From Oil To Goods: The Global Cost Surge Is Underway

From Oil To Goods: The Global Cost Surge Is Underway

Lately, something has felt a bit off — especially if you’re in the trading business, you’ve probably already noticed it.


To put it simply:

costs are rising, and this time it’s real.


A big driver behind this wave is the situation in Iran. As oil prices go up, a wide range of raw materials follow. Plastics, synthetic fibers, rubber — all of these are closely tied to oil. Once oil moves, the entire chain reacts.


I recently spoke to a friend who manufactures medical catheters. He tried to hold his prices through March, but eventually couldn’t take the pressure anymore. Plastic costs were changing almost daily — it got to the point where even he started to feel uneasy. In the end, he had no choice but to raise prices, otherwise there would be no margin left.


And it’s not just the medical sector:


  • Swimwear, ski wear, women’s pants (anything using polyester) are getting more expensive
  • Some raw materials are literally changing price day by day
  • Medical syringes have seen increases of up to 20%
  • Home appliances are under pressure too — metals and chips are both rising, stacking the cost burden


The key point is:

this isn’t one industry — it’s the entire supply chain being pushed upward.


For the past few years, China’s export prices have actually been declining. Part of the reason global inflation stayed under control was because Chinese goods were cheap.


But now, things are starting to reverse:


👉 Chinese factories are passing costs downstream

👉 Export prices are gradually rising

👉 Global retail prices are likely to follow


In simple terms:

China used to help keep prices down — that buffer is now fading.


Some institutions are already watching closely. If energy prices remain high, inflation in the US and Europe could climb back above 3% in 2026.


Another important signal:

China’s PPI (Producer Price Index), which had been declining for 41 consecutive months, is finally turning positive.


This shift may not immediately show up at the retail level, but for anyone in cross-border trade, e-commerce, logistics, or wholesale — it’s already happening.


If you’re in the business, here are a few things to keep in mind:


  • Lock in prices whenever you can
  • Don’t squeeze your margins too tightly
  • Leave some buffer in your quotations
  • Start communicating potential price increases with your clients early


This isn’t just a short-term fluctuation —

it’s more like a gradual transmission across the system.


Many people haven’t fully felt it yet,

but it’s already on the way.