NEWS DESK

COT report: Broad retreat sees WTI longs slump to 15-year low

Commodities:

Broad selling emerged across the commodities sector in the reporting period to 25 February, a week that, following a period of solid gains, saw the Bloomberg Commodity Index give back almost 2%. All sectors traded lower, with the agriculture sector particularly hard hit, while also the energy, precious, and industrial metal sectors were left exposed to selling. Overall, the combined net long position held across 27 major futures markets tracked in this, saw a 12% reduction from the 2-1/2 year high at 1.69 million contracts reached in the previous reporting week.

On an individual level, the selling of crude oil was particularly aggressive, not least in WTI, where the net long on the main CME-traded contract slumped to a near 15-year low at just 67.6k contracts, a far cry from the 250k contracts hedge funds held on 21 January. During this five-week period, the combined net long in WTI (CME and ICE) and Brent has almost halved to 260k contracts, as the technical outlook continued to deteriorate amid worries about a global trade war’s impact on demand and OPEC+ considers when to start tapering production cuts. In natural gas, emerging profit-taking saw the net long reduced after hitting a four-year high in the previous week.

Weeks of strong performances finally triggered some profit-taking and reduced positioning across precious and industrial metals, as well as platinum-group metals. However, while the reductions seen in gold and silver were primarily driven by long liquidation with limited short-selling interest, the 59% reduction in the platinum long was driven by both long liquidation and increased short-seller participation. Copper’s week-long buying streak also paused as prices retraced lower, leading to a one-third reduction in the net long.

All but two of the 15 agricultural commodities tracked in this saw net selling, with selling spread across all three sub-sectors of grains, softs, and livestock. This occurred during a week that saw the BCOM Agriculture index suffer a near 4% setback, led by grains where selling of corn and wheat was the most noticeable. Elsewhere, sugar bucked the trend after a massive amount of short covering saw the net flip back to a 51k contract net long, while cocoa’s roller-coaster price action triggered a 39% reduction in the long in response to a weekly price slump of 16%.

Forex:

In the forex market, speculators abandoned long USD positions in droves during the week to 25 February, a week that saw the dollar index soften by 0.7%. Overall, the gross US dollar long was cut by one-third to USD 15.4 billion, led by a halving of the euro short to 25.4k contracts, and a 58% jump in the Japanese yen long to a record high of 96k contracts, coincidentally leaving it exposed to USDJPY rebound.

Six weeks of accelerated greenback selling has now more than halved the gross USD long, but looking at the underlying components, the biggest, and only, bet against the dollar is the mentioned elevated JPY long, while the major positions supporting a stronger dollar remain against the CAD, EUR, and CHF.

PR News Desk

PR News Desk

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