How Biden’s Win Affects Commodities Hit by Trade Wars, Tariffs

A finished steel coil is lifted at a plant in Farrell, Pennsylvania.
Lock
This article is for subscribers only.

It’s been a tumultuous four years for U.S. commodity industries that found themselves a key focus of the White House through its aggressive trade policy agenda.

From steel and aluminum tariffs to grain subsidies to boosting exports of liquefied natural gas, very few corners of the global commodities market eluded Donald Trump’s attention. There was at least one memo, executive order, pronouncement or tweet bringing some sort of attention to uranium, soybeans, and rare earths, the kinds of materials that haven’t received attention from American presidents in years.