Skip to main content
analysis

For big global oil and mining companies, the boom times are back. That’s the signal emerging from recent company results and rising sector share prices.

BP PLC BP-N recently revealed a tripling of quarterly profits from a year ago, while commodities trader Glencore PLC GLNCY issued some bullish guidance on its full-year results. The talk among traders and analysts is of another “supercycle” for energy and raw materials.

Booming demand for oil, lumber, food crops, and industrial metals such as copper and iron ore shows little sign of slowing, with buoyant economic growth in both the U.S. and China leading to significant demand for commodities.

The Bloomberg Commodity Index has rebounded to levels not seen since 2015. With 30 per cent of the index tracking energy, it has gained 8 per cent in April alone and 15 per cent this year.

Commodity prices last peaked in 2011. So, this is a turn of fortune after a long fallow period that caused companies to cut back on investment. But today, alongside a robust global economic expansion and pandemic-related supply chain disruptions, this has led to a commodities “squeeze,” with demand outstripping supply – at least for now.

“Commodity cycles tend to arise when there is an inability to speed up supply and this is short-term bullish for the sector,” says David Kelly, chief global strategist at J.P. Morgan Asset Management.

Commodities also have support from investors seeking “real” assets that tend to appreciate when inflation becomes a bigger risk in portfolios. There is wariness about inflation pressure becoming entrenched due to the current combination of very loose fiscal and monetary policies.

Last week, the U.S. Federal Reserve Board was resolute that policy will remain loose for some time. Money expansion has already surged in the past year. At the same time, U.S. President Joe Biden has managed to get a US$1.9-trillion fiscal stimulus bill passed by Congress and made his case for a US$2.3-trillion infrastructure-spending bill and a US$1.8-trillion expansion of the social safety net.

Noting the rise of “policies to address income and wealth inequality,” analysts at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. predicted “an overheating economy and physical inflationary pressures” for the U.S.

Certainly, many investors are unconvinced that an expected rise in consumer prices in the coming months will prove “transitory,” as the Fed currently foresees.

Inflation expectations priced into the U.S. bond market have climbed to their highest level in eight years. Bond investors now expect inflation will run at an annualized 2.4 per cent over the next 10 years. That’s above the average rate of 1.75 per cent expected by the market since 2015.

As economic activity gathers pace, the recent push higher by both commodity prices and inflation expectations shows how these markets are feeding off each other.

One result is that investors tracking commodity baskets and inflation-indexed bonds through exchange-traded funds are likely to be feeling pretty happy – as are investors who have benefited from a market-beating one-third rise in the S&P 500 energy sector this year.

Reopening economies in the coming months also bodes well for greater energy usage. That will probably drive the price of commodity ETFs and shares in energy and miners higher still, with Goldman Sachs predicting “commodities rallying another 13.5 per cent over the next six months.”

Still, once the supply disruptions abate, the rally may well fade – and with it expectations for this mini commodity supercycle.

Oil prices could be hit by increased production from OPEC, and U.S. shale wells drawing from spare capacity. And expectations that infrastructure projects will keep commodity prices elevated in coming years are perhaps overstated given the lengthy approval process of many developed countries. China is also showing signs of tilting the balance of growth away from construction.

At first glance, this bodes ill for copper, which has risen above US$10,000 a tonne and approached its 2011 peak of US$10,190. But the prospects for a greener economy that rewards copper, nickel, lithium and other metals needed for electricity generation and batteries entails a different commodity cycle than those of previous bull runs.

“Copper has always been a powerful cyclical indicator, but its ubiquity [of usage] is likely to drive the metal into a new cycle,” according to research house TS Lombard. It cited the high usage of copper in solar and wind energy generation, electric cars, and the construction of battery-charging infrastructure.

BP itself seems cognizant that the sun is slowly setting on oil and gas. It plans to shift cash toward lower-carbon investments while looking to sustain its oil and gas business.

For investors concerned about inflation and seeking commodity exposure, it makes sense to be selective.

“Industrial metals appear to be in the sweet spot of a green cycle, but beyond that, there are few other areas in commodities that look as appealing longer term,” says Mr. Kelly of J.P. Morgan Asset Management.

© The Financial Times Limited 2021. All Rights Reserved. FT and Financial Times are trademarks of the Financial Times Ltd. Not to be redistributed, copied, or modified in any way.

Report an editorial error

Report a technical issue

Tickers mentioned in this story

Study and track financial data on any traded entity: click to open the full quote page. Data updated as of 21/11/24 4:00pm EST.

SymbolName% changeLast
BP-N
BP Plc ADR
+1.51%29.52
GLNCY
Glencore International Plc ADR
+0.31%9.63

Follow related authors and topics

Authors and topics you follow will be added to your personal news feed in Following.

Interact with The Globe