English

How Market Structure Drives Commodity Prices

General Finance 2018-01-03 v2 Physics and Society Economics

Abstract

We introduce an agent-based model, in which agents set their prices to maximize profit. At steady state the market self-organizes into three groups: excess producers, consumers and balanced agents, with prices determined by their own resource level and a couple of macroscopic parameters that emerge naturally from the analysis, akin to mean-field parameters in statistical mechanics. When resources are scarce prices rise sharply below a turning point that marks the disappearance of excess producers. To compare the model with real empirical data, we study the relations between commodity prices and stock-to-use ratios of a range of commodities such as agricultural products and metals. By introducing an elasticity parameter to mitigate noise and long-term changes in commodities data, we confirm the trend of rising prices, provide evidence for turning points, and indicate yield points for less essential commodities.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1508.03677,
  title  = {How Market Structure Drives Commodity Prices},
  author = {Bin Li and K. Y. Michael Wong and Amos H. M. Chan and Tsz Yan So and Hermanni Heimonen and Junyi Wei and David Saad},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1508.03677},
  year   = {2018}
}

Comments

17 pages, 5 figures, 1 table, 15 pages of Supporting Information

R2 v1 2026-06-22T10:34:17.253Z