Donald Trump causing a rare trend in commodities
One of the fundamental dynamics of commodities markets has being turned upside down, thanks in part to Donald Trump.
Industrial
metals prices and the dollar are rising in tandem on expectations that
US economic growth and inflation will accelerate during Trump's
presidency.
Usually,
they move in the opposite direction as the dollar's strength makes
commodities, which are mostly denominated in the currency, more
expensive for buyers outside the US.
The
trend is so rare that it's only happened a handful of times in the past
decade, and it's one of the many reasons that mining companies such as
Glencore are rebounding. The commodities giant is benefiting from lower
costs and higher metal prices at its zinc operations, and is on track to
resume paying dividends next year as part of a broader turnaround plan.
"Post-election,
we've seen markets rotate away from defensive investments, seeking
growth," Tom Price, a metals analyst at Morgan Stanley, said. "The US
dollar's lifted, and so has demand for dollar-priced assets like
commodities."
The
Federal Reserve said on Wednesday that inflation expectations have
tightened and conditions in the labour market are strengthening.
Trump has pledged to enact growth-fuelling tax cuts and infrastructure spending after being sworn into office.
Another
factor: Chinese investors are buying dollarpriced commodities like
copper and zinc as a hedge against yuan depreciation, strengthening the
correlation between metal prices and the dollar, JPMorgan Chase analysts
said in a Dec 2 note.
Industrial metals prices and the dollar are rising in tandem on expectations that US economic growth and inflation will accelerate during Trump's presidency.
Usually, they move in the opposite direction as the dollar's strength makes commodities, which are mostly denominated in the currency, more expensive for buyers outside the US.
The trend is so rare that it's only happened a handful of times in the past decade, and it's one of the many reasons that mining companies such as Glencore are rebounding. The commodities giant is benefiting from lower costs and higher metal prices at its zinc operations, and is on track to resume paying dividends next year as part of a broader turnaround plan.
"Post-election, we've seen markets rotate away from defensive investments, seeking growth," Tom Price, a metals analyst at Morgan Stanley, said. "The US dollar's lifted, and so has demand for dollar-priced assets like commodities."
The Federal Reserve said on Wednesday that inflation expectations have tightened and conditions in the labour market are strengthening.
Trump has pledged to enact growth-fuelling tax cuts and infrastructure spending after being sworn into office.
Another factor: Chinese investors are buying dollarpriced commodities like copper and zinc as a hedge against yuan depreciation, strengthening the correlation between metal prices and the dollar, JPMorgan Chase analysts said in a Dec 2 note.
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