Webinar

Commodities: The Russian invasion and the supply response

The Russian invasion of Ukraine has sent commodity prices rocketing, in some cases to all-time record highs. In this webinar we explore the extent to which commodity prices will remain at elevated levels and discuss any potential supply response from outside Russia.

Note: Please note that we will be holding one webinar each for APAC, EMEA, and Americas friendly time zones. Can’t make it to any of the sessions? Feel free to register for any session and we will automatically share the recording with you 3 hours after the webinar has finished.

Kiran Ahmed Bio
Kiran Ahmed

Lead Economist

Kiran Ahmed Bio

Kiran Ahmed

Lead Economist

Kiran Ahmed | Lead Economist

Kiran joined Oxford Economics as an Economist in August 2007. She works on the Industry and Global Macroeconomic Services as well as on consultancy work. Her work for the Industry Service primarily involves the basic metals and engineering sectors, and for the Global Macroeconomic Service includes forecasts for commodity prices and the several East Asian economies.

Stephen Hare
Stephen Hare

Economist

Stephen Hare

Stephen Hare

Economist

Stephen Hare | Economist

Stephen is part of the Industry team where he is responsible for the extraction sector forecasts and contributes to the monthly commodity price forecasts for iron and steel. Stephen joined us in January 2018 after completing his MSc in finance and econometrics at Queen Marys University of London.

Toby Wittington
Toby Whittington

Lead Economist

Toby Wittington

Toby Whittington

Lead Economist

Tobby Wittington | Lead Economist

Toby joined Oxford Economics in July 2014 as an Economist with the Industry team. He is currently responsible for the intermediate goods sector forecasts as well as contributing to Industry consultancy projects. Toby was educated at Birkbeck College, University of London, where he gained a first-class degree in Financial Economics, followed by a MSc degree in Economics. His MSc dissertation investigated the transmission mechanism between the Bank of England’s quantitative easing programme and UK interest rates.

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