Commodities Week Ahead: Rate Decisions, US NFP, Dollar Weakness To Drive Direction

 | Jul 30, 2018 02:56

Energy markets, along with precious and industrial metals, will likely see tight trading ranges this week ahead of key rate decisions and US jobs data, while agricultural prices could continue creeping higher on inclement weather and falling inventories.

A widely-expected rate hike by the Bank of England (BOE), the possibility for the Bank of Japan (BOJ) to surprise markets with its own rate decision, the potential for the US Federal Reserve to react to President Donald Trump's recent criticism and an anticipated third monthly jump in US employment are on the calendar. Together, these will determine the direction for the dollar and investors, caught in the crosscurrents of global macro and supply-demand factors for oil, gold and copper.

In crop markets, it will be a more straight-forward play of weather extremities, with ongoing droughts in Australia and parts of Europe expected to keep wheat on a bullish tilt. Dry conditions are also threatening cotton plantings in China and sugar fields in Brazil and India.

The Bloomberg Commodity Index, a measure of 26 raw materials, settled up 1.4% last week for its biggest weekly gain in 3-1/2 months. The index surged after crude oil prices fell on Friday but rose for the week on supply fears associated with US-Iran rhetoric and Saudi Arabia’s decision to labor strike at Chile’s Escondida mine.

Dollar Bears Could Rise Again

A further retreat in the dollar from one-year highs could help industrial commodities advance this week. Many are betting on this if the BOE proceeds with its forecast 25-basis point hike, and the BOJ decides to contract instead of ease. Another bearish outcome for USD will be if US non-farm payrolls for July comes in below the forecast growth of 190,000.

“Investors bought the dollar on expectations they will see at least two more rate hikes before the year is out,” said Fawad Razaqzada, currency analyst at forex.com.

“However, after a three-month rally, some market participants have wondered how much of the bullishness is already priced in,” Razaqzada said, arguing that even the 4.1% US GDP Q2 growth that came in on Friday couldn’t rally the buck. Investing.com’s daily technicals call for a “Sell” in the dollar.

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