Despite healthy global oil demand, J.P. Morgan maintains a bearish outlook because supply is forecast to expand at three times the rate of demand. This oversupply creates such a large market imbalance that prices must fall to enforce production cuts and rebalance the market.
The rise of destination-flexible U.S. LNG is fundamentally altering global gas markets. By acting as the marginal supplier and an effective 'global storage hub,' the U.S. reduces Europe's strategic need for high storage levels, leading to structurally lower prices and a new market equilibrium.
An acute supply squeeze in copper is imminent as massive U.S. imports create a severe inventory dislocation. With LME stocks dwindling to critical levels, J.P. Morgan predicts prices must spike to reverse the arbitrage and incentivize the flow of metal out of the U.S. to where it's more needed.
For 50 years, commodity prices moved together, driven by synchronized global demand. J.P. Morgan identifies a breakdown of this trend since 2024, dubbing it the 'crocodile cycle,' where supply-side factors cause metals to outperform while energy underperforms, creating a widening gap like a crocodile's mouth.
J.P. Morgan's bullish gold forecast isn't just about investor flight to safety. It's underpinned by inelastic mine supply failing to meet structurally higher demand from central banks, who can buy fewer tons at higher prices to maintain reserve targets, creating a strong floor for the market.
