Global commodities traded with mixed results this week, with oil dented by record-high US crude reserves and the strong US dollar, while investors braced for the results of a two-day finance meeting of the G7 economies.
Some commodities gained ground after positive economic data out of the US and Germany,which also helped push the US and Frankfurt stock markets to record peaks.
G7 finance ministers and central bank chiefs began talks on Friday on spurring growth, with currency factors likely to feature after the US dollar spiked to a four-year high against the yen.
On Thursday, the US dollar vaulted past the key ¥100 barrier, as Tokyo’s aggressive stimulus efforts to lift the Japanese economy continued to depress its currency.
The strong greenback makes US dollar-priced raw materials more expensive for buyers using cheaper currencies.
OIL: Prices tumbled to one-week lows on Friday, with Brent hitting US$101.56 per barrel and New York crude touching US$93.37.
The US Energy Information Administration revealed on Wednesday that US crude stocks rose to 395.5 million barrels in the week ending on May 3. That was their highest level since 1982, indicating that production was outstripping demand and putting downward pressure on prices.
Prices recoiled further on Friday as profit-taking also set in.
On Friday, OPEC said it still expected global oil demand to grow this year despite a weaker-than-expected first quarter and concerns about growth in China and the EU.
OPEC, which accounts for about 35 percent of global crude output, forecast average oil demand of 89.7 million barrels per day, up 0.8 million barrels from last year and unchanged from its previous projection.
By Friday on London’s Intercontinental Exchange, Brent North Sea crude for delivery next month was US$102.42 per barrel compared with US$102.35 a week earlier.
On the New York Mercantile Exchange, West Texas Intermediate, or light sweet crude, for next month slid to US$94.25 a barrel from US$95.83.
PRECIOUS METALS: Gold prices pulled lower as markets hit record peaks in Frankfurt and New York.
By late Friday on the London Bullion Market, the price of gold eased to US$1,426.50 an ounce from US$1,469.25 a week earlier.
Silver decreased to US$23.37 an ounce from US$24.25.
On the London Platinum and Palladium Market, platinum dropped to US$1,490 an ounce from US$1,501.Palladium advanced to US$702 an ounce from US$694.
BASE METALS: Base or industrial metal prices enjoyed mixed fortunes as traders balanced solid Chinese demand against the impact of the strong US dollar.
“Amid choppy trading, metals have been unable this week to build durably on last Friday’s remarkable turnaround, and half of them are ending the week well down,” BNP Paribas analysts said.
By Friday on the London Metal Exchange, copper for delivery in three months was US$7,375 a tonne from US$7,267 a week earlier.
Three-month aluminum fell to US$1,870 a tonne from US$1,878, while three-month lead eased to US$1,996 a tonne from US$2,023.
Three-month tin rose to US$20,775 a tonne from US$20,170, as three-month nickel rose to US$15,415 a tonne from US$15,080 and three-month zinc edged down to US$1,865 a tonne from US$1,882.
WEAKER ACTIVITY: The sharpest deterioration was seen in the electronics and optical components sector, with the production index falling 13.2 points to 44.5 Taiwan’s manufacturing sector last month contracted for a second consecutive month, with the purchasing managers’ index (PMI) slipping to 48, reflecting ongoing caution over trade uncertainties, the Chung-Hua Institution for Economic Research (CIER, 中華經濟研究院) said yesterday. The decline reflects growing caution among companies amid uncertainty surrounding US tariffs, semiconductor duties and automotive import levies, and it is also likely linked to fading front-loading activity, CIER president Lien Hsien-ming (連賢明) said. “Some clients have started shifting orders to Southeast Asian countries where tariff regimes are already clear,” Lien told a news conference. Firms across the supply chain are also lowering stock levels to mitigate
Six Taiwanese companies, including contract chipmaker Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電), made the 2025 Fortune Global 500 list of the world’s largest firms by revenue. In a report published by New York-based Fortune magazine on Tuesday, Hon Hai Precision Industry Co (鴻海精密), also known as Foxconn Technology Group (富士康科技集團), ranked highest among Taiwanese firms, placing 28th with revenue of US$213.69 billion. Up 60 spots from last year, TSMC rose to No. 126 with US$90.16 billion in revenue, followed by Quanta Computer Inc (廣達) at 348th, Pegatron Corp (和碩) at 461st, CPC Corp, Taiwan (台灣中油) at 494th and Wistron Corp (緯創) at
NEW PRODUCTS: MediaTek plans to roll out new products this quarter, including a flagship mobile phone chip and a GB10 chip that it is codeveloping with Nvidia Corp MediaTek Inc (聯發科) yesterday projected that revenue this quarter would dip by 7 to 13 percent to between NT$130.1 billion and NT$140 billion (US$4.38 billion and US$4.71 billion), compared with NT$150.37 billion last quarter, which it attributed to subdued front-loading demand and unfavorable foreign exchange rates. The Hsinchu-based chip designer said that the forecast factored in the negative effects of an estimated 6 percent appreciation of the New Taiwan dollar against the greenback. “As some demand has been pulled into the first half of the year and resulted in a different quarterly pattern, we expect the third quarter revenue to decline sequentially,”
ASE Technology Holding Co (ASE, 日月光投控), the world’s biggest chip assembly and testing service provider, yesterday said it would boost equipment capital expenditure by up to 16 percent for this year to cope with strong customer demand for artificial intelligence (AI) applications. Aside from AI, a growing demand for semiconductors used in the automotive and industrial sectors is to drive ASE’s capacity next year, the Kaohsiung-based company said. “We do see the disparity between AI and other general sectors, and that pretty much aligns the scenario in the first half of this year,” ASE chief operating officer Tien Wu (吳田玉) told an