- CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Wednesday said that while the commodities market could see a short-term upside, it will ultimately come down in the long term.
- “The charts, as interpreted by Carley Garner, suggest that the recent commodities boom is not long for the world,” the “Mad Money” host said.
CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Wednesday said that while the commodities market could see a short-term upside, it will ultimately come down in the long term.
“The charts, as interpreted by Carley Garner, suggest that the recent commodities boom is not long for the world. She says we could still see some short-term upside … but longer-term, she thinks this bull is about to get slaughtered,” the “Mad Money” host said.
“And when commodities turn against you, it tends to get real ugly, real fast,” he added.
Before getting into Garner’s analysis, Cramer gave investors some insights into the commodity market that are important to know:
- History shows that commodity rallies are temporary. This is because commodities don’t have dividends or buybacks as a share of a company does, he said. “That makes them very unattractive to longer-term investors — instead, they’re a magnet for shorter-term traders.”
- For the same reason as above, commodity markets tend to be extremely volatile.
- Every commodity rally is “basically a commodity collapse waiting to happen. “This is because commodity producers like farmers and miners tend to increase production when commodity prices go up, according to Cramer. Prices come back down again as more supply enters the market — especially if the Federal Reserve slows down the economy to control inflation, he added.
Getting into individual commodities, Cramer started his discussion with oil. He examined the monthly chart of the West Texas Intermediate crude futures going back three decades.
Cramer said that oil wasn’t performing well for years, and would likely still be down if not for the Covid pandemic and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, according to Garner.
Garner expects oil prices will be closer to the long-run equilibrium — between the two black horizontal lines on the chart — once the current supply shock wears off, he added.
“Of course, that’s long-term. She’s not saying it will happen immediately. … It’s possible oil could have one more burst upside. She just needs you to understand that commodities can go down as swiftly as they go up,” Cramer said.
For more analysis, watch the video of Cramer’s full explanation below.
Source: Business - cnbc.com