venerdì 20 dicembre 2024

Segnalazione dalla Banca Mondiale

Dear Colleagues,
 
We have just released the latest edition of the Commodity Markets Outlook

Commodity markets have experienced substantial volatility, in part due to shifting assessments of geopolitical risks and weak economic activity. 
Assuming no major escalation of geopolitical tensions, prices are expected to decrease by 5 percent in 2025 and 2 percent in 2026. 
The projected declines are led by oil and food prices but tempered by price increases for natural gas and a stable outlook for metals and agricultural raw materials. 
The possibility of escalating conflict in the Middle East represents a substantial near-term upside risk to energy prices, with potential knock-on consequences for other commodities. 
However, over the forecast horizon, longer-term dynamics—including decelerating global oil demand, diversifying oil production, and ample oil supply capacity—suggest sizable downside risks to oil prices, especially if OPEC+ unwinds its latest production cuts. 
I summarize the main messages of the report below (to download the full report, please use this link). 
All charts/data featured in the report and the Pink Sheet of monthly prices are available on our Commodity Markets web page.(...)

  • Commodity price forecasts. After softening by 3 percent in 2024, the World Bank’s commodity price index is expected to retreat by a further 5 percent in 2025 and 2 percent in 2026. This would lead aggregate commodity prices to their lowest level since 2020, albeit still nearly 30 percent above the 2015-19 average. The energy price index is projected to fall by 6 percent in 2024 (y/y), followed by further declines of 6 percent in 2025 and 2 percent in 2026.  Next year, the global oil supply is expected to exceed demand by an average of 1.2 million barrels per day, a glut that has been exceeded only twice before—during the pandemic-related shutdowns in 2020 and the 1998 oil-price collapse. Assuming conflict in the Middle East does not intensify, the annual average price of Brent crude is expected to fall to a four-year low of $73 in 2025, down from $80 a barrel this year. The metals price index is expected to drift slightly lower over 2025-26. Agricultural prices, after a slight increase in 2024, are projected to fall by 4 percent in 2025, largely due to increasing supplies amid favorable weather conditions, with little change anticipated in 2026. Food commodity prices are on course to decline by 9 percent in 2024, then forecast to soften by a further 4 percent next year before leveling off in 2026. 
  • Implications for inflation. As past and anticipated declines in energy and food commodity prices pass through to consumer prices—albeit to varying degrees across different products and regions—they should continue to put downward pressure on headline inflation, particularly its non-core components. Lower commodity prices should, therefore, help central banks bring headline inflation back toward targets, especially in emerging market and developing economies where food and energy form relatively large components of consumption baskets. Furthermore, given that energy and food prices tend to be particularly salient to consumers, the projected easing of commodity prices could also temper inflation expectations, which could feed back into reduced core inflation pressures.
  • Risks. In the near term, the possibility of escalating conflict in the Middle East poses substantial upside risks to energy prices. A conflict-related reduction in the region’s energy exports could drive oil and gas prices higher, with knock-on consequences for other commodities. Other upside risks to commodity prices include stronger-than-anticipated economic growth, especially if related to policy stimulus in China, and potential supply disruptions due to climate change-related extreme weather. Even so, over the forecast horizon, risks to the aggregate commodity price forecast are tilted slightly to the downside. This reflects a judgment that the steady unwinding of OPEC+ production cuts—in line with announced policy—could generate abundant oil supply, significantly reducing oil prices and lowering commodity prices overall. In addition, weaker-than-expected global industrial activity could weigh on energy and metal prices. 
  • Commodity Price Synchronization: A New Era? Over the past five decades, commodity markets have experienced periods of heightened price synchronization, particularly during times of global economic stress, such as the pandemic-induced recession and the global financial crisis. The record pace at which prices rebounded from pandemic lows in April 2020 gave way to broad-based declines starting in March 2022. Unlike the rebound after the global financial crisis, which was primarily driven by economic recovery and strong growth in emerging market and developing countries, the recent period has been marked by a series of disparate, commodity-specific shocks that have come from such sources as increased conflict in key commodity-producing regions and severe weather events. These shocks drove inflation higher and adversely affected global economic activity. In recent months, the commodity market effects of these shocks have largely subsided, leading to greater dispersion in price movements across commodities. However, the risk of synchronized price increases, due to an escalation in geopolitical tensions, remains significant.

PS: For our other periodical products, please visit: Global Economic Prospects and Global Monthly. For our latest assessment of the causes of chronic fiscal weakness in the poorest economies, see Fiscal Vulnerabilities in Low-Income Countries. For a comprehensive look at the opportunities and risks confronting 75 countries eligible for grants and zero to low-interest loans from the World Bank’s International Development Association (IDA), see The Great Reversal. For our recent study on long-term growth, see Falling Long-Term Growth Prospects. For our databases of potential growth and inflation, see Potential Growth: A Global Database and One-Stop Source: A Global Database of Inflation. For our work on debt challenges, see Global Waves of Debt: Causes and Consequences and A Cross-Country Database of Fiscal Space. For our analytical work on topical policy issues, please visit Policy Research Working Papers.

M. Ayhan Kose Deputy Chief Economist  and Director of Prospects Group World Bank

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