Traders offload their commodity bets due to recession concerns

Prices of commodities including copper, wheat, corn and other metals are falling, and a recession is the key suspect.
What’s the big deal? Copper, used in all parts of manufacturing and construction, is often used to track the economy’s health.
Falling copper prices can indicate an incoming recession — but historically hasn’t always been a reliable tracker.
Bearish bets on copper are at their highest level since 2015 — sending copper prices to 19-month lows. Other metals and wheat prices have now given up most of their gains.
The iShares MSCI Global Metals & Mining Producers ETF (BATS:PICK) — a basket of mining stocks — is down 18% in 2022.
Investors: This could be good news, depending on which side of the trade you’re on. Falling commodity prices can bring down prices of goods and ease inflation, but it could take time before the economy finds its footing.