A Pause In The Recovery Of Commodity Prices

 | Apr 27, 2017 08:49AM ET

The rebound in oil and metal prices has stalled since the beginning of the year. Yet world growth seems to have accelerated. Reasons to explain the pause in the commodity price recovery have to be found on the supply side. They will probably be only temporary for metals, but look more lasting for oil. For commodity-exporting emerging countries, the rebound in prices in 2016 gave them some extra breathing room. But for the most fragile economies, the turnaround needs to continue to truly restore their external liquidity.

Oil and metal prices have levelled off since the beginning of the year. Yet world growth seems to be accelerating. A temporary paradox? According to CPB estimates, world trade grew at an average annual rate of 3.1% in January, up from 2.6% in Q4 2016. In the United States, the average of the two ISM indexes for the manufacturing and services sectors peaked at 56.5 in Q1 2017, the highest level since Q3 2015, suggesting growth of close to 2.5%, compared to 1.5% in H2 2016. In the eurozone, manufacturing PMI averaged more than 55 points in Q1 2017, which is compatible with annual growth of 2%, compared to 1.8% in H2 2016.