Let’s dive in and see what’s going on in the space! We also need to check in with a key intermarket ratio, revealing where we want to position ourselves in the coming months and quarters.
Check out the triple-pane chart of the Bloomberg Commodity Index $BCOM, the CRB Index, and our equal-weight index comprised of 33 individual contracts (EW33):
Monday night we held our March Monthly Conference Call, which Premium Members can access and rewatch here.
In this post, we’ll do our best to summarize it by highlighting five of the most important charts and/or themes we covered, along with commentary on each
Due to the recent bank failures, this week has been all about the financial sector and the selling pressure taking place there.
However, the price action for energy stocks has been even worse by some measures.
The Energy Sector SPDR $XLE is on pace to fall -6.8% this week, while the Financials Sector SPDR is only lower by about -5.8%.
When we look at energy futures, the outlook only worsens with crude oil registering its largest weekly loss since trading into negative territory in April 2020.
So, what does this all mean for the bull market in energy?
The sector has been so resilient, showing steady leadership for several years now. Is it all over?
Maybe not, but there is some serious damage that will require immediate repair work.
Energy commodities are holding up despite last week’s selling pressure.
No, I’m not talking about natural gas – that rope snapped months ago.
But the rest of the main players – crude oil, heating oil, and gasoline – rebounded heading into the weekend. And when I look at the charts, Friday’s strength might be the beginning of a more sustained advance for energy.
Check out the equal-weight energy index:
It’s finding support where I would expect – the prior-cycle highs from 2018 and a key retracement level off the 2020 low.
As promised, I’ll cover the wheat complex this week, rounding out our coverage of the grain markets.
Let’s dive in!
Before we start, check out this breakdown of the different types of wheat varieties. I love to nerd out on this stuff – anything that involves maps, I’m hooked!
Today I’ll cover the most actively traded US contracts; Chicago Soft Red Winter Wheat (SRW), Kansas City Hard Red Winter Wheat (HRW), and Minneapolis Hard Red Spring Wheat (HRS).
The first two contracts trade on the Chicago Board of Trade (CBOT), with soft red wheat first trading on the CBOT in 1877. Minneapolis spring wheat trades on the Minneapolis Grain Exchange (MGEX).
These different types of wheat derive their names from their growing regions, where they initially come to market, and even their protein levels (hard = higher protein, soft = lower protein).
Earlier this week we held our February Monthly Conference Call, which Premium Members can access and rewatch here.
In this post, we’ll do our best to summarize it by highlighting five of the most important charts and/or themes we covered, along with commentary on each