The rally in commodities that some say is the start of a supercycle continued on Monday, buoying resource stocks.
The West Texas Intermediate contract
CL.1,
+1.82%,
the leading benchmark for oil in the U.S., topped $60 a barrel for the first time since Jan. 2020. Other commodities including platinum
PL00,
+2.64%
also advanced.
“The robust recovery in oil prices and industrial metals over the past couple of months is driving the idea of a new commodities supercycle in which prices remain above-trend for many years to come,” said Hussein Sayed, chief market strategist at FXTM.
Also read: The fifth commodity supercycle has started, says leading JPMorgan analyst
Up 12 of the last 15 weeks, the Stoxx Europe 600
SXXP,
+0.96%
rose 0.6% in morning trade, with gainers including miners Rio Tinto
RIO,
+3.25%
and BHP Group,
BHP,
+3.78%
and oil producer Total
FP,
+3.16%.
The Nikkei 225
NIK,
+1.91%
rose 1.9% in Tokyo to a fresh 30-year high, and the Kospi Composite
180721,
+1.50%
rose 1.5% in Seoul. The U.S. market is shut for the Presidents Day holiday, and markets in Hong Kong and China are closed for Lunar New Year. U.S. stock futures
ES00,
+0.46%
YM00,
+0.53%,
which are trading electronically, advanced.
The rollout of vaccines and progress on the Biden administration’s proposed $1.9 trillion stimulus is helping to fuel moves in global asset markets this year, the so-called reflation trade. Last week, the yield on the 10-year Treasury
TMUBMUSD10Y,
1.209%
topped 1.20% for the first time in a year.
Vivendi
VIV,
+16.09%
shares traded 18% higher in Paris after it said it would distribute 60% of subsidiary Universal Music Group’s share capital to shareholders and list the music label in Amsterdam by the end of the year. Investment group Bollore
BOL,
+12.14%,
holds more than a quarter of Vivendi, gained 13%.
Lanxess
LXS,
+4.31%
rose as much as 6% after agreeing to buy U.S.-based specialty-chemicals company Emerald Kalama Chemical for $1.04 billion from private-equity firm American Securities.
Other notable moves on Monday included the U.S. dollar falling back below 7 Turkish lira
USDTRY,
-0.90%
for the first time since August. Turkey’s central bank more than doubled interest rates, to 17% from 8.25%, since September.