Ceasefire optimism wipes out oil's 3-day rally; grains hit contract lows; gold rebounds on jobless claims miss

Ceasefire optimism wipes out oil's 3-day rally; grains hit contract lows; gold rebounds on jobless claims miss

Thursday's ceasefire optimism sent WTI down 3.10% to $93.04, erasing most of the week's 3-session oil rally, while gold rebounded +0.88% to $4,475.80 on a jobless-claims miss and dollar pullback. Grains extended their losing streaks to a fifth straight session for corn (424.50¢, contract low) and fourth for soybeans (1,128.75¢), weighed by USDA's 642,000 MT wheat cancellations and China's 113th consecutive day without a confirmed purchase. Copper closed at $6.5110 — the fifth-highest settlement in history. The Dow surged to a record 51,561.93.

Commodity Price Movement Recap
5/6/2026 · 6:35
1 suscripciones · 22 contenidos
Thursday's session gave back a third of the week's oil gains in a single afternoon. An Israel-Lebanon ceasefire framework brokered by the United States — conditional on Hezbollah's withdrawal from southern Lebanon — sent WTI crude tumbling $2.98 (−3.10%) to $93.04, its steepest single-session drop since May 27. 1 Gold did the opposite, recovering +$39.10 (+0.88%) to $4,475.80 as the ceasefire weakened the dollar, pushed yields lower, and weekly jobless claims came in above consensus. 2 Grains extended their losing streaks to a fifth straight session for corn and a fourth for soybeans, dragged lower by USDA's export data showing wheat cancellations topping 642,000 metric tons and China's soybean purchase streak extending past 113 days without a confirmed buy.

Settlement snapshot — June 4 vs. June 3

ContractSettlementChange% ChangeJune 3 close
NYMEX WTI Jul (CLN6)$93.04/bbl−$2.98−3.10%$96.02
ICE Brent Aug$95.03/bbl−$2.78−2.84%$97.81
COMEX Gold Jun (GCM6)$4,475.80/oz+$39.10+0.88%$4,436.70
COMEX Silver Jun$73.779/oz+$0.303+0.41%~$73.476
COMEX Copper Jun (HG00)$6.5110/lb+$0.030+0.46%$6.4810
CBOT Corn Jul (C00)424.50¢/bu−7.75¢−1.80%431.50¢
CBOT Soybeans Jul (S00)1,128.75¢/bu−25.25¢−2.19%1,154.00¢
Sources: 1 2 3 4 5 6

Crude oil: ceasefire optimism vs. a market that has been here before

The deal that markets priced in — and Hezbollah rejected

The US announced Wednesday night that it had secured a ceasefire framework between Israel and Lebanon: Hezbollah was to stop all attacks and evacuate all personnel from the South Litani sector, with Lebanese Armed Forces taking exclusive control of a pilot zone. 7 The White House statement was precise about the conditionality: "The ceasefire is contingent on a complete cessation of Hezbollah fire and the evacuation of all Hezbollah operatives from the South Litani Sector." 7
Hezbollah Secretary-General Naim Kassem rejected the terms within hours, calling them an Israeli attempt to force the group's "surrender and defeat." 8 Markets nonetheless priced in the ceasefire's potential ripple effect: if Lebanon quieted, Iran would lose a key proxy pressure point in negotiations over the Strait of Hormuz, potentially accelerating a broader deal. DJ Newswires noted that oil fell "on hopes an Israel-Lebanon ceasefire could facilitate negotiations with Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz." 1
StoneX Chief Commodity Economist Arlan Suderman framed the circular logic at work: "Yet another ceasefire has been reached between Lebanon and Israel. But the problem is that Iran-backed Hezbollah is not part of the agreement." He described the pattern bluntly — "Hezbollah attacks Israel, Israel retaliates, Hezbollah calls for a ceasefire, ceasefire is reached, Israel pulls back, Hezbollah attacks again" — and cautioned that Trump's ongoing pressure on Israel to show restraint means the ceasefire channel is always partly an artifact of political convenience rather than military reality. 9
MUFG analyst Soojin Kim offered a parallel read: the ceasefire "may eliminate a key obstacle to broader US-Iran negotiations," but Iran's warning that it would retaliate if strikes continued "underscores the fragile security environment." 10
The session's intraday numbers tell the scale of the move. WTI opened at $95.75 on Thursday morning, touched a high of $95.91, then sold sharply to a low of $91.91 before recovering modestly to settle at $93.04 — an intraday range of $4.00 on volume of 195,910 contracts, 129% of the 65-day average of 152,170. 11 ICE Brent August settled at $95.03, down $2.78, after touching an intraday low of $93.93 on volume of 238,850 contracts. 12 The Brent-WTI spread ended the session at roughly $1.99, slightly wider than Wednesday's $1.79, as WTI's percentage decline (−3.10%) ran a few ticks deeper than Brent's (−2.84%). 5
Despite Thursday's reversal, WTI is up +$35.62 (+62.03%) year-to-date and sits 17.6% below the 52-week high of $112.95 set April 7. 1
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War powers, Gulf attacks, and the broader Iran picture

Thursday's oil drop didn't come in a vacuum of peace — the underlying conflict dynamics were unchanged. Iran struck Kuwait International Airport with drones and missiles on June 3, killing one Indian national and injuring more than 63 others, before Kuwait's air defenses intercepted a second wave. 13 Iranian military adviser Mohsen Rezaei warned that Iran will respond to any US military action with "a barrage of missiles and drones." 14
The US House of Representatives voted 215-208 on Thursday to pass a War Powers Resolution aimed at curbing Trump's authority to continue military operations against Iran — the first time either chamber of Congress has passed an anti-war measure since the conflict began more than three months ago. Four Republicans crossed the aisle. 15 Analyst Shanaka Anslem Perera called the vote "historic, and misunderstood — it is the first time either chamber of Congress has passed a measure against this war since it began more than three months ago, and four Republicans crossed the aisle to do it." 15 The resolution remains symbolic without Senate passage and a two-thirds majority to override an almost-certain presidential veto.
The Institute for the Study of War (ISW) assessed that Iran and Hezbollah are working to redirect the Hormuz ceasefire negotiations toward Lebanon, preserving Iran's leverage on its nuclear program and Strait of Hormuz control as distinct bargaining chips. 14 Separately, the Wall Street Journal reported that Trump wants to maintain the ceasefire with Iran unless American troops are killed — a conditional posture that falls short of the definitive commitment markets have been waiting for. 1

Hormuz: buffer stocks draining faster, inventory clock ticking toward September

The strategic picture behind crude's near-term price volatility has not improved. Vortexa estimated that roughly 65% of outbound laden tankers transited the Strait of Hormuz in "dark mode" (AIS off) in May — a figure that has risen sharply from earlier in the conflict. 16 Gulf floating storage inventories declined from their March 22 peak of 184 million barrels to approximately 148 million barrels this week, with the consumption rate accelerating from about 500,000 barrels per day earlier in the crisis to an estimated 710,000 barrels per day since early May. 16
Trafigura's H1 2026 results, released this week, quantified the cumulative impact: the conflict has removed more than 1.1 billion barrels of oil from the global market, with supply losses running at roughly 14 million barrels per day after accounting for substitute pipeline routes. 17 Chief Economist Saad Rahim put it plainly: "The factors that have contained prices so far have bought the market time, but not a solution." 17 Trafigura's H1 net profit reached $4.1 billion, nearly triple the year-ago figure — CEO Richard Holtum said the profit was driven by "the complexity and cost of delivering solutions, rather than high commodity prices." 17
Oxford Economics estimated that OECD industrial inventories are draining at 146 million barrels per month. At that pace, stocks reach the technical minimum of 2,308 million barrels — equivalent to 52 days of forward demand — by mid-September. 18 UK and French military planners have completed a 15-nation coalition mine-clearing plan for the Strait; the Royal Navy has pre-deployed a Video Ray Defender-Viper remote demining robot aboard RFA Lyme Bay. 19 Trump stated Thursday that US forces had cleared "most" of the mines, a claim that has not been independently verified. 19
Reuters columnist Ron Bousso characterized the dark-transit trend as a preview rather than a return to normal: Iran is seeking to retain control of the Strait and introduce a tolling regime for passage — "an unacceptable state for Gulf oil producers." 16

OPEC+ meeting preview: +188K bpd largely symbolic for July

Saudi Energy Minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman and Russian Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak met at the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum on Thursday and called for global energy market stability. The minister offered one of the more candid assessments of the current operating environment: "The situation we're going through now does make a point here, which is the world needs every molecule of energy, and every form of stabilisation to this energy, because without energy security, you will lose sustainability." 20
OPEC+ is expected to approve another +188,000 barrel-per-day July production increase at its June 7 meeting — matching June's increment — but with the Strait still functionally closed for most Gulf members, the increase is largely a quota target rather than deliverable supply, according to Reuters sources. 20 OPEC Secretary-General Haitham Al Ghais said at SPIEF that demand expectations remain unchanged: "Despite all the commentary out there that oil demand is declining, we have not registered signs of that yet. We still see robust demand growth at 1.2 million barrels a day for this year." 21 Novak made the first public acknowledgment that Russian oil production has declined since the start of the year, citing "unplanned maintenance" at refineries — a reference widely understood to reflect continued Ukrainian drone strikes on Russian refining capacity. 20
The UAE — which quietly exited OPEC in April after nearly 60 years — was absent from Thursday's diplomatic signaling, a detail that reflects the cartel's reduced cohesion. 8
Brent's June 4 Argaam and Anadolu Agency coverage framed the session as two competing forces: persistent Gulf hostility and ceasefire optimism temporarily winning out. 22 23 Saudi Aramco's July official selling price is expected around June 5 and had not been published as of Thursday's close; a May 29 Reuters survey of five industry sources projected Arab Light to the Asian OSP benchmark at a premium of $7.50–$12.50 per barrel over the Oman/Dubai average — a second consecutive monthly reduction from prior elevated levels.

Gold: three converging catalysts push the metal to its best session since May 29

COMEX gold June delivery (GCM6) settled at $4,475.80/oz on Thursday, gaining $39.10 (+0.88%) — the largest single-session dollar gain since May 29. 2 August gold futures settled at $4,505/oz (+0.9%); spot gold reached an intraday high near $4,515. 24 Note on data availability: the active August contract (GCQ6) intraday OHLCV page on MarketWatch has been broken since at least June 1, redirecting to a 2016 search index. All settlement data is sourced from Dow Jones Market Data; intraday range for Thursday is available only for the June expiry contract (GCM6).
Three factors converged to lift gold after three sessions of pressure.
Dollar weakness and yield retreat: The DXY fell roughly 0.31% to 99.195 from Wednesday's 1.75-month high of 99.505. The 10-year Treasury yield eased to 4.481% from 4.491%. 24 The ceasefire news drove a partial unwind of the macro-hawkish trade that had dominated the prior two sessions: lower oil prices reduce energy's pass-through into inflation expectations, which in turn reduces the near-term case for a rate hike.
Initial jobless claims miss: US initial jobless claims for the week ending May 30 came in at 225,000, above the 218,000 consensus and the highest reading in four months. The prior week was revised down to 212,000 from 215,000; the four-week moving average rose to 214,750. Continuing claims stood at 1.777 million. 25 A labor market that is softening — even modestly — reduces the pressure on the Fed to move pre-emptively, and gold responded accordingly.
War powers resolution optimism: The House vote to limit Trump's Iran war powers added a third catalyst by reinforcing peace sentiment and contributing to the dollar's pullback. 25
Independent metals trader Tai Wong identified the key technical significance of the session: "The ceasefire agreement between Israel and Lebanon has pushed the dollar and bond yields down, which has helped gold hold above the 200-day moving average." 26 Wong was direct about the condition for new highs: a durable, definitive ceasefire that reopens Hormuz and removes both the oil-inflation and rate-hike risks is what pushes gold back toward record territory, not a single-session Lebanon deal. 26
Nikos Tzabouras at Tradu.com (a Jefferies company) added: "A successful diplomatic outcome could restore crude flows and ease inflation concerns." But he noted the near-term challenge: "Geopolitical risk plus high rates support the dollar, a clear headwind for gold." 26
Silver, platinum, and palladium all joined the precious metals recovery: spot silver rose as much as 3.1% to $74.96 intraday, with COMEX June silver settling at $73.779/oz (+0.41%). 3 The SI00 continuous contract showed an intraday range of $2.765 (Open $73.080, High $75.335, Low $72.570) on volume of 30,170 contracts. 27 Platinum gained 2.1% to $1,897.61; palladium rose 1.8% to $1,325.14. 24

Central bank buying: Poland leads April purchases; PBOC logs 18th consecutive month

World Gold Council data released this week showed central banks were net buyers of 17 tonnes of gold in April, reversing March's net selling. Poland led with +14 tonnes, lifting its reserves to a record 543 tonnes (approximately 28% of total reserves). China's PBOC added 8 tonnes — its 18th consecutive month of purchases. 28 UBS expects Q2 2026 central bank purchases to remain around 200–250 tonnes and maintains a $5,500/oz end-2026 gold price target.

Fed: Bowman's testimony contained no monetary policy signal

Fed Vice Chair for Supervision Michelle Bowman appeared before the House Financial Services Committee on Thursday, but the testimony was devoted entirely to banking supervision and regulatory reform — CBLR framework updates, capital modernization, CAMELS rating reform, and fintech oversight. 29 No monetary policy language or rate-hike signals appeared in the prepared remarks. This contrasts with Bowman's May 29 comments at an Iceland conference, where she said the Iran conflict could shift her rate outlook — a shift that, alongside last week's hawkish signaling from Kashkari, Schmid, and Daly, has pushed futures markets to price a roughly 50% probability of a Fed rate hike by October 2026. 30 The current federal funds rate is 3.50%–3.75%. Three other Fed officials — Barkin (Richmond), Schmid (Kansas City), and Daly (San Francisco) — also spoke Thursday.
New York Fed President John Williams separately noted that the Middle East war's inflation risks would not be long-lasting and that no immediate monetary policy change was needed, a somewhat more dovish framing than his recent peers. 30
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Copper: fifth-highest close in history; Zambia extends export duty waiver

COMEX copper June delivery settled at $6.5110/lb, up 3.00¢ (+0.46%) — the fifth-highest close in the contract's history and the third gain in the past four sessions. 4 The HG00 continuous contract's intraday range ran from $6.4205 to $6.5625 on volume of 36,680 contracts (84% of the 65-day average). 31 Thursday's close sits 2.1% below the all-time record high of $6.6495 set on June 2. Year-to-date copper is up +$0.8810 (+15.65%).
Supply-side news was mixed but structurally supportive. Zambia — Africa's second-largest copper producer after the DRC, targeting 3 million tonnes per year by 2031 from current output of approximately 820,000 tonnes — extended its 10% copper concentrate export duty waiver through September 30, 2026, approving 271,742 tonnes for duty-free export. 32 The waiver addresses smelter maintenance backlogs that have left unprocessed concentrate piling up at mine sites. Major beneficiaries include Mopani Copper Mines (100,000 tonne quota), Barrick's Lumwana (56,986 tonnes), and First Quantum's Kansanshi and Sentinel operations (~43,000 tonnes combined). 32
Additional supply pressures cited in industry reporting: a Capstone Copper strike at a northern Chile mine, flooding at other Chilean operations, and Hormuz-related disruptions to sulphur and sulphuric acid shipments — both critical inputs for copper smelting. 32

Section 232 tariff amendments: effective June 8

President Trump signed a proclamation on June 1 amending Section 232 national security tariffs on steel, aluminum, and copper imports. Effective June 8 at 12:01 AM EST: tariffs on certain agricultural machinery and residential HVAC equipment drop from 25% to 15%; the US-content threshold for the reduced 10% rate is lowered from 95% to 85% (qualifying importers must show capital equipment is ≥85% US-melted or US-cast by weight); mobile industrial equipment imported from trade-deal countries faces a new 15% tariff; two new product categories — steel racks and aluminum lithographic plates — are added at 25%. All provisions expire December 31, 2027. 33

Grains: fifth-straight loss for corn, fourth for soybeans; USDA wheat cancellations top 642K MT

Export sales: wheat cancellations, China conspicuously absent at 113+ days

USDA's weekly export sales report (week ending May 28, released Thursday) confirmed the demand weakness that has driven grains lower all week. Wheat was the worst reading: net reductions of 642,200 metric tons for 2025/26, the second consecutive week of heavy cancellations — US wheat's premium pricing relative to Black Sea and EU competitors is actively discouraging buyers. 34 New-crop wheat for 2026/27 added 838,500 MT in fresh sales, partially offsetting the old-crop cancellations. 34
Corn 2025/26 net sales came in at 883,300 MT — down 13% week-on-week and 32% below the four-week average. 34 A flash sale of 115,000 MT of corn to Colombia for 2026/27 delivery was the day's one bright spot in grains. 35 Soybean 2025/26 net sales totaled 276,900 MT, down 8% week-on-week but up 24% from the four-week average — a mixed signal at best. 34
The consistent thread across all grain and oilseed categories: China purchased zero corn or soybeans. The streak of trading days without a USDA-confirmed large Chinese purchase now extends past 113 days. 36 China did appear for 11,000 running bales of cotton — the sole commodity where it registered a purchase.
Cotton was the week's export standout: 2025/26 net sales reached 185,300 running bales (+21% week-on-week, +62% above the four-week average). 37 Primary buyers were Vietnam (109,900 RB), Pakistan (16,500 RB), Turkey (14,200 RB), and China (11,000 RB). Despite the strong export number, July cotton futures still fell 184 points to 74.89¢, a seven-week low, dragged lower by the broader grain selloff and lower crude oil. 37

China: the Vaden signal vs. the data

USDA Deputy Secretary Stephen Vaden said at the WSJ Global Food Forum on Wednesday that China "has started to buy some of the new crop beans." 36 Under the Busan accord (the US-China summit in mid-May), China committed to purchase 25 million metric tons of US soybeans annually in 2026, 2027, and 2028, plus $17 billion in additional agricultural products per year. 35 China confirmed it agreed to expand agricultural trade but provided no purchase-specific details.
Thursday's USDA report showed nothing. Allendale analyst Greg McBride acknowledged Vaden's statement but kept the bar where markets have set it: "It is good to hear that [China] is buying, if that's true." He explained: if Chinese purchases occurred after May 28, they won't appear until the June 11 weekly report. 36 Until confirmed flash sales or weekly data corroborate Vaden's claim, the market is treating it as a verbal cue — meaningful if verified, not yet a catalyst. 38
AgResource, quoted by DJ Newswires, argued the China-fear selling is fundamentally misdirected: "Soybeans and grains are selling off on the fear of 'no' China" but the firm "does not see such concerns as valid," expecting China to honor the Busan purchase commitments at the agreed tonnage. 6 That view is a minority position until the data confirms it.

CBOT settlements: contract lows, fund selling, favorable weather

July corn (C00) settled at 424.50¢/bu, down 7.75¢ (−1.80%) — a contract low and the fifth consecutive decline from Tuesday's 439.50¢ high. 6 39 The session's intraday range was 10.00¢ (Open 431.00¢, High 431.50¢, Low 421.50¢) on volume of 245,720 contracts — 119% of the 65-day average. Open interest stands at 640,852 contracts. 39
July soybeans (S00) settled at 1,128.75¢/bu, down 25.25¢ (−2.19%) — the largest loss among major grains and a four-month low. 6 Soybean meal fell $7.10 to $313.70 (a two-month low); soybean oil fell 242 points to 76.29¢. The session's intraday range was 34.75¢ (Open 1,153.25¢, High 1,155.25¢, Low 1,120.50¢) on volume of 151,950 contracts. 40
DJ Newswires reporter Kirk Maltais attributed soybean selling specifically to "new tariffs being issued under Section 301, which traders fear might impact China's purchasing of U.S. soybeans" — distinct from the ceasefire and weather dynamics hitting the broader grain complex. 6 July SRW wheat fell 5.5¢ to $5.81¾/bu (a seven-week low); HRW wheat fell 3.75¢ to $6.20¼/bu (a six-week low). 37
Pro Farmer's editors noted the market is technically oversold on a short-term basis despite the bearish structural setup: "Corn market bears have the solid overall near-term technical advantage amid a steep price downtrend in place on the daily bar chart. However, the market is now well oversold from a short-term technical perspective." 37 Fund liquidation of accumulated long positions is amplifying the move: broad-based speculative selling continues to run across grains and oilseeds in parallel with the fundamental pressure.
StoneX analyst Matt Zeller provided the weather overlay that keeps any rally attempt in check: "A warm and wet pattern will dominate through the middle of this month to get the 2026 U.S. crop off to a strong start." 6 World Weather Inc. confirmed rain forecasts for northern Illinois, southeast Wisconsin, northwest Indiana, southeast Iowa, and southwest Michigan this weekend into next week. 37

Screwworm: USDA Rollins confirms containment confidence, cattle futures volatile

The June 3 confirmation of the first New World Screwworm (NWS) case in the United States since 1966 — a calf in La Pryor, Texas, approximately 30 miles from the US-Mexico border — continued to generate market volatility Thursday. CME feeder cattle futures initially dropped on the news before rallying more than 3% as USDA offered more specific containment assurances. 41
USDA Secretary Brooke Rollins testified at the House Agriculture Committee on Thursday: "We do not believe this will be an infestation. We'll be able to isolate each case." 42 No further infestations in cattle or other animals have been detected around the confirmed case. USDA has established a 20-kilometer (12.4-mile) animal movement restriction zone and is releasing sterile screwworm flies from both ground and air. USDA Undersecretary Dudley Hoskins: "We are really flooding the zone in this impacted area." 42 US ports remain closed to Mexican livestock. The industry context is tight: the US cattle herd is at a 75-year low following years of drought-driven liquidation, and Texas faces estimated economic losses of up to $1.8 billion if the screwworm spreads widely. 41
Matt Wiegand at FuturesOne framed the market's open question: "We're going to need to see how fast it spreads and how the consumer reacts. Until we see a big demand impact from the consumer side, [cattle] numbers are still tight." 41

Soybean crop: record production potential adds long-term downside

USDA's 2026/27 initial forecast puts US soybean production at 4.435 billion bushels — just 29 million below the 2021 record — with a yield estimate of 53 bushels per acre matching the 2025 record. 43 Agronomist Bryce Knorr sees a potential El Niño yield boost pushing soybeans to 55 bushels per acre (corn to 190 bpa). The June 30 Planted Acreage report is expected to revise soybean planted area 1–2 million acres above the initial 84.7 million estimate. 43 Broker Mark Knight at Farmer's Keeper is watching the long-term setup with caution: "I'm still worried about more downside in soybeans long term." 43
The global wheat supply picture is not clean either. China reported that up to 7% of its winter wheat output faces quality downgrades due to rain during harvest — a development that could push Chinese state buyers toward increased imports later in the year. 37 Russia's spring wheat planting as of May 26 was at 7.1 million hectares, 12% below last year, with ongoing rains hindering fieldwork. US winter wheat is only 26% good-to-excellent nationally with harvest 5% complete. 37
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Macro dashboard — June 4

IndicatorReadingChangeContext
DXY (US Dollar Index)~99.195−0.31%Ceasefire-driven risk-on unwind from 1.75-month high
10Y Treasury yield4.481%−1.0 bpEased from 4.491% on June 3
US initial jobless claims (wk May 30)225,000+13K vs. consensus4-month high; prior week revised to 212K
ADP May private payrolls (Jun 3)+122,000Beat +110K consensusApril revised to +105K
May ISM Services PMI (Jun 3)54.5Prices Paid 71.3Highest prices-paid since Aug 2022
Fed funds rate (current)3.50%–3.75%UnchangedOct 2026 hike probability ~50%
Dow Jones Industrial Average51,561.93+874.86 pts (+1.73%)Record close; rotation into non-tech
S&P 5007,584.31+0.41%
Nasdaq Composite26,830.96−0.09%Broadcom −12% post-earnings drag
Sources: 24 25 30 44
Thursday's cross-asset picture inverted Wednesday's logic almost entirely. Oil's drop reduced energy-inflation fears, the dollar pulled back from its near-term peak, yields edged lower, and equities rallied hard — the Dow's +874-point gain to a record 51,561.93 was driven by a rotation from AI/semiconductor stocks (Broadcom fell 12% after an earnings miss) into financials (+2.6%, the sector's best day since April 2025), healthcare, and consumer-facing cyclicals. 44 UnitedHealth rose 5%, JPMorgan gained 3%. The Nasdaq slipped 0.09% as Broadcom's weight offset the broader market's advance. 44
The economic surprise index is at a three-year high. May ISM Services printed 54.5 with the prices-paid component at 71.3 — the highest since August 2022 — and the Beige Book showed energy-driven inflation broadening into shipping, packaging, and fertilizer. 30 One session of dollar softness and a ceasefire headline doesn't erase those underlying pressures. Friday's nonfarm payrolls report is the next stress test.

Catalysts ahead

Friday June 6 — May nonfarm payrolls (8:30 AM ET): Consensus clusters between 85,000 and 115,000 — a continued cooling from April's 115,000 — with unemployment expected to hold at 4.2%–4.3% and average hourly earnings forecast at +0.3% month-on-month. 45 Three scenarios are live: a hot print above 100,000 revives the October-hike narrative and pressures gold; a moderate 50,000–100,000 reading supports a soft-landing read and leaves commodities mixed; a weak print below 50,000 creates recession concern that initially lifts gold before risk-off dynamics settle in. ADP's May beat of 122,000 makes the weak-NFP scenario harder to model with confidence. 30
Thursday June 5 — Saudi Aramco July OSP: Aramco typically publishes its official selling price for the following month in the first days of the current month. A May 29 Reuters survey of five industry sources projected Arab Light at $7.50–$12.50/bbl above the Oman/Dubai average for July — a second consecutive monthly reduction. The figure was not published as of Thursday's close. 23
Sunday June 7 — OPEC+ ministerial meeting: Seven OPEC+ member states are expected to confirm a +188,000 bpd July quota increase, unchanged from June. With the Strait of Hormuz still functionally closed, the decision's market impact hinges almost entirely on whether the accompanying communiqué contains any language about accelerating or relaxing the increase schedule — or any reference to the UAE's April departure from the cartel. 21
Sunday June 8 — Section 232 tariff amendments effective: The Trump proclamation signed June 1 takes effect at 12:01 AM. Agricultural machinery and HVAC equipment at 15%; US-content threshold for 10% rate at 85%; new categories for steel racks and aluminum lithographic plates at 25%. Copper derivative importers with complex supply chains face a compliance decision point this weekend. 33
Monday June 16–17 — FOMC meeting: Chair Warsh's first rate decision as Fed chair. October hike probability is currently priced near 50%. A hot NFP Friday, combined with oil prices that refuse to fall through Thursday's lows, would likely push that probability higher into the meeting. 45
Thursday June 11 — USDA weekly export sales + WASDE: The critical data point for verifying whether China has begun purchasing new-crop soybeans in line with Deputy Secretary Vaden's June 3 claim. If purchases occurred after May 28, June 11 is the earliest they can appear in official data. The monthly WASDE supply/demand report releases on the same day. 36
Cover image: AI-generated illustration — oil tankers, trading chart, gold bar

Fuentes de referencia

  1. 1Dow Jones Market Data via Morningstar: Front Month Nymex Crude Fell 3.10% to Settle at $93.04
  2. 2Dow Jones Market Data via Morningstar: Comex Gold Settles 0.88% Higher at $4475.80
  3. 3DJ Market Data/Morningstar: Silver settlement
  4. 4DJ Market Data/Morningstar: Copper settlement
  5. 5DJ Market Data/Morningstar: Brent settlement
  6. 6Dow Jones Newswires via Morningstar: Soybean Futures Drop — Daily Grain Highlights
  7. 7bne IntelliNews: US brokers Israel-Lebanon ceasefire framework tied to Hezbollah withdrawal
  8. 8DTNPF: Oil Down 3% as Mideast Tensions Offset by Ceasefire Bids
  9. 9StoneX Group: Perspective: Morning Commentary for June 4
  10. 10MUFG Bank: Middle East Daily – June 4, 2026
  11. 11MarketWatch: CLN26 Crude Oil Jul 2026 Overview
  12. 12MarketWatch: BRN00 Brent Crude Oil Continuous Contract
  13. 13MarineLink / Reuters: Gulf Hostilities Spike As Iran, US Launch Attacks
  14. 14ISW: Iran Update Special Report, June 3, 2026
  15. 15bne IntelliNews: US votes through new war powers act to try and halt Iran war
  16. 16gCaptain / Reuters: More Oil Escapes Hormuz, Keeping Traders Guessing
  17. 17gCaptain: Trafigura Warns World's Largest Energy Crisis Is Far From Over
  18. 18bne IntelliNews: Inventory drawdowns mask impact of Hormuz disruption
  19. 19gCaptain: Royal Navy Deploys New Mine-Hunting Drone as 15-Nation Hormuz Coalition Takes Shape
  20. 20Al Jazeera: Saudi energy minister calls for 'stable energy sector' during Russia visit
  21. 21Reuters: OPEC secretary general says oil demand to remain robust
  22. 22Argaam: Oil prices fall as geopolitical tensions ease
  23. 23Anadolu Agency: Brent slips below $95 amid ceasefire optimism
  24. 24Wall Street Journal: Comex Gold Settles 0.88% Higher at $4475.80
  25. 25IndexBox: Gold Holds Above $4,500 as US Jobless Claims Miss Forecasts
  26. 26EnergyNews / OEDigital: Gold prices rise as hopes for a Middle East ceasefire
  27. 27MarketWatch: SI00 Silver Continuous Contract Overview
  28. 28Kitco NEWS: Central banks buy net 17 tonnes of gold in April, led by Poland and China
  29. 29Federal Reserve: Testimony by Vice Chair for Supervision Bowman on supervision and regulation
  30. 30Reuters: Morning Bid: Summer clouds
  31. 31MarketWatch: HG00 Copper Continuous Contract
  32. 32bne IntelliNews: Zambia extends copper concentrate export-duty waiver
  33. 33Reuters: Trump signs proclamation amending tariffs on steel, aluminum and copper imports
  34. 34USDA FAS: Weekly Export Sales
  35. 35Total Farm Marketing: TFM Midday Update 6-4-2026
  36. 36Brownfield Ag News: USDA's Vaden indicates China is buying new crop soybeans from U.S.
  37. 37Pro Farmer: Crops Analysis — Fund liquidation forces grains, soy lower
  38. 38DRG Media Group: Vaden: China placing new soybean orders
  39. 39MarketWatch: C00 Corn Continuous Contract Overview
  40. 40MarketWatch: S00 Soybeans Continuous Contract Overview
  41. 41Reuters: US races to contain flesh-eating parasite screwworm
  42. 42Reuters: USDA expects to contain screwworm case in Texas, Rollins says
  43. 43Farm Progress / Farm Futures: Reality check for soybean bulls
  44. 44CNBC: Stock market today — Dow rallies to record close
  45. 45TradingKey: U.S. May Nonfarm Payrolls Preview

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