Live-cattle futures will stay high even if U.S. consumers can’t take the price hikes: The support will come from Japanese beef eaters, whose appetite for imported meat has grown as the yen has strengthened. Koreans like it, too.
Cattle Futures Beef Up
Live-cattle futures will stay high even if U.S. consumers can’t take the price hikes: The support will come from Japanese beef eaters, whose appetite for imported meat has grown as the yen has strengthened. Koreans like it, too.
Corn Suffers in Super Bowl
Because the yearly USDA forecast of spring planting showed larger-than-expected supply, hopes for higher prices will have to lie dormant until March or April.
Crude Will Ship, Price Will Slip
Discord between Iran and the West makes for attention-grabbing headlines, but crude-demand fundamentals are soft. So any price spikes will be temporary. The U.S. benchmark contract fell nearly 3% on the week.
Cotton Prices Won’t Stay Soft
After hitting a record $2.27 a pound in March, cotton futures are down 60%. Smaller plantings and increased demand could push the price back up to $1.10 from the current 95.86 cents per pound.
The Gas Bubble: The Effects of Weather and Supply
The outlook for natural-gas futures is widely viewed as awful, With forecasts for a warm winter and current excess supply, prices are poised to fall further.
The Gas Bubble: The Effects of Weather and Supply
The outlook for natural-gas futures is widely viewed as awful, With forecasts for a warm winter and current excess supply, prices are poised to fall further.
Oil’s Slick, Cotton’s Nicked
Unless you bet wisely on gold and crude, the second half of 2011 wasn’t a good time to be in commodities—and cotton fared worst of all.
Corn, Oil Look Like Winners in 2012
Crude could hit triple digits next year, but cotton and copper could disappoint.
Supply Ploy Won’t Help Tin Price
Why—despite Indonesian producers’ holding back supply—will the price of demand-weakened tin continue to languish? The poor macroeconomic outlook.