Commodity Price Risk and Material Scarcity: An Escalating and Complex Risk

Top 10 Global Risks

06 of 10

This insight is part 06 of 10 in this Collection.

October 1, 2025 7 mins

Commodity Price Risk and Material Scarcity: An Escalating and Complex Risk

Commodity Price Risk and Material Scarcity: An Escalating and Complex Risk

Commodity price risk ranks sixth globally in 2025 — and is forecast to climb to fourth place by 2028. With supply chains strained by geopolitical tensions and climate disruption, organizations should consider hedging strategies, diversifying sourcing and exploring innovative risk transfer solutions.

Key Takeaways
  1. Geopolitical tensions, tariffs and severe weather events have led to higher commodity prices and shortages of raw materials.
  2. Organizations that diversify their supply chains and consider the use of alternative materials are better positioned to fortify their resilience in a volatile market.
  3. Leveraging derivatives, advanced analytics and other strategies can help businesses monitor risks, keep costs steady and sustain growth.

How Uncertainty is Driving Commodity Price and Material Scarcity Risk

This year’s Global Risk Management Survey shows how commodity prices and material availability continue to be critical factors in influencing the global business landscape. While some commodity prices have eased since their pandemic peaks, others have soared to record levels. Many remain costlier than before 2020, thanks to continued uncertainty and volatile demand.1

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Real-time analytics and innovative risk transfer solutions enhance resilience against material scarcity and market uncertainty.

Stuart Lawson
Global Specialty Product Leader, Credit Solutions, Aon

Market Dynamics Affecting the Risk Landscape

Supply chains are under strain from geopolitical tensions, labor shortages and climate-related disruptions. Severe weather events have intensified raw-material shortages and escalated costs across a range of industries — including food, agriculture and beverages, automotive, and pharmaceutical and life sciences — highlighting the vulnerability of global supply networks.2 At the same time, tariffs on certain commodities are increasing production costs and affecting competitiveness, particularly in sectors such as manufacturing and construction.

Affected commodities include the following:

  • Energy: In mid-2024, prices in oil and refined products surged as a result of geopolitical tensions and production cuts. Now, thanks to ample supply and slowing demand, the World Bank has forecast3 a fall in commodity prices in 2025–26. However, weather and escalating geopolitical risks keep markets sensitive, and market volatility is expected to continue.
  • Metals and Minerals: Persistent shortages of rare earths, copper and polysilicon continue to strain some sectors, for example by driving up costs for wind turbines and solar panels. In contrast, 2024 saw a temporary oversupply of lithium, cobalt and nickel, which led to falling prices and production cuts.4 At the same time, weak demand, particularly from China, has weighed on prices for industrial metals5 including nickel, aluminum, copper, lead and zinc.
  • Agriculture and Livestock: Prices remain volatile, influenced by supply chain disruptions linked to conflict zones, fluctuating demand for biofuels and weather conditions. Food insecurity persists in vulnerable regions despite some price easing.6
Losses and preparedness

Commodity price volatility and material scarcity are increasingly disruptive. Although 60% of respondents say they are prepared, nearly half experienced losses — and only 17% have quantified the risk, leaving many exposed to market shocks.

  • 47%

    of respondents suffered a loss from this risk in the 12 months prior to the survey.

  • 60%

    of respondents stated their organizations have set up a plan to respond to this risk.

Tackling Commodity Price Risk and Material Scarcity

Liquidity, working capital and access to financing remain central to effectively managing commodity price risk and material scarcity. To strengthen their position, organizations can consider the following five actions:

  1. Diversify Supply Chains and Commodity Portfolios:

    Reducing reliance on a single source or supplier helps to mitigate the dual risks of price volatility and material scarcity. Broadening the supplier base and exploring alternative materials can enhance operational resilience.
  2. Leverage Financial Hedging Instruments

    Deploying derivatives and other hedging strategies can help organizations manage exposure to commodity price fluctuations by stabilizing costs and protecting margins.

    Weather derivatives, in particular, are increasingly popular due to rising global temperatures and more frequent extreme weather events. These instruments are designed to offer payouts based on predetermined weather variability, helping organizations mitigate financial impacts from adverse weather conditions such as crop damage.
  3. Integrate Data and Analytics for Real-Time Risk Monitoring

    Advanced analytics help businesses constantly monitor and identify risks and support timely decision making. Combining commodity risk insights with business interruption and supply chain risk assessments provides a wide-ranging view of potential financial impacts.
  4. Explore Tailored Insurance and Risk Transfer Solutions

    While traditional insurance plays a limited role in managing commodity price risk directly, products such as non-payment insurance, political risk insurance and business interruption insurance can mitigate downstream effects. Customized financial solutions — including captives, parametric insurance and mark-to-market insurance — offer innovative ways to manage volatility.
  5. Use Surety as a Collateral Replacement Tool

    In a tight liquidity environment, organizations are increasingly turning to the surety market for guarantees. Surety serves as a substitute for letters of credit or bank guarantees without affecting the applicant’s bank line, as it remains unsecured in transactions. This frees up onerous collateral requirements, unlocking capital for organizations to reinvest in growth.

+1

Commodity price risk or scarcity of materials has risen one rank compared to our previous survey.

Securing Financial Stability for a Natural Resources client in the energy market

Case Study

Securing Financial Stability for a Natural Resources client in the energy market

Aon advised a supplier on a transaction that carried settlement and mark-to-market (MTM) exposure, as the buyer was unwilling to provide security via a letter of credit, posing a risk to the trader’s financial stability.

Aon positioned the transaction and crafted a take-or-pay contract to present to the underwriting market, securing $100 million in non-payment capacity through a syndication with three Lloyd’s syndicates. Aon also negotiated a sublimit of MTM coverage for 20 percent of the cargo amount, protecting the supplier client’s loss of profit if the counterparty failed to take any of the cargoes or if the prices negatively affected the trader.

The contract frustration policy allowed the client to manage credit exposures beyond internal credit lines. The MTM coverage safeguarded the client’s profit and mitigated settlement risk, ensuring financial stability amid potential market fluctuations.

Why It Matters

Managing commodity price risk and material scarcity effectively is central to strategic risk management — particularly for companies in industries with high levels of exposure. Organizations that combine diversified sourcing, real-time analytics and innovative risk-transfer solutions will be better positioned to safeguard operations and sustain growth in a volatile market.

1 Commodity Markets Outlook, World Bank Group, April 2025
2 Jason Miller, “Raw material shortages have abated, but some lingering issues remain,” Supply Chain Management Review, January 7, 2025; Lori Ann LaRocco, “The trade war’s wave of retail shortages will hit U.S. consumers in stages. Here’s when,” CNBC, April 25, 2025; Alejandra Carranza, “Shortages 2025: Geopolitics, severe weather fuel uncertainty,” Supply Chain Dive, January 31, 2025
3Commodity Markets Outlook, World Bank Group, April 2025
4 “Electric vehicle batteries,” Global EV Outlook 2025, International Energy Agency (IEA), May 2025; “Why EV Battery Production Is on the Rise This 2025,” Integrated Micro-Electronics, Inc., April 15, 2025; Callum Perry, Ewan Thomson, and the Fastmarkets team, “Facing the tightening lithium supply challenge in 2025,” Fastmarkets, February 6, 2025; Nick Holt, “EV battery supply – potential materials shortages,” Automotive Manufacturing Solutions, updated July 2, 2025
5 Data Blog, “Metal prices slide amid weak industrial activity,” blog entry by Jeetendra Khadan and Kaltrina Temaj, World Bank Blogs, November 19, 2024
6 Commodity markets outlook, World Bank, April 2025; Data Blog, “Global food commodity prices ease amid improved supply conditions and trade concerns,” blog entry by John Baffes, Dawit Mekonnen and Kaltrina Temaj, World Bank Blogs, May 22, 2025; Taylor Stinchfield, “Agriculture Commodity Price Forecast: Late 2024 into 2025,” FarmRaise, November 6, 2024; “Tariffs and turbulence: How Trump’s trade policies and geopolitical tensions are reshaping commodity markets,” Oxford Economics, June 20, 2025; “Falling Commodity Prices Could Mute Inflation Risks from Trade Tensions,” World Bank, April 29, 2025; “Response to Price Volatility in Food and Agricultural Markets: Policy Responses,” Renewable Fuels Association, 2011

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This document is not intended to address any specific situation or to provide legal, regulatory, financial, or other advice. While care has been taken in the production of this document, Aon does not warrant, represent or guarantee the accuracy, adequacy, completeness or fitness for any purpose of the document or any part of it and can accept no liability for any loss incurred in any way by any person who may rely on it. Any recipient shall be responsible for the use to which it puts this document. This document has been compiled using information available to us up to its date of publication and is subject to any qualifications made in the document.

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Supply Chain or Distribution Failure Hero Image

Supply Chain or Distribution Failure: Navigating the New Normal

Global Risk Management Survey Findings

Supply chain failure ranks seventh globally in 2025 — and is projected to fall to twelfth place by 2028. As weather-related disruption, geopolitical tension and cyber threats converge, organizations must balance efficiency with resilience and diversify sourcing.

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