Today, the future of energy prices is as uncertain as ever. Whereas in the 1970s, there was a fear that the supply of oil could decline dramatically, causing future oil prices to rise, fracking and other technological innovations have increased oil reserves to levels never before seen in history. At the same time, natural gas is becoming a clean substitute for petroleum, and because of concerns over global warming, solar power and battery technology are improving dramatically as attempts to end the economy’s dependence on carbon-based energy increase. Although coal is one of the dirtiest of energy resources, it remains an important source of power for electricity plants, especially since many countries want to eliminate any reliance on nuclear power.
Energy Resources During the Past 750 Years
From the 1200s to the 1800s, the economy’s primary energy resource was firewood, with coal and lamp oil acting as secondary resources. Each, in its own way, provided different types of energy for cooking, heating and power. GFD’s data on firewood prices begins in 1252, coal prices begin in 1447, and lamp oil price data begins in 1272. Although firewood was the primary source for energy from the 1200s to the 1800s, it was gradually replaced by electricity and gas in the 1800s as energy was brought directly into the home. As the graph below shows, although there were periods when the price of firewood rose dramatically, the price of firewood also stayed the same for centuries.
As the use of firewood declined in the 1800s, in part because the forests of Europe and America were exhausted, coal become more prominent and by the 1900s, petroleum replaced coal as the primary source of energy. In the 1700s, whale oil replaced lamp oil as whalers from New Bedford and other parts of New England searched global oceans for whales to kill and convert their blubber into oil. Whaling became the principal industry of New England making the area rich. Had the world remained dependent on whale oil, whales would have become extinct long ago.
In the 1860s, petroleum oil was discovered in Pennsylvania and quickly replaced whale oil as a source of energy. When oil was first produced in Pennsylvania in 1859, a barrel of oil sold for $20, but because of oversupply, the price quickly fell to 10 cents by the end of 1861, making it a cheap substitute for whale oil.
Overnight the whaling business went into steady decline, with production falling by 70% between 1854 and 1865, leaving us Moby Dick, and saving whales from extinction. By combining historical data for coal, coal gas, firewood, lamp oil, whale oil, petroleum oil and natural gas, GFD has created a commodity index of energy prices that covers the past 750 years.
Long-term Trends in Commodity Prices
Several interesting facts emerge from a long-term analysis of commodity prices. Industrial commodities, basically metals and non-food agriculturals, have consistently risen in price less than other commodities. In fact, the dip in industrial commodity prices in the 1930s returned the index to where it had been in 1550! Since then, industrial commodity prices have increased faster than agriculturals, but still not as fast as energy prices.
Of the three major commodity indices that GFD calculates for energy, agriculturals and industrials, the energy index has increased the most over the past 750 years. Between 1252 and 1970, both energy and agricultural prices increased by a factor of 60 while industrial commodity prices increased by only a factor of six. During those 700 years, agricultural and energy prices increased in line with one another with few dramatic swings in relative prices.
The Surprising Interplay Between Coal and Oil Prices
The chart below provides a comparison of the behavior of two of the underlying components of the energy price index, oil, represented by the lower price line since 1800 and coal, which has shown a steady uptrend over the past few centuries.
Few people would have guessed that over the long term, coal has shown such a consistent increase in its price, following a 500-year trendline that started in the early 1500s. Even more surprising is the fact that oil prices, as represented by lamp oil, whale oil and petroleum, showed no tendency to increase from the late 1500s to the 1930s. When petroleum oil was first produced in Pennsylvania, the price of oil went through a series of wild swings, starting at $20 in 1859, collapsing down to 10 cents in 1861, then rising back to $11 in 1864, and gradually declining in price until the end of the 1800s. During the 1900s, both oil and coal prices increased steadily, but oil prices have increased five times as fast as coal prices over the past 100 years because of increased demand for oil relative to coal.
The Future of Commodity Prices
In our annual review of global stock markets, we noticed that a relatively large number of countries put in what could be a bear market bottom in 2016. If this is true, investors should expect that global markets will continue a bull market run in 2017 rather than forming a top that leads to a bear market.
Global Financial Data has data on bull and bear markets on 100 countries beginning in 1693. With this data, we have been able to track bull and bear markets during the past three centuries. We define a bear market as a decline of 20% or more in a country’s primary stock market average and a bull market as an increase in the market of 50% or more. Although a 20% decline is a commonly accepted decline to indicate a bear market, there are no clear rules on what constitutes a bull market. The reason we settled on a 50% increase is that if a market declines by 20% (from 1000 to 800), it would have to increase by at least 50% (from 800 to 1200) to rise 20% above the previous market top. Any changes of a smaller magnitude are treated as either a bear market rally or a bull market contraction.
Have Emerging Markets Ended a Four-year Bear Market?
One country actually suffered two bear markets in 2016, Venezuela, which ended a 30% bear market in July, rallied 228% into December, then suffered a 26% decline over a period of three weeks. These fluctuations occurred in the country with the highest inflation in the world, and adjusting for inflation, the results were quite different. During 2016, the Venezuela Bolivar Fuerte (sic) fell against the US Dollar by about 75%. Measured in US Dollars, the Caracas Stock Exchange Index declined by 73% between June 2015 and December 2016. The highest denomination banknote in Venezuela, the 100 Bolivar, is worth about three cents. I think I can safely say that Venezuela has not hit a bottom yet.Country | Bull Top | Change | Bear Bottom | Change | 2016 Recovery |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Abu Dhabi | 9/18/2014 | 144.93 | 1/21/2016 | -28.59 | 21.66 |
Belgium | 4/13/2015 | 104.31 | 2/11/2016 | -21.25 | 16.30 |
Brazil | 11/4/2010 | 133.58 | 1/20/2016 | -48.43 | 59.99 |
China | 6/12/2015 | 165.15 | 2/29/2016 | -48.02 | 15.53 |
Colombia | 11/5/2010 | 151.96 | 1/18/2016 | -51.78 | 28.75 |
Croatia | 2/11/2011 | 84.84 | 1/18/2016 | -32.55 | 26.54 |
Czech Republic | 4/15/2010 | 107.51 | 6/27/2016 | -39.42 | 16.65 |
Egypt | 9/7/2014 | 147.67 | 1/21/2016 | -48.26 | 147.74 |
France | 4/27/2015 | 92.87 | 2/11/2016 | -25.28 | 24.47 |
Germany | 4/10/2015 | 120.19 | 2/11/2016 | -29.00 | 26.40 |
Greece | 3/1/2014 | 187.51 | 2/11/2016 | -67.81 | 45.99 |
Hong Kong | 4/28/2015 | 75.03 | 2/12/2016 | -35.59 | 20.09 |
India | 1/29/2015 | 95.60 | 2/11/2016 | -22.67 | 16.01 |
Iraq | 10/4/2011 | 63.50 | 6/16/2016 | -73.18 | 28.75 |
Italy | 4/15/2015 | 91.29 | 6/27/2016 | -30.74 | 22.61 |
Japan | 8/10/2015 | 143.17 | 2/12/2016 | -29.27 | 26.91 |
Kazakhstan | 9/3/2014 | 55.26 | 1/21/2016 | -39.12 | 69.89 |
Kuwait | 6/24/2008 | 70.82 | 1/26/2016 | -68.47 | 16.46 |
Luxembourg | 4/14/2015 | 73.02 | 2/11/2016 | -34.48 | 41.39 |
Mongolia | 2/25/2011 | 626.20 | 5/5/2016 | -68.18 | 17.09 |
Namibia | 5/5/2015 | 199.62 | 1/20/2016 | -36.31 | 38.52 |
Netherlands | 4/13/2015 | 85.92 | 2/11/2016 | -24.28 | 24.42 |
Nigeria | 7/9/2014 | 118.19 | 1/19/2016 | -47.82 | 19.68 |
Norway | 4/15/2015 | 72.83 | 1/20/2016 | -26.35 | 29.50 |
Oman | 1/16/2011 | 66.38 | 1/21/2016 | -30.74 | 18.81 |
Peru | 4/2/2012 | 298.29 | 1/20/2016 | -63.09 | 75.34 |
Philippines | 4/10/2015 | 376.85 | 1/21/2016 | -25.14 | 12.43 |
Poland | 4/28/2011 | 120.89 | 1/20/2016 | -42.90 | 16.32 |
Qatar | 9/18/2014 | 239.24 | 1/18/2016 | -40.65 | 22.54 |
Romania | 8/10/2015 | 83.09 | 1/18/2016 | -21.21 | 17.71 |
Saudi Arabia | 9/9/2014 | 169.96 | 10/3/2016 | -51.42 | 33.12 |
Singapore | 5/22/2013 | 143.72 | 1/21/2016 | -26.50 | 12.75 |
Spain | 4/13/2015 | 99.78 | 2/11/2016 | -34.95 | 20.49 |
Sweden | 4/27/2015 | 109.56 | 2/11/2016 | -22.84 | 22.79 |
Ukraine | 8/1/2014 | 65.89 | 5/24/2016 | -54.63 | 23.17 |
Venezuela | 6/13/2015 | 100.40 | 12/10/2016 | -73.34 | 14.07 |
Zimbabwe | 8/1/2013 | 133.18 | 6/17/2016 | -59.95 | 54.76 |
MSCI EAFE | 7/3/2014 | 52.30 | 2/12/2016 | -25.21 | 12.84 |
MSCI Emerging | 5/2/2011 | 153.96 | 1/21/2016 | -42.93 | 5.24 |
MSCI Europe | 5/21/2015 | 53.45 | 6/27/2016 | -25.53 | 12.89 |
Global Financial Data has introduced commodity indices which have the longest histories available anywhere as part of its family of GFD Indices. These commodity indices begin in the year 1000 and are current through 2016. The data are monthly and are updated on an ongoing basis.
The GFD Commodity Indices include a composite index, three commodity indices and eight commodity sub-indices. The Composite Index is broken down into three categories, energy, agriculturals and industrials. There are no sub-indices for energy, but there are five sub-indices for agriculturals (beverages, soft foods, grains, livestock and oils and meal) and three sub-indices for industrials (non-food agriculturals, base metals and precious metals).
The energy index begins in 1252, beverages in 1287, softs in 1209, grains in 1000, livestock in 1209, oils and meal in 1306, non-food agriculturals in 1248, base metals in 1268 and precious metals in 1000. Every index has at least 700 years of history.
For the agricultural indices, beverages include beer, cocoa, coffee, milk and tea; the soft foods include butter, cheese, eggs, potatoes and sugar; the grains include barley, corn, hay, oats, rice and wheat; livestock includes, hogs, cattle and lambs; the oils and meal include corn oil, cottonseed oil, cottonseed meal, flaxseed, lard, oatmeal, palm oil, soybean meal, soybean oil, soybeans and tallow. For the industrial indices, base metals include aluminum, copper, iron, lead, nickel, steel, tin and zinc; the non-food agriculturals include cotton, rubber, tobacco, wood and wool; and the precious metals include gold, palladium, platinum and silver. The energy index includes coal, coal gas, firewood, natural gas and oil (which includes lamp oil, whale oil and petroleum).
Data are taken from the United States and England. Annual data from England use historical series calculated by Gregory Clark in “The Price History of English Agriculture, 1209-1914.” British data is used until the 1700s when data from the United States becomes available. Most U.S. data before 1861 comes from Arthur H. Cole, Commodity Prices in the United States, 1700-1861, Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1938. Series from the 1900s and 2000s use government and traded spot prices data.
The underlying commodities have for each series have changed over time. Whenever a new commodity source was introduced, we chain-linked different series to provide a continuous set of data for the underlying commodity. Composites were created for iron (beginning in 1268), steel (1720), coffee (1708), milk (1287), tea (1673), coal (1259), oil (1272), butter (1261), potatoes (1724), sugar (1265), barley (1209), corn (1756), hay (1258), oats (1209), rice (1000), wheat (1209), hogs (1732), cattle (1209), lambs (1874), cotton (1749), tobacco (1618), wood (1443), wool (1248) and lard (1797).
Commodities are weighted based upon the amount of trade and consumption of each component. No exact data are available for the amount traded and consumed before the 1900s, so the weights have been estimated.
The GFD Commodity Indices are available to subscribers to the GFD Indices, which include hundreds of proprietary series calculated for commodities, stocks and bonds. To get more information on these indices, or if you would like a list of the indices and the companies that have been added, call today to speak to one of our sales representatives at 877-DATA-999 or 949-542-4200.
Standard and Poor’s and MSCI recently revised their GICS sector indices, introducing Real Estate as a separate sector, removing it as an industry within Finance. S&P/MSCI also revised several of its sub-indices, both adding and subtracting several of them. The GICS Codes now include 11 Sectors, 24 Industry Groups, 68 Industries and 157 Sub-Industries. Because of these changes, GFD has decided to reorganize and simplify the tickers for its S&P Sector Indices.
Until now, the S&P Sector index tickers used abbreviations to name a particular sector. For example, RAIL was used for railroads and AIRL was used for Airlines. The problem was that it was impossible to know which alphabetic abbreviation was used for each sector. Going forward, GFD will use the actual GICS numerical codes in the tickers to make it easier for our subscribers to find the sector index they want. Once they have the GICS Code for any sector or industry, they can easily put together the ticker for the index using a simple formula. An Excel file of the current GICS codes can be found at
https://www.msci.com/documents/10199/4547797/GICS+Structure+effective+Sep+1%2C+2016.xls/d8600f87-cc12-4070-912f-08590232441d
All S&P tickers used in the GFDatabase begin with an underscore (_), followed by a one or two-digit number indicating whether the index is from the S&P 500 Large Cap (5), S&P 400 Midcap (4), S&P 600 Small Cap (6) or S&P 1500 Supercomposite (15) index. The number is then followed by “SP”, and then the GICS Code.
For example, the code for the S&P 500 Energy Sector is _5SP10 using 5SP for the S&P 500 and 10 for the Energy Sector. The code for the S&P 400 Transports Industry Group is _4SP2030 using 4SP for the S&P 500 and 2030 for the Transportation Industry Group. The code for the S&P 600 Health Care Providers and Services Industry is _6SP351020 using 6SP for the S&P 600 and 351020 for the Health Care Providers and Services Industry. The code for the S&P 1500 Electric Utilities Sub-Industry is _15SP55101010 using 15SP for the S&P 1500 and 55101010 for the Electric Utilities Sub-Industry. This methodology eliminates the need to determine the letter suffix for each sector and industry.
Because the GICS Sectors and Industries are global codes, some industries may not be available for the United States S&P Indices, but GFD Includes all the indices that are available for the S&P 500 Large Cap Indices, S&P 400 Midcap Indices, the S&P 600 Small Cap Indices and the S&P 1500 Supercomposite Indices.
To get more information on these indices, or if you would like a list of the indices, call today to speak to one of our sales representatives at 877-DATA-999 or 949-542-4200.