Author

Lavan Mahadeva, Laura Brooks
Aluminium Base Metals Battery Materials Energy Commodities Ferroalloys Fertilizers Minor Metals Precious Metals Steel Wire & Cable Prices Battery Economics Trade Strategy Wire & Cable Fertilizers & Agricultural Chemicals Chemicals Transport Construction Metals Mining Manufacturing Consumer goods and retail Technology Stockholders/Distributors Government and Institutions Professional Services Academia & Research Financial Services Energy & Renewables Emissions Strategy Strategic Planning and Market Opportunities Performance Evaluation and Benchmarking Cost Management and Optimization Risk Management and Compliance Negotiations and Hedging Leadership and Influence Policy making and lobbying Batteries Power, Energy, Renewables and Utilities Wire and Cable (& Fibre) Fertilizers Chemicals Transport & Automotive Construction / EPC Contractors Mining, and Metal Production Manufacturing & Fabrication Consumer goods and retail Healthcare Infrastructure/Equipment Technology Stockholders/Distributors Government and Policymakers Professional Services Academia & Research Financial Services, Investors and Traders Silicon

The client, a Japanese trading house, asked us to aid their strategy development process by defining, separating and estimating the super cycles in historical commodity prices and to use our understanding and expertise to explain commonalities and differences.

A final section was to draw some conclusions for the future. Although one cannot forecast prices based on this method alone, the method had to be designed to extract important lessons for the future from an expert understanding of the past history of the commodity. 

Our recommendation
One recommendation was to recognize that super cycles in these commodities can be influential and long-lasting and are distinct from short-lived temporary spikes and troughs. A deep analysis into the causes of the super cycles identified the main problem to be exaggerated supply reactions to what would otherwise be temporary shocks and an insufficient consideration of competitors. Our main recommendation was to address these issues through a conscious design of a planning and reaction process.

Methodology
We built historical (from 1900) real prices for copper, aluminium, iron ore and coal and justified our methodology to construct and deflate the series. We then estimated the super cycles, trends and short-lived movements using the start of the art econometric methods. We then cross checked differences against the supply and demand features of each commodity, taking full account of the value chain. A final section drew lessons together, taking account of the current pipeline of investment projects in each commodity.

Outcome
The client found the different perspective very useful especially in understanding how far and how long prices can deviate from their long-run cost trends. This was a starting point for designing a planning and reaction process which acknowledged the true scale and nature of the volatility in commodity prices.