5 Reasons Why Commodities Are The Place To Be In 2018

 | Feb 18, 2018 05:06AM ET

The stock market pullback of the last couple of weeks has shown that markets are jittery, and will likely be volatile for awhile as investors keep a vigil on rising bond yields (inflation) and potential interest rate hikes. In these uncertain times, one sector that appears to be holding its own, and then some, is commodities. Let’s examine why this is the case, and why commodities are going to be THE place to put your money in 2018.

The correction

The stock market correction (let’s not call it a crash) that suddenly saw everyone’s trading apps turn red on Monday Feb. 5 shocked investors. The S&P 500 was off 4.1% at 2,648 - the worst fall in 6.5 years. The rot spread to Asian stock markets the next day, with Japan’s Topix index falling 6.3%, South Korea’s KOSPI losing 2.6%, and Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 down by 3.7%.

Predictably, equity investors swiftly moved their holdings into safe havens - bonds, the dollar and gold - with all flights to safety pointing up on the 5th. The yield on the 10-Year US Treasury bill hit 2.88%, the US dollar rose against competing currencies, and gold defied its usual trend of moving in the opposite direction of the dollar by gaining six tenths of a percent to $1,345 an ounce.

The correction was generally blamed on inflation fears and worries about the world’s central banks raising interest rates, which would make stocks a less attractive investment than income-bearing instruments like bonds. Algorithmic trading is also said to have played a role .

Adam Hamilton of Zeal Intelligence offered a better dissection, noting that the S&P 500’s near 9-year stock bull represented an increase of 324%. The index at the end of January was sporting a price to earnings ratio of 31.8X, where historical fair value is 14X and bubble territory is 28X. The writing on the wall for a major selloff appeared on Friday the 2nd with the US jobs report.

“Average hourly earnings beat expectations by climbing 2.9% year-over-year, the hottest read on wage inflation since June 2009. That triggered inflation fears with the 10-year Treasury yield already at 2.78%,” Hamilton wrote.

Few think that the correction will echo something like the 1987 Black Monday 22.6% plunge which turned the then-bull market into a bear. There have been 11 under-20% corrections since 1976. US GDP is targeted to grow at 2.5% and unemployment is down to 4.1%, showing health in the US economy and likely, continued confidence in US stocks.