BNY’s analysis reveals that although higher commodity prices have stabilised related assets, they are not expected to bring about structural changes in emerging markets. The report warns against overestimating the impact of commodity price increases, as many economies may experience prolonged stagflation.
In metals-producing countries, central banks and governments are relieved that recent extreme price actions have been less disruptive. Prices have yet to return to pre-volatility highs, but stabilisation is visible in associated assets such as currencies and equity indices.
World’s Commodity Cycle
The analysis is cautious about expecting structural economic changes from metals price rallies as the world is not entering a new commodity super-cycle. Fears of fiat currency debasement have little to do with physical demand, suggesting that structural reforms are only considered when situations near crisis levels.
Author: FXStreet Insights Team. The FXStreet Insights Team comprises journalists who curate market observations from renowned experts. The content includes notes from commercial sources, supplemented by insights from internal and external analysts.
We should view the recent stability in emerging market assets as a short-term reaction, not a fundamental shift. While currencies of commodity exporters have bounced, the underlying economic picture remains weak. Traders should be cautious about chasing this rally, as it lacks the support of strong physical demand.
The primary risk we see developing is prolonged stagflation in these markets. For instance, Brazil’s IPCA inflation, which had eased in late 2025, ticked back up to 5.1% in January, while Q4 2025 GDP growth for exporters like South Africa was a meager 0.5%. This combination of rising inflation and stagnant growth is a classic warning sign for traders.
Metals Rally Analysis
This metals rally is different from what we saw in the past. Looking back at the 2000s super-cycle, we saw sustained, decade-long demand growth from China’s industrialization. Today’s price action seems more driven by fears of fiat currency debasement in developed markets, a sentiment that can reverse quickly.
Derivative strategies should therefore be defensive and positioned for potential downside. We believe put options on broad emerging market ETFs offer a good hedge against a reversal. The Cboe Emerging Markets ETF Volatility Index (VXEEM) has already climbed to 28 this week from the low 20s in late 2025, signaling growing market nervousness.
We should also not expect these commodity windfalls to trigger meaningful economic reforms, as we observed with Peru’s political gridlock through much of 2025. These governments rarely implement difficult structural changes without a forcing crisis. This inaction increases the likelihood of future instability, creating opportunities for those positioned for volatility.