Commodities Are Soaring. That’s A Bad Sign For Crypto

 | Mar 09, 2022 06:25AM ET

Surging commodity prices may tip the world into a recession, diminishing the prospects of risk-on assets like cryptocurrencies.

h3 Key Takeaways/h3
  • Commodities like oil, gas, wheat, and precious metals have soared in price due to supply-side shocks caused by the Russia-Ukraine conflict.
  • Soaring commodity prices could lead to a global recession, painting a bleak long-term market outlook for risk-on assets like Bitcoin.
  • Investors appear to be showing interest in precious metals like gold and palladium, which are trading near or beyond their historic highs.

Oil, gas, wheat, and precious metals are soaring and adding inflationary pressure to already-high CPI inflation numbers. Historically, such surges in energy and oil prices have led to global recessions, which have typically had a negative impact on risk-on assets such as stocks and cryptocurrencies.

h2 Russia-Ukraine Conflict Sends Commodities Soaring/h2

Global economies had barely begun recovering from the COVID pandemic that resulted in over two years of intermittent lockdowns, severe supply chain issues, unprecedented money printing, and record-high inflation rates before facing another global crisis triggered by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Now, the war in Ukraine and the anticipation of supply-side shortages it has triggered has sent commodity prices soaring near or beyond record highs.

Meanwhile, the wholesale natural gas price in Europe, another commodity heavily affected by the Russia-Ukraine conflict, has soared way past the all-time highs it made in December to €207 (around $225) per megawatt-hour, up 1,000% since March 2021. The price jumped as high as €267 (around $290) per megawatt-hour on the day Tuesday after temporarily hitting an all-time high of €345 (around $375) Monday as Russia threatened the old continent that it would turn off the valve.