Commodities Could Get a Boost from $1 Trillion Infrastructure Plan

It may be time for investors to take a serious look at commodities and raw materials. A bipartisan $1 trillion infrastructure spending bill cleared the Senate on Tuesday and now awaits approval from the House when members return to Washington next month.

Included in the bill is $550 billion in funding for things most people think of when they hear the word “infrastructure”—roads, bridges and the like. About $66 billion is allocated to rail, $11 billion to highways, $42 billion to ports and airports. Another $73 billion goes toward updating the nation’s aging power grid to include more renewables like wind, solar and hydroelectric.

Should the bill get signed into law, it will help close an estimated infrastructure spending shortfall of nearly $3 trillion over the next 10 years. That’s according to the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), which for 20 years now has scored the overall health of the nation’s physical infrastructure. In 2021, the group gave it a less-than-mediocre C-.

Shares of domestic steel and aluminum producers rallied on the news, with Ohio-based TimkenSteel climbing the most at 11.2%. Nucor, the largest steelmaker in the U.S., finished up 9.6%, while Century Aluminum rose 9.3%.

I believe further gains could be in the works. According to estimates by Citigroup, the infrastructure plan could increase U.S. steel demand by as much as 3 million to 4 million metric tons per year.

Copper producers and refiners could also get a boost, as copper wiring is a much-needed component of wind turbines, solar arrays and other green energy generation projects. Besides funding renewables, the infrastructure bill also sets aside $7.5 billion toward the electrification of public transport and another $7.5 billion toward public electric vehicle (EV) charging stations, which should also boost copper demand.

Inflation to Remain Elevated?

Also contributing to my bullishness is the potential for inflation to remain elevated in at least the medium term. In July the consumer price index (CPI) increased 5.3% compared to the same month last year, the second straight month that inflation was about 5%. That’s more than double the average annual inflation rate of 2% for the past 20 years.