Created in 1957 as the Commodity Research Bureau’s official commodity-tracking index, this index is the oldest commodity index in the world. The original index received its most recent makeover in 2005 when it was renamed the Reuters/Jefferies Commodity Research Bureau Index (CRB) — quite a mouthful!
The CRB index is widely followed by institutional investors and economists; of all the indexes, it’s perhaps the most widely used as an economic benchmark, although the S&P GSCI and the DJ/AIGCI are also widely used references.
The CRB index has performed well since 2002.
Year | Total Return |
---|---|
2002 | 23% |
2003 | 8.9% |
2004 | 11.2% |
2005 | 16.9% |
2006 | –3% |
2007 | 16.5% |
2008 | –32% |
2009 | 17% |
Ten-year annualized returns for the CRB are 9.02 percent, outpacing many asset classes, including some comparable commodity indexes.
The CRB index tracks all the major commodity component classes.
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The CRB index currently tracks a basket of 19 commodities, which are selected based on their liquidity and production value. This index is unique because it is the only index that uses a tiered methodology of distributing weights to commodities. This hybrid approach gives a production value weight to energy products, while assigning fixed weights to other commodities. The components and their weightings are reviewed annually.
Tiers | Commodity | Weight | Exchange |
---|---|---|---|
Tier I | WTI crude oil | 23% | CME |
Heating oil | 5% | CME | |
Unleaded gas | 5% | CME | |
Tier II | Natural gas | 6% | CME |
Corn | 6% | CME | |
Soybeans | 6% | CME | |
Live cattle | 6% | CME | |
Gold | 6% | CME | |
Aluminum | 6% | LME | |
Copper | 6% | CME | |
Tier III | Sugar | 5% | ICE |
Cotton | 5% | ICE | |
Cocoa | 5% | ICE | |
Coffee | 5% | ICE | |
Tier IV | Nickel | 1% | LME |
Wheat | 1% | CME | |
Lean hogs | 1% | CME | |
Orange juice | 1% | ICE | |
Silver | 1% | CME |