Commodities
Raw materials used to create the products consumers buy, from food to furniture to gasoline. Commodities are assets that have tangible properties, such as oil, metals, and agricultural products. Commodities are often traded on commodity exchanges.
Investment
Investment vehicles that track commodity futures indices are not the same as actively managed futures accounts. Investment banks, for example, help companies to plan stock or bond issues and sell them to investors. Investment banks help corporations to finance their operations by underwriting—or purchasing and reselling—new stock and bond issues. Investment advisory firms are also included in this industry.
Demand
Demand is especially strong in China and from US ethanol production. Demand for meat, dairy and animal feed grains made from corn and soybeans is rising in populous developing countries, such as China and India, as a result of improving diets and rising incomes there. Demand has continued to increase during this period of static and declining sources of supply. This will lead to an increase in demand for commodities.
The dollar should strengthen, but demand will remain robust due to economic growth. In the 1800’s, demand for standardized contracts for trading agricultural products led to the development of commodity futures exchanges. Commodity prices have been driven higher by a number of factors, including increased demand from China, India and other emerging countries that need oil, steel and other commodities to support manufacturing and infrastructure development. As demand for goods and services increases, the price of those goods and services usually rises as well, as do the prices of the commodities used to produce those goods and services.
Some of the strategies for investing in commodities.This is not the internet boom -two down days and it is suddenly commodity armageddon -pathetic-look at the underlying fundementals-there are always blow offs in an uptrend-just read an article about the impending collapse of commodities-three years ago-full of charts graphs and other rubbish-i understand we all have opinions-just happen to think yours is wrong -well see in a year. A use value, or useful article, therefore, has value only because human labour in the abstract has been embodied or materialised in it. Plainly, by the quantity of the value-creating substance, the labour, contained in the article. Commodities come into the world in the shape of use values, articles, or goods, such as iron, linen, corn, &c.
For example, commodities are one of the few asset classes that tend to benefit from rising inflation. While the stock market is suffering a relatively minor dip, commodities are getting clocked Wednesday. This is the next bubble to pop"======= No, the US dollar is imploding and commodities are showing us what the world thinks of the greenback.





