Barron's Why It Is Time To Buy Commodities

Barron’s Headline: Why It’s Time to Invest in Commodities, and How to Do It

By Reshma Kapadia
Updated Jan. 7, 2022 9:45 pm ET / Original Jan. 7, 2022 9:39 pm ET

https://archive.fo/wntNp

Commodities are rarely exciting—and the price of copper, corn, or even oil doesn’t stir investors the way a tweet from Elon Musk does. Yet commodities sit at the crossroads of three of today’s biggest investment themes—rising inflation, a changing China, and the transition away from fossil fuels amid increased attention to climate change.

Barron’s highlighted this opportunity a year ago as commodities emerged from a decadelong bear market. It was a good call: The Bloomberg Commodity Index rose 27% in 2021, its best year in decades. Those three big trends are still going strong, so more gains could be ahead for some commodities, like oil, and agricultural commodities such as corn. But the price run-ups mean that investors need to pick their spots carefully. The factors affecting commodity prices—and determining which ones investors should focus on—often overlap and have different short- and long-term implications. Actively managed funds are better able to spot and take advantage of changing trends; for three good fund options, see the article on page L7.

Inflation has been one of the biggest drivers of many recent economic and market trends. The most recent consumer price index, or CPI, inflation report showed that prices rose across the board in November—by quite a lot, 6.8%. And in December, the Federal Reserve acknowledged that inflation was indeed a sustainable trend—not transitory—and that it’s moving ahead with plans to raise interest rates to battle inflationary pressures. Even as the Omicron variant spreads, the world is snapping back from pandemic lockdowns. There is pent-up demand for household items, corporate endeavors, municipal projects, and, of course, for the commodities that are needed in all kinds of production. Meanwhile, many of those commodities are in short supply. Add in supply-chain problems in getting those commodities into production and the produced goods to the end user, and it’s no wonder that prices are rising.

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How is this for a statistic?

Bigger trends are also at work, creating a backdrop for strong gains in agriculture commodities. From 2014 to 2021, the number of vegetarians in the U.S. rose 500%, increasing demand for pulses, soybeans, and alternative protein sources like nuts and avocados, says Martin Davies, president and CEO of Westchester, a Nuveen affiliate that invests directly in farmland. Low-carbon fuel standards in states like California, Oregon, and Washington will cause greater demand for soybeans and sugar cane, which are used in biofuels, he adds.

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