U.S. tariffs are set to take effect on China on Friday, with China
promising immediate retaliation, kicking off the next phase of the trade war.
But it remains to be seen if the trade war will derail a particularly bullish
looking oil rally.
U.S. tariffs on $34
billion worth of imported Chinese machinery, auto parts and medical
devices begins on July 6, and China’s tariffs on U.S. soybeans and SUVs will
begin as well. With little sign of de-escalation, the trade war could barrel
forward with more tariffs coming down the pike. The timing is not great, as
global trade in general is showing
signs of slowing down. Economists are proclaiming the end to “global
synchronized growth,” which helped bolster strong economic performances
around the world in 2017.
The cooling of global trade has contributed to an emerging market selloff,
with steep declines in bonds, equities and currencies in much of the
developing world.
China is not immune to these trade and economic headwinds. The Shanghai
Composite Index, China’s main stock index, entered bear market territory
recently, and Beijing is trying
to curb panic selling. China’s currency has also come under intense
pressure.
(Click to enlarge)
Shanghai Composite Index
The trade war and the global economic slowdown, should it accelerate,
could start to drag down oil demand. China has also proposed tariffs on U.S.
crude oil, which could curtail purchases of oil from U.S. shale fields
(although that oil would likely be rerouted elsewhere).
Nevertheless, it isn’t at all clear that these economic headwinds will upset
the oil price rally, which is climbing inexorably towards $80 per barrel,
perhaps higher. The supply outages, which are growing in both size and in
number, might overshadow any dip in demand. Related:
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Goldman Sachs has maintained a bullish outlook on commodities for much of
this year, and it downplayed the threat to its forecast this week. “Although
commodities maintain their status as the best performing asset class in 2018,
the month of June was a substantial setback driven by [emerging market]
demand weakness, trade war concerns and the exit of OPEC+ from supply cuts,”
Goldman Sachs wrote in a July 4 note.
But the investment bank was unbowed. “We believe all of these concerns
have been oversold.”
Goldman reiterated its forecast for a 10 percent gain in commodities over
the next 12 months. The outlook comes down to several factors, including
strong GDP growth, outages in “key oil and metal markets which are
exacerbated by recent sanctions,” and falling inventories.
Moreover, Goldman dismissed some threats to this outlook. The recent
weakness in Europe and Japan has mostly stabilized. The slowdown in China is
being countered by the central bank, which has cut interest rates. Turmoil in
other emerging markets such as Argentina, Brazil and Turkey “remain small
isolated events from a commodity perspective.” Also, various asset classes
have been beaten down, which presents a buying opportunity.
Goldman Sachs argues that the combination of higher interest rates, rising
commodity prices and a stronger dollar is “unsustainable.” These forces,
which don’t normally go together, will put too much pressure on emerging
markets if they keep up. They make debt too painful, commodities such as fuel
become too expensive in local currencies, and they end up sparking unrest,
such as the recent trucker’s strike in Brazil.
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That means that while commodity prices could, in theory, collapse, Goldman
thinks it will be one of the other two factors. “The bottom line is that
something has to give, and we agree with our FX strategists that the dollar
will likely weaken from here.”
The bank also dismissed Chinese tariffs on U.S. crude, arguing that
markets will quickly adapt. China will end up buying more oil from Russia,
the Middle East, West Africa and the North Sea. U.S. exporters will initially
have to discount their crude in order to attract other buyers, but “this
period would likely be short lived,” Goldman said.
In short, the investment bank does not believe that the trade war will end
the upswing in commodities. “We believe that the trade war impact on
commodity markets will be very small, with exception of soybeans where
complete rerouting of supplies is not possible.”
In other words, there is plenty of room to run for oil prices.
By Nick Cunningham of Oilprice.com
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