Commodity stocks are among the most powerful wealth-building instruments available to retail investors — but they are also among the most misunderstood. Unlike growth stocks that can be valued on future earnings, commodity stocks are almost entirely driven by where we are in the commodity cycle. Buy at the wrong point in the cycle and you can lose 60-80%. Buy at the right point and you can make 200-400% in two years.
This guide explains exactly how to think about commodity investing — which signals matter, how to identify cycle phases, and how to build a portfolio that captures the upside without being destroyed on the downside.
What Are Commodity Stocks?
Commodity stocks are shares in companies whose earnings are primarily driven by the price of a raw material — oil, copper, iron ore, coal, LNG, salmon, fertilizer or shipping freight rates. The company does not set its own price. It is a price-taker, selling its output at whatever the market determines.
This is what makes commodity stocks fundamentally different from consumer or technology stocks. A software company can raise prices. An oil company cannot — it sells oil at whatever Brent crude trades at today. When Brent doubles, revenues roughly double. When Brent halves, revenues roughly halve.
The key commodity stock categories are: oil and gas producers (ExxonMobil, Equinor, ConocoPhillips), mining companies (Freeport-McMoRan, BHP, Rio Tinto), shipping companies (Frontline, Golden Ocean, COSCO), fertilizer producers (Mosaic, CF Industries, Yara), and agricultural commodity processors (Wilmar, Bunge).
Understanding the Commodity Cycle
The commodity cycle is a multi-year pattern of boom and bust driven by the fundamental economics of supply and demand. It typically runs 7-12 years from trough to trough, though individual cycles vary significantly based on geopolitical events, technological shifts and monetary policy.
The mechanism is straightforward: when commodity prices are low, producers cut investment, mines close, and drilling rigs are stacked. Supply falls. Eventually demand catches up with falling supply, prices rise. High prices attract new investment — new mines are opened, new drilling programs launched. Supply grows again. Prices fall. The cycle repeats.
The critical insight for investors is that this process takes years, not months. A copper mine takes 10-15 years from discovery to production. An offshore oil platform takes 5-7 years to develop. This long supply response time is what creates the extreme price swings — and the extreme stock price swings — that commodity investors can exploit.
The commodity cycle is exploitable precisely because supply responds slowly to price signals. The window between "prices rising" and "new supply arriving" is when commodity stocks produce their best returns.
The Key Signals to Watch
Signycle tracks 18 commodity and macro signals across energy, metals, shipping, agriculture and rates. Here are the most important ones and what they tell you:
The Four Cycle Phases
Every commodity cycle passes through four distinct phases. Recognising which phase you are in determines your strategy.
Phase 1: Early Expansion (Buy Zone)
Commodity prices are recovering from a trough. PMI is rising from below 50. Shipping rates are increasing. Producer balance sheets are stressed after years of low prices. This is the best entry point — stocks are cheap, sentiment is terrible, and the fundamentals are about to improve dramatically. The 2016 and 2020 troughs were both Phase 1 opportunities. Investors who bought Frontline in 2020 made over 400%.
Phase 2: Mid Expansion (Hold Zone)
Prices are rising strongly. PMI is above 52. Producers are generating strong free cash flow. Stocks have already moved significantly but the cycle still has legs. This is a "hold your winners" phase — selling too early is the biggest mistake here. The 2021 period across energy and shipping was Phase 2.
Phase 3: Late Expansion / Sell Zone
Commodity prices are near cycle highs. PMI is peaking or rolling over. New supply is being commissioned. Producers are at peak margins. This is when to take profits systematically — not all at once, but reducing exposure. Current Signycle cycle score of 76/100 suggests we are in late expansion across most commodities.
Phase 4: Contraction (Stay Out)
Prices are falling. PMI is below 50. New supply is arriving. Producer earnings are collapsing. This is when to hold cash and wait for the next trough. The 2015-2016 commodity crash and the 2020 COVID collapse were both Phase 4 periods.
Signycle Cycle Score: 76/100 — Late Expansion. Most commodities are in sell or warn territory. This is not a time to be adding new positions aggressively — it is a time to hold existing winners and prepare for the eventual contraction.
Which Stocks to Own in Each Phase
Different commodity stocks perform differently across the cycle. Here is a practical framework:
Early cycle (Phase 1): Highest-leverage names — small oilfield service companies, junior miners, high-debt shippers. These have been beaten down the most and recover the fastest. Examples: Transocean, Frontline, small copper miners.
Mid cycle (Phase 2): The blue chips with operating leverage — Freeport-McMoRan for copper, ConocoPhillips for oil, Golden Ocean for dry bulk. These have strong balance sheets and earnings grow dramatically as prices rise.
Late cycle (Phase 3): Shift toward defensive commodity exposure — integrated majors like ExxonMobil and Chevron (lower earnings volatility), royalty companies, commodity processors. Reduce pure-play exposure.
Contraction (Phase 4): Stay in cash or rotate to counter-cyclical sectors. Commodity stocks can fall 50-80% from cycle peak to trough. Preservation of capital is the priority.
The Biggest Mistakes Commodity Investors Make
Buying at the top because "the news is good." Commodity stocks peak when everyone knows the story — oil at $100, copper at record highs, shipping rates making headlines. By the time it is widely reported, the cycle is in Phase 3 and the easy money has been made. Buy when nobody wants to own them.
Ignoring the cycle and treating commodity stocks like growth stocks. You cannot hold a copper miner "forever" the way you hold a software company. The cycle will turn. BHP fell 60% from 2011 to 2016. Frontline fell 85% from 2008 to 2012. Every commodity stock has a cycle — respecting that cycle is the difference between wealth creation and wealth destruction.
Underestimating the speed of the reversal. Commodity markets can turn brutally fast. Oil went from $70 in January 2020 to negative $37 in April 2020 — a move no model predicted. The Hormuz crisis of 2026 pushed Brent from $73 to $126 in six weeks. Positions need to be sized for this volatility.
Over-concentrating in one commodity. Building a portfolio around a single signal is high risk. A diversified commodity portfolio covers energy, metals, shipping and agriculture — so that a collapse in one sector does not destroy the whole portfolio.
Building a Commodity Stock Portfolio
A well-constructed commodity stock portfolio should have three layers:
Core positions (50%): High-quality blue chips with strong balance sheets that can survive a cycle downturn. DBS Bank (commodity financing), BHP (diversified mining), Equinor (integrated oil), Keppel Corp (offshore energy). These you hold through cycles.
Cycle positions (35%): Higher-leverage names you add in early/mid cycle and reduce in late cycle. Freeport-McMoRan (copper), Frontline (tankers), Golden Ocean (dry bulk), ConocoPhillips (oil). These are the positions that generate 100-400% returns in a bull cycle.
Satellite/speculative (15%): Highest-leverage names you only own in early cycle phases. Small oilfield service companies, junior miners, highly-indebted shippers. These can multiply but can also go to zero.
The Signycle platform tracks all 18 commodity signals in real time and maps them to 250+ stocks across 33 exchanges — so you always know which phase of the cycle each commodity is in and which stocks benefit.
The Role of Macro Signals
Commodity stocks do not move in isolation. Two macro signals matter enormously: EUR 10Y interest rates and the global PMI.
When EUR 10Y rates fall, commodity demand typically rises (cheaper financing for capex, housing, infrastructure). When rates rise sharply — as in 2022 — commodity demand gets hit and stocks re-rate lower even if commodity prices hold up. At current EUR 10Y of 2.93% — neutral territory — rates are not adding significant headwind or tailwind to commodity stocks.
The PMI is the most important leading indicator. Watch for the PMI to bottom and turn up from below 48 — historically that has been the best single indicator to start building commodity positions.
Not financial advice. See disclaimer.