%%OP - Market Wizards has some sections on commodity traders. Carley Garner has some intro books. Jim Rogers Hot Commodities is another recommendation.


Commodities are a hard area to be an expert in. That's because they are different in their natural characteristics, their application and usage. May be you should narrow down your search to a specific commodity and dive deeper into the subject then. Other than that, from what I've read and traded through - commodities in general are a trading vehicle that trends hard in a direction - once a trend is established it continues longer than other assets and with less corrective activity. May be that stems from the real supply and demand forces behind them - if there is a need of lumber, real-life situations, forces and tendencies have made it such and it is probably there to stay for a while. That also means less speculation. Again all this is "in general".Looking to add some commodity positions to my portfolio to lower SPX correlation. Can anyone recommend a book or website that can give a good overview of different commodities, their supply/demand factors, global factors, growing/ harvest seasons etc?
%%Commodities are a hard area to be an expert in. That's because they are different in their natural characteristics, their application and usage. May be you should narrow down your search to a specific commodity and dive deeper into the subject then. Other than that, from what I've read and traded through - commodities in general are a trading vehicle that trends hard in a direction - once a trend is established it continues longer than other assets and with less corrective activity. May be that stems from the real supply and demand forces behind them - if there is a need of lumber, real-life situations, forces and tendencies have made it such and it is probably there to stay for a while. That also means less speculation. Again all this is "in general".


%%I heard longterm trendfollowing commodities still work.? What can you expect 20% p.a. or Sharpe ~1 ?