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Commodity Market - Metals, Agriculture, and Energy price, update and analysis

Started by BrittanyMc, November 29, 2025, 01:48:27 PM

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BrittanyMc



This is not advice on investment, only data and brief analysis

Global Commodities Weekly Recap — Week Ending Friday, 27 February 2026

The past week in commodities was defined by cross-currents between macroeconomic data, currency movements, and selective supply-side headlines. Rather than one dominant theme, markets split into three tracks: energy softened, precious metals firmed, and agriculture stayed mostly range-bound.

Below is a breakdown by sector with approximate front-month futures closing levels as of Friday's settlement window.

1) Broad Commodity Indexes

Bloomberg Commodity Index (BCOM): slightly negative on the week

Energy component: weaker

Precious metals component: firmer

Agriculture: mixed

Because energy carries heavy weight inside diversified commodity benchmarks, modest oil weakness outweighed gains in gold and some agricultural contracts. The result was a broadly flat-to-lower weekly tone for composite indexes.

Commentary:
This week's index behavior shows how dominant crude oil remains in shaping broad commodity performance. Even if half the complex is stable or rising, oil often determines the final direction of the index.

2) Energy Commodities
Crude Oil

WTI Crude Oil Futures: ~ $61–62 per barrel

Brent Crude Oil Futures: ~ $66–67 per barrel

What happened

Oil drifted lower during the week.

Key influences:

Inventory data from the United States suggested comfortable supply levels.

Demand discussions centered on slower global manufacturing growth.

Geopolitical tension moderated, removing some previously embedded risk premium.

No major production outages or shipping disruptions occurred. The market therefore focused on consumption outlook rather than supply shock.

Commentary:
Oil traded like an economic sentiment barometer. Traders were not pricing scarcity; they were repricing expectations about fuel demand growth.

Natural Gas

Henry Hub Natural Gas Futures: ~ $2.8–2.9/MMBtu

Natural gas extended prior weakness.

Reason:
Late-winter weather forecasts showed milder temperatures in key U.S. consuming regions, reducing heating demand projections. Storage levels appeared manageable relative to seasonal norms.

Commentary:
Gas once again demonstrated how weather-driven it is. Small forecast changes continue to produce outsized percentage moves compared with other commodities.

3) Precious Metals
Gold

Gold Futures: ~ $5,020 per ounce

Gold rose modestly on the week.

Drivers:

continued macro uncertainty

currency fluctuations

portfolio hedging flows

Gold benefited from cautious investor positioning even though inflation data did not show a dramatic surprise.

Silver

Silver Futures: ~ $84–86 per ounce

Silver was more volatile and underperformed gold slightly.

Why:
Silver reacts to both safe-haven demand and industrial activity expectations. Concerns about global factory momentum limited upside compared with gold.

Commentary:
Gold's steady bid contrasted with oil's weakness — a sign that financial caution outweighed growth optimism this week.

4) Industrial Metals
Copper

Copper Futures: ~ $12,700–12,900 per metric ton

Copper remained elevated but did not break higher.

Influences:

Infrastructure spending narratives remain supportive long term.

However, recent manufacturing data in major economies were mixed.

Aluminum and nickel softened slightly during the week, reflecting similar uncertainty about industrial output growth.

Commentary:
Industrial metals were in "wait-and-see mode." The market neither confirmed a slowdown nor embraced a new expansion narrative.

5) Agricultural Commodities

(Chicago Board of Trade approximate closes)

Corn Futures: ~ $4.45 per bushel

Wheat Futures: ~ $5.75 per bushel

Soybean Futures: ~ $11.70 per bushel

Agricultural markets were comparatively stable.

What drove the sector:

Early planting expectations forming in the Northern Hemisphere

Export sales data steady but not exceptional

No major weather shock this week

Soft commodities:

Coffee Futures: volatile but elevated historically

Cocoa Futures: still historically high despite consolidation

Sugar Futures: steady near mid-Pending Order cents per pound

Commentary:
Agriculture reflected physical fundamentals rather than macro sentiment. Prices remained largely anchored to crop outlook rather than global risk narratives.

6) Cross-Market Interpretation

This week highlighted a subtle but important theme:

Energy weakened → demand outlook cautious

Gold strengthened → financial hedging active

Copper stable → long-term industrial themes intact but not accelerating

Agriculture steady → no supply disruption

There was no single dominant shock. Instead, the commodity complex adjusted gradually to evolving economic expectations.

The absence of panic moves suggests markets were recalibrating rather than reacting to crisis. Capital rotated between sectors instead of exiting commodities entirely.

Overall Summary

The week ending 27 February 2026 showed:

Mild downside in crude oil due to demand discussion and inventory comfort

Continued weather-driven softness in natural gas

Modest safe-haven support for gold

Industrial metals steady but cautious

Agricultural commodities range-bound

Commodity markets this week were shaped more by macro expectations and positioning adjustments than by physical shortages or dramatic geopolitical events.


BrittanyMc



This is not advice on investment, only data and brief analysis

Global Commodities Weekly Recap — Week Ending Friday, 6 March 2026

The past week in global commodity markets was dominated by a sharp surge in energy prices caused by geopolitical conflict, while most other commodities moved more moderately. Oil markets experienced the most dramatic shift, while metals and agricultural commodities were comparatively stable. The commodity complex therefore split into two very different stories: energy shock versus relatively steady physical commodity markets.

1) Major Commodity Indexes

Broad commodity baskets ended the week higher overall, primarily because energy prices carry large weighting inside most indexes.

Energy's surge offset relatively modest moves in metals and agricultural commodities. The result was a commodity market environment where one sector—oil—dominated the direction of the entire asset class.

Commentary:
Commodity indexes can sometimes give a misleading impression of the overall market. This week is a good example: while the index rose, many commodities actually moved very little. The rise was mostly an energy story.

2) Energy Commodities
Crude Oil

Approximate front-month futures closing levels:

WTI Crude Oil: about $90.9 per barrel

Brent Crude Oil: about $92–93 per barrel

Oil recorded its largest weekly increase in decades, rising more than 25–30% during the week.

What happened

The rally was triggered by a major escalation in the Middle East involving military strikes and retaliatory attacks that threatened shipping routes through the Strait of Hormuz.

Roughly one-fifth of global oil supply normally moves through that corridor, so any disruption immediately affects global price expectations.

There may be production cuts in some Gulf producers due to logistical constraints, which amplified supply concerns.

Other energy markets

Natural Gas (Henry Hub): roughly $3.1/MMBtu

Heating Oil: about $2.43 per gallon

RBOB Gasoline: about $1.93 per gallon

Gas markets were volatile but far less dramatic than oil. The primary driver remained seasonal demand expectations rather than geopolitical supply disruption.

Commentary:
Oil markets respond instantly to geopolitical risk because production and transportation infrastructure is concentrated in a few regions. When those regions face conflict, prices often move before any physical shortage actually appears.

3) Precious Metals

Approximate futures closes:

Gold: about $5,087 per ounce

Silver: about $83 per ounce

Gold remained historically elevated and fluctuated within a narrow range during the week.

What influenced metals

Two forces acted simultaneously:

Geopolitical risk increased demand for defensive assets.

Rising bond yields and currency movements limited stronger upward moves.

Silver moved in a similar direction but with slightly higher volatility due to its industrial usage.

Commentary:
Gold's behavior this week showed a balance between fear and financial tightening. While geopolitical events usually push gold higher, rising yields can offset some of that demand.

4) Industrial Metals

Approximate levels:

Copper: about $5.99 per pound (~$13,200 per metric ton)

Nickel: about $18,000 per ton

Aluminum: around $3,060 per ton

Industrial metals were comparatively stable.

What moved the sector

Markets focused mainly on global manufacturing outlook and Chinese demand expectations. Copper prices showed small gains during the week while trading volumes declined slightly.

Commentary:
Industrial metals behaved as if the geopolitical crisis were mostly an energy story rather than a broad economic shock. That suggests markets still view the conflict primarily as a supply-chain issue for oil rather than a global industrial disruption.

5) Agricultural Commodities

Approximate front-month futures closes:

Corn: ~ 427 cents per bushel

Wheat: ~ 537 cents per bushel

Soybeans: ~ 1124 cents per bushel

Cotton: ~ 62 cents per pound

Coffee: ~ 294 cents per pound

Cocoa: ~ $3,765 per ton

Sugar: ~ 13.9 cents per pound

Rice: ~ $11.14 per cwt

Agricultural commodities were largely stable throughout the week.

What influenced agriculture

Key drivers included:

planting expectations for the upcoming season

export demand from major importing countries

currency fluctuations affecting global trade competitiveness

There were no major weather shocks or crop disruptions, which explains the relatively calm price action.

Commentary:
Food commodities often move independently from financial headlines unless supply conditions change. Even during a major geopolitical event affecting oil, agricultural markets can remain quiet if weather and harvest conditions are normal.

6) Livestock and Other Commodities

Live Cattle: about 242 cents per pound

Lean Hogs: about 87 cents per pound

Lumber: roughly $593 per thousand board feet

These markets moved modestly during the week and were influenced primarily by domestic demand expectations rather than global events.

Overall Interpretation

The commodity market this week was shaped by one dominant factor: geopolitical risk in the energy sector.

Key patterns across the market:

Oil surged sharply, dominating commodity headlines and lifting broad commodity indexes.

Natural gas moved much less, reflecting its more regional supply structure.

Gold stayed historically high but relatively stable, balancing risk demand and financial conditions.

Industrial metals showed limited reaction, indicating markets did not interpret the crisis as an immediate threat to global manufacturing.

Agricultural commodities remained calm, because crop fundamentals were unchanged.

In short, the commodity complex experienced an energy-driven shock rather than a systemic commodity rally. Most sectors behaved normally while oil markets reacted dramatically to geopolitical developments affecting one of the world's most critical supply routes.


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