Lacklustre Demand Weighs On Bellwether Commodities

 | Dec 22, 2014 16:44

As commodities weigh on the FTSE 100, what next for 2015?

If you believe in the theory that commodity price demand points to economic growth and a healthy economy then the last two years have served to blow a rather large hole in that theory.

In fact looking at commodity prices over the last two to three years, while equity markets have gone higher, commodity prices have done the exact opposite.

It’s therefore not that surprising that there is so little underlying price inflation in the world when we’ve seen widespread declines in commodity prices across the board, as well as a sharp decline in Crude Oil prices, in the last six months.

Having said that given the sharp rises seen since 2009 in commodity prices, these falls are more than welcome at a time when we haven’t seen much in the way of wage growth, so in essence what we’ve seen in the last few months is simply a reversal of the income squeeze seen since 2009.

In my opinion that’s not a bad thing and is likely to act as a fiscal stimulus all by itself, in terms of lower input prices for companies and lower shop prices for consumers.

While it’s not such good news for the basic resource sector it will likely make the sector much leaner in terms of cutting its costs, and for when prices start to tick upwards again.

The poor performance of commodity prices also helps explain the poor performance of the basic resource sector over the past 12 months and the fact that the FTSE100 and the Australia ASX have underperformed a lot of their global peers in terms of stock market performance this year, due to the heavy weighting of both indices to the commodity sector.

The Reuters CRB benchmark index of commodity prices is trading below five year lows, down 15% on the year, and nearly 35% down from its 2011 all-time highs.

Commodity price performance 2013