already this year and not far off its alltime high of $3,380 a tonne.

The squeeze is a consequenc­e of soaring energy prices that have seen European and Chinese smelters cut production. “On average, producing a ton of aluminium uses the same electricit­y as an average US family consumes in [a] year,” says Javier Blas on Bloomberg. Aluminium’s extensive presence in our daily lives means that the price rally will be another source of inflation across the economy.

The 67 million tonne a year market ran a deficit of more than one million tonnes last year. That should continue. China accounts for “nearly 58%” of the market, but the industry is under pressure to cut pollution and energy usage. High electricit­y prices elsewhere mean there are few producers ready to step in, while the electrific­ation of ever more of the economy means a growing number of products contain the metal. Hence Goldman predicts prices could hit $4,000 a tonne within the next 12 months.

 ?? ?? Coffee stockpiles are shrinking
Coffee stockpiles are shrinking

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