Andreas Neier

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Commodity Macro Framework

Intermarket Relationships in Commodities

A deep-dive into how gold, oil, agricultural markets and key commodity currencies (AUD, CAD, BRL) interact within the global macro system.

Gold USD Real Yields Oil CAD Agriculture BRL AUD

What this article helps you do

  • Think in systems (not isolated charts).
  • Understand the USD as the center of commodity pricing.
  • Use real yields as the professional layer for gold.
  • Connect oil ↔ CAD and agriculture ↔ BRL via terms of trade.
  • Translate intermarket logic into context (not signals).

Trader’s framing

Intermarket analysis does not predict markets — it explains them.

Use these relationships to improve regime awareness (risk-on vs. risk-off) and to validate whether moves “make sense” within the broader macro environment.

The Commodity Intermarket System

Use the map as a structural overview. Relationships are regime-dependent and can strengthen or weaken with shifts in global liquidity and risk sentiment.

Intermarket map connecting USD, real yields, gold, oil, agriculture, AUD, CAD and BRL
Suggested layout: USD / Global Liquidity at the center, with branches to Gold (and Real Yields), Oil→CAD, and Agriculture→BRL, plus Gold→AUD as a regime-dependent link.
 

1) The US Dollar: The Center of the Commodity System

Most global commodities are priced in USD. This makes the dollar a system-wide transmission mechanism for global liquidity and purchasing power.

USD ↓ → Commodities ↑
Broad tendency (context, not a rule)

Supply shocks can overwhelm everything, but in many macro regimes a rising USD creates headwinds for commodities, while a weakening USD provides structural support — especially via emerging market demand.

2) Gold and the US Dollar

Gold is priced in USD, so a weaker dollar often supports gold via purchasing power effects for non-USD buyers. However, crisis regimes can produce a “safe haven double bid” (USD and gold rising together).

USD ↓ → Gold ↑  |  USD ↑ → Gold ↓
Typical tendency

Important exception

During stress, USD and gold can rise together: USD as liquidity/funding demand, gold as monetary insurance.

3) Gold and Real Yields (The Professional Layer)

Real yields (inflation-adjusted rates) represent the opportunity cost of holding a non-yielding asset like gold. This is one of the most structurally important relationships for gold over medium to long timeframes.

Real Yields ↓ → Gold ↑  |  Real Yields ↑ → Gold ↓
Core relationship

Separating the “USD story” from the “real yield story” often resolves confusion when correlations appear to break. Sometimes gold reacts more to rates than to the dollar.

 

Key Relationships (Fast Mental Models)

These are structural tendencies. Use them to build context — then execute with price structure and risk management.

Energy Oil ↔ CAD

Oil ↑ → CAD ↑  |  Oil ↓ → CAD ↓
Energy exporter dynamic

Higher oil prices can improve Canada’s terms of trade and support CAD. Oil also impacts inflation expectations (a key link into rates).

Gold exporter Gold ↔ AUD

Gold strength → AUD support
Regime-dependent

Australia is a major commodity exporter and gold producer. In risk-on regimes, commodity strength can support AUD. In risk-off regimes, AUD may weaken even if gold holds firm.

Agriculture Agriculture ↔ BRL

Sugar / Soybeans ↑ → BRL ↑
Often strongest in risk-on

Brazil is a global agricultural powerhouse (sugar, coffee, soybeans). Strong ag prices can support BRL via trade flows, but EM FX remains sensitive to USD strength and global liquidity.

System USD ↔ Broad Commodities

USD ↓ → Commodities ↑
Dollar-denomination effect

The USD acts like “gravity” for global commodity pricing. It won’t override supply shocks, but it often defines the wind at your back (or in your face) across commodity cycles.

Tip: If you trade commodities, this grid is your “sanity check”. If price action contradicts the macro backdrop, ask why — don’t force a trade.

Intermarket Chains (The Most Useful Way to Think)

Single correlations are fragile. Chains are more robust because they reflect plausible cause-and-effect sequences.

Chain Energy → Rates → Gold

Oil ↑ → Inflation expectations ↑ → Real yields adjust → Gold reacts

Energy is often the fastest inflation channel. That’s why oil belongs in a gold framework even if you never trade oil.

Chain Dollar Weakness → Commodities

USD ↓ → Broad commodities ↑ → Exporters supported

A softer USD can support demand, improve terms of trade, and stabilize exporter currencies — especially in risk-on regimes.

Chain Agriculture → BRL (with EM caveat)

Sugar / Soybeans ↑ → BRL supported — unless USD strength dominates

The caveat matters. BRL can weaken even with strong ag prices if global liquidity tightens or risk-off accelerates.

Chain Stress Regime

Risk-Off ↑ → USD ↑ → EM FX pressure ↓ → Gold outperforms

This is where gold tends to outperform higher-beta commodities and commodity currencies.

Quick Reference: Arrow Cards

A compact visual summary for fast review. These are context tools — not trade triggers.

Arrow cards summarizing: USD and gold, real yields and gold, oil and CAD, agriculture and BRL
Suggested set: USD↔Gold, Real Yields↔Gold, Oil↔CAD, Agriculture↔BRL, USD↔Broad Commodities, Stress Regime chain.

Conclusion

Intermarket analysis enhances clarity. By understanding how the USD, real yields, commodities and exporter currencies interact, you gain regime awareness rather than isolated chart signals.

How to use this framework (clean & practical)

  • Use intermarket relationships to define bias and risk regime.
  • Use price structure for execution and risk management for survival.
  • If things don’t line up, don’t fight the tape — ask what part of the chain is changing.
Disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Trading involves risk.
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© Andreas Neier COT-Trader 2026
  • Home
  • About Me
  • Knowledge
    • CoT Data
    • Seasonality
    • Stock Holidays
    • Rare Earth Metals
    • My Trading Framework
    • Intramarket Spreads
  • Market Analysis
  • Strategies
  • Tools
  • Broker
  • Contact
  • Datenschutzerklaerung
  • Impress