Crude oil and gasoline futures are completing major reversal patterns.
Heating oil is ripping higher.
Natty gas has traders on the edge of their seats (what’s new?) as it heads into a seasonally favorable stretch.
But what about the rest of the commodity space?
Check out the overlay chart of our equal-weight energy index and our equal-weight broad commodity index:
Both averages have followed the same path since the 2020 lows despite a mere 15% weighting toward energy in our broad commodity index.
But energy is pulling away. Oil and gas names are taking on a leadership role among US equities as their underlying commodities confirm by digging in and resolving higher.
I like buying energy – stocks and commodities. And I outline two new trade ideas from the energy space at the end of today’s post.
Energy commodities are reclaiming critical levels. They’re outperforming their alternatives. And buyers continue to support a healthy demand for crude oil distillates.
What’s not to like?
Today, I’m drilling down to individual stocks, highlighting five trade setups I didn’t cover in last Wednesday’s What the FICC episode…
And these stocks look ready to rip!
First up is oil services. I like this group of stocks because the oil services ETFs $OIH and $XES are the strongest among industry groups.
Here’s Schlumberger LTD. $SLB, the $81B behemoth:
We highlighted SLB in early January in our Hall of Famers column. It's carved out a six-month base below our risk level since.
Most energy stocks and commodities have failed to provide the best opportunities for the average market participant.
In fact, they’ve been an absolute dumpster fire compared to high-flying tech names for almost a decade.
But everything changed following the 2020 sell-off.
Commodities flipped the script, outperforming bonds and stocks. Long-forgotten energy names worked their way back in the conversation as the energy sector taught a masterclass in relative strength.
This story isn’t finished – not yet!
One glance at the market’s year-to-date performance reveals an explosive tech rally that’s managed to erase the past two years from our collective memory.
That’s why I think it’s more important than ever to reiterate why I still like commodities in the back half of the year, specifically...
Crude oil is breaking to multi-month highs. Copper is approaching the 4-dollar level. And Silver is ripping!
I’ll have more on the precious metals front Monday with your weekly Gold Rush.
Today, I’m focusing on the grain and livestock markets. The dropping dollar has helped line up a long list of fresh trade ideas: potential failed breakouts, possible failed breakdowns, and critical levels to trade against…
The most important crop report of the year has hit.
Yes, it’s generated quite the buzz over the past few weeks, as grain markets ripped higher in anticipation.
Some observers even speculated that Friday’s report was the most important in the history of the agrarian economy.
So let’s round down, be conservative, and call it the most important crop report in 5,000 years.
Seriously, though, it was a big deal, as acreage estimates for soybeans represent the largest miss since the report's inception – or, like, ever, in history.
More importantly for traders and investors, the report brought increased volatility.
If you’re like me and prefer to sit out these kinds of days, you’re patiently waiting for the dust to settle.
Meanwhile, if you’re at all put off by the volatility of these futures contracts, I have a vehicle that promises a much smoother ride…
Let’s talk about Archer Daniels Midland $ADM, “supermarket to the world.”
The $41B commodity behemoth has more than 100 years of experience in the grain markets.
A healthy rotation is underway across equity markets.
Leadership has swung toward cyclical value-oriented names over the trailing two weeks. Small-cap Energy, Materials, and Financials are outpacing the year-to-date top performers (Large-cap Tech). It’s a clear expansion in participation and a hallmark characteristic of any bull market.
But if cyclical stocks have a chance at participating over the long haul, we want to witness similar strength from corresponding commodity markets.
And we are…
Check out rebar futures posting a potential failed breakdown:
The bounce in rebar fits with the strength in small-caps and Emerging Market equities. If industrial metals such as rebar start catching higher, procyclical commodities and their related stocks likely follow suit…
Our Equal-Weight 33 Commodity Index is printing fresh two-year lows. Crude oil is hanging around the lower bounds of a multi-month consolidation. And Dr. Copper is loitering below former support.
This isn’t bull market behavior.
But just as the stock market is a market of stocks, the commodity market is a market of, well, a diverse set of commodities.
So, while I don’t want to buy many high-profile procyclical contracts – and certainly not the commodity indexes – I do like the more obscure areas showing strength…
Areas such as uranium!
I outlined my case for uranium stocks at the start of the year. It was pretty simple: If gold and copper are printing fresh highs, peripheral areas likely enjoy a bid. That includes uranium.
Perhaps copper hasn’t had the best first half, but gold and other precious metals...
Former resistance turns into potential support – and vice versa.
That’s Polarity 101. It’s a pattern found throughout the market. It doesn’t matter the asset class – Bitcoin or Berkshire. It’s simply human psychology at work.
These levels often mark missed opportunities. And, in the process, they create price memory that fuels increased activity. Traders and investors are driven to transact at these levels, highlighting supply and demand zones that act as support or resistance.
Why does this matter right now?
Because gold futures have sliced through near-term support, careening toward a level etched in the minds of goldbugs everywhere…
I’m talking about the 2011 highs!
Gold futures recently undercut a key level marked by the February pivot highs and last month’s pivot lows – a polarity zone.