Biodiesel fans will be keenly awaiting an announcement this week by the US Environmental Protection Agency on how much of the renewable product must be blended into the nation’s fuel supply. Meanwhile, European natural gas futures retreated after posting the biggest weekly surge since August. Here are five charts to consider in global commodity markets.
(Bloomberg) — Biodiesel fans will be keenly awaiting an announcement this week by the US Environmental Protection Agency on how much of the renewable product must be blended into the nation’s fuel supply. Meanwhile, European natural gas futures retreated after posting the biggest weekly surge since August. Here are five charts to consider in global commodity markets.
Natural Gas
Gas prices in Europe plunged on Monday, giving back some of last week’s advance and highlighting ongoing volatility in the market. Benchmark Dutch front-month gas’s 35% surge last week — the most since August — came as hotter weather forecasts signaled stronger demand than previously expected amid signs of budding competition from Asia for the heating and power-generation fuel. That pushed the US dollar equivalent futures contract to a premium over the Japan-Korea Marker, the Asian benchmark, for the first time since mid-May. Both Europe and Asia compete for liquefied natural gas shipments from the US and the Middle East.
Renewables
Renewable diesel production is taking off in the US — with capacity on track to reach about 385,000 barrels per day by 2025 — more than double where things stood at the end of 2022, according to Energy Information Administration data. Generous federal incentives have helped drive the surge in production of the green fuel made from crops and animal fat that can be substituted for petroleum-based diesel. The EPA is set to decide this week how much biomass-based diesel it should mandate be mixed into the country’s fuel supply in 2023, 2024 and 2025, amid concern that proposed targets lowballed potential production.
Agriculture
The US corn belt will be a major focus for markets with the release of crop conditions on Monday and the weekly drought report on Thursday. Corn crops experiencing moderate to intense drought have been steadily increasing to 45% of the total. That compares with just 19% for the same time a year ago. The US Department of Agriculture last week refrained from changing its estimates for domestic corn yields, despite the dry weather. That will leave traders guessing about the state of the harvest until the next estimate is published in July. Corn for December delivery is down 11% this year in Chicago.
Metals
Cobalt will surely be in focus this week as the Democratic Republic of Congo — the world’s largest producer of the key battery ingredient — hosts a mining conference. The price of the metal used in electric-car batteries and electronics has fallen almost 30% this year to $13.90 a pound, according to Fastmarkets data, amid lackluster global demand and rising supply from new No. 2 producer Indonesia. Goldman Sachs Group Inc. is forecasting softness for battery metals including cobalt, lithium and nickel in the second half of 2023 amid an oversupply.
Oil
The slump in oil continued into a third week amid ongoing concerns over demand as Goldman Sachs Group Inc. lowered its price forecast again. Despite shocks from surprise production cuts by both OPEC+ and Saudi Arabia, futures have slumped about 15% this year in a constant struggle for momentum amid a slower-than-expected recovery in China. Oil traders will be closely watching monthly reports this week from the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries on Tuesday and the International Energy Agency on Wednesday for clues on the trajectory for supply and demand, which may weigh further on prices.
–With assistance from Gerson Freitas Jr., Mark Burton, Michael Hirtzer, Dominic Carey, Jennifer A. Dlouhy, Kim Chipman and Liezel Hill.
(Updates European natural gas, US corn and oil prices with Monday trading.)
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