Commodities show leadership as hard assets outperform an unsettled macro landscape
Ole Hansen
Head of Commodity Strategy
Key Points:
- Commodities are turning in one of their strongest weeks of the year, with the BCOM TR Index up 2.5% and outperforming equities, bonds, crypto and most alternative assets.
- The reopening of the US government sets a flood of delayed economic data in motion while Fed speakers rein in expectations for near-term rate cuts, pressuring tech and growth assets.
- Precious metals lead the complex with silver up 10% on the week, but grains, natural gas and parts of the energy space all contribute to broad-based strength.
- Industrial metals, particularly copper, retain a powerful long-term pull as AI-driven power demand collides with bottlenecks across grids, transformers and mining supply.
- The big picture: in a macro environment struggling with fiscal strain, policy uncertainty and real-world supply constraints, commodities have quietly reclaimed the mantle of "reliable safe haven."
Commodities are turning in one of their strongest weeks of the year, in the process outperforming equities, bonds, crypto and most alternative assets. The reopening of the US government sets a flood of delayed economic data in motion while Fed speakers rein in expectations for near-term rate cuts, pressuring tech and growth assets. Precious metals lead the complex with silver up 10% on the week, but grains, natural gas and parts of the energy space all contribute to broad-based strength. Industrial metals, particularly copper, retain a powerful long-term pull as AI-driven power demand collides with bottlenecks across grids, transformers and mining supply. The big picture: in a macro environment struggling with fiscal strain, policy uncertainty and real-world supply constraints, commodities have quietly reclaimed the mantle of "reliable safe haven."
Commodities are once again demonstrating why they remain one of the market’s most effective shock absorbers. While equities wobble on renewed doubts about rate-cut timing and worries about overvaluations across some sectors, bond yields buck the usual risk-off script by rising, crypto struggles to regain a store-of-value bid, and the dollar trades softer, the broad commodity complex continues to edge higher, propelled by a blend of structural tightness, geopolitical risk, and renewed demand for tangible hedges.
The Bloomberg Commodity Total Return Index is on track for its best week since June, and by the standards of a typically volatile asset class, the consistency of performance this year is notable. Equities remain hostage to strength across a very narrow spectrum of stocks and Fed rhetoric, bonds continue to trade at the mercy of inflation uncertainty and US fiscal debt concerns, and crypto cannot decide whether it is a tech proxy or an alternative investment that sits outside traditional markets. Commodities, by contrast, have delivered breadth, balance, and a clear narrative anchored in real-world supply constraints and fiscal uncertainty.
Macro backdrop: the data deluge returns, but so does Fed caution
The US federal government’s reopening ends a 43-day shutdown and sets the stage for a barrage of delayed economic releases. Over the coming days and weeks, traders will finally receive the data required to recalibrate the growth and inflation picture: employment revisions, inflation updates, production numbers, and—crucially for agriculture, the first WASDE report since September.
Ordinarily, a reopening would lift sentiment. Instead, the relief has been tempered by a coordinated effort from several Federal Reserve members to cool expectations of a near-term rate cut. Market-implied odds of a December cut have slipped back below 50% amid repeated reminders that the fight against inflation “has not yet been conclusively won.”
For tech- and AI-exposed equities, already trading at stretched valuations, this shift acted as a catalyst for renewed weakness. A correction in cryptocurrencies added to the general risk-off tone. At the same time, bond yields drifted higher—an unusual development for a market supposedly in de-risking mode.
The commodity complex: broad-based strength, not a single-story market
On the week, the Bloomberg Commodity Total Return Index is heading for its best performance since June, rising 2.5% toward a fresh 3½‑year high and taking its year‑to‑date gain to 15.5%. The index, which tracks 24 major commodities, continues to challenge leading equity benchmarks for top‑spot performance in 2025. All sectors contributed to the advance, led by a 5% rise in precious metals, 2.9% in grains, and 2.7% in energy. Among individual movers, silver stood out with an 8.5% gain, followed by natural gas (5%), sugar (4%), gold (3.7%), and soybeans (3%), while Brent and WTI—both heavyweights in the index—managed to recover to record a small weekly gain.
As shown in the table below, covering the year-to-date performances, the breadth of the rally has widened. Just a few months ago, the 2025 commodity story centered on strength in precious metals alongside copper, coffee, and cattle. These solid gains have now been joined by renewed support across the grain and soybean sectors, as well as fuel products—most notably diesel—amid tight supplies heading into winter as Russia’s energy infrastructure remains under attack.
This breadth stands in stark contrast to equities, where leadership remains narrow, and to crypto, which—instead of offering an alternative to traditional investments—increasingly has become a proxy for the general level of market risk appetite, especially the tech- and AI-focused stocks concentrated in the Nasdaq 100 index. Investors seeking diversification, downside protection, or simply something grounded in actual physical supply-demand dynamics continue to rediscover the commodity space as an alternative, leading to speculation that the sector could be at the start of a new supercycle driven by multiple forces, as highlighted in a slide from my current presentation to clients. The most important being:
- Deglobalisation, defence, and de-dollarisation: sanctions, trade wars, export restrictions, reshoring supply chains
- Decarbonisation: renewable energy infrastructure and energy-efficient technologies—going green requires a lot more materials
- Surging power demand: data centres (AI), cooling (climate change), and EVs to underpin demand for copper, aluminium, natural gas, and uranium
- Debasement: a reduction of a currency’s real value through excessive money creation that erodes its purchasing power (fiscal stability)
- Demographics: population growth across emerging markets continues to drive rising consumption and commodity-intensive urbanisation
- Ongoing underinvestment in long-cycle projects after a decade of low prices
If there is one message the commodity complex has delivered this year, it is the futility of waiting for the perfect entry. The BCOM TR Index is up more than 15% despite having endured two sizeable drawdowns earlier in the year. The investors who did best were those who stayed invested and rebalanced within the complex, rather than attempting to sidestep volatility.
Precious metals: hard assets retake the safe-haven crown
Silver’s 8.5% surge has made it the week’s standout performer, marking an impressive turnaround from last month’s 15% correction. The move has been supported by a blend of macro‑driven demand, persistent physical tightness, and renewed interest from hedge funds and other leveraged accounts caught off guard by the metal’s swift recovery toward record territory. Silver has benefitted from gold’s strength while using its own thinner liquidity profile to outperform.
Gold’s near 4% rise reflects the broader and renewed rotation into real assets. With US fiscal dynamics deteriorating again—spending commitments rise while tax receipts fall—and with the shutdown having left a temporary fog over the economic picture, gold has become the default hedge. Note, the interest expense on US national debt rose to a record USD 1.24 trillion in the last 12 months, more than doubling over the past four years. The US government now spends more money on interest than it does on national defence. In addition, a softer dollar and a tentative recovery in ETF accumulation reinforce this trend.
Both gold and silver miners have witnessed strong gains this year, with two major ETFs tracking the two sectors both trading up around 126% year-to-date. In the short term, the question remains how a potential and long-overdue stock market correction may impact these sectors. While some support may emerge from investors rotating some of their exposure to value stocks, the sector cannot completely escape such headwinds, highlighting a familiar divergence: bullion remains the clean macro trade, while miners remain tied to equity beta.Energy: geopolitics interrupts the glut narrative
Both Brent and WTI remain rangebound, with support forming near USD 60 and USD 55, respectively. Earlier in the week, prices tumbled after OPEC’s latest monthly report flipped its third‑quarter projection from a 400,000-barrel daily deficit to a 500,000-barrel surplus. The revision—alongside forecasts from other agencies pointing to a deeper surplus into 2026—prompted speculation that the long‑anticipated overhang had finally arrived. Those pressures eased, however, when geopolitics returned to the forefront following a Ukrainian drone attack on Russia’s Black Sea port of Novorossiysk, a major export artery for both crude and grains.
The short‑term setup remains dominated by oversupply, with months of rising OPEC+ output and steady non‑OPEC growth lifting inventories heading into winter. Even so, downside risks are partly offset by shrinking OPEC spare capacity as Saudi Arabia and the UAE lift production, reducing the buffer against future disruptions. Flows from sanctioned producers—Russia, Iran, and Venezuela—also remain a wildcard, while firmness in refined products such as diesel and jet fuel continues to support crude through resilient crack spreads.
The longer‑term narrative has become incrementally more supportive. The IEA now warns that natural declines could erode around 5.5 million barrels per day of capacity annually unless new projects are sanctioned. Brent in the USD 60s may feel comfortable for consumers, but such levels do little to incentivise largescale, capital‑intensive developments. With global demand expected to keep rising until 2050, the gap between perceived abundance and underlying supply resilience could define the next cycle.
For now, the focus remains on near‑term softness—ample supply, modest demand, and cautious OPEC+ management—but the emerging imbalance between supply and demand underpins our view that crude could become one of 2026’s more contrarian opportunities. Once the current surplus clears and inventories normalise, the market will need to reprice the true cost of future supply.
Industrial metals: the Santa Clara parable and the copper bottleneck
No part of the commodity space better illustrates the tension between the physical economy and digital optimism than copper. While prices have not matched the fireworks seen in precious metals, the structural case continues to strengthen. Santa Clara, California—the beating heart of Silicon Valley—now finds itself with newly built, multibillion-dollar data centres sitting empty as the grid cannot yet supply the power required to operate them.
The irony is hard to miss. Nvidia’s chips are ready to train trillion-parameter models, but the sockets they would plug into remain dark. The bottleneck is not silicon—it is copper, transformers, transmission lines, permitting, construction lead times, and the physical limits of grid expansion. Demand for electricity is exponential. Supply—in copper, concrete, steel, and grid reinforcements—is linear. Mathematics alone argues for a structurally supportive environment for copper over the next decade.
For now, copper may struggle breaking to fresh record highs after China’s economic activity cooled more than expected in October, and after Freeport‑McMoRan said it had partially resumed operations at the Grasberg mine in Indonesia following September’s accident‑related shutdown. Global inventory levels also remain ample in the near term. Beyond 2026, however, the picture shifts: supply is increasingly at risk of falling short of the accelerating demand linked to electrification, data‑centre build‑outs and broader grid reinforcement needs. The Novorossiysk attack triggered an immediate spill‑over into the grains market, lifting wheat futures on concerns about export disruptions from one of the region’s key hubs, while soybeans also extended their recent rally, reaching a 17‑month high ahead of the US Department of Agriculture’s long‑delayed World Agriculture Supply and Demand Estimates (WASDE) report—the first since the federal shutdown. Industry surveys point to lower US yields for both corn and soybeans, while updated export data may offer a clearer view of Chinese demand, which has been difficult to assess during the blackout. US officials say China pledged to purchase 12 million tonnes of US soybeans over November and December, but uncertainty persists over how much of that commitment has actually been executed. These developments, combined with short‑covering from hedge funds, have helped drive a strong rebound in the Bloomberg Grains Index over the past month, flipping its year‑to‑date performance from an 8% loss to a modest gain. The last available positioning data—published on 23 September before the shutdown—showed hedge funds holding sizeable net‑short positions across the six major US grain and oilseed futures. Once CFTC reporting resumes, significant adjustments are likely to be revealed given the 43‑day blackout period.
Grains and oilseeds: Black Sea worries and the return of the WASDE
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