13oleM

COT report: Geopolitics meets sceptical positioning as 2026 begins

Picture of Ole Hansen
Ole Hansen

Head of Commodity Strategy

Key points:

  • Our weekly Commitment of Traders update highlights futures positions and changes made by hedge funds across forex and commodities during the week ending Tuesday, 6 January 2025.  
  • Speculators have built their largest dollar short in six months, driven by heavy euro buying and renewed appetite for high-yielding currencies such as the Mexican peso and, increasingly, the Australian dollar, while conviction in the yen remains weak.
  • Crude oil longs were trimmed and investor sentiment is the most bearish in a decade, leaving the market under-owned just as Iran and Venezuela risks are re-emerging, increasing the risk of a positioning-driven rebound.
  • Gold was sold by leveraged funds while silver and PGMs saw only modest inflows, with index rebalancing and profit-taking muting speculative enthusiasm even as safe-haven demand is being reinforced by geopolitics, US debt concerns and questions around Fed independence.
  • Despite looming BCOM-related buying, cocoa still carried a net short and last Friday’s 12% slump highlighted how exporters and commercial hedgers can overwhelm speculative squeeze attempts when liquidity is artificially boosted.

Forex:

In forex, dollar selling extended into an eighth consecutive week, lifting the non-commercial dollar short against eight IMM FX futures by 14% to USD 11.9 billion, the largest bearish position in six months. The dominant long against the greenback remains in the euro, where the net long rose to an August 2023 high of 162,812 contracts, equivalent to USD 23.9 billion.

Elsewhere, short covering continued across the Swiss franc, sterling, and particularly the Australian dollar, where speculative positioning has been reduced to the smallest net short in 13 months. The second-largest long after the euro is the Mexican peso, which continues to attract yield-seeking inflows, lifting the net long to an 18-month high of 109,301 contracts, or around USD 3.0 billion. By contrast, conviction in the yen remains limited, after the net long position was cut by 37% to just 8,815 contracts, or USD 0.7 billion.

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Non-commercial IMM forex futures positions versus the dollar

Commodities

The first full reporting week of 2026 saw the Bloomberg Commodity Index advance 0.7%, driven by pockets of strength across industrial and precious metals as well as coffee and cattle, only partly offset by broad weakness in the energy sector led by a 15.7% slump in US natural gas. While price action was fairly evenly split across the 25 major futures contracts tracked, the new year nevertheless began with a burst of net selling from managed money accounts, reflecting a market grappling with heightened geopolitical risk but also considerable uncertainty about how far prices had already discounted it.

In addition, the annual rebalancing of major commodity indices such as the S&P GSCI and Bloomberg Commodity Index has added a layer of short-term uncertainty. This once-a-year, rules-based process runs over five business days until Wednesday 14 January, during which index-tracking funds realign their futures exposure back to predefined target weights after a year of uneven price performance. In years with limited dispersion across commodities the impact is usually modest. After 2025, however, it is anything but. Gold rose more than 60% last year, while silver delivered its strongest annual performance since 1979 with gains close to 150%. At the same time, cocoa is re-entering the BCOM Index for the first time in decades, generating substantial mechanical buying during the rebalancing window, while crude oil is set to attract net inflows after last year’s underperformance.

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Managed money commodities long, short and net positions, as well as changes in the week to 6 January 2025

In energy, crude oil (Brent and WTI) saw a modest reduction in the combined net long as prices softened amid an overriding supply glut focus, underlining a market where additional liquidation still appears to require a clear downside technical break that has yet to materialise. This leaves the market vulnerable to a rebound should either the technical or fundamental outlook improve. The lack of appetite for oil exposure was underlined by a recent Goldman Sachs survey showing institutional investors holding their most bearish view on oil in a decade. In the short term, however, the deteriorating situation in Iran and continued sanctions on Venezuela — where the prospects for a rapid recovery in production remain very limited — helped trigger renewed buying after both WTI and Brent held key support during early-January selling. Elsewhere, US natural gas extended its sharp sell-off, with the net long slashed by 36% amid another week of heavy losses.

In metals, the renewed geopolitical bid that drove a strong start to the year had only a limited impact on positioning. Gold was sold by leveraged funds, while silver, platinum and palladium attracted modest net buying. Copper’s 5% rally was meanwhile used as an opportunity to reduce exposure, with the net long trimmed by around 5%, reflecting growing caution after last year’s powerful rally and against a backdrop of rising exchange inventories.

The ongoing annual rebalancing of major commodity index funds, and the short-term uncertainty it creates, likely also helped explain why both long and short positions were reduced in gold and silver. So far, both metals have absorbed the mechanical selling remarkably well, highlighting that well-telegraphed flows often fail to have the impact many anticipate. Potential buyers who had been waiting for better entry levels into the new year have instead been forced back into the market as Trump-related risks, geopolitical tensions, and renewed concern over US debt and Federal Reserve independence have lifted safe-haven demand.

Volatility is therefore likely to remain elevated, but as highlighted in recent updates, a continued rise in gold and silver through the rebalancing window would send a powerful signal about the depth of underlying demand for the ultimate safe havens.

In agriculture, grains saw net selling led by soybeans and wheat. The soft complex was more mixed, with sugar sold while coffee and cocoa attracted buying. Notably, cocoa still carried a net short position ahead of its return to the BCOM index — an event expected to trigger substantial mechanical buying — highlighting the lack of conviction in higher prices going into the rebalancing window. That scepticism proved well-founded on Friday when cocoa slumped 12% as front-running longs, positioned for a rebalancing-driven squeeze, were forced to liquidate after exporters took advantage of the index-related liquidity to sell.

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Energy
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Metals
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Grains and soybean complex
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Softs

What is the Commitments of Traders report?

The COT reports are issued by the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) and the ICE Exchange Europe for Brent crude oil and gas oil. They are released every Friday after the U.S. close with data from the week ending the previous Tuesday. They break down the open interest in futures markets into different groups of users depending on the asset class.

Commodities: Producer/Merchant/Processor/User, Swap dealers, Managed Money and other
Financials: Dealer/Intermediary; Asset Manager/Institutional; Leveraged Funds and other
Forex: A broad breakdown between commercial and non-commercial (speculators)

The main reasons why we focus primarily on the behavior of speculators, such as hedge funds and trend-following CTA's are:

  • They are likely to have tight stops and no underlying exposure that is being hedged
  • This makes them most reactive to changes in fundamental or technical price developments
  • It provides views about major trends but also helps to decipher when a reversal is looming

Do note that this group tends to anticipate, accelerate, and amplify price changes that have been set in motion by fundamentals. Being followers of momentum, this strategy often sees this group of traders buy into strength and sell into weakness, meaning that they are often found holding the biggest long near the peak of a cycle or the biggest short position ahead of a through in the market.

Related articles/content             
9 Jan 2026: Commodities weekly Geopolitics and index rebalance in focus as 2026 begins
8 Jan 2026: Gold and silver face a test of strength as annual index rebalancing begins
6 Jan 2026: COT on forex and commodities - Week to 30 Dec 2025
6 Jan 2026: Gold silver and platinum regain momentum as 2026 opens with familiar risks and new tensions
5 Jan 2026: Oil markets digest Venezuela shock disruption now optionality later
2 Jan 2026: What the steepest US yield curve since 2021 signals as 2026 begins
17 Dec 2025: Gold in review from pure macro trade to cornerstone asset
12 Dec 2025: Commodities weekly The great divergence metals surge while energy slumps
10 Dec 2025: Silvers breakout year From monetary hedge to industrial powerhouse
9 Dec 2025: Crude oils uneasy path toward 2030 and the opportunities it presents
2 Dec 2025: US critical minerals impact on copper silver and platinum
1 Dec 2025: Silver surges to fresh record highs as structural tightness meets macro tailwinds
28 Nov 2025: Commodities weekly Metals take the lead as index hits three year high
20 Nov 2025: Cocoa slump saves the chocolate bar but not your Christmas treats
14 Nov 2025: Commodities show leadership as hard assets outperform an unsettled macro landscape
13 Nov 2025: Crude oil short-term weakness masks long-term supply challenge
10 Nov 2025: Gold and silver break higher as US debt concerns eclipse shutdown relief
7 Nov 2025: Commodities weekly Gold tests AI turbulence as diesel and natgas steal the show
5 Nov 2025: Volatility shocks forced deleveraging and their temporary impact on in-demand commodities
4 Nov 2025: US grains and soybeans: Rally or short squeeze?
3 Nov 2025: Gold From euphoria to consolidation The next leg looks like a 2026 story
24 Oct 2025: Commodities weekly From glut to disruption sanctions lift energy as metal sectors diverge
22 Oct 2025: Gold and silver correction to test the markets true strength
22 Oct 2025: Gold and Silver reset What it means for long-term investors in miners
21 Oct 2025: Crude oil Short-term surplus meets long-term supply risk
20 Oct 2025: Commodities: Flying blind as US shutdown halts COT reporting
20 Oct 2025: Precious metals pause after record highs
10 Oct 2025: Commodities weekly Debasement fears the latest focus fuelling demand
8 Oct 2025: Gold powers through USD 4000 as investors question the old order
3 Oct 2025: Commodities Weekly Shutdown risks boost demand for hard assets
1 Oct 2025: Grain markets pressured by harvest and rising stocks
 

Educational resources:
A short guide to trading crude oil
The basics of trading wheat online
A short guide to trading gold
A short guide to trading copper
A short guide to trading silver
Gold, silver, and platinum: Are precious metals a safe haven investment?

Daily podcasts hosted by John J Hardy can be found here


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