Copper, Gold, Crude Oil: Bullish Relay Race In Commodities Continues

 | Mar 18, 2022 05:30AM ET

This article was written exclusively for Investing.com

  • New highs in copper and a correction, gold joins the party
  • Aluminum hits new highs; nickel and other base metals hit multi-year peaks
  • Oil moves towards new all-time high, oil products soar
  • Signs of hyper-inflation
  • 3 reasons commodity bull continues to roar

During the first half of 2020, commodity prices fell with all other asset classes as the global pandemic gripped markets. After making multi-year lows, prices stabilized and began to recover. Central bank liquidity and government stimulus primed the global financial system, and raw material markets began aggressive rallies. In August 2020, gold became the first commodity to reach a new all-time high, and many others followed in 2021.

The U.S. central bank, Treasury Department and many elected officials blamed rising prices, which was causing inflation, on pandemic-inspired supply-chain bottlenecks. In May 2021, copper, palladium and lumber prices rose to new all-time highs. In late 2021, the Fed and others finally admitted that inflation was a lot more structural than “transitory” and began outlining plans to increase short-term interest rates and end asset purchases by March 2022.

In late February 2022, Russia invaded Ukraine, sparking the first major war on European soil since WW II. Russia is a leading commodity producer. Sanctions, embargoes and supply-chain issues created by the war in Eastern Europe only increase inflationary pressures. The Russian invasion and sanctions have caused commodity prices to soar. Over the past days, copper, gold, nickel, coal, wheat and many other raw materials have moved to new record highs. The bull market in commodities started before the war in Ukraine, which only pours fuel on an inflationary fire.

h2 New Highs In Copper And A Correction, Gold Joins The Party/h2

Russia invaded Ukraine on Feb. 24, starting a humanitarian tragedy. The U.S., Europe and other allied countries slapped sanctions on Russia. Russia retaliated with export bans. The war and trade barriers create a new round of price dislocations in raw materials markets, impacting supplies. Inflationary pressures have already caused the commodities asset class to experience a bullish relay that began in 2020 and continued through 2021 and the first months of 2022. The war only turbo-charged the price appreciation in many raw material markets.