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COT Report: Speculators sell dollar, buy crude ahead of Middle East escalation

Picture of Ole Hansen
Ole Hansen

Head of Commodity Strategy

This content is marketing material.

Key points:

  • Ourweekly Commitment of Traders update highlights futures positions and changes made by hedge funds across forex and commodities during the week ending Tuesday, 10 June 2025.
  • In forex, non-commercial traders increased their gross USD short positions against the eight major IMM currency futures by 31%, driven by demand for EUR, GBP, and CAD.
  • Ahead of Friday's Middle East escalation, the commodity sector saw broad demand on US–China trade optimism and seasonal strength in energy demand.
  • Buyers focused on crude oil, gas oil, platinum, soybeans, and livestock, while sellers picked out gasoline, corn, sugar, and cotton.

    Speculators ramp up dollar shorts as DXY hits three-year low

    In the latest reporting week to 10 June, the US Dollar Index (DXY) extended its slide to a fresh three-year low, prompting a marked shift in speculative positioning. According to CFTC data, non-commercial traders increased their gross USD short positions against the eight major IMM currency futures by 31%, pushing the total to a four-week high of USD 16 billion.

    As shown in the table below, the bulk of the dollar selling was channeled into demand for EUR, GBP, and CAD, and only partly offset by a sixth consecutive week of net JPY selling.

     

    16olh_cot1
    Non-commercial IMM forex futures positions versus the dollar

    Broad commodity buying ahead of Middle East escalation

    In the week to June 10, managed money accounts showed broad-based demand across commodities, with net buying recorded in all major sectors except softs. The most notable positioning shifts occurred in the energy space, as speculative appetite was buoyed by tightening fundamentals and early signs of improving risk sentiment following renewed optimism around a potential US-China trade deal, which helped ease macroeconomic and demand concerns.

    The standout move came in crude oil, where speculators added aggressively to net long positions, driving the combined Brent and WTI long to a ten-week high of 319,000 contracts. This was primarily driven by a combination of fresh longs in Brent and the reduction of gross short positions in WTI, as the market entered the peak summer demand period amid signs of tightening supply.

    Importantly, this shift in positioning occurred before last Friday’s dramatic escalation in the Middle East, when Israel launched strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities and senior military targets, triggering a near-13% intraday spike. Crude settled 7% higher on Friday, only to spike again in early Monday trade as hostilities between Israel and Iran continued.

    However, the absence of direct strikes on oil infrastructure or export facilities, combined with a failure to surpass Friday’s price peaks—Brent at USD 78.50 and WTI at USD 77.60—invited profit-taking and hedging flows from producers. Still, the unfolding conflict presents a binary risk scenario: uninterrupted flows could trigger a sharp $10 correction, while any disruption to Iranian exports or a worst-case scenario blockade of the Strait of Hormuz could send prices soaring. For now, prices are drifting lower into Monday’s session, with current levels only justified if actual supply disruption materialises.

    In precious metals, gold saw modest long liquidation, while silver attracted fresh buying. The standout was platinum, where net long positions jumped alongside a 13% price surge—driven by technical momentum and an outlook pointing to tightening market condition.

    In agriculture, soybeans found renewed support amid optimism around Chinese demand, while short covering helped reduce an extended net short in wheat. Corn, however, continued to face selling pressure amid a persistently bearish supply outlook. The softs sector was the only area to buck the trend, with sugar shorts doubling on weakening fundamentals and technical breakdowns. In contrast, the livestock sector remained in favour, with broad-based buying led by hogs as supply concerns and firm seasonal demand supported bullish sentiment.

    16olh_cot2
    Managed money commodities long, short and net positions, as well as changes in the week to 10 June
    16olh_cot3
    Energy
    16olh_cot4
    Precious and industrial metals
    16olh_cot5
    Grains and oilseed futures
    16olh_cot6
    Softs & Livestock

    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             

    13 June 2025: Commodities weekly Geopolitics lift crude and gold
    12 June 2025: Brent crude briefly breaches 70 amid Iran attack threats
    10 June 2025: COT Report: Metals, energy demand offset by broad Ag selling
    6 June 2025: Commodities weekly Gold stalls spotlight shifts to cheaper silver and platinum
    4 June 2025: Crude oil holds firm despite mounting supply glut fears
    3 June 2025: Gold and silver break key levels as copper eyes tariff decision
    2 June 2025: COT Report: Speculators sold crude ahead of OPEC hike
    28 May 2025: Breakout or breakdown Gold silver and platinum face pivotal resistance zones
    26 May 2025: COT Report: Hedge funds return to gold; elevated grains short
    23 May 2025: Commodities weekly Diverging supply trends boost platinum weigh on crude
    21 May 2025: Israel attack risks add modest risk premium to crude prices
    20 May 2025: As gold pauses is platinum ready to shine for investors
    19 May 2025: COT Report: Speculators show measured reaction to trade truce
    16 May 2025: Commodities Weekly - Gold retreats Procyclicals rise amid trade truce optimism
    14 May 2025: Crude stays range-bound despite latest tariff-truce bounce

    13 May 2025: Gold holds steady as tariff truce sparks silver rebound
    12 May 2025: COT Report: Broad risk reduction seen ahead of easing trade tensions
    9 May 2025: Commodities weekly Sentiment improves as trade tensions cool before talks
    8 May 2025: Copper market navigates tariff uncertainty amid tight global supply
    7 May 2025: Agriculture markets diverge as trade war weather and speculators reshape landscape
    6 May 2025: Crude climbs as market digests OPEC hike and shale slowdown risks

    6 May 2025: Gold rises as Chinese demand rebounds post-holiday
    5 May 2025: 
    COT Report: Dollar-selling persists; Crude length trimmed ahead of OPEC output hike
    1 May 2025: 
    Gold corrects sharply from record highs as Chinese demand pauses

    Podcasts that include commodities focus:


    13 June 2025: Geopolitics derails risk sentiment, but for how long?
    6 June 2025: Silver rips as Musk-Trump bromance trips
    28 May 2025: Nvidia to determine whether US stocks can achieve new highs
    12 May 2025: As good as it gets on the trade news front
    6 May 2025: 
    Bears hang in at key levels as Palantir rides the retail whirlwind

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