Cannon Trading Podcast
Welcome to the Cannon Trading Podcast, where we bring you daily episodes with market updates and periodic deep dives into the world of trading commodity futures and options.
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Cannon Trading is a commodity futures brokerage established in 1988, and located in Los Angeles, CA.
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Trading Commodities futures and options involves a substantial risk of loss.
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Cannon Trading Podcast
Pre Market Briefing
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Welcome to the deep dive. I mean, silver just broke $90 an ounce and copper is sitting at an all-time high.
SPEAKER_00Yeah, but the crazy part is uh the reason copper is surging on the Chicago Exchange right now has everything to do with missing sulfuric acid in the Middle East.
SPEAKER_01Right, which is wild. So today's mission is deciphering the May 14, 2026 pre-market briefing, which was authored by Eli Livy at Canon Trading Company.
SPEAKER_00Exactly. We are unpacking how sticky inflation and you know the Iran Hormuz shock are rapidly rewiring global commodities for you.
SPEAKER_01Okay, let's unpack this.
SPEAKER_00But uh before we map out where these markets are heading, a mandatory reminder for your own portfolio.
SPEAKER_01Disclaimer Trading futures, options on futures, and retail off-exchange foreign currency transactions and other financial instruments involve substantial risk of loss and are not suitable for all investors. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Carefully consider if trading is suitable for you in light of your circumstances, knowledge, and financial resources. You may lose all or more of your initial investment. Opinions, market data, and recommendations are subject to change at any time.
SPEAKER_00So setting the baseline here, we really have to look at the macro picture. The US dollar is absolutely dominating right now.
SPEAKER_01It is. It feels like the market has been, you know, walking through a desert for months, just staring at this shimmering oasis of Federal Reserve rate cuts.
SPEAKER_00Right. And the latest data just proved that OASIS was entirely a mirage. Like April CPI, the consumer inflation, hit 3.8% year over year. Wow.
SPEAKER_013.8?
SPEAKER_00Yeah. But the real shocker was the PPI, the producer price index. That tracks what businesses are actually paying.
SPEAKER_01Aaron Powell Right, the wholesale side of things.
SPEAKER_00Exactly. It saw its largest annual print since December 2022. So rate cut hopes are basically dead at this point.
SPEAKER_01Which completely shifts the reality on the ground. I mean, we went from expecting imminent cuts to Bank of America pushing their first cut prediction all the way out to 2027.
SPEAKER_00Yeah, 2027. And get this, the market is even pricing in a 30% chance of a rate hike by December.
SPEAKER_01Aaron Powell A hike. That's incredible. And we just saw the 30-year Treasury hit a 5% yield at auction for the first time since 2007.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell Right. And normally, you know, the bond market and the commodities market act like connected gears. When interest rates go up and the dollar strengthens, commodity prices gear down.
SPEAKER_01Aaron Powell But right now we're seeing those gears completely shear their teeth. Which brings us to the split in the metals market.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell Definitely. Gold is dragging. Which makes sense since high rates make non-yielding assets less attractive. Trevor Burrus, Jr.
SPEAKER_01Right. There's no yield on gold.
SPEAKER_00Exactly. But then you have industrial metals defying gravity. Silver broke $90 and copper hit an all-time high of $6.60 a pound.
SPEAKER_01Wait, $660? But isn't that just the AI and EV boom? Like, I thought data center demand was the whole story right now.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Ross Powell Well, that is the demand baseline, sure. But the briefing points to a severe supply shock driving this specific spike.
SPEAKER_01Oh, really? What kind of shock?
SPEAKER_00So the Iran-Hormuz conflict choked off Middle Eastern exports of sulfuric acid.
SPEAKER_01Sulfuric acid.
SPEAKER_00Yeah. That acid is a critical chemical used in the copper refining process. Without it, Chilean refiners literally had to throttle their capacity.
SPEAKER_01No way. So it created a genuine physical supply squeeze.
SPEAKER_00Exactly, a total bottleneck.
SPEAKER_01Aaron Ross Powell That is wild. I mean, we think of copper coming out of a mine, but it's entirely dependent on a chemical from halfway across the world.
SPEAKER_00Yep. Everything is connected. And geopolitics isn't the only thing breaking the models right now.
SPEAKER_01Right. Nature is taking a swing too. The USDA just dropped their WASDA report, basically the ultimate global supply and demand scorecard for agriculture.
SPEAKER_00And it completely reset the board. It is a true tale of two harvests.
SPEAKER_01How so?
SPEAKER_00Well, for corn and soybeans, the USDA is projecting massive, near-record crops. I mean, they are in full supply rebuild mode.
SPEAKER_01Okay, so corn and soy are looking great.
SPEAKER_00Right. But wheat is the exact opposite. The USDA severely trimmed wheat production estimates.
SPEAKER_01And that's in prices limit higher, right? Meaning they shot up so fast they hit the exchange's maximum daily limit and stopped trading entirely.
SPEAKER_00Exactly. Boom, trading stops.
SPEAKER_01But the briefing attributes that entirely to a persistent drought across the Western Plains. Like, why does a localized dry spell trigger a maximum market panic?
SPEAKER_00Because well, global wheat reserves are already incredibly stretched from other disruptions over the past few years.
SPEAKER_01Oh, I see. So there's no buffer left.
SPEAKER_00Precisely. When the global margin for error is near zero, a regional dry spell suddenly dictates global pricing.
SPEAKER_01It is just wild irony that in a modern market entirely obsessed with AI data centers and Federal Reserve dot plots, plain old weather in the plains still dictates massive market limit moves.
SPEAKER_00It really does put things in perspective.
SPEAKER_01Absolutely. Yeah. If you are holding a portfolio weighted heavily in tech or broad indices, you might think wheat droughts or chilean refinery issues don't affect you.
SPEAKER_00But they do. This shows how physical choke points are completely overriding financial models.
SPEAKER_01100%. We want to give massive credit for today's insights to Eli Levy at Canon Trading Company. You can reach him directly via email at Eli at Canon Trading.com to get these pre-market briefings yourself.
SPEAKER_00A final required note before we wrap up today's analysis.
SPEAKER_01Disclaimer Trading Futures, options on futures, and retail off exchange foreign currency transactions and other financial instruments involve substantial risk of loss and are not suitable for all investors. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Carefully consider if trading is suitable for you in light of your circumstances, knowledge, and financial resources. You may lose all or more of your initial investment. Opinions, market data, and recommendations are subject to change at any time.
SPEAKER_00Leaving you with this to consider, if our global supply chains are so easily choked by a single regional conflict and localized dry weather, are we entering an era where overlapping supply shocks aren't anomalies but simply the permanent new normal for our economy?