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Commodities weekly: Gold stalls, spotlight shifts to ‘cheaper’ silver and platinum

Posted on: Jun 07 2025

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Key points in this update:

  • The Bloomberg Commodity Index was heading for its strongest weekly performance in five months, buoyed by broad-based gains—particularly in the energy and metals sectors
  • Traders and investors continued to grapple with the uncertain global economic fallout from President Trump’s trade war
  • Silver and platinum reach fresh cyclical highs, driven by momentum and their relative cheapness to rangebound gold.
  • Crude holds firm despite growing supply glut risks

The Bloomberg Commodity Index was heading for its strongest weekly performance in five months, buoyed by broad-based gains—particularly in the energy and metals sectors. Notably, silver and platinum, often overlooked in mainstream investment portfolios, surged to fresh cycle highs, reflecting a growing investor appetite for tangible assets amid rising geopolitical and financial risks. This momentum came ahead of a closely watched US jobs report, which confirmed a weakening trend without falling off a cliff. Overall, incoming U.S. economic data will continued to add a layer of anticipation to an already volatile market landscape.

While silver and platinum topped the weekly commodities performance chart, posting returns close to 10%, on a year-to-date basis, silver is up 24%, while platinum has surged by 29%; other commodities also saw notable gains. Crude oil, in particular, performed surprisingly well. Both WTI and Brent crude prices rose approximately 4%, but overall continue to trade within well-established ranges. This rise came despite a fresh announcement from eight OPEC+ members of yet another bumper production increase, raising some concerns about an emerging supply glut in the second half of the year.

Oil markets appeared to shrug off the news, buoyed instead by renewed optimism following an agreement between US President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping to resume trade talks. Additional upward pressure came from persistent supply disruption risks, particularly in Venezuela, Libya, Iran, and even Canada—where wildfires have caused temporary production slowdowns.

Copper also had a strong week, supported by robust demand, most notably in China, and rising supply constraints amid continued movement of copper to the US from the rest of the world. The New York traded high-grade contract benefited from a widening premium for US copper over London Metal Exchange (LME) prices, following the Trump administration's decision to double tariffs on imported aluminium and steel to 50%. The move is part of a broader effort to reduce America’s reliance on foreign imports, although it comes with the downside of higher costs across a range of sectors—from housing and automobiles to household goods and office supplies.

Moreover, copper prices remain underpinned by a significant drop in LME-monitored stockpiles, which have fallen 50% year-to-date. A recent inventory decline in Shanghai adds to the bullish momentum, even though some of this inventory drawdown reflects a relocation of supplies to US warehouses ahead of an expected tariff announcement.

In the agricultural sector, performance was mixed. Arabica coffee prices rebounded following a month-long correction from a record high, while short covering supported wheat in response to geopolitical tensions and weather risks. Together with ongoing strength across a US-focused livestock market, these gains helped offset persistent weakness in corn and sugar.

Commodities performance across all sectors

Elsewhere across financial markets, sentiment remained cautious. Traders and investors continued to grapple with the uncertain global economic fallout from President Trump’s trade war—an issue reignited despite a recent 90-day truce between the US and China. The US Court of International Trade had initially blocked the bulk of Trump’s sweeping tariffs, ruling them an unconstitutional use of emergency powers under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act. However, a federal appeals court subsequently granted a temporary stay, reinstating the tariffs pending further review. The legal whiplash added to global uncertainty, with markets unsure whether these aggressive trade policies will be ultimately upheld or struck down.

Compounding the unease, President Trump’s so-called “big beautiful bill”—a sweeping tax and spending package projected to add between USD 3 to USD 5 trillion to the national debt—has stoked fresh concerns over runaway deficits and rising inflation. The bill sparked a high-profile clash between Trump and Elon Musk, who called it a “disgusting abomination” that recklessly inflates the federal deficit. In response, Trump lashed out, branding Musk “crazy” and threatening to tear up key federal contracts and subsidies that benefit Tesla and SpaceX.

While some observers dismissed the feud as political theatre, it underscored the increasing dysfunction in Washington, where the administration appears more focused on picking fights than offering credible economic solutions. The broader consequence is growing investor anxiety about America’s fiscal and political stability. This uncertainty—combined with the increasing politicisation of American business—has begun to erode global confidence. As a result, investors are now demanding a premium to hold US government bonds, and the dollar remains under pressure despite a widening yield advantage over other sovereign debt markets.

These dynamics have further incentivised investors to diversify away from traditional financial instruments and toward tangible assets. Gold continues to be the primary haven, but with bullion demand showing signs of stalling as investors look for a fresh trigger to propel prices higher, we have instead in recent weeks seen heightened interest in silver, platinum, and to a certain extent also copper—all benefiting from tightening supply conditions. These commodities are viewed as politically neutral; unlike sovereign bonds or foreign currencies, they carry no counterparty risk and are not tied to any nation’s credit rating. This is precisely why gold remains a cornerstone of central bank reserves worldwide—and why other metals, supported by a tightening supply outlook, are now increasingly seen as a rational hedge against political and financial instability.

Silver breakout leaves gold trailing

Despite silver’s occasional volatility—especially relative to gold—the white metal has been on an upward trajectory since September 2022. While gold has garnered most of the attention, silver’s performance has been roughly on par, with both metals doubling in value during this period. However, unlike gold, which must break new record highs to continue its advance, silver remains well below its 2011 peak near USD 50, potentially offering room for further outperformance as investors hesitate to buy gold at record prices.

From a technical perspective, the break above USD 35 not only signals a 13-year high, it also reflects a break above the 0.618 Fibonacci retracement of the 2011 to 2020 downward move, potentially from a technical perspective not leaving much in terms of resistance before USD 40. However, with the initial move carrying the hallmark of momentum buying from speculators buying the break above resistance-now-support in the USD 35-area, the rally needs to extend further in order to reduce the risk of liquidation from recently established long positions.

Spot silver - Source: Saxo

Platinum rally resumes after brief, shallow pullback.

Platinum, which recently broke above USD 1,025—surpassing a long-term descending trendline that originated at the 2008 high of USD 2,300—resumed its ascent following a brief and shallow correction. An often-overlooked semi-industrial metal, which a decade ago traded on par with gold, before seeing its relative cheapness as seen through the gold-platinum ratio hit a record 3.6-to-1 last month. However, supported by fundamentals leading to the mentioned technical breakout, the metal has gained some traction these past few weeks, after the World Platinum Investment Council, in its latest Platinum Quarterly report, projected a third consecutive annual market deficit, with demand expected to outstrip supply by nearly one million troy ounces.

This anticipated shortfall, which will draw down existing above-ground inventories, is being driven by demand from the automotive sector and, notably, a surge in Chinese interest in jewellery, bars, and coins. Last month, China recorded its highest platinum imports in a year, spurred by the metal’s relative price stability and its significant discount to gold. The shortfall could accelerate if the current demand from investors continues, not least through demand for platinum-backed exchange-traded funds, which during the past two weeks have seen total holdings jump 111,000 ounces to a ten-month high at 3.29 million ounces.

Gold rangebound as traders pivot to silver; policy shift could fuel rally

Gold remains rangebound after a technical breakout above the downtrend from its April 22 record high of USD 3,500, failed to attract renewed and strong buying interest. Instead, traders have shifted their focus to silver and platinum. While we remain cautious about predicting an imminent surge to new all-time highs, the macroeconomic backdrop is increasingly supportive of precious metals. A potent mix of rising fiscal debt concerns, tariff-driven supply shocks, weakening consumer confidence, a softening labour market, and continued dollar weakness may soon prompt a dovish—and potentially stronger-than-expected—policy shift by the Federal Reserve. Combined with the risk of higher inflation and central banks extending their gold-buying spree into a fourth consecutive year, the groundwork for a potential push toward USD 4,000 cannot be ruled out.

Managed money positioning across key metals

In the latest reporting week ending May 27, speculators in the managed money category held net long positions across gold, silver, platinum, and copper. Platinum saw a notable buildup in speculative longs following a breakout, while positioning in the other metals remained relatively muted. This leaves ample room for accumulation once the technical and/or fundamental outlook becomes more favorable—as was the case with silver over the past week.

Meanwhile, the binary nature of the upcoming U.S. copper tariff decision—and the risk of a potential volatility spike following any announcement—continues to suppress speculative interest in copper. Nevertheless, traders are maintaining a cautiously bullish bias.

Managed money positions across key metals

Crude holds firm despite growing supply glut risk

WTI and Brent crude oil continue to trade within a relatively wide USD 10 range, established after the sharp selloff in early April. This slump followed renewed concerns over President Trump’s trade war policies and an OPEC+ announcement to accelerate the unwinding of 2.2 million barrels per day (bpd) in voluntary production cuts. The move, seen as a response to overproduction by some members, was also aimed at gradually regaining market share from high-cost producers.

On the demand side, rising consumption of gasoline and distillates ahead of the peak summer season for driving and air conditioning has helped underpin the market. Meanwhile, several supply-side risks are offering additional short- to medium-term price support. These include recent wildfires in Canada threatening production, the risk of supply disruptions in Libya due to political unrest, and the recent revocation of Chevron’s license to operate in Venezuela—potentially impacting around 220,000 bpd of output. Additionally, persistent geopolitical tensions, including the Russia-Ukraine war and the looming threat of renewed US sanctions on Iran if nuclear talks break down, are keeping a floor under oil prices.

Brent crude, currently trading around USD 65.50, remains confined within a broad USD 58.50 to USD 68.50 range. In addition to the short-term supply risks previously mentioned, the recent price uptick has also been driven by buying activity from speculators who were caught off guard by the market’s resilience. However, once this momentum-driven buying exhausts itself, further upside is likely to remain capped, particularly as OPEC+ continues to add supply incrementally on a monthly basis.

Brent Crude oil, first month cont. - Source: Saxo
Related articles/content             
4 June 2025: Crude oil holds firm despite mounting supply glut fears 3 June 2025: Gold and silver break key levels as copper eyes tariff decision 2 June 2025: COT Report: Speculators sold crude ahead of OPEC hike 28 May 2025: Breakout or breakdown Gold silver and platinum face pivotal resistance zones 26 May 2025: COT Report: Hedge funds return to gold; elevated grains short 23 May 2025: Commodities weekly Diverging supply trends boost platinum weigh on crude 21 May 2025: Israel attack risks add modest risk premium to crude prices 20 May 2025: As gold pauses is platinum ready to shine for investors 19 May 2025: COT Report: Speculators show measured reaction to trade truce 16 May 2025: Commodities Weekly - Gold retreats Procyclicals rise amid trade truce optimism 14 May 2025: Crude stays range-bound despite latest tariff-truce bounce 13 May 2025: Gold holds steady as tariff truce sparks silver rebound 12 May 2025: COT Report: Broad risk reduction seen ahead of easing trade tensions 9 May 2025: Commodities weekly Sentiment improves as trade tensions cool before talks 8 May 2025: Copper market navigates tariff uncertainty amid tight global supply 7 May 2025: Agriculture markets diverge as trade war weather and speculators reshape landscape 6 May 2025: Crude climbs as market digests OPEC hike and shale slowdown risks 6 May 2025: Gold rises as Chinese demand rebounds post-holiday 5 May 2025: COT Report: Dollar-selling persists; Crude length trimmed ahead of OPEC output hike 1 May 2025: Gold corrects sharply from record highs as Chinese demand pauses 29 April 2025: Copper navigates energy transition supply shocks and market turmoil 28 April 2025: COT Report: Continued gold selling; USD weakness drives record JPY long 25 April 2025: Commodities weekly Energy slump overshadows strength in gold and agriculture 23 April 2025: Blowout top leaves Gold in consolidation mode 22 April 2025: Commodities return Why allocation matters 16 April 2025: Whats next as gold hits our USD 3300 target 15 April 2025: COT Reports show hedge funds racing to cash post-Liberation Day 11 April 2025: Commodities weekly As chaos reigns whats next for markets 10 April 2025: YouTube Interview: Gold, silver, copper, oil - prices, supply, demand in 2025 Podcasts that include commodities focus: 6 June 2025: Silver rips as Musk-Trump bromance trips 28 May 2025: Nvidia to determine whether US stocks can achieve new highs 12 May 2025: As good as it gets on the trade news front 6 May 2025: Bears hang in at key levels as Palantir rides the retail whirlwind 23 April 2025: Trump going soft on tariffs versus the direction of travel. 11 April 2025: US and China are slipping into an economic war 4 April 2025: Markets melts down as recession risks go global 1 April 2025: Bracing for Liberation Day
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Ole HansenHead of Commodity StrategySaxo Bank
Topics: Commodities Gold Silver Inflation Federal Reserve Gas Oil Crude Oil Heating Oil Oil and Gas Oil Copper Agriculture China Highlighted articles Wheat Natural Gas Highlighted articles Corn Platinum Trump Version 2 - Traders Cocoa Coffee
Nvidia’s blockbuster earnings: weathering geopolitical storms and pioneering the AI revolution

Posted on: May 30 2025

Key points:

  • Nvidia delivered strong quarterly results, driven by robust AI chip demand, successful Blackwell rollout, and expanding customer diversification, despite a significant USD 8 billion revenue hit from US-China trade restrictions.
  • China's geopolitical risks remain critical, as export controls accelerate China's domestic AI capabilities, threatening Nvidia’s long-term market position and global AI leadership.
  • Investor focus areas going forward include Nvidia’s margin recovery trajectory, further expansion beyond hyperscalers into diversified industries, and strategic responses to intensifying competitive pressure from Chinese AI innovation.
This content is marketing material.

Imagine sailing a state-of-the-art ship directly into a fierce storm, with towering waves and relentless wind. Yet not only does your vessel remain intact—it accelerates ahead.

Nvidia’s recent quarterly earnings echoed exactly this scenario, as the tech giant powered through intense geopolitical headwinds, particularly stemming from escalating US-China tensions and export restrictions. However, for investors, it's the resilience beneath these impressive figures that truly matters.

Extraordinary growth amid challenging times

Nvidia reported remarkable quarterly revenues of USD 44.1 billion, up a stunning 69% year-over-year, comfortably surpassing analyst forecasts. The data-centre segment, central to Nvidia’s success, soared to USD 39.1 billion, a 73% increase. Nvidia’s data-centre revenue now dwarfs that of all its closest rivals combined, underscoring its dominance as the preferred supplier of AI infrastructure to tech giants like Amazon, Microsoft, Alphabet, and Meta.

Nvidia reported strong profitability this quarter, with a gross margin of 71.3% (excluding the China-related inventory charges), underscoring the company's robust operational performance.

CEO Jensen Huang emphasized Nvidia's role at the heart of the ongoing AI revolution, highlighting how fundamental artificial intelligence has become, comparable to electricity or the internet itself.

Nvidia guided for next-quarter revenue of USD 45 billion, broadly in line with analyst expectations, despite an anticipated USD 8 billion hit from China restrictions.

 

Navigating strong China headwinds—the USD 8 billion storm

However, Nvidia’s journey wasn't entirely smooth. Recent US government export restrictions on Nvidia’s advanced H20 chips, tailored specifically for China, led to a substantial USD 4.5 billion inventory write-down. This impact will deepen next quarter, with Nvidia projecting a further USD 8 billion revenue shortfall due to the inability to sell these chips into China.

CEO Huang challenged the strategic thinking behind US export controls, explaining that restricting Nvidia’s products won't slow China’s AI development. Instead, these limitations have accelerated China’s domestic innovation, inadvertently strengthening competitors such as Huawei. For Nvidia investors, the crucial issue now is how the company will strategically adapt to these restrictions—possibly by creating alternative chips compliant with the rules—to maintain its competitiveness in China.

Blackwell: Nvidia’s strategic AI shift

Despite the China setback, Nvidia’s strategic pivot to its groundbreaking Blackwell chips advanced smoothly after overcoming early production hurdles. Large-scale deployments at customers like Microsoft signify growing confidence in Blackwell’s capabilities. Nvidia’s management has reiterated that as Blackwell scales, profit margins are set to recover toward historical highs in the mid-70% range.

Blackwell represents more than just another product line—it marks Nvidia’s deeper integration into global AI infrastructure, underpinning growth across diverse sectors including cloud computing, robotics, healthcare, and professional services.

Broadening beyond hyperscalers: a crucial pivot

Another positive development is Nvidia’s expanding reach beyond traditional hyperscalers. CFO Colette Kress highlighted increasing demand across various industries, including automotive, robotics, healthcare, and consulting. Investors have long sought this diversification, aiming to reduce dependency on a small group of large cloud providers. This growing customer base suggests Nvidia’s long-term market opportunities continue to expand.

Competitive threats from China's domestic AI

Adding urgency to Nvidia’s strategic responses is China’s rapid advancement in AI, exemplified by companies like DeepSeek, whose chatbot rivals Western tools such as ChatGPT. Huang clarified that these emerging "reasoning models" actually boost, rather than diminish, demand for advanced computational power. Nvidia is therefore well positioned—but investors must remain vigilant to how this evolving competitive landscape impacts future earnings.

Key considerations for investors

Investors must watch the following themes closely:

  • Broadening revenue streams: The move toward diverse end-markets—from automotive to healthcare—signals greater long-term stability. Watch for progress here as an essential future growth driver.
  • Navigating China strategically: With USD 8 billion in immediate lost revenue, the strategic adjustments Nvidia makes for China—possibly via lower-powered chips or new compliance strategies—will significantly impact future earnings and global market positioning.
  • Blackwell profitability and execution: Monitor closely the pace of Blackwell adoption by hyperscalers and other customers. The promised return of margins to the mid-70% range depends heavily on successful execution.
  • China's competitive AI landscape: Nvidia faces intensified competition as China rapidly develops its own AI industry. DeepSeek and other reasoning models represent both risks and opportunities, as their adoption creates even greater demand for high-compute solutions.

Nvidia’s crossroads moment

Nvidia currently occupies a uniquely complex position—right at the intersection of geopolitical tensions and transformative AI innovation. The risks it faces from China are significant, but so too is its strategic opportunity globally, evidenced by substantial new partnerships in places like Saudi Arabia and across the Middle East.

The immediate challenge for Nvidia—and thus its investors—is clear: the company must successfully navigate these geopolitical storms while delivering on its ambitious technological roadmap. Any missteps or unforeseen disruptions could swiftly change investor sentiment.

Yet, Huang’s powerful vision remains Nvidia’s guiding star, neatly summarizing the potential investors are betting on:

“Countries worldwide recognize AI as essential infrastructure—like electricity, like the internet. Nvidia stands at the very centre of this profound transformation.”

Navigating stormy waters has never been easy, but Nvidia’s impressive execution so far suggests it’s uniquely equipped not just to survive—but thrive. For investors, watching Nvidia isn't merely about tracking a company’s financial results—it’s about keeping a finger on the pulse of global technology itself.

Jacob FalkencroneGlobal Head of Investment StrategySaxo Bank
Topics: Equities Highlighted articles En hurtig tanke Artificial Intelligence Theme - Artificial intelligence Technology Tech Corporate Earnings Earnings per share Price to earnings ratio Price earnings ratio Earnings beat Earnings miss NVidia Corp. NVIDIA Corporation
Commodities weekly: Diverging supply trends boost platinum, weigh on crude

Posted on: May 24 2025

This content is marketing material

Key points in this update:

  • Global risk sentiment took a knock this week after US Treasury yields surged fueled by mounting concerns of the expanding U.S. fiscal deficit
  • A weaker dollar despite rising yields reflecting loss of confidence in the U.S. as a risk-free investment, driving investors towards other regions and safe-haven assets like gold and the Swiss Franc.
  • Platinum, this week's highflyer, surged more than 10% to reach a fresh one-year high supported by momentum buyers amid a tightening supply outlook.
  • Crude quickly surrendered an Israel-Iran related risk premium amid speculation key OPEC+ producers are planning another bumper production increase in July, the third in a row.
  • Weather risks gave the grains sector a lift, in the process forcing speculators to reduce bearish bets, most notable in corn and wheat

Global financial markets started the week on a positive note, extending optimism from the previous week after the U.S. and China agreed to a 90-day pause in their escalating trade war. This truce eased punitive tariffs that had begun to weigh on both economies—threatening recession in the U.S. and a slowdown in China’s export-driven growth—helping boost equities and risk sentiment into a second week.

However, the rally faded when the 30-year U.S. Treasury yield reached its highest level since 2023, fueled by mounting concerns over the expanding U.S. fiscal deficit. Contributing to these worries were Moody’s recent credit rating downgrade and President Trump’s  “big beautiful bill”—a tax and spending package which is projected to add $3–5 trillion to the national debt, stoking fears of higher deficits and inflation. The dollar meanwhile was heading for its worst weekly close since December 2023, despite high Treasury yields, reflecting a loss of confidence in the U.S. as a risk-free investment, driving investors toward other regions and safe-haven assets like gold and the Swiss Franc.

Having been passed by the House, the bill is now heading to the Senate where a handful of Senators have a problem with the version the House passed. The Republicans can only afford to lose three votes in the Senate and the bill could be split up and any changes would have to revert to the House for a vote before Trump signs it into law. In other words, we don’t know the final impact here or how the treasury market or the USD will react once a deal has been hammered through both houses.

Investors nevertheless grew wary that the Federal Reserve and other central banks might need to keep interest rates elevated longer to offset inflation driven by fiscal expansion. In the near term, sentiment in the bond market is so negative that a rebound is possible - especially if the Senate forces through a watered down version - which could support risk assets, but longer-term concerns over fiscal policy are likely to dominate market direction in the months ahead. Meanwhile, trade talks between the U.S. and major partners—including China, Japan, and Europe—continue, fostering some optimism despite the lack of significant breakthroughs.

Fiscal worries also weighed on the dollar, while gold surged toward its best week in a month. This move was supported not only by debt-related anxiety but also by a CNN report citing U.S. intelligence that Israel is preparing a strike against Iran. Gold's rally may signal the end of a recent consolidation that had shaved $380 off its price since peaking at a record $3,500 on April 22. Platinum, this week's highflyer, surged more than 10% to reach a fresh one-year high after briefly exceeding the 2024 peak at USD 1,096—supported by momentum buyers amid a tightening supply outlook.

 

Commodities performance across all sectors
 

The Bloomberg Commodity Index—which tracks 24 major commodities across energy, metals, and agriculture—remained range-bound over the past six weeks, with gains in some sectors offsetting losses in others. This week, however, the index was up by 1.3%, lifting the year-to-date gain to 5.3%, supported by a rebound in gold and other investment metals, as well as the first increase in grain prices in six weeks. The latter was driven by adverse weather conditions affecting global wheat production forecasts.

Industrial metals posted a modest gain, led by a renewed tariff-driven premium on New York-traded high-grade copper over its London counterpart. These gains were partly offset by losses in the energy sector, amid expectations of third consecutive and large production increase from eight OPEC+ members, and falling soft commodity prices, especially cocoa and coffee.

Platinum, the forgotten metal springs back to life

Platinum—an often-overlooked, semi-industrial metal primarily mined in South Africa—is finally showing signs of life after a decade of sideways trading. Used largely in catalytic converters and laboratory equipment, platinum surged over 10% this past week. The rally was fueled by expectations of a third consecutive annual supply deficit and rising demand in China for platinum bars, coins, and jewelry, as investors take advantage of its relative cheapness—particularly against gold. The gold-to-platinum price ratio hit a peak of 3.6 in April (i.e., one ounce of gold equaling 3.6 ounces of platinum), but has since narrowed to around 3.

Momentum accelerated after the World Platinum Investment Council’s latest Platinum Quarterly report projected a deepening market deficit—nearly one million troy ounces—marking the third straight year of shrinking above-ground inventories. Notably, platinum also broke above a 17-year technical downtrend this week. However, while momentum traders briefly pushed prices above the 2024 high of USD 1,096, a sustained breakout is not yet confirmed. More positive price action, potentially above USD 1,134 is needed to distinguish a true trend reversal from a mere range extension.

Spot platinum chart showing previous highs, now resistance - Source: Saxo

Gold attracts renewed demand amid fiscal debt focus

Gold rebounded sharply following its steepest correction since 2023, driven by renewed concerns over U.S. fiscal health. This highlights a shift in traditional correlations, as gold typically struggles when interest rates rise. In this case, however, rising bond yields—reflecting increased U.S. funding costs—are themselves reinforcing the appeal of gold as a hedge, as they signal deteriorating government creditworthiness.

Having already reached our 2025 target of USD 3,500, we now adopt a cautious, wait-and-see stance. The market is caught between profit-taking and renewed dip-buying. Despite the recent pullback, core structural drivers remain intact: strong central bank buying, geopolitical tensions, fiscal instability, and persistent inflation concerns. From technical analytic perspective, a break above USD 3,355, the 0.618 Fibonacci retracement of the latest correction, may signal a renewed push towards fresh highs.

Spot Gold (XAUUSD) - Source: SaxoTraderGO

Risk of another OPEC+ output surge weighs on crude

Crude oil markets have stabilized following a sharp April selloff, with WTI trading between USD 55–65 and Brent between USD 58.50–68.50—a volatile but contained USD 10-per-barrel range.

This week, attention turned to the Middle East after Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei dismissed prospects for renewed nuclear talks, rejecting U.S. demands—particularly on uranium enrichment—as “outrageous.” Geopolitical tension escalated further after a CNN report cited U.S. intelligence suggesting Israel may be preparing to strike Iranian nuclear facilities.

However, any risk premium was quickly offset by growing expectations of a third consecutive OPEC+ production increase, U.S. fiscal uncertainty, and soft demand data ahead of the Memorial Day weekend. In the short term, sentiment in the U.S. bond market appears to be near peak pessimism, and if yields retreat, crude may find support from improved risk appetite. While we remain cautious, we are not overtly bearish and expect oil to stay rangebound within its current wide band.

Weather risks give grains a lift

Grains are on track for their first weekly gain in six weeks, with futures across wheat, corn, and soybeans posting gains. Wheat led the rally, buoyed by supply-side concerns both domestically and abroad. Short covering by speculators—who’ve held a net short position in Chicago wheat for a record 149 consecutive weeks—added fuel to the move.

Globally, dry weather conditions from China to Russia and Europe are threatening yields, while U.S. prices found additional support from strong export demand and erratic weather that has worsened crop conditions. These developments have prompted a reassessment of the global production outlook and reintroduced volatility into a previously oversold sector.

CBOT wheat futures have been in a sustained downtrend since peaking in 2022, though they’ve found some support near the USD 5 per bushel level in recent months. A persistent contango—where near-term contracts trade below deferred ones—has encouraged speculative short selling, contributing to a record 149-week stretch of net short positions. For a meaningful reversal, the supply outlook must worsen further, driving up front-month prices and potentially triggering a technical breakout akin to the recent move in platinum. For now, we’re watching key resistance at the descending trendline near USD 5.80 per bushel, which must be cleared to confirm a shift in momentum.

CBOT wheat, first month cont. - Source: SaxoTraderGO
Related articles/content             
21 May 2025: Israel attack risks add modest risk premium to crude prices 20 May 2025: As gold pauses is platinum ready to shine for investors 19 May 2025: COT Report: Speculators show measured reaction to trade truce 16 May 2025: Commodities Weekly - Gold retreats Procyclicals rise amid trade truce optimism 14 May 2025: Crude stays range-bound despite latest tariff-truce bounce 13 May 2025: Gold holds steady as tariff truce sparks silver rebound 12 May 2025: COT Report: Broad risk reduction seen ahead of easing trade tensions 9 May 2025: Commodities weekly Sentiment improves as trade tensions cool before talks 8 May 2025: Copper market navigates tariff uncertainty amid tight global supply 7 May 2025: Agriculture markets diverge as trade war weather and speculators reshape landscape 6 May 2025: Crude climbs as market digests OPEC hike and shale slowdown risks 6 May 2025: Gold rises as Chinese demand rebounds post-holiday 5 May 2025: COT Report: Dollar-selling persists; Crude length trimmed ahead of OPEC output hike 1 May 2025: Gold corrects sharply from record highs as Chinese demand pauses 29 April 2025: Copper navigates energy transition supply shocks and market turmoil 28 April 2025: COT Report: Continued gold selling; USD weakness drives record JPY long 25 April 2025: Commodities weekly Energy slump overshadows strength in gold and agriculture 23 April 2025: Blowout top leaves Gold in consolidation mode 22 April 2025: Commodities return Why allocation matters 16 April 2025: Whats next as gold hits our USD 3300 target 15 April 2025: COT Reports show hedge funds racing to cash post-Liberation Day 11 April 2025: Commodities weekly As chaos reigns whats next for markets 10 April 2025: YouTube Interview: Gold, silver, copper, oil - prices, supply, demand in 2025 Podcasts that include commodities focus: 12 May 2025: As good as it gets on the trade news front 6 May 2025: Bears hang in at key levels as Palantir rides the retail whirlwind 23 April 2025: Trump going soft on tariffs versus the direction of travel. 11 April 2025: US and China are slipping into an economic war 4 April 2025: Markets melts down as recession risks go global 1 April 2025: Bracing for Liberation Day
More from the author             
  • Ole S Hansen's articles on Saxo
  • Follow and interact with me on Twitter and BlueSky social media platforms
Ole HansenHead of Commodity StrategySaxo Bank
Topics: Commodities Gold Silver Inflation Federal Reserve Gas Oil Crude Oil Heating Oil Oil and Gas Oil Copper Agriculture China Highlighted articles Wheat Natural Gas Highlighted articles Corn Platinum Trump Version 2 - Traders Cocoa Coffee