Good News Travels Fast: Global Demand Shocks, Oil Futures, and Emerging Markets Dynamics

Seminarios Semanales


Wednesday, January 14, 2026

Good News Travels Fast: Global Demand Shocks, Oil Futures, and Emerging Markets Dynamics

David Coble

Co-authors: Felipe Beltrán, David Coble, Manuel Escobar, Felipe Rojas
Affiliation: IMF
Date and time: Wednesday, January 21, 2026 14:30 (Santiago, GMT-03:00)
Location (Online Seminar):

Registration: seminarios@bcentral.cl

Abstract: In this paper we study how aggregate demand surprises affect and propagate to the global economy, with particular attention to their impact on Emerging Market Economies (EMEs). To do so, we introduce a new high-frequency external instrument to identify global demand shocks: the sensitivity of oil futures prices around labor market announcements from the US and the Euro Area, two events that consistently trigger strong revisions in global growth expectations across financial markets. Using a proxy-SVAR framework, our results suggest that a global demand shock has positive effects on world industrial production, reduces oil inventories and global uncertainty, and improves financial conditions. In EMEs, upward revision in macroeconomic outlook leads to higher industrial production and inflation, real exchange rate appreciation, and lower EMBI spreads. When the sample is split between oil-importers and exporters, we observe results consistent with the role of external trade exposure in shaping transmission, heterogeneity in the magnitude and persistence of output, inflation, real exchange rates, and sovereign risk responses. These results are consistent with theoretical expectations and the related literature. Our findings offer a credible empirical strategy for isolating global demand shocks and have direct implications for empirical macroeconomic modeling of emerging market economies.

 
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