Why The Buffett Factor And Tightening Financing Are Bullish For Commodities

 | Sep 15, 2020 01:01

This article was written exclusively for Investing.com

  • Buffett buys natural gas infrastructure, gold production
  • This time an acquisition in Japanese trading companies
  • Buffett gets bullish on inflation, shifts his portfolio to raw material investments
  • Banks retreat from commodity financing
  • Commodities bull market on the horizon

The Dollar Index has been falling since March. The Fed and central banks worldwide are currently committed to pouring a never-ending level of liquidity into the global financial system. Governments are increasing deficits with stimulus programs in order to combat the economic devastation brought on by COVID-19.

The US Fed has said it is willing to tolerate inflation levels above the 2% target rate. The landscape for commodity prices has not been this bullish in decades.

Warren Buffett was uncharacteristically quiet as the global pandemic spread around the globe earlier this year. Instead of picking up bargains, his holding company, Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE:BRKa) sold airline and banking shares. However, over the past months, the Oracle of Omaha began accumulating inflation-sensitive assets as the investing legend turned 90 years old.

He acquired energy assets, precious metals, and Asian trading companies. At the same time, many financial institutions that traditionally financed commodity projects retreated from the business.

While markets rarely move in a straight line and commodities are among the most volatile asset classes, all signs point to higher raw material prices over the coming months and years. The Buffett factor is just one more reason the asset class looks more than attractive as we move towards the end of 2020, a very challenging year for the world.

h2 Buffett buys natural gas infrastructure, gold production/h2

After selling airlines and banks, the first news to come out of Omaha was Berkshire Hathaway’s acquisition of the natural gas transmission and pipeline assets from Dominion Energy (NYSE:D). The deal involved $4 billion in base and the assumption of around $6 billion in debt.

Buffett’s Berkshire will now carry 18% of all interstate natural gas transmission, up from 8%. The announcement at the start of July came right after natural gas fell to its lowest price since 1995.