Why Metals And Mining Giant Glencore Could Be Headed For A New All-Time High

 | Aug 11, 2021 21:58

This article was written exclusively for Investing.com.

  • Bullish relay race in commodities may be in the early laps
  • Glencore (LON:GLEN): leading producer and merchant in the asset class
  • New management
  • Settling past sins
  • Heading for new record high as commodity prices accelerate

Over the past two weeks, copper and base metals prices corrected lower and were sitting near the bottom end of the short-term trading range. Copper is the leading base metal that trades on the London Metals Exchange. Aluminum, nickel, lead, zinc, and tin prices tend to follow the red industrial metal.

Meanwhile, crude oil has also moved lower. On Aug. 9, the energy commodity reached a low of $65.15, only 14 cents above the $65.01, July 20 low. In the world of commodities, only one company is a leading producer and trader of a wide range of commodities, including metals, energy, and other raw materials.

Glencore (OTC:GLNCY) traces its roots back to Philipp Brothers, the world’s leading commodities company in the 1960s-1980s. Marc Rich, a rising star at the company, left Philipp Brothers in the 1970s to set up his own shop. That firm, Marc Rich and Company, became Glencore.

While Philipp Brothers went out of business because of the downturn in the commodities sector, Glencore thrived. The company purchased commodity assets worldwide, embarking on an M&A path that included merging with Xstrata, the Anglo-Swiss multinational mining company, in 2013.

After debt issues in early 2016, the company shed non-essential assets and emerged as a producing and merchant powerhouse. Glencore’s production capabilities keep the company on the cutting edge of market fundamentals, which feed their trading acumen. GLNCY shares have been trading in a bullish trend since the March 2020 lows.

Inflationary pressures look likely to continue to push the stock higher over the coming months as shares head for a challenge of the all-time peak from 2012.

h2 Bullish relay race in commodities may just be in the early laps/h2

Since the March-May 2020 lows, commodity prices have moved appreciably higher. In August 2020, gold reached an all-time high at $2063 per ounce. In May 2021, lumber, copper, and palladium prices soared to record levels. Grains rose to eight-year highs in 2021. Iron ore, steel, and coal prices have all moved to multi-year highs.

The tidal wave of central bank stimulus and tsunami of government stimulus created by the global pandemic planted turbocharged inflationary seeds that have been blooming all over the commodities asset class.

In 2008, the central bank and government monetary and fiscal stimulus caused commodity prices to move to multi-year and, in some cases, record highs by 2011-2012, in the wake of the global financial crisis. While the worldwide pandemic is a far different event, central banks and governments used the same tools to stabilize the global economy.

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The only difference in 2020 and 2021 is the stimulus levels are far higher. We have already seen inflation rising. The most recent US consumer price index data revealed the highest inflation in three decades.

Commodity prices thrive in an inflationary environment, but bull markets rarely move in a straight line. Since raw materials tend to be highly volatile, corrections can be brutal.

Over the past weeks, we have seen selloffs in the asset class, which could make this the perfect time to consider adding GLNCY to your portfolio.

h2 Glencore: leading asset class producer and merchant/h2

Glencore is a commodities giant. The company’s website highlights the many tentacles it has in the global raw material markets.

Copper’s price dropped from a record high at nearly $4.90 per pound in May to around the $4.30 level as of Aug. 9.