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Commodities Week Ahead: Inflation Concerns Lead As Biden Stimulus On Tap

Published 03/08/2021, 04:55 AM
Updated 09/02/2020, 02:05 AM

President Joseph Biden's $1.9 trillion pandemic relief is likely to set markets, including commodities, on a mixed course this week as the tug-of-war between economic recovery and inflation risks continues on Wall Street.

After its much-awaited and contentious passage through the Senate, Biden’s bill faces another round of clearance at the House of Representatives on amendments related to minimum wage before he signs it into law. From there, disbursements begin for state COVID-19 vaccinations and aid, help for small businesses, school reopenings and—perhaps most visibly of all—$1,400 checks for most Americans.

For the energy, metals and agricultural markets, the remaining legislative processes in the bill could range from being a bore to highly charged, depending on the backdrop of the daily macroeconomic data. There’s weekly jobless claims to note after the strong beat by February nonfarm payrolls.

But attention will particularly be on Wednesday’s Consumer Price Index and Friday's consumer sentiment and Producer Price Index.

'Inflation Week'

The focus on price pressures turns this into somewhat of an “Inflation Week,” most appropriate for Biden’s bill itself, which, while promising a powerful boost to the economic recovery and the stock market, has seen optimism offset by fears over rising inflation and interest rates.

Both bonds yields, benchmarked by the US 10-year Treasury note, and the Dollar Index rose again on Monday to near last week’s highest, laying a cautious path forth for commodity investors.

Investors have taken the recent yields—which has propelled the 10-year note to levels not seen since before the pandemic—as a sign of potentially damaging inflation expectations.

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US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, however, indicated Friday that higher long-term Treasury yields were a sign of expectations for a stronger recovery, not of increased inflation concerns.

However, commodities could move up and down for other reasons.

Saudi Attack Gives Oil Bulls Another Excuse

Oil prices, for instance, spiked again in Monday’s Asian session after an attempted drone attack on a giant Saudi Arabia oil refinery and transport hub in the kingdom by Iran-sympathizing Yemeni Houthis. No damage was caused. Yet, oil bulls saw an excuse to drive Brent to above $70 per barrel the first time since January 2020 and US crude just a couple of cents beneath $68.

Oil Daily

This isn’t the first raid on a Saudi oil facility since the massive September 2019 hit on the Abqaiq complex that impacted the kingdom’s production for weeks.

Each attack since has been blunted with increasing efficiency by the Saudi authorities, providing little justification for related price-hikes. The latest gains in oil should be reversed too. Yet, in an environment where the rally in crude is getting beyond ridiculous—up 85% since end-October, with even the Saudi oil minister now having doubts about demand—one has to wonder when common sense would return.

Jeffrey Halley, senior markets strategist at OANDA in New York, suggests that $70 Brent is as much a function of market psychology as supply, adding:

“Brent crude has a definite gap on its chart, suggesting it could retreat to $69.75 a barrel; it's Friday high. Support then follows at $67.50 a barrel. The rise through $70.00 a barrel appears to be flushing out physical buyers who were waiting for the dip.”

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Gold’s Disconnect With Inflation Continues

In gold’s case, the inexplicable departure from the path of inflation continued as COMEX futures for April delivery dipped into negative territory again at the time of writing after an unmeaningful 0.6% rally earlier in the Asian session.

Gold Daily

The spot price of gold, which fund managers sometimes use more than futures to gauge direction, remained in the positive, although just marginally.

At around $1,700 an ounce, gold prices as a whole are down 10% on the year and off 19% from the August record high of nearly $2,090.

Already on a slow-burn meltdown, gold got swept up again in last week’s equity market rout despite its so-called standing as an inflation hedge.

Biden’s pandemic relief bill, which should hand the United States a larger budget deficit and higher debt-to-GDP—both good for gold—has been ignored as the yellow metal tumbled recently on the same phenomenon that has routed stocks: surging bond yields and the dollar.

Axi’s chief global market strategist Stephen Innes said in a note on Monday:

"Gold has been undercut by cheerful economic optimism over a robust economic recovery and faster than anticipated rises in bond yields."

However, "the (gold) market may have fallen too steeply, too quickly", Innes added.

Disclaimer: Barani Krishnan uses a range of views outside his own to bring diversity to his analysis of any market. For neutrality, he presents contrarian views and market variables. He does not hold a position in the commodities and securities he writes about.

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Latest comments

hi what's up am are now
The crude oil would be come down when limiting of Iran be solve.
Logically, yes ... especially if the Iranians start "discounting" to win market share. So far, OPEC members have often showed respect for quorum. But with the Mullahs just waiting to get even with MbS and crew for their siding with Trump over the past 2 years, anything's possible.
Biden stimulus on tap... That's funny. Biden is turning on the tap that's for sure.
It was a language tweak to fit length requirements, Nate. Let's not skew it into something else. Thanks and a good week ahead.
Nat Johnson. Stimulus is imminent and so is its price reaction. Right on spot.
Barani hello, I am waiting for a dip to 1500 for gold before stepping in again, what is your opinion? Thanks
1400 would be better.
Bluent OK. You got it all other way round mate. Barani is writing as per the prevailing trend and price behavior. He has been writing all the time that given the ever mounting debt and debt to GDP Gold ought to be 2000+ but these Wall Street banks we prefer calling them banksters colluded with some hedge funds are pushing it down out of sheer greed and that's what is making things difficult for gold. Long term outlook for gold is not bullish, it's hyper bullish and no sensible person with an iota of understanding of markets will dispute this. Barani as a responsible analyst writes just what he does see happening and his vision can not be negated by any bias. I do understand its annoying to see gold crumbling and melting but this is the situation as of now. Yes long term gold is unstoppable.
 I couldn't have said it better. I understand the frustrations of gold long like B.O. But markets, like democracy, were never meant to be perfect, though over time, they are supposed to work.
GOLD H1 sell
Be ready to jump before any shorts squeeze, that's all.
thanks Mr Krishnan. while long term prospect of gold is intact. short term downside risks remain till there is a substantial correction in equities
That's exactly what Wall Street banks want us to believe, and their notes will turn that notion into a self-fulfilling prophecy.
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