Five Key Charts to Watch in Global Commodities This Week
(Bloomberg) -- China’s monthly streak of gold buying for central bank stockpiling has come to an end. Natural gas traders are skittish over any potential disruptions that could throw markets into disarray. And the US Department of Agriculture releases its latest supply-and-demand estimates Wednesday, with insights on how strong crop conditions are being incorporated into the closely watched forecast.
Most Read from Bloomberg
Russia Is Sending Young Africans to Die in Its War Against Ukraine
Investment Bank Moelis Probes Incident After Video of Employee Appearing to Punch Woman
Macron Gambles on Snap French Election in Bid to Stop Le Pen
Stocks Eke Out Gains in Fed Run-Up as Euro Falls: Markets Wrap
New York Fed Is Losing Talent and ‘Street Cred’ Under John Williams
Here are five notable charts to consider in global commodity markets as the week gets underway.
Gold
China’s central bank didn’t buy any gold last month, ending a massive buying spree that helped push the precious metal to a record high in May. The bank has been stocking up its reserves since November 2022, leading a flurry of purchases by the world’s central banks amid rising geopolitical tensions. There were signs that China’s demand was cooling as higher prices took their toll. The risk for gold bulls is that China’s voracious appetite for bullion has left the precious metal vulnerable to any potential shift in demand. Gold edged higher on Monday.
Corn
The US corn crop, the world’s biggest, is off to its best start in three years, with 75% of fields in either good or excellent condition. Ample rainfall and not-too-hot temperatures were boosting emerging plants, even if some farmers were complaining about waterlogged fields. America’s grain supplies are needed as adverse weather in Russia, the top wheat shipper, was taking a toll on the harvest. Traders on average expect the USDA to make few changes on its US corn output forecast in Wednesday’s World Agriculture Supply and Demand report since it’s still early in the growing season. Corn rose on Monday.
Oil
Ministers from the OPEC+ group of oil producers unveiled plans to add almost 2.5 million barrels a day to the group’s supply by October 2025 when they met on June 2. The increase is to come from unwinding the most recent round of output cuts and allowing the United Arab Emirates a modest additional uplift in its target to reflect rising production capacity there. Oil prices slumped by 5% in the wake of the announcement, prompting a rapid U-turn, with ministers insisting that the biggest part of the increase could be postponed or even reversed. Oil gained Monday after last week’s drop.
Natural Gas
Global gas markets are at risk to supply disruptions and increased power consumption as summer demand kicks into higher gear. Traders are on edge for any sustained global disruption, especially after facing aftershocks from last week’s unexpected outage in Norway. The threat of supply cuts elsewhere, geopolitical woes and stiff competition for liquefied natural gas cargoes are also sources of volatility that could drive up the benchmark Dutch gas price and Asian spot LNG.
Offshore Wind
Offshore wind additions are set to hit a new high this year, as several new markets including the US, France and Taiwan ramp up build. There will be 18.3 gigawatts of offshore wind capacity commissioned in 2024, a new record, according to BloombergNEF. The milestone comes as offshore wind auctions are set to boom, supporting a strong growth trajectory, and capacity is on track for a 10-fold increase by 2040 to reach 742 gigawatts.
--With assistance from Doug Alexander and Sybilla Gross.
(Adds Monday’s market moves for gold, corn and oil from third paragraph.)
Most Read from Bloomberg Businessweek
As Banking Moves Online, Branch Design Takes Cues From Starbucks
Legacy Airlines Are Thriving With Ultracheap Fares, Crushing Budget Carriers
Sam Altman Was Bending the World to His Will Long Before OpenAI
David Sacks Tried the 2024 Alternatives. Now He’s All-In on Trump
©2024 Bloomberg L.P.