Chart Of The Day: Using Metals To Trade Both Sides Of Inflation (Part 1)

 | Mar 10, 2021 09:35AM ET

Recently, we've been discussing the current market debate regarding the potential for inflation to raise its ugly, or lovely, head—depending on how you interpret the phenomenon.

The positive outlook sees reflation as good for the economy, with rising prices fueling economic expansion, allowing companies to increase profits and ramp-up hiring and wages, thereby enabling consumers to spend more. This reading creates a virtuous, upward spiraling cycle of manageable gains. 

The negative view anticipates economic overheating, wherein the expansion becomes unmanageable and prices rise too quickly. In this scenario, with prices escalating ahead of corporate profitability and consumer buying power, ultimately the economy spirals lower.

Naturally, at this stage, one can't know which interpretation of the theme will prevail, but we can illustrate how to trade each version of the inflation narrative in order to hedge and ideally incur a profit. 

Today we'll consider the industrial metal copper, which would benefit from the reflation trade as economic expansion prevails. Tomorrow, we plan to write about platinum, the precious metal that usually gains when it's used as a hedge against rapidly rising inflation.