KEY POINTS
  • Prices for commodities like oil and base metals have rebounded strongly from last October on the back of positive news about Covid-19 vaccine trials, Vivek Dhar, a mining and energy economist at the Commonwealth Bank of Australia, said on CNBC's "Squawk Box Asia."
  • Whether the rallies extend into a supercycle depends on China's policies in 2021, he said.
  • Unless Beijing prioritizes commodity-intensive sectors, as opposed to service or consumption sectors, a supercycle is unlikely as China makes up a majority of the commodity demand in the mining space, Dhar said.

SINGAPORE — Commodity prices are going up but whether that continues for an extended period of time — known as a supercycle — depends on China, an economist said Thursday.

The last supercycle happened in the mid-2000s before the global financial crisis and peaked in 2008 as China grew to become a commodity powerhouse.