Commodities

Should you add commodities to your portfolio?

Commodities spent much of the past decade in the doldrums, as the excitement about “supercycles” faded into a familiar boom-and-bust. In the aftermath of the pandemic, that’s changed: investors are getting far more involved in metals markets. Meanwhile, long-term commodity bulls are getting a favourable hearing as they set out a case for rising demand and tight supply caused by the electrification of the energy system

Bulls can get carried away by this in the short term: copper is actually down by $2,000 per tonne since Jeff Currie was interviewed by Bloomberg. The dynamics look very complex right now. Chinese end-user demand is soft due to the weak economy (especially in real estate – construction uses a lot of copper). Yet Chinese copper stocks in warehouses have been building steadily and are at multi-year highs (that could reflect traders building positions in anticipation of a big government stimulus programme, which has so far not been forthcoming). That’s a large amount of metal that might be dumped back on global markets

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