If oil spiked in February, why is every grocery receipt not 20% higher by now?
The answer is the lag. It is the most misunderstood part of the food and energy story. Grocery contracts are signed weeks or months ahead. Fertilizer bought today supports a crop harvested in fall. Existing stock buffers the shelf for a while.
By the time the shock fully reaches the shopper, many people have stopped paying attention to the original news cycle.
The 2022 Playbook
The cleanest case study is what happened after Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022. The USDA says fertilizer prices jumped nearly 50% in just two months. The Kleinman Center at Penn says urea peaked at $925 a metric ton in April 2022.
The World Bank's April 2022 outlook then forecast wheat prices would rise more than 40% in 2022. That would be an all-time nominal high. The bank cited higher gas prices feeding into fertilizer and into farm prices.
Fertilizer price increases in that cycle were the largest since 2008. The grocery hit did not show up at full strength until that summer. The energy shock was in February. The grocery shock was six months later.
The 2008 Cycle Looked Similar
The 2008 commodity boom played out the same way. Brent crude raced past $145 a barrel in July 2008. Fertilizer and grain prices followed. U.S. food inflation kept climbing into early 2009 even as oil itself collapsed in the financial crisis.
The lesson from both cycles is simple. Energy spikes age into food spikes on a delay. The peak of the food bill rarely lines up with the peak of the oil headline. That is why investors who only watch the spot market often miss the back half of the move.
Why The Lag Is Closer To Six Months Than Six Weeks
There are three reasons. Wholesale prices need time to absorb higher input costs and pass them through. Retailers buy on contracts that do not reset overnight. Shopper behavior shifts gradually, so demand signals also take weeks to move.
The result is a steady transmission, not a sudden jump. Each link in the chain pads the timing a little. That is why the visible grocery move always trails the energy move by a couple of seasons.
The Storage Buffer
Big retailers also keep weeks of stock on hand to smooth out price moves. That means today's shelf often shows last quarter's wholesale price, not this week's. The buffer fades fast once it runs out.
Why The Lag Helps Some Investors
The lag is the part of the cycle that rewards patience. By the time grocery CPI peaks, energy prices are often already rolling over. That mismatch creates the most useful entry and exit windows for inflation hedges.
The investors who move early on the energy spike often book the cleanest gains. The ones who wait for grocery prices to confirm the move usually arrive late.
What To Watch
Investors looking for the leading edge should track wholesale food prices and the producer price index for processed foods. Both move first. The headline CPI moves last.
The current grocery bill is mostly reflecting late-2025 input costs. That is before Brent rallied to $118. The full pass-through of the Q1 2026 oil shock is still ahead. Peak impact most likely arrives in late summer and early fall.
Sources: USDA Economic Research Service; Kleinman Center for Energy Policy; World Bank Commodity Markets Outlook (April 2022).
