What to Watch in Commodities as China Heads for Pivotal Week

Commodities are entering a crucial period as earnings season gathers pace, Europe firms up its energy-crisis response, and China’s political elite gathers in Beijing for a twice-a-decade summit.

Companies due to weigh in on this year’s wild markets include aluminum producer Alcoa, oilfield giant Schlumberger, and, for battery materials, Elon Musk’s Tesla.

China’s Communist Party congress opens Sunday with a speech by President Xi Jinping that should describe -- in very broad terms -- his thoughts on where the world’s no.2 economy is headed. Any allusions to Covid Zero, debt deleveraging or balancing development with security could steer prices for Monday’s open. A fresh batch of Chinese economic numbers also land next week to underscore what’s at stake.

European Union leaders will lay out their proposals to tackle the energy crunch at a Brussels summit on Tuesday, while the world’s top miners Rio Tinto and BHP offer quarterly output updates on Tuesday and Wednesday. Filling out the agenda, the latest US soybean crush numbers come with exports under threat, and there’s also a major precious metals conference.

Red Flags

There’s speculation that Xi could drop the Communist Party’s long-standing commitment to economic development as its top priority. That might be seen as bookmarking an end of sorts to the country’s two-decade raw materials boom. China’s slowdown would likely have been the biggest commodities story of the year, were it not for Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, and the nation’s demand outlook across energy, metals and food is still highly uncertain.