ASX at the close

Advertisement

Angus Nicholson for Chris Weston, Chief Market Strategist at IG Markets

China driving the pullback in commodities

The impressive rally seen in the industrial metals space looks to be unwinding as early indications appear to show that China will not continue its rate of stimulus into 2Q. A slew of recent economic data out of China is showing that the recent acceleration seen in China’s activity indicators appears to be levelling off into 2Q. Slightly lower Manufacturing PMIs, further declines in imports growth and relatively unmoved CPI inflation are all providing fundamental support to the pullback seen in a range of commodity prices.

ScreenHunter_12889 May. 10 15.24

Adding to these concerns, an interview published in China’s official newspaper, The People’s Daily, with the pseudonymous “Authoritative Person” (quanwei renshi) sternly criticised the credit-driven growth of the past few months. The article seemingly came from a senior member of China’s leading group on economic and financial affairs, and is a strong indication that the good times for industrial metals riding a wave of stimulus may soon be coming to an end.

ScreenHunter_12890 May. 10 15.24
Advertisement

Commodities are also likely to suffer in a rising US dollar environment. The DXY Dollar Index closed above key technical resistance at $94 yesterday. Despite the disappointing Non-Farm Payrolls data on Friday, Fed speakers have taken a noticeably more hawkish turn of late, which has helped support the USD. While a rate hike in June is exceedingly unlikely, there is a valid case for the Fed to try and lay the groundwork for a potential hike in September which may be driving their hawkish turn.

ScreenHunter_12891 May. 10 15.24

Copper has made a fairly clear double top around the US$5000 level (indicated by the rectangle), and has now lost over 5.8% in the past week. The price has currently broken through the Ichimoku Cloud, and the Tenkan-sen and Kijun-sen lines as well the two Senkou lines (both circled) are on the verge of key crossover points. A breakthrough of the US$4640 level could see copper plunge to its February lows of US$4400.

Advertisement
ScreenHunter_12892 May. 10 15.25

Iron ore has similarly collapsed, losing 20.5% since 22 April, which qualifies as a technical bear market, coming a mere month after it entered a technical bull market. The Tenkan-sen (blue line) has crossed below the Kijun-sen (red line), a strong reversal signal. The price has moved down dramatically and is resting on a key support level at CNH 383. A close below here is likely to see the iron ore price push down further to CNH 365 and CNH 350, the next levels of technical support.

ScreenHunter_12893 May. 10 15.25
Advertisement