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❯ INTRODUCTION
#1

Resources are endangered

How this will affect you depends on how much you rely on modern technologies. For example, how much stock of mined raw materials are available will determine the supply of devices like your computers and smartphones, housing materials, food availability and more. It will also have dramatic impact on the manufacturing supply chains as well as on the financial markets - including the stocks and rare metals that you buy. Raw materials are the very foundations that powers an efficient and working economy. Let's see how this shortage will apply on the economy opportunities, inflation, and most importantly, you.


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Periodic Table of Endangered Elements Limited (by availability; future risk to supply) Threat (decreasing availability through increased usage) Danger (severe availability shortage in the next 100 years) Source: Chemistry Innovation Knowledge Transfer Network (KTN UK) & INV Research

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Hydrogen
Symbol: H
Classification: Nonmetal
Melting point (under STP):
Boiling point (under STP):
Electronegativity:
Electron configuration:

Major uses: N/A
Industries: N/A
Supply regions: N/A

Major suppliers: N/A
❯ KEY TO A STABLE FINANCE
#2

Interlinked resources

Most of the world's resources are interlinked. This is the big ecosystem connecting multiple industries and aspects of life. In order to fully grasp the resource climate of the world, we need to get to the bottom of everything: chemical elements that determines how economies work, how prices and inflation change based on circumstances, and how your investments fare. We need to look at the distribution as well as production of resources holistically and how they play a part in various industries. Come see it in action.

Select an industry viewing category
Agriculture
  • Agriculture
  • Energy
  • Healthcare
  • Semiconductors
  • Agriculture

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    In Agriculture

    There are 16 elements that are considered essential for agriculture. They are known as "agriculture-critical elements" or RCEs. They are essential as plant nutrients, ensuring fertility as well as proper cultivation and growth. 4 of these RCEs are sourced naturally from the air, water, soil, and are:

    • Hydrogen (H)
    • Carbon (C)
    • Oxygen (O)
    • Nitrogen (N)

    The rest of the 12 RCEs are sourced from either the soil or from fertilizers. These are:

    • Phosphorus (P)
    • Potassium (K)
    • Calcium (Ca)
    • Magnesium (Mg)
    • Sulphur (S)
    • Boron (B)
    • Zinc (Zn)
    • Copper (Cu)
    • Manganese (Mn)
    • Iron (Fe)
    • Chloride (Cl)
    • Molybdenum (Mo)
    FAO Food Price Index price changes are calculated on a per month basis, while the graph shows all time data

    The FAO Food Price Index (FFPI) is a measure of the monthly change in international prices of a basket of food commodities. It's comprised of the average 5 commodity group price indices of meat, dairy, cereals, vegetable oil, and sugar price indices.

    Source: The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO)

    FAO Meat Price Index price changes are calculated on a per month basis, while the graph shows all time data

    The FAO Meat Price Index* averaged 113.0 points in March, slightly up (0.9 points and 0.8 percent) from February but down 6.3 points (5.3 percent) from one year ago. In March, price quotations for bovine meat increased, influenced by rising internal prices in the United States of America, where cattle supply is expected to be lower in the months ahead. Pig meat prices increased slightly, mainly due to higher prices in Europe on the continued supply limitations and increased pre-Easter demand. By contrast, poultry meat prices fell for the ninth successive month on subdued global import demand, despite supply challenges amid widespread avian influenza outbreaks in several large exporting countries. Ovine meat prices also averaged lower, reflecting a downward adjustment from the high prices registered in February, driven by increased pre-Easter demand and the impact of exchange rate movements.

    Source: The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO)

    FAO Dairy Price Index price changes are calculated on a per month basis, while the graph shows all time data

    The FAO Dairy Price Index averaged 130.3 points in March, down 1.1 points (0.8 percent) from February and standing 15.6 points (10.7 percent) below its level in the corresponding month a year ago. The decline in March was driven by lower price quotations for cheese and milk powders, while butter prices increased. The decline in the international price quotations for cheese was underpinned by slower purchases by most leading importers in Asia amid increased export availabilities, including inventories, in leading exporters. Milk powder prices fell for the ninth consecutive month, primarily reflecting sluggish import demand, especially for near-term deliveries, and seasonally rising milk production in Western Europe. By contrast, butter prices increased due to solid import demand, especially from North and Southeast Asian countries, for supplies from Oceania, where seasonally falling milk production tracked slightly below trend levels.

    Source: The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO)

    FAO Cereals Price Index price changes are calculated on a per month basis, while the graph shows all time data

    The FAO Cereal Price Index averaged 138.6 points in March, down 8.2 points (5.6 percent) from February and 31.6 points (18.6 percent) below its one year ago. This month’s decrease reflects a fall in international prices of all major cereals. International wheat prices fell the most, by 7.1 percent, driven by ample global supplies and strong competition among exporters. The extension of the Black Sea Grain Initiative, allowing Ukraine to continue to export from its Black Sea ports, also contributed to the decline. Higher estimates for Australia’s production, along with improved crop conditions in the European Union this month, boosted the global supply outlook further. Strong competition from the Russian Federation, where high supplies continue to support competitive prices, also sustained the downward pressure on markets. World maize prices also fell, by 4.6 percent, in March, pressured by seasonal availability from harvests in South America, expectations of a record output in Brazil, and the extension of the Black Sea Grain Initiative. Among other coarse grains, world prices of barley and sorghum declined by 6.7 percent and 5.7 percent, respectively, influenced by spillover from weakness in international maize and wheat markets. International rice prices eased by 3.2 percent in March, weighed by ongoing or imminent harvests in major exporting countries, including India, Viet Nam and Thailand.

    Source: The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO)

    FAO Vegetable Oils Price Index price changes are calculated on a per month basis, while the graph shows all time data

    The FAO Vegetable Oil Price Index averaged 131.8 points in March, down 4.1 points (3.0 percent) from February and standing as much as 47.7 percent below its level a year ago. The decrease in the index was the net result of lower soy, rapeseed and sunflower oil quotations more than offsetting higher world palm oil prices. After falling for three consecutive months, international palm oil prices rebounded in March. Besides lower output levels in Southeast Asia due to unfavourable weather and floodings in some growing regions, palm oil prices received further support from limited global exportable supplies amid temporary export restrictions imposed by Indonesia. By contrast, world soyoil prices continued to fall, following the trend of lower international soybean quotations. In the meantime, rapeseed and sunflower oil prices also kept declining, underpinned by, respectively, ample world supplies and subdued global import demand.

    Source: The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO)

    FAO Sugar Price Index price changes are calculated on a per month basis, while the graph shows all time data

    The FAO Sugar Price Index averaged 127.0 points in March, up 1.8 points (1.5 percent) from February, marking the second consecutive monthly increase and reaching its highest level since October 2016. The increase in prices mostly resulted from concerns over lower global availabilities of sugar in the 2022/23 season, following declining production prospects in India, Thailand and China. However, the positive outlook for the sugarcane crops in Brazil, about to be harvested, limited the upward pressure on world sugar prices. The decline in international crude oil prices, encouraging a greater use of sugarcane to produce sugar in Brazil, coupled with the weakening of the Brazilian real against the United States dollar, contributed to limiting the month-on-month increase in world sugar prices.

    Source: The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO)

    ❯ APPLICABILITY
    #3

    How Econo+ applies to you

    1. Preparation

    By having a holistic view of the world, you are preparing yourself to better adapt to the environment as well as knowing when and what to prepare.

    2. Investment

    Knowing what's truly behind the supply, demand, and economics gives you an edge in making better and more informed decisions when investing.

    3. Research

    With our complete financial and industrial data from CoreEngine Megadata accompanied by Econo+, you are sure to get a curated dataset offering you insights you won't get anywhere else.

    4. Procurement

    Full access to Econo+ premium dataset will offer you supplier procurement data aligned to different element categories or industries they belong to. Helping you better procure the products you need and at better prices.

    We believe in open data.

    Open source information is our commitment to a better world. It brings us together and makes us stronger. Econo+ is a first-of-its-kind terminal platform that took us almost 5 years to develop and now we proudly open up some of its essential features to the public for the first time. To discover for yourself the full power of Econo+, please contact us for more information.

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