What Happens to WTI Crude Oil (FRED) When the Inventory-to-Sales Ratio Spikes?
What happens when business inventories rise sharply relative to sales? Destocking signal, production cuts, and recession implications.
How WTI Crude Oil (FRED) Responds
Scenario Background
The business inventory-to-sales ratio measures how many months of sales are covered by existing inventory. A rising ratio indicates inventories are accumulating faster than sales, signaling either unexpected sales weakness or intentional stockpiling. A spike above 1.5 typically precedes production cuts, employment reductions, and price discounting as businesses work down excess inventory.
Read full scenario analysis →Historical Context
The inventory-to-sales ratio typically ranges from 1.25-1.45. Spikes above 1.55 have occurred during 2008-2009 (peak 1.70), 2020 (peak 1.70 briefly), and smaller bumps in 2015-2016 and 2019. The 2022 retailer inventory surge (Target, Walmart, Amazon excess) produced rapid retail-specific spikes despite aggregate ratio staying controlled. Post-pandemic, ratios have normalized but remain elevated in goods-heavy categories.
What to Watch For
- •Retail inventory-to-sales above 1.55
- •Manufacturing new orders declining alongside inventories rising
- •Import growth decelerating (supply-side response)
- •Retailer guidance mentioning inventory destocking
- •PPI for core goods declining
Other Assets When the Inventory-to-Sales Ratio Spikes
Other Scenarios Affecting WTI Crude Oil (FRED)
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