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Will the tech boom feed the commodity cycle?

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Will the tech boom feed the commodity cycle?

Tim Pickering: The link between tech and commodities is strong and growing stronger

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Like many things within financial markets, the link between commodities and the overall economy and global stock markets is a bit of a mystery.

As an example, it is generally understood that central banks raise rates in an attempt to control inflation. Yet what is less understood is that raising rates only affects our spending, the so-called “demand-pull inflation” associated with manufactured goods, whereas it does little to control the “cost-push inflation” associated with commodity prices and wages.

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Central banks can’t control commodity prices or their supply since raising rates neither increases short-term commodity supplies nor attracts long-term commodity infrastructure investments.

Another rarely made link is the one between technology and commodities, or new school versus old school: the internet, cloud and artificial intelligence (AI) versus picks, shovels and drill bits. But the link is strong and growing stronger, and it may be an important factor in the extension of the current commodity cycle that started in 2020 — cycles that typically last 10 years.

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The link between commodities and the current tech boom and AI is driven by the demand for data centres, computer chips and electric vehicles (EVs). For each of these technologies to grow, the demand for commodities is massive.

Data centres, power and AI

To borrow a line we couldn’t write any better: “Like all technologies known to man, AI has a dark side to it: high energy consumption.”

To say that AI is a power hog is an understatement. AI requires more hardware and more powerful chips than typical computing. At 4.3 gigawatts of global power demand today, a figure that could grow almost fivefold by 2028, according to Schneider Electric SE, some argue AI already consumes as much power as bitcoin mining.

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A single Nvidia Corp. DGX A100 server consumes as much electricity as several U.S. households combined, according to Digiconomist, and cryptocurrencies, blockchains and other technologies also strain data centres.

The demand for space means large data centre operators such as Amazon.com Inc., Microsoft Corp., Alphabet Inc., Meta Platforms Inc., Oracle Corp. and TikTok owner ByteDance are having problems with power supply and “access to electricity is not keeping up,” Reuters recently highlighted.

Chips and AI

But it is not just the massive demand for computing power at play since commodities are under increasing pressure, too. There is a link between AI demand and precious metals. “Demand will rise for platinum alloys used in chip manufacturing, silver-palladium … in high-power components, gold bonding wire in chip and memory packages, gold plating in printed circuit boards and palladium plating on lead frames,” Reuters recently reported.

Beyond precious metals, base (industrial) metals are also important. The chips themselves, while commonly known to be silicon-based, require interconnects. These were commonly made from aluminum, but are now typically cobalt or copper. It appears that copper, often used as an economic barometer, is just as important here, too. The highly conductive metal is used to connect components within an integrated circuit in addition to transmitting power to the circuit itself.

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We need to recognize the importance of copper in the ever-expanding demand for power by data centres. Electricity grids rely heavily on copper in everything from the turbines that convert mechanical energy into electrical energy to the batteries, wires and transformers that carry that power everywhere. “Our modern world would not function as it does without it,” according to a recent article by Business Insider.

Electric vehicles

EVs are no doubt part of the future. The rate of adoption is up for debate and seems geographically sensitive, but we can recognize the trade-off. As with everything in life and investing, there is a trade-off: less gasoline demand means power is coming from somewhere else, but the components that facilitate this are still commodity-based. The International Energy Agency said the typical EV requires six times the mineral inputs of a conventional car.

As we divert our attention from fossil fuel consumption, there will be a significant impact on demand for lithium, cobalt, graphite for batteries and some less sexy metals such as zinc, nickel and, yes, copper, according to a Deloitte report in 2018 that highlighted some of the expected outcomes:

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  • Most analysts predicted the global demand for lithium would double or even triple by 2030.
  • Analysts predicted the demand for battery-grade graphite would triple by 2020.
  • Cobalt was facing a global supply deficit that could grow to 5,340 tons in 2020 from 885 tons in 2018.
  • EVs are expected to contain four times as much copper as combustion-powered engines.
  • The demand for battery-grade nickel is expected to increase by 50 per cent by 2030.

That’s quite the trade-off.

Commodity cycle

The recent calm in the commodity cycle after the Russia-Ukraine invasion is just a pause. Alongside decarbonization, deglobalization and demographics, inflationary drivers that weren’t present just a few years back, we now have a massive new player in commodity demand — India.

Commodity cycle drivers have never been stronger in history and a new factor such as the tech boom may reawaken the sleeping giant.

It is extremely difficult to time any financial market, but commodity markets are equally challenging. The reality is that commodities are the most diverse asset class — cotton is not like crude is not like coffee is not like canola. Yet all these things are important to our daily lives and economic realities.

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None of us know the way an individual technology will play out — how well EVs will be embraced, where AI will take us or if data centres will be driven by cryptocurrency, blockchain or other factors — but we do know that the underlying commodities will be required in some regard, even if it’s just at the breakfast tables of the hordes of people employed by the massive tech world — after all, they gotta eat.

As such, we recommend a diverse broad commodity approach that is systematic and agnostic to a specific market while wrapped in disciplined risk management.

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Maybe the greatest trade or investment is indeed a hard one: tech to fuel the next phase of commodity demand. In a way, it seems so obvious: we need energy to power data centres and inputs such as metals. Reuters reported that companies were buying into suppliers to secure deliveries: “Major brands, including the investment arm of the Ikea group, are following automakers’ lead in snapping up stakes in suppliers of raw materials and energy, seeking greater control over their production,” it said. “In the past six months, more than US$4 billion was spent by firms investing in their supply chains across industries including food, batteries, chemicals, autos, mining, and waste and recycling.”

We think big tech may be the next big commodity buyer, and at a time when supply is increasingly tight and prices are already on the rise.

Tim Pickering is the chief investment officer and founder of Auspice Capital Advisors Ltd., the largest active commodity and CTA fund manager in Canada. Auspice manages tactical long and long/short funds and ETFs for retail and institutional investors in Canada and the U.S.

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