Commodity Fuel (energy) Index Monthly Price - Index Number

Data as of March 2026

Range
Jul 2014 - Mar 2026: 3.950 (3.11%)
Chart

Description: Commodity Fuel (energy) Index, 2005 = 100, includes Crude oil (petroleum), Natural Gas, and Coal Price Indices

Unit: Index Number

Source: International Monetary Fund

See also: Agricultural production statistics

See also: Top commodity suppliers

See also: Commodities glossary - Definitions of terms used in commodity trading

Overview

The Commodity Fuel (energy) Index is a composite price index that tracks a basket of fuel and energy-related commodities rather than a single physical product. In commodity markets, such indices are typically quoted as an index number, with the exact construction depending on the publisher’s methodology. They commonly aggregate benchmark prices for crude oil, refined petroleum products, natural gas, coal, and sometimes related fuel inputs used in transport, power generation, and industrial heating. Because the index combines multiple energy markets, it serves as a broad reference for the cost of primary energy inputs across the economy.

The index is used to summarize price movements in fuels that are central to freight, electricity generation, petrochemicals, manufacturing, and household heating. Its behavior reflects the interaction of extraction costs, refinery margins, transport constraints, seasonal heating and cooling demand, and the substitutability among fuels in some end uses. As a composite measure, it is less about a single physical delivery point and more about the shared pricing dynamics of energy commodities.

Supply Drivers

Supply in a fuel index is shaped by the production and transport systems of the underlying energy commodities. Crude oil supply is concentrated in regions with large sedimentary basins and established export infrastructure, while natural gas supply depends on pipeline networks, liquefaction capacity, and field decline rates. Coal supply is tied to mining geology, labor availability, rail and port access, and the cost of extraction relative to competing fuels. Because these commodities are physically distinct, bottlenecks in one segment can affect the index even when others remain well supplied.

Energy supply is also sensitive to maintenance cycles, unplanned outages, and weather disruptions. Hurricanes can interrupt offshore production and refining, cold snaps can strain gas systems, and drought can limit hydroelectric output, increasing reliance on thermal fuels. Storage matters as well: crude oil and refined products can be held in tanks, while natural gas storage is more constrained and seasonal. Production lead times are long in upstream energy, especially where new wells, pipelines, refineries, or export terminals require substantial capital and permitting. These structural features make supply adjustment slower than demand adjustment.

Demand Drivers

Demand for a fuel index is driven by transportation, power generation, industrial heat, and residential or commercial heating and cooling. Petroleum products dominate road, air, and marine transport, while natural gas and coal remain important in electricity generation and industrial combustion in many regions. Seasonal patterns are persistent: heating demand rises in colder periods, while electricity demand often increases during hot weather because of air conditioning. These recurring cycles create regular shifts in the relative weight of fuels within the index.

Substitution among fuels is an important long-run mechanism. Power generators may switch between coal and gas where plant design and fuel availability allow, and some industrial users can move between fuel oil, gas, and coal depending on relative prices and equipment constraints. Over longer horizons, efficiency gains, electrification, and environmental regulation alter the composition of demand, but the basic role of fuels as inputs to mobility, heat, and power remains central. Population growth, urbanization, and industrialization support underlying consumption, while recessions typically reduce transport and manufacturing fuel use.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Because fuel commodities are widely traded in U.S. dollars, exchange-rate movements affect local-currency prices and international purchasing power. Interest rates matter through inventory financing and storage costs: when carrying fuel inventories becomes more expensive, forward prices can shift relative to spot prices. Energy indices often reflect contango or backwardation across the underlying markets, depending on storage availability, expected tightness, and seasonal demand.

Fuel indices also respond to broader macroeconomic conditions because energy use is closely linked to industrial output, freight activity, and consumer mobility. Inflation can raise nominal commodity prices, while risk sentiment can influence speculative positioning in futures markets. Correlation with other asset classes is episodic rather than fixed, but energy often behaves differently from metals or agricultural commodities because its demand is tied more directly to transport and power systems than to construction or food consumption.

MonthPriceChange
Jul 2014126.93-
Aug 2014121.20-4.51%
Sep 2014116.62-3.78%
Oct 2014106.20-8.94%
Nov 201496.38-9.24%
Dec 201478.55-18.50%
Jan 201563.10-19.67%
Feb 201570.8712.31%
Mar 201568.42-3.46%
Apr 201571.865.02%
May 201577.587.96%
Jun 201576.08-1.93%
Jul 201568.78-9.59%
Aug 201559.25-13.86%
Sep 201559.660.69%
Oct 201559.65-0.02%
Nov 201554.83-8.08%
Dec 201547.37-13.59%
Jan 201640.01-15.54%
Feb 201640.781.93%
Mar 201647.2015.74%
Apr 201651.018.06%
May 201656.7511.26%
Jun 201659.775.31%
Jul 201656.63-5.25%
Aug 201657.431.42%
Sep 201658.231.39%
Oct 201664.3210.47%
Nov 201660.03-6.67%
Dec 201668.4714.04%
Jan 201769.281.19%
Feb 201769.330.07%
Mar 201765.21-5.93%
Apr 201766.992.72%
May 201764.23-4.12%
Jun 201760.21-6.26%
Jul 201762.193.29%
Aug 201765.294.99%
Sep 201768.825.40%
Oct 201770.852.95%
Nov 201776.638.16%
Dec 201778.111.92%
Jan 201885.018.83%
Feb 201880.54-5.26%
Mar 201880.900.45%
Apr 201885.936.22%
May 201891.766.78%
Jun 201890.83-1.02%
Jul 201891.730.99%
Aug 201890.38-1.47%
Sep 201895.615.79%
Oct 201896.861.30%
Nov 201881.90-15.44%
Dec 201872.68-11.27%
Jan 201973.791.54%
Feb 201977.384.86%
Mar 201979.943.31%
Apr 201984.185.31%
May 201981.77-2.87%
Jun 201973.04-10.68%
Jul 201974.832.45%
Aug 201970.37-5.96%
Sep 201973.604.59%
Oct 201970.80-3.80%
Nov 201974.605.36%
Dec 201976.883.07%
Jan 202074.44-3.17%
Feb 202064.96-12.74%
Mar 202042.06-35.25%
Apr 202029.35-30.21%
May 202038.8132.20%
Jun 202048.3424.57%
Jul 202051.205.91%
Aug 202053.785.03%
Sep 202050.97-5.22%
Oct 202051.330.72%
Nov 202054.666.47%
Dec 202062.9215.12%
Jan 202169.8811.06%
Feb 202180.3815.02%
Mar 202180.770.48%
Apr 202180.800.05%
May 202186.286.79%
Jun 202193.928.85%
Jul 202198.294.65%
Aug 202196.32-2.00%
Sep 2021107.1811.27%
Oct 2021123.3715.11%
Nov 2021115.01-6.78%
Dec 2021112.37-2.29%
Jan 2022121.317.95%
Feb 2022133.319.90%
Mar 2022166.7325.07%
Apr 2022153.19-8.12%
May 2022163.636.82%
Jun 2022173.486.02%
Jul 2022171.75-1.00%
Aug 2022172.770.59%
Sep 2022158.17-8.45%
Oct 2022146.17-7.59%
Nov 2022139.44-4.60%
Dec 2022130.92-6.11%
Jan 2023119.29-8.88%
Feb 2023110.53-7.35%
Mar 2023103.47-6.39%
Apr 2023109.265.60%
May 202396.91-11.31%
Jun 202395.17-1.79%
Jul 2023100.865.97%
Aug 2023108.717.79%
Sep 2023117.738.29%
Oct 2023115.68-1.74%
Nov 2023106.20-8.20%
Dec 202399.61-6.20%
Jan 2024101.181.58%
Feb 2024102.221.03%
Mar 2024104.231.97%
Apr 2024109.595.14%
May 2024102.62-6.36%
Jun 2024103.771.12%
Jul 2024105.982.13%
Aug 2024102.65-3.15%
Sep 202495.37-7.09%
Oct 202497.672.41%
Nov 202496.51-1.18%
Dec 202496.49-0.02%
Jan 2025103.537.30%
Feb 202599.16-4.22%
Mar 202595.06-4.14%
Apr 202587.89-7.54%
May 202584.05-4.38%
Jun 202592.189.68%
Jul 202591.66-0.57%
Aug 202588.08-3.90%
Sep 202587.58-0.57%
Oct 202584.28-3.77%
Nov 202583.96-0.39%
Dec 202582.92-1.24%
Jan 202692.8511.98%
Feb 202692.40-0.48%
Mar 2026130.8841.64%

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