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Commodities weekly: Strength in energy and grains offsets pause in precious metals

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Ole Hansen

Head of Commodity Strategy

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Key points in this update:

  • The commodities sector is closing in on a strong first half of 2025, with the Bloomberg Commodity Total Return Index up 7.8% so far in June
  • While the precious metal sector remains the stand out sector in terms of performance, energy and grains, two recent under-water sectors have staged a bounce back
  • Besides energy, we highlight which sectors and individual commodities could be impacted by the Middle East conflict
  • Also, silver and platinum hitting fresh cycle highs before retreating with tired-looking gold, while crude's risk premium ebb and flows with focus on Washington

The commodities sector is closing in on a strong first half of 2025, with the Bloomberg Commodity Total Return Index up 7.8% so far in June. The rally puts the index on track for its best monthly performance since March 2022, when Russia’s invasion of Ukraine triggered a sharp spike in energy and crop prices. This time, another conflict—between Israel and Iran—has emerged as a key driver of market strength, particularly in the energy sector.

Recent developments across the different commodities sectors highlight why a diversified approach to an often volatile asset class is the best approach. While the precious metal sector remains the stand out sector in terms of performance, the risk of a correction always lingers following a +25% rally in less than six months, and this month we are seeing that sector pausing while energy and grains, two recent under-water sector in terms of performance bounce back.

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Year-to-date total returns across different commodities sectors

Commodities in focus as Middle East tensions escalate

Crude oil prices have seen a $10 per barrel risk premium priced in, driven by concerns over potential supply disruptions through the Strait of Hormuz—a vital corridor for global oil flows. Refined products, especially diesel, have surged even more amid mounting geopolitical tension and the mentioned supply concerns into a seasonal peak demand period.

Besides energy, the war premium has also extended to agriculture markets, where grains—particularly soybeans, corn, and wheat—have caught a bid. Soybeans and corn due to their biofuel link, which rises in tandem with diesel and gasoline prices. Wheat, a dietary staple across the Middle East and North Africa, has gained on fears of regional supply disruptions and food security concerns. Sugar, another food commodity that is linked with crude oil prices due to Brazil’s ability to shift production from sugar to fuel ethanol did not respond to the increases seen so far, not least because of the prospect of a strong production outlook in Brazil, India, and Thailand.

Industrial metals have also started to respond. Aluminium may find additional support should energy prices remain elevated, given its energy-intensive production process. The Middle East, a key producer and exporter of aluminium to Western markets, could see disruptions that tighten supply further. A prolonged period of higher energy prices will inadvertently put upward pressure on the general cost of mining and refining, partly offset by an already soft global macroeconomic outlook amid Trump's tariff war, which may soften further from rising input costs, supporting a sticky to higher inflation outlook.

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One week returns

Silver and platinum hit fresh cycle highs before retreating with tired-looking gold.

In precious metals, gold, silver, and platinum retreated this week as traders booked profits following the Fed’s latest FOMC meeting. The central bank signaled a cautious stance, with no immediate plans to cut rates as tariff-related inflation risks come into focus. Gold is on track for its first weekly loss this month, having shown signs of exhaustion near recent highs. While a short-term correction cannot be ruled out, the broader bullish backdrop—driven by geopolitical uncertainty, central bank demand, and a weakening macroeconomic outlook—remains intact.

Silver, which hit a 13-year high above $37 earlier in the week, also succumbed to profit-taking, and to avoid a deeper pullback, it will need to hold support near the $35 level. Platinum, up 45% year-to-date, stalled just below the 2021 high at $1,340—a key resistance level that must be cleared to confirm a longer-term breakout after years of rangebound trading.

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Spot gold - Source: Saxo

Crude's risk premium ebb and flows with focus on Washington


The energy sector has been the standout contributor to the mentioned gains this month, initially buoyed by seasonal summer demand tightening supply. This has helped offset bearish factors such as rising OPEC+ output and macroeconomic uncertainties. What began as a steady recovery—partly fueled by short-covering—turned volatile last week when Brent crude spiked to near USD 80 per barrel, after Israel launched a prolonged series of airstrikes on Iranian nuclear and ballistic missile facilities. Thereby reducing the chance of a negotiated solution between the US and Iran.

With Iran vowing to respond with missiles and drone attacks and rising fears of US involvement in strikes on Tehran and its underground nuclear facilities, the escalation has once again raised fears of broader conflict in a region responsible for a third of global oil output. Tensions around the Strait of Hormuz—through which over 20 million barrels of oil transit daily—are the main focus. Pricing a market that on balance—without a disruption—should trade closer to or below USD 70 is difficult.

In the coming days, the market will remain laser-focused on developments in and around the Strait of Hormuz, as well as signals from Washington, after President Trump indicated a decision on whether to strike Iran could come within two weeks. While the geopolitical risk premium has supported crude prices recently, it’s worth noting that on days without fresh escalation, this premium tends to deflate—allowing prices to drift back toward fundamentally justified levels, currently seen near or just below USD 70 per barrel.

In the event of a short-lived disruption, however unlikely, prices could spike sharply towards USD 100 before easing amid the release of strategic reserves—primarily from China and the U.S.—along with logistical rerouting of Middle East exports through key pipeline infrastructure. The most significant of these is Saudi Arabia’s East-West pipeline, capable of moving up to 5 million barrels per day to the Red Sea, and the UAE’s Fujairah terminal, which can handle around 1.5 million barrels per day, bypassing the Strait entirely. Another option is the reopening of Iraq’s Kirkuk-Ceyhan 0.65 million barrels per day capacity pipeline, which has been closed since March 2023 due to a payment dispute between Ankara, Baghdad and Erbil.

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Brent crude, first month cont. - Source: Saxo

Short covering lifts grains, but soft fundamentals remain a drag

Wheat futures in Chicago surged to a two-month high this week, driven by adverse weather across key growing regions in the U.S., Europe, and Russia, alongside signs of robust export demand—particularly into North Africa. The rally which potentially received some extra strength related to the Middle East conflict has been amplified by hedge funds reducing long-held short positions in both CBOT and Kansas HRW contracts.

Despite wet weather harvest delays in the U.S., early crop quality and yields have exceeded expectations, after the USDA this week lifted its spring wheat condition rating to 57% good or excellent, up from 53%, suggesting no immediate threat to overall production. Additional price strength from current levels could trigger upside breaks adding further momentum to the rally, not necessarily due to price-friendly fundamentals, but first of all due to buying as wrong-footed longs scale back bearish bets. For the rally to become more sustainable, thereby signalling a low in the market following three years of weakness, the global production outlook needs to deteriorate further, so for now we view the rally as technically more than fundamentally driven.

Related articles/content             
19 June 2025: Wheat rise on short covering and weather woes but fundamentals still lacking
18 June 2025: Commodities strengthen into midyear as demand for hard assets heat up
16 June 2025: COT Report: Speculators sell dollars, buy crude ahead of Middle East escalation
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:


20 June 2025: Yep: NOK, wheat and Tesla in the same podcast.
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
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