What to Watch in Commodities as China Adds to Global Demand Fear

Commodities are heading for a challenging finish to a year of turmoil, with geopolitical tensions and global demand uncertainty set to buffet markets from oil to copper and crops through December.

China’s struggles with Covid-19 offer an across-the-board headwind that will likely linger into 2023. Crude is on the cusp of a third weekly loss after plans for a price cap on Russian barrels stumbled, while gas traders will track Europe’s still-uncertain supply situation as temperatures fall. Dim prognoses for the world economy are stacking up.

In next week’s diary, there’s China’s latest factory activity and America’s third-quarter GDP, plus another public outing by Fed Chair Jerome Powell and the latest UN snapshot of food costs. Finally, in new energy, watch for a crucial US trade finding on Chinese solar and the latest on lithium’s slide.

What Next?

November began with some investor optimism for China’s exit from strict virus controls. It ends with fear that a fresh wave of restrictions will once again pummel commodity demand. Case counts across China are at record levels and the capital is seeing some panic buying as residents fear lockdowns.

Traders will closely track how authorities react during December, and how key metrics like urban traffic activity, flight numbers and construction activity pan out. Manufacturing PMI figures due Wednesday should also confirm widening economic weakness. “Recent price rallies in a number of commodities in reaction to the prospect of China’s reopening look to have run ahead of themselves,” Citigroup Inc. said.