Since 2020, commodity markets have been drunk on adrenaline as pandemic-era disruptions, Trump tantrums, war and sanctions rocked supply and demand. In 2026 a general sobering-up may prevail.
For globally traded industrial commodities, prices appear flat to up in 2026, with crude oil the major exception. Crude oil remains oversupplied, and we expect this to drive prices lower across 2026.
Global commodity dynamics in mid‑2025 point to a market undergoing fragmentation, not collapse. While the World Bank projects an overall 12% decline in the broad commodity price index this year (after ...
Certain commodities have a multitude of tailwinds. Here are 4 that are up 25% to 70% in just one month. The post Why are ...
WASHINGTON, April 29, 2025—Faltering economic growth is coinciding with ample oil supply in ways that are expected to drop global commodity prices to their lowest level of the 2020s, according to the ...
If that golden-oldie precious metal spinner Rumpelstiltskin could choose a year to come back from his eternal rest, it would likely be 2025. Claim 60% off TipRanks Premium for data-backed insights and ...
WASHINGTON, October 29, 2025—Global commodity prices are projected to fall to their lowest level in six years in 2026, marking the fourth consecutive year of decline, according to the World Bank Group ...
Equities remain elevated for now, but a tired market cycle and rising commodity prices signal increasing downside risk into late 2024 and 2025. Cyclical commodities, especially industrial metals and ...
Global commodities prices are on track to fall to their lowest level in six years by 2026, as weaker demand, a widening oil surplus and policy uncertainty continue to weigh on markets, according to ...
Perhaps the only thing that we can predict about commodity prices is that they will be unpredictable. As the commodity crisis puts a strain on worldwide prices, companies are scrambling to protect ...
Commodities play a central yet often underappreciated role in shaping macroeconomic fluctuations across both advanced economies (AEs) and emerging market and developing economies (EMDEs), with the ...