Surging Oil And Wheat Prices Paint A Bleak Inflation Outlook

 | Mar 03, 2022 06:21

At the start of this year there was some hope that coming out of the other side of Covid, we’d see a semblance of normality return to normal life, and while there was some concern about supply chains and higher energy prices there was a sense that this was probably containable.

Suffice to say that calculus has shifted markedly, while the job of central banks in looking to combat rising inflation risk has become much more complicated.

The Russian invasion of Ukraine which started with a slow burn of lies and obfuscation from Russian President Vladimir Putin about his intentions, has upended the global commodity market sending both energy and agricultural prices to their highest levels in years.

The isolation of Russia from the world financial system is now manifesting itself with major global brands starting to disentangle themselves from the Russian economy.

While sanctions of major Russian banks were the starting point the isolation of Russia’s economy has prompted major banks to look at disentangling themselves from doing business at all inside Russia. This has prompted a run on Russia’s banks over concern that credit cards will no longer work, a fear that appears to have been realised after Mastercard (NYSE:MA) and Visa (NYSE:V) cut off Russian financial institutions from their networks.

This week BP (LON:BP) announced it was divesting its stake in Rosneft which it has a 20% stake in. This is something they should have done some time ago, and last year saw the business account for $2.8bn of profits. BP said that the decision will probably mean it will have to take a total write-down of $25bn in Q1, given that it is unlikely to find a buyer and even if it does it will be a forced seller.

Sector peer Shell (LON:RDSa) has also distanced itself from its associations with Gazprom (MCX:GAZP) and pulled back from its 27.5% stake in the LNG Sakhalin gas field.

The backlash against Russia has continued today with Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) the latest company to announce that it would stop selling its products in the country.

This looks like it’s going to be an ongoing theme as the sanctions noose tightens even further and is a trend that is only likely to get worse with significant consequences for global supply of key raw materials as well as demand for goods and services, as everything becomes more expensive.

Not only are we seeing it in energy prices, but we are also seeing it in precious and industrial metals prices, of which Russia is a key supplier, and agricultural commodity prices as well.

The rise in agricultural commodity prices is a bigger concern, and there are two reasons for this.

The first one is that Russia and Ukraine combined, account for 20% of the global wheat and corn market, and the second one is that Russia is the biggest exporter of ammonium nitrate, which is used in fertilizer.

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In February, Russia banned exports of this until April, sending fertilizer prices soaring which in turn has sent crop prices in the same direction.

One of the key takeaways from the most recent CPI numbers was that we are now starting to see inflation manifest itself in everyday items, with double-digit rises in meat, dairy, fish, and fruit.

The CMC Agricultural index has already risen sharply in the last few days, with the prices of Corn, Wheat, and Soybean, which make up just over 50% of the index, already up over 15% year to date.

CMC Agricultural Index