TITAN PROTECT — RAW MATERIALS RADAR · 20 MAY 2026
Gold Pulls Back, Crude Holds — Commodities Are Picking Their Battles
Gold was the star of yesterday’s session. Today it is correcting. That is healthy — the question is whether the structure that drove it higher is still intact. Across the commodity complex, the answer looks like yes.
Commodity Snapshot — 20 May 2026
| Commodity | Price | 24h Change | Range Today | Structure Signal |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gold (XAU) | $4,467 | -$39 (-0.87%) | $4,455 – $4,512 | Contango intact — dip, not break |
| Silver (XAG) | $73.89 | -$0.94 (-1.25%) | $73.39 – $75.23 | Underperforming gold |
| Crude WTI | $103.77 | -$0.40 (-0.38%) | Record jet demand | Physical demand solid |
| Crude Brent | $110.70 | -$0.55 (-0.49%) | $110+ floor test | Brent/WTI spread $6.93 |
| Copper (HG) | $6.17 | +0.11% (flat) | $6.15 – $6.22 | Holding after tariff relief |
| Natural Gas | $3.11 | -3.84% | Sharpest daily drop | Supply concern easing |
Gold: Yesterday’s Winner Taking a Breather
Gold closed as a standout yesterday while equities sold off — exactly the behaviour you want from a portfolio hedge. The $4,467 price today reflects a $39 overnight pullback that came on relatively low volume (24,076 contracts against a higher average). Low-volume pullbacks after a directional session are noise, not signal.
The forward market structure remains in contango — the market is still pricing a premium to own gold in the future. That structure only breaks when large institutional holders decide to exit in size. They have not done that. Asset managers held their largest net long book in months as of the last COT read. Dealers are also constructive.
What drove gold higher is still in place. G7 bond yields at 4.7% — levels not seen since 2004 — create a genuine fiscal credibility question. Japan’s 10-year bond at an all-time high above 2.80% adds to the anxiety about sovereign balance sheets. Gold benefits when institutional players lose confidence in government paper. That confidence has not recovered.
The Iran War Powers Resolution advancing through the US Senate is an additional geopolitical underpinning. Gold does not need multiple catalysts — but when it has them, the floor tends to be stickier than the bears expect.
Silver: Underperformance Is the Tell
Silver fell 1.25% today against gold’s 0.87% — that gap matters. In a genuine commodity bull run, silver tends to outperform gold once the move matures. The fact that silver is underperforming suggests this is still primarily a safe-haven, geopolitical gold trade rather than a broad industrial metals rally.
If you see silver begin to close the gap and outperform gold on a percentage basis, that is your signal that the move is broadening into industrial demand territory. Until then, prefer gold over silver as the primary exposure.
Gold/Silver ratio: Currently ~60.5x. A ratio above 80x historically favours silver as a catch-up trade. At 60x the ratio is not stretched enough to force the silver outperformance trade yet.
Crude: The Jet Fuel Story Is Real
US refineries are converting a record 12.7% of each barrel of crude into jet fuel — up 2.2 percentage points since the Iran War began. This is not a futures market story; it is a real economy demand story. Airlines are flying more, military logistics demand has risen, and refiners are responding by maximising jet output at the expense of other products.
WTI at $103.77 looks expensive in isolation. Against the backdrop of a refinery system running at record jet-fuel capacity, it looks like a supported price. The $100 level is likely a floor now, not a ceiling. Brent at $110.70 implies the global premium for crude is holding, which is consistent with ongoing geopolitical risk premium in Middle Eastern supply.
The Brent/WTI spread at $6.93 is slightly above its 12-month average. That spread widening typically precedes a WTI catch-up rally — physical buyers in the US are more insulated from the geopolitical premium, but as domestic jet demand rises, that insulation shrinks.
Copper: The Quiet Strength
Copper at $6.17 is essentially flat on the day after posting strong gains earlier in the week. The resilience of copper at these levels — when every other industrial input is softening — is notable. Copper tends to front-run economic activity. Flat copper in a risk-off day is constructive.
The China demand picture remains the biggest swing factor for copper. Any infrastructure stimulus announcement from Beijing would send copper significantly higher from this base. File that as a watch item rather than an active trade today.
Natural Gas: -3.84% Is the Outlier
NatGas at $3.11 dropped nearly 4% — the sharpest single-day move in the commodity complex today. This came as storage data suggested easing supply concerns. After a winter where cold weather expectations drove NatGas higher, the spring normalisation is hitting hard.
The $3.00–$3.10 zone is the next critical support. A break below $3.00 opens a move toward $2.70 — that would represent a full unwinding of the weather premium. Do not try to catch this falling knife without clear reversal structure.
Trade Setups by Experience
New Traders
Gold dip buy: Entry at $4,455 on a retest of today’s low with a bounce candle confirmation. Stop $4,420. Target $4,510. R:R 1.5:1.
Risk: Around 35%. The structure and forward market support the long. Bond yields are the main threat — if yields spike further, gold faces an additional flush before recovering.
Intermediate
WTI Crude long: Entry $102.50 on pullback. Stop $100.80. Target $107.00. R:R 2.6:1. Jet fuel demand underpins the trade; Iran geopolitical risk provides further upside optionality.
Risk: Around 40%. A global risk-off event that hits demand expectations could push crude below $100 quickly.
Advanced
Gold/Silver spread: Long gold / short silver as ratio approaches reversion. Target ratio narrowing from 60.5x toward 55x as the bull run matures. Pair trade — reduces outright commodity exposure.
NatGas: Wait for $3.00 support test. If it holds with a clean hourly reversal candle, the risk/reward for a long is compelling with stop $2.90, target $3.30. R:R 3.0:1. Risk: Around 50% — do not size aggressively.
Scenario Analysis
Bull case (40%): Dollar softens on fiscal concerns, gold recovers from today’s dip and tests $4,530. Crude holds above $103 on jet-fuel demand and geopolitical risk premium. Copper breaks $6.25, signalling industrial re-acceleration. Silver begins to narrow the gold gap — confirmation that the bull run is broadening.
Base case (40%): Gold grinds sideways $4,440–$4,510 for 3–5 sessions before the next leg. Crude holds $102–$106 range. Copper drifts lower to $6.00 support. NatGas continues slide to $3.00–$3.05 where buyers emerge.
Bear case (20%): 30Y yield breaks 5.25%, dollar spikes. Institutional commodity longs face margin calls. Gold drops to $4,380–$4,400 before reasserting. Crude breaks $100 on demand fears. Copper falls to $5.70. NatGas overshoots to $2.75. This scenario requires both bond yields and dollar to move in tandem — possible but requires a catalyst (Fed hawkish shock or deteriorating US fiscal news).
Dollar Impact Grid — Commodity Sensitivity
| Commodity | Dollar Up 1% | Dollar Down 1% | Other Key Driver |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gold | -0.8% to -1.2% | +0.8% to +1.2% | Sovereign bond yields, geopolitical risk |
| Silver | -1.0% to -1.5% | +1.0% to +1.5% | Industrial demand, solar panel demand |
| Crude WTI | -0.5% to -0.8% | +0.5% to +0.8% | Refinery demand, Iran geopolitics, OPEC |
| Copper | -0.6% to -1.0% | +0.6% to +1.0% | China demand, tariff policy, supply |
| Natural Gas | Minimal | Minimal | Storage levels, weather, LNG exports |
Position Sizing Guide
| Account | Max Risk/Trade | Gold CFD | Crude CFD |
|---|---|---|---|
| £2,000 | £40 (2%) | 0.01 oz equiv | 0.4 barrel equiv |
| £10,000 | £200 (2%) | 0.05 oz equiv | 1.2 barrel equiv |
| £50,000+ | £1,000 (2%) | 0.25 oz equiv | 6 barrel equiv |
Cross-References
- → COT positioning: Institutional long books intact across gold and energy; commercial shorts on DXY add to commodity bull case
- → Global grid: Iran War Powers Resolution, Japan bond yield all-time high — geopolitical and sovereign stress = gold positive
- → FX layer (Post 11): Dollar fragility at current levels is the primary tailwind for commodity longs. Monitor DXY vs 99.5 support
- → Basis layer (Post 10): Gold contango structure confirmed — roll buyers are present, not absent. Dip is a basis correction, not a reversal
Session Reference Times
| London Open (gold active) | 08:00 BST / 09:00 CEST / 03:00 ET |
| NYMEX Open (crude active) | 14:30 BST / 15:30 CEST / 09:30 ET |
| Asia Open (gold/copper) | 01:00 BST / 02:00 CEST / 20:00 ET (prior eve) |
For educational purposes only. Not financial advice. Trading commodities carries significant risk including leverage risk and physical delivery risk. Past performance is not indicative of future results.