Insights
Commodities

Expanding the commodities conversation

Part One of the Aberdeen Investments Commodities Research Series, this installment offers timely insights for advisors and investors seeking to better understand the evolving role of commodities in modern portfolios.

Expanding the commodities conversation

Part 1 of 

Commodities research series

Duration: 3 Mins

Key findings

  • Despite rising interest, most investors remain under-allocated to commodities, with average portfolio exposure at just 4.6% – well below levels that research suggests may enhance diversification and resilience.
  • Nearly two-thirds of advisors say clients lack a clear understanding of how commodities support portfolio goals, and over 40% find commodities harder to explain than other asset classes – highlighting a persistent conversation gap.
  • Commodities offer more than just diversification: they provide potential inflation protection, exposure to global megatrends, daily liquidity, and resilience during geopolitical disruptions.
  • ETFs remain the preferred vehicle for commodity exposure, offering simplicity, transparency, and flexibility for both strategic and tactical allocations – making implementation more accessible than ever.
What if the next phase of commodity industry growth depends less on new products – and more on improving how advisors and clients talk about the asset class?

After a standout year for precious metals – particularly gold and silver – and renewed focus on portfolio resilience, many advisors are reassessing the role of commodities. Interest is clearly rising, with 37% of advisors planning to increase allocations to precious metals, and 29% to broad commodities in 2026 (Chart 1).

Chart 1. Surveyed advisors who plan to make alternative changes in 2026

Yet, on average, commodities account for just 4.6% of client portfolios (Chart 2).

Chart 2. Surveyed advisors’ current commodities allocations

This gap between conviction and implementation presents a central challenge for both advisors and clients: commodities are increasingly viewed as important, but they are still not fully integrated into most portfolios.

A foundational, yet underrepresented asset class


Commodities are the physical inputs behind modern economic activity. Energy powers transportation and data centers. Agricultural markets sustain food systems. Industrial metals enable electrification, infrastructure, and digitalization. Despite this central role, commodities remain underrepresented in client portfolios. They are often treated as peripheral diversifiers rather than as core building blocks of long-term asset allocation. Independent research reinforces this disconnect. Bloomberg analysis suggests that commodity allocations in the range of approximately 4% to 9% may enhance portfolio efficiency in traditional multi-asset frameworks. Yet most investors remain well below this range. The result is a persistent structural under-allocation to assets that underpin everyday economic life.

The conversation gap

Our survey of 300 US financial advisors highlights why this gap persists.

In a recent survey conducted by Aberdeen Investments in partnership with CoreData Research, where we surveyed 300 US financial advisors, nearly two-thirds reported that clients lack a clear understanding of how commodities support portfolio objectives.1 Over 40% say commodities are harder to explain than other asset classes (Chart 3). As a result, most client discussions focus narrowly on diversification, while broader benefits are rarely emphasized.

Chart 3. Surveyed advisors usage of commodities

This limited framing constrains adoption. Commodities are discussed but not fully contextualized within the client goals around inflation resilience, income stability, or long-term growth.

An evolving geopolitical backdrop

The global environment is also reshaping how commodity markets function.

Rising geopolitical tensions and the re-emergence of resource nationalism are altering supply dynamics across energy, metals, and agricultural markets. Governments are increasingly prioritizing domestic control, strategic reserves, and supply security.

Export restrictions, local-content rules, and state involvement in production have become more common. As a result, pricing is increasingly influenced by political decisions and national priorities, not just cyclical supply and demand.

For investors, this adds another structural dimension to the case for sustained exposure.

Education as a long-standing strategic priority

For many years, Aberdeen Investments has invested significant resources in advisor education, developing research, market commentary, and practical tools designed to help advisors understand how commodities behave across market cycles and how they can contribute to portfolio outcomes.

Our survey results reinforce the importance of this long-term commitment.

Advisors continue to seek frameworks that help them:

Rather than pointing to a new educational agenda, the findings validate the value of sustained, consistent investment in education and engagement.

ETFs, benchmarks, and practical implementation

Most advisors already prefer exchange-traded funds (ETF) for commodities exposure. When chosen correctly, these vehicles offer transparency, liquidity, and operational simplicity, making them well suited for both strategic and tactical use.

For many investors – 56%, according to our survey – broad exposure tied to established benchmarks, such as the Bloomberg Commodity Index, provides a disciplined foundation for long-term allocations (Chart 4).2 These benchmarks are among the most widely followed in the industry and reflect diversified exposure across energy, metals, and agriculture.

Chart 4. Paths to commodities exposure for clients

Importantly, index-based approaches that maintain consistent exposure, rather than actively shifting in and out of individual commodities, may be better positioned to capture unexpected inflation shocks, which are often driven by sudden moves in underlying commodity prices.

By avoiding discretionary timing decisions, benchmark-linked strategies help ensure that portfolios remain exposed when inflation pressures emerge unexpectedly.

Expanding the narrative

To fully realize the potential of commodities, client conversations must move beyond a single-benefit framework. Therefore, in addition to diversification, commodities can support:

  • Downside protection and inflation hedging. Particularly during supply-driven price spikes. With 70% of advisors prioritizing downside protection and 24% focusing on inflation protection, commodities can play a key role in addressing these concerns – yet few advisors currently highlight these benefits in client discussions.
  • Daily liquidity and transparency. Unlike many alternative assets, commodities – especially via ETFs – offer daily liquidity and transparency. This is particularly relevant as 61% of advisors prefer liquid alternatives for new allocations.
  • Exposure to structural growth themes. Commodities are driven by powerful global trends such as deglobalization, infrastructure investment, the rise of AI, and the energy transition. While 55% of advisors recognize these as long-term tailwinds, only 20% mention them in client conversations – suggesting a missed opportunity to connect commodities to compelling macro narratives.
  • Resilience to geopolitical disruption. Commodities often respond differently to global events than traditional assets. During periods of geopolitical tension or supply chain shocks, certain commodities – such as energy, agricultural goods, or precious metals – can act as effective hedges, helping to stabilize portfolios when other markets are under pressure.

When these dimensions are incorporated into client discussions, commodities become easier to position as a strategic portfolio component rather than a tactical allocation.

From niche to mainstream


Our research suggests the foundation for broader adoption is already in place. Advisor interest is growing. Implementation tools are widely available. Clients are increasingly aware of macroeconomic and geopolitical risks. The next stage of development will be driven by education, consistent messaging, and strong analytical frameworks, areas where sustained investment and long-term engagement matter most. By helping advisors connect market structure, portfolio construction, and client outcomes, the industry can reposition commodities from niche allocation to enduring portfolio tool. At Aberdeen Investments, we believe our role is to support that transition, through research-driven insights, benchmark-based implementation, and a long-standing commitment to advisor education.

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