Commodities And Inflation-Indexed Treasuries Rallied Last Week

 | Apr 06, 2020 07:39AM ET

After weeks of falling, broadly defined commodities rallied sharply last week (through April 3) and posted the biggest gain for the major asset classes, based on a set of exchange-traded funds. The first gain in six weeks for raw materials overall may be fleeting, but for the moment the rear-view mirror for this corner of markets is looking up.

The iShares S&P GSCI Commodity-Indexed Trust (NYSE:GSG) surged 5.9% for the week through Friday’s close. The rally marked the fund’s first weekly gain since mid-February.

The key source of the price jump: reports that OPEC and Russia agreed to meet to hammer out a production cut in oil to aid the ailing market, which is oversupplied by a hefty degree. But over the weekend the meeting was reportedly delayed and oil prices are lower on Monday. As CNBC reports today:

Tensions between Saudi Arabia and Russia escalated on Friday, and the meeting will now “likely” be held on Thursday, according to sources familiar with the matter.

“It’s probably going to crater,” Again Capital’s John Kilduff said of oil. “There was a lot of optimism priced into oil Thursday and Friday. With this new Saudi, Russia spat, it doesn’t look like it’s going to come together.”

Meanwhile, inflation-indexed Treasuries posted the second-best rise for the major asset classes last week. The iShares TIPS Bond (TIP) gained 1.1%, marking the ETF’s third straight weekly advance.

Most of the major asset classes lost ground again last week. The biggest setback: US real estate investment trusts (REITs). Vanguard Real Estate (VNQ) tumbled 7.9%.

The Global Market Index (GMI.F) also fell in last week’s trading. This unmanaged benchmark that holds all the major asset classes (except cash) in market-value weights via ETFs shed 2.2%.