Energy Volatility Shows Power of Commodities to Influence Inflation

A sharp rise in natural gas prices since August has put upward pressure on a host of commodities, including coal, electricity, and oil, while squeezing margins for industrial users. Forced curtailment of industrial activities has contributed to higher prices for other commodities, such as base metals and ammonia, where output is being reduced to save natural gas.

Given existing supply bottlenecks in shipping and computer chips, the run-up in commodity prices has fed renewed concerns about inflation and a potential negative growth impulse from constrained industrial output and higher spending on heating bills. The International Monetary Fund in October trimmed its forecast for global growth, citing risks that include rising fuel costs and accelerating inflation. Unfortunately, energy-price volatility could persist in the coming months.

Gas market sparks next leg up across commodities

A confluence of one-off and structural factors has left global natural gas inventories on the low end of the historical range entering into winter and pushed prices higher.

Cold temperatures in Europe and Russia lasting through spring this year limited the typical seasonal buildup of gas inventories. Weather issues have also curbed wind and hydro power production, increasing the call on thermal generation, including natural gas.

Delayed maintenance due to COVID-19 and underinvestment in upstream production limited capacity utilization at global liquefied natural gas (LNG) facilities to levels not much above 2020, when low prices prompted output reductions.

Compounding problems, low natural gas inventories and strong internal demand within Russia, and that country’s preference for exports through the southern corridor, have contributed to a decline in northern European imports of Russian gas.

In addition, the exceptional growth over the past year in industrial production – and the resulting power needs – due to pandemic-related global demand for goods contributed to recent energy shortfalls.