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Is The Oil Crash From Trade War A ‘Bonus’ Or Something Trump Planned All Along?

Published 05/24/2019, 03:31 AM
Updated 09/02/2020, 02:05 AM

If there’s one person who’s enjoying the trade war with China, it’s Donald Trump. The U.S. President made that clear two weeks back: “I love the position we’re in”, he said as he gushed about the revenue the government would likely make from his higher tariffs—which economists dispute anyway. Trump was saying all this even as Beijing planned to retaliate against his multiple hostilities, well before the escalation of his fight with Huawei.

But there’s something else Trump is possibly enjoying now aside from punishing China on trade, although he isn’t tweeting about it, like he used to. And that’s lower oil prices.

One of the greatest casualties of this week’s trade war-related market ruptions has been oil.

WTI 15-Min Chart - Powered by TradingView

On Wednesday, West Texas Intermediate, the benchmark for U.S. crude, fell 6%, crashing below its $60 per barrel support of the past month. Brent, the U.K.-traded global benchmark for oil, slumped 5% to below its $70-per-barrel perch. It was the worst trading day for crude since the beginning of the year and after the start of OPEC production cuts in December. As of early Asian trading on Friday, WTI was destined for a weekly drop of 7% and Brent 6%, though year-to-date they remained up 29% and 27% respectively.

Being one of the biggest risk assets in the macro space, it isn’t surprising for oil to be one of the most vulnerable in the present environment.

Why Would Trump Escalate Trade War Now?

What remains ambiguous though is the timing of the whole thing.

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Trump hasn’t been clear on why he chose to up the ante against the Chinese tech sector at this particular time, other than making it seem like a progression of his efforts to rein in a stubbornly wayward China on trade.

Yes, it could be annoying when a party you’ve negotiated with for months appears to be going back on what’s been agreed.

Yet, if history is any guide, China has never been an easy side to outwit on trade.

Trump has been telling his voter base in political rallies of the past few weeks that he remains focused on getting America the “best deal” and the escalation of the trade war was a necessary evil for the greater good of the United States, something he accused his predecessor Barack Obama of wilfully neglecting.

Still, for the president to throw away six months of negotiations that began with his December summit with Chinese leader Xi Jinping at last year’s G20 in Buenos Aires—especially after repeated assurances by officials from both sides, including Trump, that all was going well and that a deal was imminent—makes little sense to his detractors.

It isn’t surprising then that his rivals might suspect political expediency as Trump’s motivation, given that, even after the end of the Mueller investigation, the president continues to face potential impeachment as Democrats maintain that he obtained Russia’s help to win his 2016 election. This theory is expounded by deeds like his direct aid of $16 billion to U.S. farmers hurt by the trade war. While there’s certainly merit in the award, there’s no mistaking that it could also endear Trump to his voter base, particularly soybean growers in the Midwest, as he preps for his November 2020 reelection.

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Low Oil Prices Always On Trump’s Agenda

Like it or not, low oil prices have remained high on the president’s political agenda, regardless of whether the current market crash is an unintended “bonus” of the trade war.

In fact, the efficacy at which Trump’s face-off with China has offset tensions arising from the president’s other battles with Iran and Venezuela—that just a week ago had pushed crude prices to 2019 highs—seems to suggest some astute planning on his part aimed at getting such results, rather than just sheer coincidence.

While Trump hit China with additional tariffs as early as May 5, his latest actions against Huawei only began on May 15. That was just before the May 19 meeting of the OPEC+ alliance in Jeddah that already signaled to the energy world what its outcome would be—that the Saudis had no intention of relaxing output cuts despite achieving a near 40% rally in crude prices this year.

Of course, this week’s belly-up in oil prices wasn’t only caused by China. It was due as much to the surprise U.S. crude build of about 5 million barrels, on the average, for a second running week and muted refinery runs ahead of Monday's Memorial Day holiday, which typically marks the start of the peak summer driving season in the U.S.

To suggest the president had stalled trade talks with China just to get his way with oil prices may seem offensive to proponents of the Trump administration.

Yet, with analysts often seeing the absence of a trade deal as the only barrier to an unstoppable oil rally that could even push Brent past $90, one might wonder how badly Trump wants that right now.

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Latest comments

global trade was great as long as it was in the favor of usa.
True, Inderjeet.
Trump works in extremes in negotiations, recognizing that a compromise based on an extreme position is a "better deal". China has been taking advantage of the US for decades both in trade and in stealing trade secrets. Finally a President who has the guts to take them to task. Short term pain will lean to long term gain!
Thanks for your thoughts, Gary. Do read this too: https://www.google.com/amp/s/thebulwark.com/this-is-literally-the-only-piece-you-need-to-read-about-trumps-trade-war/amp/
To be dismayed that Trump is willing to throw away 6 months of negotiations ... is to believe that the "progress" was real. Chinese back-peddling illustrates the difference between words of promise, and actions of value. The stumbling block occurred when the terms of enforcement were put on the table. It would seem that Trump is responding to empty promises, with forewarned consequences.
Good, balanced thoughts, Mr Hiepler. Let's see how it all pans out. For now, he must be full of glee from yesterday's $3 drop ib oil though we are back up less than a buck today. It's like his shot back at Falih: "Don't want to put on more barrels? No worries, I can still short-circuit this market!"
As always, truly appreciate the comments of everyone here. Please continue reading/commenting/following us here and @Investingcom. My handle is @barani_krishnan
Joe - Not really. The Mueller report came out and showed nothing; it's only Democrats that continue to focus on Russia; everyone else that doesn't have a hyper-partisan Never-Trump agenda has already long moved on. I'm sure just reading this will trigger that internal, dysfunctional rage most Trump haters have, but Democrats have been trying to find (or create) scandal after scandal and Trump just keep pushing on with the agenda he laid out during his election campaigns.
The fact remains that weak oil prices work for him, that's really the focus. Whatever else here is basically the structure leading up to that. While I have cited what the detractors say, I also have it in the copy that his fan base will find it insulting that he's waging an entire trade war for the spoils of cheap gas. You have both sides of the coin here.
Oil is not the US Dollar, it cannot be printed in unlimited quantities. Manufactured oil price crashes will cause even less investment into exploration and demise of the number of the indebted oil companies. Sooner or later physical supply will suffer.
Every industry is undergoing disruption, Dino. Fossils have survived amazingly due to underinvestment/(Big Oil) undermining in/of renewables. For all people laugh about Musk, no one really had the imagination to take EVs the way he did. It remains to be seen how the pace of disruption proceeds from here (fewer stories these days even on Google test cars). But today's oil business doesn't have the indispensability of 40 years ago, that's for sure.
LOL, Trump plan anything.
It is what it is, Benjamin. Whether it's deliberate to some extent or sheer coincidence, it's cause for a Trump celebration -- just that he hasn't tweeted yet about it.
Trump would use each and every conflicts the US has got with other countries to defocus attention the Americans have on Trump's own struggles related to his family companies and his Russia-related dealings. Therefore the cusp of the House investigations is the commencement of war Trump has  with China
He learned well from Rham Emanuel and the Obama team then when he said, "never let a good crisis go to waste." After all, up till now that administration had taken the cake for deflecting any negative consequences of it's actions.
As the Trump administration is too in absolving blame. Master classes for future leadership, don't you think?
Poor analysis. Being long in front of a 9% pullback will coach you up a little.
It is what it is. Whether it's deliberate to some extent or sheer coincidence, it's cause for a Trump celebration -- just that he hasn't tweeted yet about it: "Good job, OPEC! Another $3 off will be good!"
Really, that's what this piece is all about, Gary.
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