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Something Historic Is Lifting Commodities To Records. Not Hormuz – Amazon.com (NASDAQ:AMZN), United State


An index of commodities excluding energy has just soared to a fresh record high, surpassing the prior peak set in 2011 and signaling that the raw materials rally extends far beyond the crude oil disruption at the Strait of Hormuz.

The Bloomberg Commodity Index ex-Energy topped 155 levels this week, breaking out above its 2011 high and sitting roughly 13% above its 40-week moving average.

The index tracks industrial metals, precious metals, and the agricultural sector — everything that ends up inside a power cable, a solar panel, a data center cooling loop, or a fertilizer bag.

It is a record set without crude oil. The move is structural. And it is wired directly into the AI race.

“While energy markets have captured most of the attention since the start of the Iran conflict, strength across the broader commodity complex has been equally notable this year,” said Adam Turnquist, chief technical strategist for LPL Financial, in an emailed note.

Copper Is The Tell

Turnquist flagged the breakout in a research note on Tuesday and linked it to a list of drivers that bear little resemblance to the 2011 emerging-market reflation trade. 

Tight supply. Chinese silver export restrictions. Solar. AI data centers. Electric vehicles. Lithium carbonate has more than doubled this year due to accelerating demand for batteries and energy storage.

Copper has climbed to record highs on what Turnquist called “rising consumption tied to AI data center buildouts and electrification trends.”