The Commodity Story

 
FX Outlook
January 06, 2009 Posted by:
Everyone knows the broader story for commodity prices in 2008; it was a tale of two wildly differing six-month periods. For the first half of the year virtually every commodity soared in value; after July 4, there was a collective nosedive. The Reuters/Jefferies CRB Index (CRB) ended the year with a loss of around 36 percent, despite the more than five percent gain on the last day of the year.

During the first half of 2008 everything seemed to favor higher commodity prices. Investors who were jittery about the subprime situation, the collapse of Bear Stearns and the weakening dollar flocked to gold and other commodities. Analysts focused on supply bottlenecks in agricultural and industrial commodities and touted growing demand from China, India and others. With risk appetite alive and well, the speculative bubble flourished, aided by Goldman Sach's forecast of $200/barrel oil prices.

Everything changed after July 4. As our economy slowed and consumers felt the pinch, consumers drove and consumed less and criticism of oil companies grew. Congress threatened legislation to clamp down on speculation. As the financial crisis widened and signs of a global slowdown grew more widespread, the downward spiral in prices gathered momentum. Hedge funds that had been a large part of the run-up were forced to liquidate positions and this added fuel to the sell-off.

There are six groups of commodities within the index (click here to see the full list and returns). Out of the nineteen commodities within those groups, only four eked out gains in 2008. While the losses were widespread, the energy and industrial commodities were especially hard hit for obvious reasons.

So what does the future hold? The energy complex is perhaps the most difficult to predict. Clearly, global demand has slowed, but so has supply as OPEC has announced production cuts. It appears as if Saudi Arabia and the UAE, two large producers that have historically been reluctant to cut production, will abide by the cuts. For now, it appears as if there has been a shift in sentiment towards greater conservation in the U.S. and the rest of the developed world. However, it is harder to predict the actions of China, India and others, once growth picks up again. Overall, my sense is that we may have seen the bottom in December around $33/barrel, but the range for this year will probably be a narrower one, perhaps capped around $75/barrel. How long we remain in that range depends on several factors, but mainly on the trajectory of a global economic recovery.

Industrial commodities are likely to stagnate somewhat longer, in my opinion. Supplies are ample, demand destruction has been fairly dramatic and it will take time to work off the imbalance. I do not expect a recovery until 2010 and there is a chance prices could head significantly lower in the interim. I am more positive on two major groupings: grains and metals. Demand for grains tends to be more stable and now that the speculative element is largely absent, we could find a bottom sooner in that space. I am constructive on gold and silver as I expect the dollar to remain fairly weak for most of 2009, which will underpin prices this year while in 2010 and beyond growing inflationary fears should boost prices. I have no particular opinion on soft commodities and livestock.

Overall, I expect a less volatile year for commodities, as much of the speculative element has disappeared, leaving cash and hedging transactions by producers and buyers as the main drivers. I suspect the CRB index will probably rebound from its 2008 losses, but not by a meaningful amount as sectors within the index will perform differently. Barring another significant setback for the global economy, the currencies of commodity producing countries should similarly be less volatile and I would expect most of the stronger ones (AUD, BRL and others) to form a bottom this year and build on those gains in 2010.

Looking Ahead

My core view remains unchanged; the dollar could head lower in Q1 and it is doubtful whether it will mount any sort of recovery later this year. I expect a weak economy and aggressive quantitative easing by the Federal Reserve to pressure the currency.

Last week and on Monday, the GBP bounced vs. the EUR ahead of hitting parity (it got to .98 GBP per EUR) and this boosted the GBP and pressured the EUR. Despite that, another test of 1.00 is possible; were it to take place, there is a chance of another test of the 1.47 to 1.50 area for the EUR vs. the USD. As I said last week, those levels should contain any EUR rally for now, as it has perhaps risen too far and too fast, given the weakness in the European economy and the likelihood of further rate cuts. The GBP is not out of the woods despite the short-covering rally and could test 1.40 soon, before strengthening later this year.

The JPY lost some ground as equities rallied, but should remain fairly strong in the near term - perhaps in a 90 to 95 range - while risk appetite remains low. Later this year, if the global economy recovers, risk appetite improves and yields rise, the JPY will gradually lose its allure.

U.S. asset markets are likely to bounce in Q1 on hopes that a new administration will address and perhaps resolve the economic crisis. I think economic weakness is too widespread and entrenched to respond to any quick fix. As a result, I believe that bounce will be followed by disappointment and another sell-off that should extend through Q2 and Q3, followed by perhaps another (more well-founded) rally at the end of 2009 or early 2010. As a result, I would personally fade dollar, equity or commodity strength in the next few months and continue to buy fixed income assets on dips.

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Dave Bhagat
Dave Bhagat
Senior Foreign Exchange Advisor
Silicon Valley Bank
Location: Palo Alto, CA
Phone: 650.320.1158
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