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Goldman Says Commodity Investors Fear Future in Age of Trump

Published 24-01-2019, 03:37 pm
© Bloomberg. Sand is poured into a pile at the Hi-Crush Partners LP mining facility in Kermit, Texas, U.S., on Wednesday, June 20, 2018. In the West Texas plains, frack-sand mines suddenly seem to be popping up everywhere. Twelve months ago, none of them existed - together, these mines will ship some 22 million tons of sand this year to shale drillers in the Permian Basin, the hottest oil patch on Earth. Photographer: Callaghan O'Hare/Bloomberg
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(Bloomberg) -- Political uncertainty means there’s no time like the present when it comes to commodities trading, according to Goldman Sachs Group Inc (NYSE:GS).

Traders are less willing to buy and sell long-dated futures because of increasing risks associated with trade wars and other geopolitical fissures springing up around the globe, Jeff Currie, head of commodities research at Goldman, said in an interview on Bloomberg TV. Instead, more activity is moving into the nearest month’s contract.

“The willingness of people that trade forward commodities has dropped because they’re scared about the future and they move up to the prompt or they go hand to mouth,” Currie said. “That dynamic is becoming increasingly prevalent across commodity markets.”

Trading volume for front-month contracts as a share of all contracts has increased for commodities such as West Texas Intermediate oil and Brent crude, as well as soybeans and wheat, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. To be sure, the trend isn’t universal, as the share has fallen for London metals contracts such as aluminum and copper.

Global markets for everything from commodities to equities have been rocked for the past year by geopolitical chaos, with investors being kept on edge by everything from a trade war between the U.S. and China to President Donald Trump’s decision to reimpose sanctions on Iranian oil and a still-ongoing partial shutdown of the American government. The Bloomberg Commodity Index is up 4.5 percent this year after falling 10 percent in the fourth quarter.

(Updates with commodity index change in fifth paragraph.)

© Bloomberg. Sand is poured into a pile at the Hi-Crush Partners LP mining facility in Kermit, Texas, U.S., on Wednesday, June 20, 2018. In the West Texas plains, frack-sand mines suddenly seem to be popping up everywhere. Twelve months ago, none of them existed - together, these mines will ship some 22 million tons of sand this year to shale drillers in the Permian Basin, the hottest oil patch on Earth. Photographer: Callaghan O'Hare/Bloomberg

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