PODCAST · news
Commodity Compass Weekly
by Jennifer Pickerel
Welcome to Commodity Compass Weekly with Jennifer Pickerel, your essential source for navigating the fast-moving world of commodities. Every week, we break down the biggest market movers, trends, and macro factors driving price action across energy, metals, agriculture, and beyond. Whether you're trading oil, watching gold, or managing risk in softs and grains, this podcast delivers sharp insights and a forward-looking view to help you stay ahead.Join us every week for a concise and informative update that keeps you connected to the pulse of the global commodity markets.
-
53
Commodity Compass - 5/1 - Grains Head Higher on Fertilizer Squeeze; UAE Leave OPEC+
This week, one of the most significant institutional developments of the Hormuz crisis arrived not with a missile strike or a diplomatic announcement — but with a formal letter. On April 28th, the United Arab Emirates announced its withdrawal from OPEC and the broader OPEC-plus alliance, effective today, May 1st. The UAE joined the organization in 1967. It has now left. The country produces roughly three and ahalf million barrels per day and represented approximately twelve percent of OPEC’s total output. The stated reason: a sovereign strategic choice to pursue its own production ambitions free of cartel constraints — a tension that hasbeen building for years but was accelerated by the Hormuz crisis and the UAE’s own experience of being attacked by Iran during the conflict. We’ll have more on what this means for oil markets in the energy section.
-
52
Commodity Compass - 4/24 - Brent Heads Above $100 Once Again; Concerns in Wheat Country
The Strait of Hormuz stalemate is now entering its ninth week, and the numbers are becoming staggering. Thirteen million barrels per day remain shut in. Cumulative supply losses have now surpassed six hundred and fifty million barrels — roughly seven days of total global consumption, gone from the market since the conflict began. Iran’s Revolutionary Guard seized two vessels this week, following attacks on three ships in the strait, a sharp escalation that underscored how far the situation is from any practical resolution.
-
51
Commodity Compass - 4/18 - The Week that Was Not
If last week was the ceasefire that wasn’t, this week was the reopening that wasn’t. The U.S. Navy opened the week by announcing a blockade of Iranian ports and mine-clearing operations in the Strait. Oil rebounded sharply — Brent pushed back toward $99 — as the Islamabad talks between U.S. and Iranian officials collapsed midweek and the supply disruption narrative hardened.
-
50
Commodity Compass - 4/10 - Commodity Trades the Week in Two Acts
This week’s commodity story came in two acts.Act one: Wednesday, April 8th. President Trump announced a two-week ceasefire between the United States and Iran, with Tehran agreeing to reopen the Strait of Hormuz as a condition. Act two: the breakdown. The ceasefire began unraveling almost immediately. Pakistan’s Prime Minister announced it covered all fronts including Lebanon — Trump and Netanyahu disagreed publicly. Iran announced tolls of more than one million dollars per ship through the Strait.
-
49
Commodity Compass - 4/3 - Historic Inversion with Brent and WTI
This was the week the Iran war moved from a supply shock to something closer to an existential market event. Four things happened, and every one of them lands on Monday. April 6th is shaping up to be one of the more consequential market opens in recent memory.
-
48
Commodity Compass - 3/27 - Iran Shuts the Door
This week’s commodity story came down to three data points, and none of them were bullish for a resolution. Iran’s IRGC turned back two Chinese-flagged vessels — CSCL Indian Ocean and CSCL Arctic Ocean — owned by China’s state shipping giant, less than 48 hours after Iran’s Foreign Minister Araghchi publicly promised safe passage to ships from five friendly nations, China among them. That promise lasted two days. Washington postponed — again. President Trump extended his deadline for Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz or face strikes on its power plants, pushing the threat out to April 6th. And finally, White House proposals went nowhere.
-
47
Commodity Compass - 3/21 - Iranian Escalations Move Towards Midstream Energy Infrastructure
Commodity markets were driven by one overwhelming reality this week: the Middle East conflict moved from a war narrative to an energy system story. After earlier strikes on Iranian infrastructure, the week was defined by the widening fallout — attacks spread across major oil and gas sites in the Gulf, Iraq declared force majeure on foreign-operated oilfields, and the commercial viability of shipping through the Strait of Hormuz became a daily question rather than a tail risk.
-
46
Commodity Compass - 3/14 - Commodities Become front Line of Global Risk Pricing
This week, commodity markets traded under the shadow of a single question: what happens if the Strait of Hormuz becomes a battlefield? After last week’s U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran, the story shifted from the initial shock to the consequences. Through the week, Iran stepped up threats against shipping lanes in the Gulf while the U.S. and its allies moved additional naval assets into the region, forcing energy markets to constantly reassess the risk of supply disruption.
-
45
Commodity Compass – 3/6 - The Iranian Conflict Launches Oil Volatility
The commodity complex was thrown into one of the most geopolitically charged environments we’ve seen in years this week. Joint U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iranian targets escalated tensions across the Middle East and immediately forced markets to reprice risk. The Strait of Hormuz—through which roughly one-fifth of global oil supply normally moves—saw shipping slow dramatically, with insurers pulling coverage and tanker traffic collapsing as the region turned into a conflict zone.
-
44
Commodity Compass – 2/27 - Precious Metals and Energy Rise on a Week where Growth Stocks Fell
This was a week where volatility wasn’t random — it had a trigger. The release of the Citrini report sent shockwaves through high-multiple tech names, reigniting questions around valuation, liquidity sensitivity, and just how fragile the AI-led equity rally might be. That pressure in growth stocks quickly bled into broader risk sentiment, and by midweek the tape felt defensive rather than euphoric. At the same time, rhetoric toward Iran turned sharply hawkish, with clear U.S. military positioning into the weekend raising the risk premium across global markets. The combination of tech instability and geopolitical escalation created a classic rotation trade — capital moved out of momentum equities and into hard assets. Safe-haven demand in gold and silver built steadily throughout the week, not in a panic spike, but in persistent accumulation.
-
43
Commodity Compass – 2/22 - Military Movements in the Middle East Cause Metals and Energy to Rise
This week was a headline trader’s market. The Supreme Court’s decision to take up challenges related to presidential tariff authority reintroduced uncertainty around trade policy, and that uncertainty rippled through metals and energy. At the same time, renewed U.S. military movements in the Middle East — including repositioning of naval assets — injected a fresh geopolitical risk premium into crude and safe-haven flows.
-
42
Commodity Compass – 2/13 - Metals Stabalize while Grains and Livestock Show Relative Strength
This week, commodities traded in a market that was recalibrating fast. U.S. inflation data came in cooler than expected, reinforcing the disinflation trend and sending Treasury yields lower across the curve. That drop in rates, paired with a generally weaker U.S. dollar, created a supportive backdrop for hard assets and rate-sensitive commodities. Broadly speaking, the commodity complex leaned constructive — with precious metals finding a bid and energy stabilizing — even as volatility remained elevated.
-
41
Commodity Compass – 2/7 - Whiplash Volatility in Commodities this Week
This week’s commodity session was driven by whiplash volatility across risk assets, with early-week caution giving way to sharp reversals as traders recalibrated macro expectations into Friday. U.S. labor signals helped set the tone: ADP showed just 22,000 private-sector jobs added in January, well below expectations, while weekly jobless claims jumped more than expected, with snowstorms cited as a major driver — all of it feeding the narrative that the labor market is losing momentum at the margin. That softer growth pulse kept rate expectations lively and pushed markets to trade every data point through the lens of “how soon and how deep” policy easing could get in 2026.
-
40
Commodity Compass – 1/30 - Energy Prices Rise while Precious Metals Face a Hard Correction
This week was defined by a violent correction in precious metals, with both gold and silver pulling back hard after months of relentless upside, as profit-taking, a stronger U.S. dollar, and shifting rate expectations triggered one of the largest weekly drawdowns we’ve seen this cycle. A major macro headline hanging over markets was the growing buzz that Kevin Warsh is President Trump’s preferred pick for the next Fed Chair — a nomination viewed as more hawkish and more market-discipline focused, which pushed yields higher and cooled some of the easy-money narrative that had fueled metals. At the same time, the U.S. dollar staged a notable rebound, snapping a multi-week slide and creating mechanical pressure across the entire commodity complex.
-
39
Commodity Compass – 1/23 - Natural Gas and Silver Take the Spotlight This Week
This week felt like a classic rotation trade: precious metals higher, base metals mixed, and energy chopping around as geopolitics and capital flows drove the tape. Gold and silver caught a strong bid as tensions around Greenland cooled, removing some near-term geopolitical risk but paradoxically pushing investors back into monetary hedges rather than hard-risk assets. Commentary from the World Economic Forum added to that tone, with policymakers openly discussing debt sustainability, de-globalization, and the fragility of sovereign balance sheets — not exactly a backdrop that inspires confidence in fiat assets.
-
38
Commodity Compass – 1/16 - Commodities Fade Late in the Week as Iranian Tensions Decrease
This week’s commodity price action was defined by a dramatic mix of geopolitical risk and shifting macro data that set the tone early — only for sentiment to fade into Friday’s close. Markets opened the week with heightened tensions in Iran, including new confrontations and sanctions headlines that briefly lifted energy and safe-haven commodities on fears of supply disruption in the Middle East. That geopolitical risk premium was amplified by mixed macro data out of the U.S. — where inflation readings showed persistent stickiness even as jobs data remained softer than expected — leaving traders conflicted about the path for policy and growth.
-
37
Commodity Compass – 1/9 - Venezuela News has Oil on Edge
This week commodity markets were dominated by a mix of geopolitical risk, macroeconomic signals, and shifting expectations about inflation and growth. Oil prices were especially reactive to unfolding events in Venezuela, where U.S. intervention and moves to potentially redirect Venezuelan oil exports into global markets injected volatility into crude benchmarks. At the same time, U.S. economic data — notably weaker-than-expected jobs figures — reinforced that labor market momentum has slowed, tempering inflation pressures and complicating Federal Reserve policy expectations for 2026. Support for Commodity Compass comes from TerraHutton.
-
36
Commodity Compass – 12/19 - Base Metals Find a Resurgence as Energy Lags
Commodity markets were genuinely mixed this week as a new batch of U.S. economic data exposed growing discrepancies in inflation signals, complicating expectations for monetary policy in 2026. While headline CPI and PPI continued to cool, components tied to shelter, services, and food prices remained sticky—keeping real-asset investors cautious rather than aggressive. Markets also reacted to renewed headlines around Venezuelan oil flows, as U.S. officials signaled flexibility on enforcement amid broader energy-security concerns, weighing on crude but supporting downstream inflation narratives. The metals were the big outperformers this week, while energy continued to show weakness and agriculture was mixed.
-
35
Commodity Compass – 12/12 - The Dollar Weakens and Farmers Receive a Bailout
This week’s commodity price action was dominated by central-bank policy and government intervention headlines, starting with the Federal Reserve’s decision to cut rates and resume short-dated Treasury purchases, which markets interpreted as a renewed liquidity backstop. That move initially supported precious metals and energy, but also reinforced concerns that economic momentum is slowing faster than expected. Equity markets turned volatile as investors debated whether the Fed’s actions were pre-emptive easing or a response to deeper stress, triggering broad de-risking that weighed on industrial commodities. The U.S. dollar softened early in the week before stabilizing, creating choppy cross-currents across metals and energy. Adding to the macro mix, the White House floated a new farmer bailout proposal, aimed at offsetting lower crop prices and export uncertainty, which briefly supported some ag sentiment while underscoring stress in the rural economy.
-
34
Commodity Compass – 12/04 - Silver and Natural Gas Steal the Stage this Week
Hopes for a December rate cut from the Federal Reserve (given soft inflation and weak hiring trends) buoyed non-yielding assets, but the broader tone remained cautious as traders weighed soft demand against still-ample supply. The result: demand-sensitive commodities — base metals, energy and industrial minerals — came under pressure, while safe-haven assets saw sporadic bouts of interest.
-
33
Commodity Compass – 11/21 - Livestock Under Pressure this Week Amidst Equity Volatility
This week’s macro backdrop was dominated by sharp volatility across global equity markets as investors reacted to mixed economic signals and concerns over the capex spend on the AI buildout. Risk appetite swung day-to-day, with investors unwinding positions in growth-sensitive assets and rotating defensively into cash and short-duration instruments. The recent U.S. government shutdown compounded the instability, raising fresh concerns about delayed data releases, contracting federal spending, and the broader economic drag heading into year-end.
-
32
Commodity Compass – 11/14 - Volatility Returns as Growth Fears and Policy Uncertainty Weigh on Markets
It was a volatile week across global markets as the U.S. government shutdown finally ended, but worries about growth, stretched tech valuations, and policy uncertainty kept investors cautious. Commodities traded defensively ... gold and silver fluctuated on shifting Fed expectations, while platinum, palladium, and copper softened on weak demand signals from China. Matt Geiger of MJG Capital joined the KE Report to discuss the precious metals correction and outlook. In energy, oil edged higher after a Russian export terminal attack, natural gas spiked on cold-weather forecasts, and coal prices rebounded on stronger Chinese and European buying. Agriculture markets saw wild swings following a bearish USDA report, with traders bracing for more volatility into year-end.Click here to listen to all the Clear Commodity podcasts
-
31
Commodity Compass – 11/08 – Pressured US Tariff Policies Rattle Markets this Week
This week, commodity prices slid broadly as global equity markets de-risked and traders grew cautious about growth prospects. The ongoing U.S. government shutdown — now the longest in history — continued to cloud economic visibility, with consumer sentiment plunging to its lowest levels in years. Private-sector jobs data further whispered caution: the latest surveys showed significant weakness and announced layoffs, amplifying fears of a slowing economy.
-
30
Commodity Compass – 11/01 – Uranium Receives Headline Boost while China Returns to the US Soy Bean Market
The headlines this week were dominated by politics and trade: In Argentina’s mid-term elections, Javier Milei’s party secured a decisive win, boosting market confidence in Argentina’s reform agenda, lifting the peso, and energizing investment-interest in Latin American mining and agricultural export sectors. At the same time, the United States and China announced a trade truce: China agreed to resume large-scale U.S. soybean purchases and to delay expanded rare-earth export controls, while the U.S. offered tariff reprieves in exchange. For commodity markets this cell of events meant a dual-push: agricultural commodities — especially soybeans and grains — received a bid on the promise of eased trade friction, while metals and strategic minerals felt renewed focus on supply-chain geopolitics and investment flows.
-
29
Commodity Compass – 10/25 – Policy Shock in U.S. Cattle, Geopolitics Drive Metal & Energy Narrative
The commodity narrative this week shifted from metals volatility to policy and geopolitics in the Americas. Washington moved to quadruple low-tariff beef imports from Argentina to curb grocery inflation, alarming U.S. ranchers and signaling a deeper strategy to pull Argentina out of China’s orbit in soy and critical minerals. At the same time, Beijing advanced new barriers to foreign access in rare earths and battery metals, reinforcing strategic supply-risk themes. Energy sentiment firmed on new U.S. sanctions targeting major Russian producers and fresh talk of refilling the SPR, while livestock markets reeled from the policy shock and grains stayed driven by harvest and export flows.
-
28
Commodity Compass - 10/17 - Precious Metals Continue to Shine, Cattle go Limit Down
This week, the dominant headline driving the metals and broader markets was again the escalating U.S.–China battle over rare earth export controls. Beijing unveiled its most aggressive export restrictions yet — expanding the list of controlled elements from seven to twelve, adding rules on processing equipment and forcing exporters to apply for licenses. In Washington, U.S. officials blasted the move as a “global supply-chain power grab,” with Trade Representative Greer calling on China to roll back the curbs. China, in turn, accused the U.S. of stoking panic and distortion, rejecting Washington’s calls to unwind the restrictions. The metals complex had a strong week, until a Friday correction. Energy remained mixed, and grains found a slight rebound.
-
27
Commodity Compass - 10/10 - Rare Earth Export Controls Rattle Geopolitics
The dominant narrative pushing commodities this week was the escalating U.S.–China quarrel focused on rare earth export controls. China, citing national security, expanded restrictions on rare earth metals, magnets, and the technology associated with processing and refining, tightening its grip on key materials essential for aerospace, and defense. In response, President Trump threatened to impose 100% tariffs on Chinese imports starting November 1, escalating the trade war and rattling markets already grappling with supply chain risks.
-
26
Commodity Compass - 10/3 - Diverging Supply Concerns in Copper and Oil
Markets shrugged off the US government shut down this week. Job and private sector employment data showed a decaying labor market, but investors saw it as more fuel for cheaper capital. As the major boards found new all-time highs this week, precious metals extended their rally as well—gold briefly surged to a new record as concerns about a U.S. government shutdown and sticky inflation elevated safe-haven flows. In base metals, copper caught a bid midweek as lingering supply disruptions—especially from the mudslide and forced outages at Grasberg—reignited deficit fears. All told, the week’s story hinged on diverging trends: energy under pressure from surplus expectations, metals riding supply constraints and safe-haven demand, and commodity subsectors reacting idiosyncratically to evolving fundamentals.
-
25
Commodity Compass - 9/26 - Platinum and Palladium Outperform, Lean Hogs find a Friday Surge
We started the week riding some momentum in oil, but by midweek WTI and Brent gave back gains after a deal to reopen the Kurdish-Iraq pipeline. The demand for precious metals continued throughout the week with gold making new all-time highs, silver closing in on its all-time highs. Both were exceptional, yet were outdone this week by platinum and palladium on percentage moves. On the ag side, grains mostly softened as U.S. harvest pressure mounted.
-
24
Commodity Compass - 9/21 - Rate Cuts Move Silver and Gold; Harvest Kicks Off in the Heartland
The Federal Reserve offered its first rate cut since December last week and spurred heavy buying into the precious metals complex later in the week. WTI and Copper and still in their own trading ranges. Harvest in the US kicks off while prices get a bounce.
-
23
Commodity Compass - 9/14 - Grains, Gold and Palladium Shine
President Trump also ratcheted up pressure on the Fed Chair to enact a “big rate cut now,” citing weakening producer prices and arguing that inflationary risks are receding. These dovish cues helped push the U.S. dollar lower this week, improving the outlook for commodities whose prices are dollar-sensitive.
-
22
Commodity Compass - 9/7 - Gold in the Spotlight this Week, Further Weakness in Grains
Markets began September on edge, with investors highly attuned to U.S. inflation data and momentum toward a possible rate cut. Risk appetite was buoyed by an unexpectedly soft dollar into Friday, as rising expectations that the Federal Reserve could ease policy kept equities buoyant and sought to support commodity prices—particularly gold, which notched its strongest weekly gain in three months.
-
21
Commodity Compass - 8/29 - Gold and Silver Break Out, Corn Finally Rallies
As the Executive Branch of the US Government continues to put pressure on the FOMC, markets are betting on easier money and lower rates. This pushed gold and silver into higher territory this week. Corn finally some a bounce this week while cattle continued to rise. The oil shale patch is worried about over-supply.
-
20
Commodity Compass - 8/24 - Dovish Tones on Friday Sent Commodities Higher for the Week
The markets awaited patiently all week for Jerome Powell's Jackson Hole comments on Friday. The dovish tone sent physical markets higher and the US Dollar lower. Cattle hit another new all-time high and we have reason to believe the move is not over.
-
19
Commodity Compass - 8/17 - Mixed Signal in Metals while Farmers See Continued Pressure with Low Grain Prices
Strong U.S. jobs data, sticky inflation, firming yields, and mixed global growth signals contributed to a choppy week for commodity markets, while a strengthening dollar and buoyant equities encouraged investors to rotate between safe‑haven metals and riskier assets. Grain prices remain under pressure and we saw this in the market reaction to one of the top Ag equities this week.
-
18
Commodity Compass - 8/8 - Is the Bull Market Run in Cattle Coming to an End?
Gold futures get a boost, and then the fade, from tariff announcements out of the White House. Grains continue to get hit while the cattle market continues its magnificent bull run. However, Friday's move in cattle push caution into the weekend.
-
17
Commodity Compass - 8/3 - Physical Markets Whipsawed on Tariff Clarifications and Economic Data
Gold gets a Friday boost. Comex Copper Corrects on tariffs clarifications. And agriculture saw mostly red throughout last week.
-
16
Commodity Compass - 7/27 - Commodities Hinge on the US Dollar Moves while Copper Awaits the Tariff Deadline
A stronger U.S. dollar and a raft of economic data set the tone for commodities last week. Solid U.S. jobless‑claim figures bolstered confidence in the labour market and reinforced expectations that the Federal Reserve would leave rates unchanged, curbing demand for safe‑haven metals. However, durable goods orders slid and Chinese fiscal revenue contracted, raising concerns about a slowdown in industrial activity and dragging on oil markets.
-
15
Commodity Compass - 7/21 - New Mandates in Soybeans and Rare Earths Drive Commodity Markets
The commodity markets last week were decidedly quieter than previous weeks, with the exception of some key news out of soybean demand and biofuel production in the United States. We also have some analysis on the news out of the DoD on their position with MP Materials and the Mountain Pass rare earth operation.
-
14
Commodity Compass - 7/6 - Commodities Welcome One Big Beautiful Bill
We take a look at the shortened week last week before President Trump signed into law his One Big Beautiful Bill. The metals continued to rise, oil shook off geopolitical risk premium and the grains may have found a floor.
-
13
Commodity Compass - 6/30 - Gold and Oil Correct while Platinum and Palladium Continue Higher
We have a look at last week's move within the commodity sector, with gold and oil correcting after de-escalation in Iran. The grains continue to show weakness while PGMs continue their winning streaks.
-
12
Commodity Compass - 6/22 - Energy Prices Resume Higher Moves Following US Involvement in Iran
Before the weekend, commodity markets experienced notable fluctuations. But on Saturday evening, the United States, in coordination with Israel, launched airstrikes on three key Iranian nuclear facilities: Fordow, Natanz, and Isfahan. Markets remain fluid, as speculators await any type of response from the Iranian government.
-
11
Commodity Compass - 6/16 - Commodities on High Alert Following Escalations in Iran
This week on The Commodity Compass, we break down a volatile rally across precious metals, energy, and agriculture. Gold and silver surged as geopolitical tensions and safe-haven demand drove prices to multi-year highs. WTI crude jumped over 13% following escalating conflict between Israel and Iran, while a sixth straight decline in U.S. rig counts added fuel to the fire. Meanwhile, wheat and soybeans climbed on adverse weather and export demand, rounding out a week of broad-based commodity strength.
-
10
Commodity Compass - 6/8 - Silver and PGMs Attempt to Catch Gold's Move
Silver, platinum and palladium had big weeks this past week. Oil saw a big bounce as US rig counts continue to drop. And we talk about the stagnation in the uranium spot market.
-
9
Commodity Compass - 6/2 - Commodities Cool Last Week before Ukraine Drone Attacks
Lean Hogs lead the way in the commodities complex with most in the red last week. We talk about gold's anticipation of more easing by the Federal Reserve and a bit of concern over copper supply with a key asset coming offline.
-
8
Commodity Compass - 5/26 - Metals Shine and Nuclear Energy Gets the Trump Boost
Here you breakdown of last week's price action in the commodity market, where most of the complex outperformed volatility in US bonds and equities. Precious metals performed well on safe haven demand while nuclear energy advocates received a welcomed nod of approval from the Trump Administration. Things are looking good for the US corn planting season.
-
7
Commodity Compass - 5/19 - Commodity Optimism Retreats as Tariff Uncertainties Remain
Here's the breakdown of price action throughout the commodity complex this past week. Earlier in the week, optimism gained after the US - China tariff negotiations, but uncertainties remained as commodity investors continue to be cautious.
-
6
Commodity Compass - 5/12 - Energy and Ags Rebound Following Trade Talks
After most commodity markets were mixed on Friday, prices are mostly rebounding today after it was announced that US and China will impose a temporary 90-day trade deal which reduces tariffs on US imports. Agriculture and energy are the biggest benefactors while a higher US dollar is pushing gold lower.
-
5
Commodity Compass - May 5, 2025 - Oil Continues to Head Lower
Geopolitics and some FX movement of US dollar holdings are pushing gold higher. OPEC+ remains on course to increase supply while US rig counts drop. Live Cattle remain strong while corn sees a forecast for increased productivity.
-
4
Commodity Compass - 4/28 - Copper Supply Declines and a New World Screwworm Threatens the Cattle Market
We walk through the weekly pricing action in the commodity market. Gold takes a breather as the US Dollar finds support. Data from the Shanghai Futures Exchange pointed to a record decline in copper inventories in China. Its an important week with major oil producers reporting quarterlies. US LNG shipments to China have crashed. And a new parasite has the USDA concerned to the point of requiring Mexican cooperation.
We're indexing this podcast's transcripts for the first time — this can take a minute or two. We'll show results as soon as they're ready.
No matches for "" in this podcast's transcripts.
No topics indexed yet for this podcast.
Loading reviews...
ABOUT THIS SHOW
Welcome to Commodity Compass Weekly with Jennifer Pickerel, your essential source for navigating the fast-moving world of commodities. Every week, we break down the biggest market movers, trends, and macro factors driving price action across energy, metals, agriculture, and beyond. Whether you're trading oil, watching gold, or managing risk in softs and grains, this podcast delivers sharp insights and a forward-looking view to help you stay ahead.Join us every week for a concise and informative update that keeps you connected to the pulse of the global commodity markets.
HOSTED BY
Jennifer Pickerel
Loading similar podcasts...