Commodities Week Ahead: Oil Eyes $50 On Trade Talks; Gold Looks Beyond $1300

 | Jan 07, 2019 03:21

US-Sino trade talks are likely to add to the bullish New Year fervor in oil, tipping US crude beyond the key $50 per barrel mark this week, while gold could stomp new ground in $1,300 territory from a potential slide in the dollar as the Fed signals it will be “patient” with rate hikes.

Soybeans and copper, two other commodities with gigantic demand in China, will also be taking their cue from the January 7-8 trade talks, the first since the December 1 meeting where US President Donald Trump and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping agreed upon a 90-day ceasefire.

In the case of crude, the meeting in Beijing will be another chance for oil bulls to prove global energy fundamentals are getting better after a disastrous 2018.

While the EU as a whole imports around 14 million barrels per day of crude, the single largest consuming nation for oil is China with about 8.4 million bpd. China’s economy, therefore, has major ramifications for global oil demand. China has said it expects the trade talks with US Deputy Trade Representative Jeffrey Gerrish and Treasury Undersecretary for International Affairs David Malpass to be “proactive and constructive.”

h3 Encouraging 2019 Start For Oil/h3

Oil has had an encouraging 2019 start from OPEC’s persistent message that it will deliver the 1.2 million bpd in production cuts promised with Russia over the next six months. OPEC lynchpin Saudi Arabia has also signaled its will to squeeze supplies as much as possible to recoup the 40 percent price drop from last year’s highs.

The stock market, which has determined oil price direction in the past three months as much as crude output and demand, might be on the side of oil bulls too. Fed Chair Jerome Powell said on Friday the central bank will assess the economy and the current low inflation regime before piling on rate hikes—an elixir for US stocks after one of their worst Christmases on record due, partly, to three rate increases.