Close Menu

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    ALL vs AFP-Today Match Prediction-Dream11-Asian Legends League 2026-ALL T20-1st Match-Who Will Win

    June 3, 2026

    Small lifestyle changes yield huge benefits for heart health, says research

    June 3, 2026

    Commodity Markets Are Living on Borrowed Time

    June 3, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • ALL vs AFP-Today Match Prediction-Dream11-Asian Legends League 2026-ALL T20-1st Match-Who Will Win
    • Small lifestyle changes yield huge benefits for heart health, says research
    • Commodity Markets Are Living on Borrowed Time
    • Ederson to Manchester United for total €45m, full agreement with Atalanta
    • Daphne Joy Teases NSFW Content After Statement On Diddy Tape
    • The Strange Afterlife of Fascism
    • Paralympian Josh Turek wins Democratic nomination for U.S. Senate in Iowa
    • Trump pushes back on reports U.S.-Iran talks collapsed
    X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
    iFonge
    • National news
    • International News
    • Economy
    • Entertainment
    • Finance
    • Health
    • Politics
    • sports
      • Football
      • Cricket
    iFonge
    Home » Commodity Markets Are Living on Borrowed Time
    Economy

    Commodity Markets Are Living on Borrowed Time

    ifongeBy ifongeJune 3, 2026No Comments0 Views
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Tumblr Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Yves here. Yours truly is not alone in comparing the weird period we are in to the phase of a tsunami when the ocean pulls far further back from the shore before the monster wave rolls in, relentlessly overpowering everything in its path. Unless you are familiar with the pattern, the retreat of the water simply looks unusual, as oppose to a dire warning of a need to find high ground as fast as possible. This article describes why the deceptively calm economic phase, here as shown by limited volatility in commodity prices relative to widely expected shortfalls, is set to end, and not well.

    By CityAM.com. the online presence of City A.M., London’s first free daily business newspaper. Cross posted from OilPrice

    Commodity markets have spent the past three months performing an extraordinary balancing act. Despite one of the most significant disruptions to global energy flows in decades, the global economy has continued to function remarkably smoothly. After an initial spike, prices for several key commodities have stabilised or even eased. Yet this apparent calm is deceptive. The reason the system has held together is due to governments, producers and consumers drawing down the buffers that normally protect the global economy from disruption. Those buffers are now approaching dangerous limits.

    Inventories are being depleted at a remarkable pace. Global oil stockpiles have fallen to levels that senior industry executives describe as unprecedented. Aluminium markets are facing a similar squeeze. Bloomberg recently calculated that combined stockpiles tracked by the London Metal Exchange, CME Group and the Shanghai Futures Exchange would cover less than five days of global supply.

    The surprising resilience of commodity prices reflects the fact that the global economy has proved far more adaptable than many expected. Strategic reserves have been deployed on a large scale. The United States and Japan have both released oil from emergency stockpiles to cushion the loss of supply. American jet fuel output has reached record levels. Even China has managed to reduce crude imports without any obvious drawdown of its strategic petroleum reserves, which a recent report from the Oxford Institute for Energy Studies suggests is due to changing refinery yields and industrial flexibility. In effect, China has been extracting greater flexibility from its industrial system rather than relying solely on inventory releases.

    All of these developments demonstrate a market responding exactly as economic theory would predict. When a critical input becomes scarce, producers seek substitutes, inventories are drawn down and existing capacity is pushed harder. These adjustments can be remarkably effective. They buy time. But time is ultimately what inventories represent. Every barrel released from a reserve, every tonne withdrawn from a warehouse, and every industrial workaround implemented today simply postpones the moment when supply and demand must once again be reconciled.

    The US Strategic Petroleum Reserve is a case in point. The United States entered this crisis from a significantly weaker position than prior energy shocks. Having peaked at more than 700 million barrels in 2010, the SPR had already been reduced by roughly a third before the disruption in the Middle East began. Recent releases have helped stabilise markets, but they have done so by consuming the very buffer that exists to absorb future shocks. The critical question is not whether the SPR can technically be depleted. It cannot. The more important question is whether markets begin to doubt that policymakers possess sufficient reserves to continue cushioning disruptions indefinitely. Once that confidence disappears, the existence of barrels underground becomes less important than the perception that the shock absorbers are running out.

    At some point, the arithmetic becomes unavoidable. The world cannot permanently consume more commodities than it produces. Strategic reserves can only be released once. Inventories can only be drawn down once. Refineries can only be reconfigured so far. Eventually, the familiar supply-and-demand framework begins to reassert itself, and a new equilibrium must emerge between available supply and desired consumption.

    Demand Destruction

    Economists have a sanitised term for this process: demand destruction. The reality is more painful. Demand destruction occurs when prices rise to a level that forces consumers and businesses to reduce their consumption. Households spend more on fuel and less on everything else. Airlines reduce routes. Manufacturers delay investment. Energy-intensive industries curtail production. Consumption falls not because people choose to consume less but because higher prices leave them no alternative.

    This is why inventory levels matter so much. As long as stockpiles remain available, markets can postpone the adjustment. Once they are exhausted, prices become the primary mechanism through which balance is restored. Neil Chapman, senior vice-president at ExxonMobil, recently described the situation with unusual candour. Oil prices, he argued, have remained relatively contained because inventories have been drawn down. Yet those inventories are now approaching levels rarely seen in modern markets. Once those buffers disappear, the economics change rapidly. As Chapman put it, “a model would say Brent will shoot up” towards $150 or even $160 per barrel.

    Many governments will inevitably seek to shield consumers from the consequences. Price caps, subsidies and emergency fiscal packages are politically attractive when energy costs surge. Yet such measures do not eliminate the underlying economic loss. They merely redistribute it. If consumers are protected from higher prices, then taxpayers, bondholders or currency holders must absorb the cost instead.

    Japan offers an early illustration of this dynamic. The government has proposed additional fiscal support while simultaneously insisting that it will not require higher borrowing over the calendar year. Markets appear sceptical. Yields across the Japanese government bond curve have risen as investors attempt to identify where the cost of these interventions will ultimately fall. The pressure has not disappeared; it has simply been transferred elsewhere within the system.

    This is the uncomfortable reality confronting policymakers around the world. There is no financial engineering solution that can replace missing barrels of oil. No accounting adjustment can create aluminium inventories that do not exist. No subsidy can transform a scarce commodity into an abundant one. The shock emanating from the Middle East is real, and while the global economy has responded impressively through substitution, efficiency gains and inventory drawdowns, these measures are temporary expedients rather than permanent solutions.

    When inventories become critically low, markets force a new equilibrium. And a new equilibrium in a poorer world means exactly what it sounds like: higher prices, lower consumption and lower living standards. The commodity markets are not forecasting a poorer world. They are enforcing one.

    ____

    1 To illustrate:

    Commodity Markets Are Living on Borrowed Time
    Borrowed Commodity Living markets time
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email
    ifonge
    • Website
    • X (Twitter)
    • Instagram

    Related Posts

    Coffee Break: Armed Madhouse – Game of Drones

    June 2, 2026

    2026 Has Been a Wild Ride for Southeast Asian Stock Markets – The Diplomat

    June 2, 2026

    Links 6/2/2026 | naked capitalism

    June 2, 2026
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    Iran live updates: Trump vows ‘bigger, and better’ Iran attacks if deal not reached

    April 9, 202652

    Strait of Hormuz ‘completely open’, Iran says; Stock market continues its record-setting rally

    April 17, 202624

    Tyson Fury will pay unique tribute to Ricky Hatton in Makhmudov comeback fight

    April 10, 202617

    Trauma Bonding in Relationships and How Trauma Attachment, Abuse, and Emotional Dependence Form Hard to Break Bonds

    April 28, 202613
    Follow Us
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    • YouTube

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest news from iFonge.

    About Us
    About Us

    At Ifonge, we are dedicated to delivering high-quality content across multiple categories including National News, International News, Economy, Entertainment, Finance, Health, Lifestyle, Politics, and Sports.

    Our Picks

    ALL vs AFP-Today Match Prediction-Dream11-Asian Legends League 2026-ALL T20-1st Match-Who Will Win

    June 3, 2026

    Small lifestyle changes yield huge benefits for heart health, says research

    June 3, 2026

    Commodity Markets Are Living on Borrowed Time

    June 3, 2026
    Most Popular

    Iran live updates: Trump vows ‘bigger, and better’ Iran attacks if deal not reached

    April 9, 202652

    Strait of Hormuz ‘completely open’, Iran says; Stock market continues its record-setting rally

    April 17, 202624

    Tyson Fury will pay unique tribute to Ricky Hatton in Makhmudov comeback fight

    April 10, 202617
    © 2026 All rights reserved iFonge.
    • Home
    • About us
    • DISCLAIMER
    • Privacy Policy
    • Contact

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.