Continuing commodity crisis weighs on FTSE

clock

Commodities continued to tumble today on the back of global growth concerns, with oil and silver plunging to their lowest levels since March.

Downbeat US employment data, gloomy manufacturing data in Europe and fears over further monetary tightening in China have created a toxic mix triggering a dramatic commodities sell-off. According to Bloomberg, the S&P GSCI index of 24 commodities fell 1.7% in morning trading in New York, with oil falling 2.3% and silver tumbling 7%. The 19-commodity Reuters-Jefferies CRB index fell 5% yesterday, marking its fifth biggest one-day fall on record. Silver, which saw its biggest one-day drop in more than thirty years yesterday, has now declined around 30% since last week. The sell-of...

To continue reading this article...

Join Investment Week for free

  • Unlimited access to real-time news, analysis and opinion from the investment industry, including the Sustainable Hub covering fund news from the ESG space
  • Get ahead of regulatory and technological changes affecting fund management
  • Important and breaking news stories selected by the editors delivered straight to your inbox each day
  • Weekly members-only newsletter with exclusive opinion pieces from leading industry experts
  • Be the first to hear about our extensive events schedule and awards programmes

Join now

 

Already an Investment Week
member?

Login

More on Investment

7IM's Ben Kumar: When behavioural biases are not all they seem

7IM's Ben Kumar: When behavioural biases are not all they seem

Investment identity more important

Ben Kumar
clock 02 July 2025 • 3 min read
Aegon AM launches UK-domiciled global income fund

Aegon AM launches UK-domiciled global income fund

In response to client demand

clock 27 June 2025 • 1 min read
CCLA's Charlotte Ryland and Joe Hawkes: How to position for the end of the 90-day tariff pause

CCLA's Charlotte Ryland and Joe Hawkes: How to position for the end of the 90-day tariff pause

Focus on quality

Charlotte Ryland and Joe Hawkes
clock 26 June 2025 • 4 min read
Trustpilot