Increased defense spending, geopolitical ambitions like buying Greenland, and strong GDP figures are creating significant tailwinds for the commodity complex. The primary investment strategy becomes aligning capital with government spending priorities, effectively front-running fiscal outflows.
The administration's explicit focus on re-shoring manufacturing and preparing for potential geopolitical conflict provides a clear investment playbook. Capital should flow towards commodities and companies critical to the military-industrial complex, such as producers of copper, steel, and rare earth metals.
Raghuram Rajan explains that central banks are increasing gold reserves not just for diversification, but as a direct response to geopolitical risks like the seizure of Russian assets. This 'weaponization of payments' erodes trust in holding reserves in foreign currencies, making physically controlled gold more attractive as a neutral asset.
For commodities to benefit from reflation, rising inflation alone is not sufficient. It must be accompanied by a genuine economic and industrial rebound, indicated by rising Purchasing Managers' Indexes (PMIs). This combination dramatically improves commodity returns, especially for energy and industrial metals.
The sectors that outperform in the initial year of a new presidential administration can provide a roadmap for market trends over the subsequent years. This political-macro overlay suggests focusing on current leaders, like metals, for sustained performance.
The instability in Venezuela highlights the increasing geopolitical friction between the U.S. and China over commodities. This reinforces the strategy for central banks in emerging markets to buy gold as a way to diversify reserves, hedge against sanctions risk, and move away from the U.S. dollar.
Regardless of the national deficit, expect more fiscal stimulus as politicians prioritize winning elections. The need to address voter concerns about 'affordability' ahead of midterms will drive spending, creating a 'run it hot' environment favorable to hard assets.
Decades of underperformance, driven by government policy favoring other sectors, have left the commodities space (metals, oil & gas) without a new generation of "rockstar" investors. This talent and capital vacuum means that even small inflows from passive strategies could trigger outsized price moves as capital rotates.
The post-Cold War era of stability is over. The world is returning to an 'Old Normal' where great power conflict plays out in the economic arena. This new state is defined by fiscal dominance, weaponized supply chains, and structurally higher inflation, risk premia, and volatility.
The strategic value of commodities in a modern portfolio has shifted from generating returns to providing a crucial hedge against two growing threats. These are unsustainable fiscal policies that weaken currencies ('debasement risk') and the increasing use of commodities as geopolitical weapons that cause supply disruptions.
To navigate an era of government debt overwhelming monetary policy, investor Lynn Alden proposes a specific three-pillar portfolio. It allocates 50% to profitable equities, 20% to cash for optionality, and a significant 30% to inflation-hedging hard assets like commodities, precious metals, and Bitcoin.