1. Crude Oil: The Global Heartbeat
Crude oil is the commodity that never sleeps. Its price affects almost every aspect of modern life – fuel costs, aviation, transportation, manufacturing, and even food prices (because logistics touch everything). When crude moves, the world feels it.
Why crude oil moves?
Crude prices react instantly to global events. For example:
- OPEC decisions: If OPEC decides to cut production, supply reduces and crude prices tend to rise.
- Geopolitical tensions: Conflicts in oil-producing regions like the Middle East can create fear of supply disruptions, pushing prices higher.
- US inventory data: A weekly report showing large inventory buildup often pushes prices down, while a draw (lower inventory) can push them up.
- Global growth expectations: Strong economic growth means higher demand for fuel; weak growth does the opposite.
For example, if crude oil jumps sharply, you’ll soon feel it at the petrol pump. Airline tickets may become costlier, and transportation-heavy industries like e-commerce and logistics face rising costs.
Trading tip: Crude oil is extremely volatile. A ₹20 move in minutes isn’t unusual. Always pre-define your stop-loss and maintain extra margin to avoid forced square-offs.
2) Copper: The Growth Signal
Copper is called “Dr. Copper” because it often diagnoses the health of the global economy. When industries build, upgrade, or expand, copper is one of the first commodities they need.
Why copper moves?
Copper’s price depends a lot on industrial demand. It is heavily used in:
- Construction
- Electrical wiring
- Electronics
- Automobiles and EVs
If China, one of the biggest copper consumers, posts strong manufacturing data, copper prices usually climb. On the other hand, a slowdown in global construction or real-estate markets, can pressure its prices. Furthermore, a strong USD can make copper more expensive for other countries, leading to lower demand. For example, the copper wiring in your home, the appliances you use, and even your phone rely heavily on copper. If real-estate activity picks up, copper demand tends to rise.
Trading tip: Copper generally moves more steadily than crude. Trend-following indicators like moving averages or trendlines can help traders ride the momentum.
3) Gold: The Safe Haven
Gold is the emotional commodity. When people fear inflation, recession, war, or financial instability, they rush to gold for safety.
Why gold moves?
Gold prices are influenced by:
- Inflation trends
- Interest rate decisions
- Strength or weakness of the US dollar
- Overall global risk sentiment
For instance, if inflation rises or central banks cut interest rates, investors often shift towards gold.
In India, gold demand surges during wedding and festive seasons, which temporarily pushes prices higher due to increased buying by jewellers and households.
Trading tip: Gold shines brightest during uncertainty. And historically it has been seen that fear often translates into rising gold prices (track USD/INR and global news headlines).
Bottom Line
Crude oil reflects global energy dynamics, copper signals economic growth, and gold captures investor sentiment in times of uncertainty. Tracking these three commodities gives beginners a powerful head start in understanding how world events shape markets. Once you learn what moves them, your trading becomes more informed, less emotional, and far more strategic.
(The author is Head of Commodities Retail Business, Kotak Securities)
