Except I don't see any evidence of this happening. Demand for product is up all over the place. Demand for housing and construction materials is still super high, demand for new commercial vehicles, consumer vehicles, construction equipment, batteries, datacenter servers and GPUs, network switches, communications equipment, up all over the place.I think it's under the concept that demand for commodities precedes demand for product. Since you would need commodities to manufacture goods. If commodity prices are down, that means demand is down, that means producers are anticipating lower demand for finished goods. So a downturn in commodities would signal manufacturers anticipating a downturn in sales. Or that existing orders for goods are waning and ergo they aren't needing to produce as much, and that's pushing prices lower on commodities, since manufacturers aren't needing as much on that side of the equation.
Some consumer goods are down, like laptops, headsets, and monitors, because people bought tons of them during the pandemic. Not sure what demand for things like home furnishings are at, but if housing inventory goes up, demand for home furnishings will also go up.
Food will never go down because Americans are fucking fat. Healthcare will never go down because Americans are fat, stupid, and sick.
I'm just not seeing demand for finished goods being down enough to lead-the-tail on commodity prices. I think commodity prices are coming down because those commodity-producing industries have gotten back into full swing and are seeing heavy investments from governments.
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