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Emerging Markets

Recent data from Asia’s manufacturing powerhouses reveal a surge in exports, suggesting that the global manufacturing recovery is alive and well, despite the current soft patch. Japanese exports rebounded to 2.0% y/y in December after declining in the…
The forthcoming third round of enormous US fiscal stimulus will likely mark a structural regime shift in global financial markets. Over the past 25 years, the chief concern of US and, hence, global financial markets, has been economic growth. Share prices typically fluctuated with growth expectations. As a result, the S&P 500 and US bond yields have been positively correlated, as shown in Chart 1 of week. Chart 1AUS Share Prices And Treasury Yields Will Soon Become Negatively Correlated Going forward, odds are that the correlation between US equity prices and US bond yields will turn negative and stay there for several years, as was the case prior to 1997. In brief, we are moving from a deflationary to an inflationary backdrop. Share prices will likely start negatively reacting to rising inflation and/or inflation expectations and vice versa. We will discuss these issues in depth in forthcoming reports. A rise in EM corporate bond yields is the key threat to EM share prices, as shown in the charts on page 3. EM corporate and sovereign US bond spreads are so tight that they are unlikely to compress further to offset the rise in US Treasury yields. As a result, EM dollar-denominated corporate and sovereign bond yields will also rise as US Treasurys sell off. Chart 2 of week shows that the distinct breakout in a high-beta American industrial stock price – Kennametal – points to higher US government bond yields. Chart 1BA Super-Strong US Industrial Cycle Points To Higher US Treasury Yields The timing of such a shakeout in risk assets is uncertain but it will likely be sharp and will happen in the first half of this year. The reason is that positioning and sentiment on global risk assets in general and EM risk assets in particular are very elevated as we illustrate in this January issue of Charts That Matter. Our major investment themes remain: US equities will continue underperforming global stocks. Rising bond yields and inflation will hurt the expensive US equity market more than overseas ones. Europe and Japan will outperform and EM will likely be a market performer. For now, maintain a neutral allocation to EM in a global equity portfolio. The US dollar is in a structural bear market but it is presently oversold and will bounce sharply sometime in H1 this year. Continue shorting select EM currencies versus an equal-weighted basket of the euro, CHF and JPY. EM currencies will suffer more than DM currencies during a potential US dollar snapback. A setback in EM fixed-income markets should be used as a buying opportunity. Inflation is much less of a problem in EM than in the US. A long-term bear market in the greenback favors EM fixed-income markets, both dollar-denominated and local currency ones. Arthur Budaghyan Chief Emerging Markets Strategist arthurb@bcaresearch.com Rising EM Corporate Bond Yields Is The Key Threat To EM Share Prices A continuous rise in corporate and sovereign US dollar bond yields (shown inverted) has historically been a negative signal for EM share prices. With no downside to global growth due to US fiscal policy, both US and EM bond yields are crucial variables to monitor. Chart 1Rising EM Corporate Bond Yields Will Be The Key Threat To EM Share Prices Chart 2Rising EM Corporate Bond Yields Will Be The Key Threat To EM Share Prices EM Stocks Will Outperform The S&P 500 Amid Rising Inflation Worries Rising inflation expectations will help EM stocks to outperform the S&P 500. The latter is more expensive and, thereby, more sensitive to rising interest rates. Chart 3EM Stocks Will Outperform The S&P 500 Amid Rising Inflation Worries Chart 4EM Stocks Will Outperform The S&P 500 Amid Rising Inflation Worries US Equities Are Overextended; EM Is Set To Outperform The S&P 500 In The Coming Years In real (inflation-adjusted) terms, US stocks in general and US tech stocks in particular are over-extended relative to their long-term trends. Relative to US equities, but not absolute term, EM stocks are cheap. Chart 5US Equities Are Overextended; EM Is Set To Outperform The S&P 500 In The Coming Years Chart 6US Equities Are Overextended; EM Is Set To Outperform The S&P 500 In The Coming Years   Chart 7US Equities Are Overextended; EM Is Set To Outperform The S&P 500 In The Coming Years Chart 8US Equities Are Overextended; EM Is Set To Outperform The S&P 500 In The Coming Years   Strategy For An Era Of Inflation Global growth stocks will underperform versus value ones. US equities have broken down relative to the global equity index. US bond yields have more upside. A rise in US corporate bond yields is the main danger to American stocks. Chart 9Strategy For An Era Of Inflation Chart 10Strategy For An Era Of Inflation   Chart 11Strategy For An Era Of Inflation Chart 12Strategy For An Era Of Inflation   Risk Measures That EM Investors Should Monitor US TIPS yields are very oversold. Any spike will likely trigger a rebound in the US dollar and a correction in EM local currency bonds. Besides, off-shore Chinese property company bond prices have rolled over. This means stress is accumulating in China’s property market and construction activity will slow in H2 this year. Finally, EM HY corporates might begin underperforming EM IG – a sign of poor risk backdrop. Chart 13Risk Measures That EM Investors Should Monitor Chart 14Risk Measures That EM Investors Should Monitor Chart 15Risk Measures That EM Investors Should Monitor   The Case For US Inflation US personal disposable income has surged due to fiscal transfers. This is ultimately Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) in action. US consumer spending on goods has been booming, lifting global trade and manufacturing. The vaccination and a reopening of the economy will increase the velocity (turnover) of money supply and lead to higher inflation in H2 2021. Chart 16The Case For US Inflation Chart 17The Case For US Inflation Chart 18The Case For US Inflation   Global Trade: The US and China Have Been Epicenters Of Spending China's and the US’ real trade balances (export volume divided by import volume) have been falling, meaning that both economies have been locomotives of global demand. China’s stimulus is tapering off but the US’ fiscal largess continues. Chart 19Global Trade: The US and China Have Been Epicenters Of Spending Chart 20Global Trade: The US and China Have Been Epicenters Of Spending   Chart 21Global Trade: The US and China Have Been Epicenters Of Spending US Consumers Could Face High Goods Prices Tradable goods prices are rising in US dollar terms. If export nations’ currencies continue appreciating, US imports prices in US dollar terms will rise much more. This will reinforce inflationary pressures in the US. Chart 22US Consumers Could Face High Goods Prices Chart 23US Consumers Could Face High Goods Prices Chart 24US Consumers Could Face High Goods Prices Chart 25US Consumers Could Face High Goods Prices   No Inflation In China In China, supply has been overwhelming demand and deflationary tendencies remain broad-based. Policymakers have become concerned with RMB appreciation, or at least the pace of its strengthening. Authorities have allowed more portfolio capital to leave China. The latter has produced the recent surge in HK-traded Chinese stocks (please refer to page 16). Chart 26No Inflation In China Chart 27No Inflation In China Chart 28No Inflation In China Chart 29No Inflation In China   The Chinese Economy: Strong In H1; Slowing In H2 China’s credit and fiscal stimulus peaked in Q4 2020. This and regulatory tightening for banks and ongoing non-banks as well as the property market restrictions will produce a meaningful slowdown in H2 this year. Chart 30The Chinese Economy: Strong In H1; Slowing In H2 Chart 31The Chinese Economy: Strong In H1; Slowing In H2 Chart 32The Chinese Economy: Strong In H1; Slowing In H2 Chart 33The Chinese Economy: Strong In H1; Slowing In H2   Commodities Inventories In China Are Elevated Slowdowns in China’s construction activity and infrastructure spending amid excessive inventories of commodities pose a downside risk in commodities prices this year. Chart 34Commodities Inventories In China Are ElevatedChart 36Commodities Inventories In China Are Elevated Chart 35Commodities Inventories In China Are Elevated   A Mania In Full Force Asia’s growth stocks have been rising exponentially. Such parabolic price moves can last for a while but these stocks will experience a major shakeout this year. The trigger will be rising global bond yields as discussed on pages 1 and 2. Chart 37A Mania In Full Force Chart 38A Mania In Full Force Chart 39A Mania In Full Force Chart 40A Mania In Full Force   Local Retail Investors Have Been Buying EM Stocks Aggressively These charts show that a retail mania is taking place not only in the US but has become a common phenomenon in many EM stock markets. Amid retail-driven rallies, fundamentals do not matter and momentum is the key variable to monitor. Chart 41Local Retail Investors Have Been Buying EM Stocks Aggressively Chart 42Local Retail Investors Have Been Buying EM Stocks Aggressively   Mainland Investors Buying HK-Listed Chinese Stocks To halt yuan appreciation, authorities have recently increased quotas for mainland investors to buy HK-listed equities. Consequently, capital has rushed out of the mainland and Chinese stocks listed in HK have surged. The duration and magnitude of any flow-driven rally is impossible to handicap with any certainty. Chart 43Mainland Investors Buying HK-Listed Chinese Stocks Chart 44Mainland Investors Buying HK-Listed Chinese StocksChart 45Mainland Investors Buying HK-Listed Chinese Stocks   Global Investors Are Super Bullish These charts illustrate that based on the Sentix1 survey European investors are record bullish on EM equities and European growth. Chart 46Global Investors Are Super Bullish Chart 47Global Investors Are Super Bullish Investor Sentiment And Positioning Are Very Elevated Investors are bullish on US stocks and copper (a proxy for global growth) and bearish on the US dollar. The ratio of US institutional and retail money market funds’ assets (cash on sidelines) relative to market value of stocks and all US dollar bonds has declined substantially. Chart 48Investor Sentiment And Positioning Are Very Elevated Chart 49Investor Sentiment And Positioning Are Very Elevated Chart 50Investor Sentiment And Positioning Are Very Elevated   Several Reflation Gauges Are Facing Resistance Global cyclical versus defensive stocks and several EM reflation plays are facing important technical resistances. Chart 51Several Reflation Gauges Are Facing Resistance Chart 52Several Reflation Gauges Are Facing Resistance   Major Equity Indexes Are Attempting A Breakout The EM, global ex-US, global ex-TMT and euro area equity indexes are at their previous highs and are attempting a breakout. Momentum is on their side but positioning and sentiment are against a sustainable breakout. Chart 53Major Equity Indexes Are Attempting A Breakout Chart 54Major Equity Indexes Are Attempting A Breakout Chart 55Major Equity Indexes Are Attempting A Breakout Chart 56Major Equity Indexes Are Attempting A Breakout   Outside Asian Growth Stocks, EM Equities Have Been Lagging Reflecting not-so-positive fundamentals, EM share prices, outside Asian growth stocks, have not yet entered a bull market. Chart 57Outside Asian Growth Stocks, EM Equities Have Been Lagging Chart 58Outside Asian Growth Stocks, EM Equities Have Been Lagging Chart 59Outside Asian Growth Stocks, EM Equities Have Been Lagging Chart 60Outside Asian Growth Stocks, EM Equities Have Been Lagging   The Outlook For EM Stocks The cyclical EM profit outlook is bullish. However, much of this is already priced in. China’s peak stimulus is a risk to EM later this year. We recommend equity investors to favor EM versus the S&P 500 but not against European or Japanese stocks. Chart 61The Outlook For EM Stocks Chart 62The Outlook For EM Stocks New COVID Cases Are Rising In Several Areas Outside North Asia Many developing countries are facing challenges to contain the pandemic as well as to obtain and conduct broad-based vaccination. Chart 63New COVID Cases Are Rising In Several Areas Outside North Asia Chart 64New COVID Cases Are Rising In Several Areas Outside North Asia   Footnotes 1  The Sentix surveys cover several thousand European institutional and individual investors. In the survey, investors are asked about their medium-term expectations. Source: SENTIX.  
Special Report Highlights Both the massive inventory accumulation and robust underlying consumption have been driving Chinese crude imports in recent years. Chinese crude oil import growth will decelerate in 2021 due to a slower pace in the country’s oil inventory accumulation. The country’s underlying crude oil consumption growth will remain robust this year, which will support a still positive growth in Chinese crude oil imports this year. Strong Chinese crude oil imports are positive to global oil prices this year. Feature The gap between China’s total crude oil supply and its domestic crude oil consumption has been widening in recent years, due to a massive buildup in Chinese crude oil inventory (Chart 1A and 1B). In fact, China’s crude oil inventories have quadrupled in the past five years, exceeding two billion barrels as of November 2020 and are equal to about 70% of OECD total inventory (Chart 2). Chart 1AA Massive Buildup In Chinese Crude Oil Inventory Chart 1BChina: Total Crude Oil Supply Growth Has Exceeded Its Domestic Consumption Growth In addition, China’s crude oil import growth has been outpacing domestic oil consumption growth, while domestic production remains stagnant (Chart 3). Chart 2Crude Oil Inventories In China Have Quadrupled In The Past Five Years Chart 3China: Crude Oil Import Growth Has Been Stronger Than Its Domestic Consumption Growth Will China maintain its strong crude oil import growth this year? How will the interplay between domestic consumption and imports evolve in 2021? We expect China’s crude oil consumption growth to remain solid in 2021, growing at an annual rate of about 6-7% and up from the 4.5% growth rate reached in 2020. However, China’s crude oil imports are likely to increase by 4-6% in 2021 from the previous year, slower than the 7.2% growth seen in 2020. The moderation in Chinese oil imports in 2021 will mainly be due to a slower pace of crude oil inventory buildup. Understanding The Surge In Crude Oil Inventory Chart 4China's Crude Oil Inventory Buildup: One Major Driver Behind Its Strong Imports Since 2016 The massive buildup in domestic crude oil inventory has been one major driving force behind the strong growth in China's crude oil imports since 2016 (Chart 4). As oil prices continue to rebound, and given China’s existing large oil inventories, we think the pace of inventory accumulation in China will slow in 2021. Therefore, growth in Chinese oil imports this year will likely moderate. China’s crude oil imports currently account for about 75% of the country’s total crude oil supply. Since China’s domestic crude oil production has been stagnant in the last decade, the fluctuations in Chinese crude oil imports are largely driven by the change in the country’s total demand, which includes both domestic consumption and changes in inventories. China’s crude oil import growth has significantly outpaced domestic consumption growth in the past five years, leading to a buildup in inventory. China’s crude oil inventory includes Commercial Petroleum Reserves (CPR), which are held by refiners and traders; and Strategic Petroleum Reserves (SPR), which are held by the government. Our Chinese crude oil inventory proxy1 was constructed based on the crude oil flow diagram shown in Chart 5.  Chart 5How Did We Derive Our Chinese Crude Oil Inventory Proxy? Our research has suggested that since 2016, most of the buildup has occurred in CPR. This is due to the following: The government in 2015 required refiners to keep their inventory level at no less than their 15-days requirement for operation use. Chinese refinery capacity had been expanded at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 2.8% during 2016-2019. These existing and new refineries have been building their inventories to meet government regulations in the past several years.  In addition, the government started to allow independent refineries to import crude oil by setting a quota in mid-2015, and the import quotas have been increased every year. In 2020, the quota reached 184.6 million tons, equaling to about 3,700 kbpd, nearly five times the quota in 2015. The total increase in imports of these independent refiners over the past five years was about 2,950 kbpd, accounting for 70% of the increase in the country’s total crude oil imports during the same period. Chart 6China: Rising Run Rates For Its Independent Refineries Independent refiners import crude oil for both refinery purposes and to meet the new inventory requirement. Over the last several years, the increased amount of quota has improved Chinese independent refiners’ profitability and refinery capacity run rate, as the import quota allows these private sector refiners to save operating costs by cutting out the “middleman” and by actively managing their own feedstocks. For example, Shandong has the largest number of independent refineries among all provinces. Chart 6 shows that the run rate of the region’s independent refineries has surged since 2016, from about 40% in that year to 75% this year. In addition, since 2016, the fluctuations in their run rates have become much more closely correlated with global oil prices.   Commercial crude oil users have much larger physical reserve space than the SPR. Notably, they tend to sharply increase their imports when crude oil prices are low.  In addition, inventory accumulation often occurs when credit/financing is available with low costs and refiners expect higher prices ahead. Meanwhile, our research shows the SPR development has been slowing considerably in recent years, resulting in little inventory buildup in SPR. The last time the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) reported the SPR data was December 29, 2017. It showed the SPR was about 37.73 million tons by mid-2017, not far from the country’s target of 40 million tons for the first two phases2 of SPR. This suggests that the country was at least close to finishing its second phase of the SPR in 2017. Since then, there has been little information about the third phase of the SPR progress. We have only been able to find two pieces of news on that subject, and both suggest the construction of the third phase of SPR has been stagnant, and the planning of two sites only started in 2019. As the average construction time for projects in the second phase of SPR was about four years, we do not think these sites were completed in 2020. The NBS data shows that even during the period of mid-2015 and mid-2017, the SPR had only increased by 234 kbpd, about 117 kbpd per year. In comparison, the Chinese total crude oil inventory increased by 600-700 kbpd per year in 2016 and 2017. Clearly, SPR only accounted for a small share of the Chinese total crude oil inventory. Looking forward, we expect a much slower pace of crude oil inventory buildup in China in 2021. Our forecast is based on the following factors: Current Chinese crude oil inventories (CPR and SPR combined) are already in the upper range when comparing the OECD countries (Chart 7). Although the IEA data shows that Japan and Korea have oil stocks of 200 days and 193 days of their respective crude oil net imports, Chinese oil inventories are currently equivalent to 195 days of crude oil net imports and much higher than the 90 days the IEA requires OECD countries to hold. With Brent oil prices having risen by a lot from the April 2020 trough and elevated domestic crude oil inventories, both government and commercial users will likely slow their purchases of overseas oil for inventory accumulation. In comparison, Chinese crude oil inventory accumulation growth slowed sharply in 2018 when Brent oil prices rose by 95% from their trough in mid-2017 (Chart 8), A significant portion of Chinese oil inventory buildup was accumulated over the past five years. At 1,170 kbpd, the largest annual accumulation was in 2020, higher than the 700-900 kbpd fill per year during 2017-2019. Chart 7China's Crude Oil Inventory: No Longer Low Chart 8China: Rising Oil Prices Will Likely Slow Down Its Pace Of Crude Oil Inventory Accumulation We do not expect the fast inventory accumulation of 2020 to repeat in 2021. Instead, a mean-reversal in the inventory accumulation pace will likely occur. Table 1Our Estimates Of The Scale Of Chinese Crude Oil Inventory In 2021 Our baseline estimate based on China’s 2021 import quota and refinery capacity3 is that Chinese crude oil inventory will increase to 207-210 days of Chinese crude oil imports by this year-end, up from 192 days at last year-end (Table 1). With already-elevated crude oil inventory, the pace of the inventory accumulation in China will be slower than last year. Bottom Line: After a massive buildup over recent years, the pace of inventory accumulation in China will slow in 2021 and probably onwards as well. As a result, Chinese oil import growth will converge with the pace of domestic consumption growth. China’s Robust Crude Oil Consumption Growth In 2021 Chart 9China: Resilient Domestic Crude Oil Consumption Growth In 2020 Despite the pandemic outbreak, last year’s underlying consumption of crude oil in China was resilient at a year-on-year growth of 4.5%, even though the rate was smaller than the average growth of 6-7% in 2018-2019 (Chart 9).  The growth in oil consumption last year was mainly from the non-transportation sector. The output of non-transportation fuels, including fuel oil, naphtha, petroleum coke, and petroleum pitch, are mostly having impressive growth, suggesting strong consumption in sectors like chemical products, steel sector and infrastructure (Chart 10). For example, naphtha is the primary feedstock for ethylene production. Ethylene is the building block for a vast range of chemicals from plastics to antifreeze solutions and solvents. Transportation fuel consumption was weak in 2020, with the output of major transportation fuels including gasoline, diesel oil and kerosene in contraction (Chart 11). Chart 10Strong Consumption In Non-Transportation Sectors in 2020 Last Year Chart 11Transportation Fuel Consumption Was Weak In 2020 In 2021, we expect the underlying consumption growth of crude oil in China to increase to 6-7% from last year’s 4.5%. This will be in line with its growth in both 2018 and 2019 (Chart 9 on page 7). First, the consumption of transportation fuels will likely recover this year. Transportation fuels are the largest consuming sector for Chinese petroleum products. Based on British Petroleum data, gasoline, diesel and kerosene accounted for 55% of total Chinese oil consumption in 2019. We expect the transportation fuel consumption growth to be stronger (i.e., 6-7%) than its five-year compounded annual growth rate (CAGR) of 4.1% during 2015-2019. Chart 12China's Automobile Sales Correlated Well With Its Crude Oil Imports Automobile sales in China correlated well with the country’s crude oil imports (Chart 12, top panel). Despite a year-on-year contraction of 2% for the whole year of 2020, automobile sales had been strong with a double-digit growth nearly every month since May. Only 5% of these automobiles are new energy vehicles (NEV). About 80% of them are gasoline cars and 15% are diesel automobiles. Annual total car sales still account for about 9% of total existing automobiles (Chart 12, bottom panel). This means a 6-7% growth in the transportation consumption of passenger cars and commercial cars is very possible in 2021. The number of airports and airplanes are still on the uptrend in China. The CAGR of Chinese kerosene consumption rose from 10.1% during 2010-2014 to 10.6% during 2015-2019. This suggests that the kerosene consumption growth in China could reach 11% in 2021. Domestic gasoline and diesel prices are near decade lows (Chart 13). This will encourage consumption of these fuels. Second, the oil consumption growth in the industry sector will likely be larger than the 5% in the recent years (Chart 14). Based on the NBS data, the industry sector accounts for about 36% of China’s petroleum product consumption. Chart 13Low Domestic Gasoline And Diesel Prices Encourage Fuel Consumption This Year Chart 14Robust Oil Consumption Growth In The Industry Sector In 2021 Third, infrastructure spending and property market construction will slow in 2H2021 given the credit, fiscal, and regulatory tightening that has been taking place. However, construction only accounts for about 6% of Chinese petroleum product consumption.  Given all of this, achieving a 6-7% underlying consumption growth of crude oil in China this year is possible. Taking into consideration the slower pace of inventory buildup, we expect China’s crude oil imports to increase by 4-6% in 2021 over the previous year, slower than last year’s 7.2% growth. Bottom Line: The underlying consumption growth of crude oil in China is likely to increase to 6-7% in 2021 from last year’s 4.5%, providing solid support to China’s crude oil imports. What About Other Factors Affecting Chinese Crude Oil Imports? Currently, both domestic crude oil production and net exports of Chinese petroleum products exports are small contributors to the growth of Chinese crude oil imports. However, as the Chinese petroleum export sector becomes more competitive in the global market, it will likely take a bigger share of China’s crude oil imports going forward. Chart 15Net Exports Of Chinese Petroleum Products Are On The Uptrend We expect domestic crude oil output to be stagnant in 2021. The breakeven prices for most domestic oil fields are US$50-60 per barrel. Without a considerable rally in oil prices, the total domestic crude oil output is unlikely to pick up. Moreover, due to the massive crude oil inventory buildup in recent years, Chinese oil producers may constrain their output. In this scenario, a reduction in domestic crude oil output by 1-2% in 2021 from 2020 is possible. Nonetheless, this will only increase China’s oil imports by a small amount of about 40-80 kbpd. The net exports of Chinese petroleum products are on the uptrend (Chart 15). Currently net exports of Chinese petroleum products account for only about 6% of Chinese crude oil imports.  However, Chinese refineries are increasingly competitive in global gasoline and diesel markets, since most of the new refineries in the country are high technology equipped and highly efficient. In addition, last July, China started issuing export licenses to private refiners, and we expect the trend to continue. According to Bloomberg, China is set to surpass the US to become the world’s largest oil refiner in 2021. As such, in the coming years we expect rising Chinese exports of petroleum products will demand more imports of crude oil.  We expect Chinese petroleum products net exports to rise by 100-150 kbpd in 2021 15-20% growth from last year), which may increase our estimate of China’s year-on-year crude oil import growth from 4-6% to 5-7% in 2021. However, increasing Chinese petroleum product exports does not increase global final demand for oil. It cannot be viewed as a fundamentally bullish factor for oil prices. Bottom Line: Stagnant domestic crude oil output and rising net exports of Chinese petroleum products will also lead to an increase of China’s crude oil imports.  Investment Implications Chart 16China: An Increasingly Important Factor For Global Oil Demand Strong crude oil imports by China have supported global oil prices in recent years. China has become an increasingly important driving force of global oil demand. Its oil imports currently make up about 12% of global oil demand, more than doubled from a decade ago (Chart 16). The country’s crude oil imports will continue expanding this year. Even at a slower rate, the robust oil consumption and imports from China will remain a positive factor for global oil prices in 2021. Beyond 2021, however, the country’s crude oil import growth outlook is facing increasing downside risks. Demand that is due to inventory accumulation is ultimately finite and non-recurring. Moreover, more oil accumulations in 2021 on top of China’s already elevated oil inventories may weigh on Chinese oil imports beyond 2021. In the meantime, US crude oil producers may benefit from continuing strong purchases from China. In 2020, China significantly ramped up its crude oil imports from the US, as the country has pledged to boost purchases of US energy products under the phase one trade deal signed with President Trump in January 2020. Chart 17Chinese Imports Of US Crude Oil May Continue To Rise In 2021 In 2020, Chinese imports of US crude oil in volume terms were 155% higher from a year before (Chart 17, top panel). Its share of total Chinese crude oil imports also spiked from 1-2% in late 2019 to 7-8% in the past several months (Chart 17, bottom panel). In the meantime, China’s share of US crude oil export also jumped from 4.6% in 2019 to 14.7% last year. In 2021, our baseline view is that China will want to show goodwill to the newly elected Biden administration by continuing to boost its crude oil purchase from the US. This will benefit US crude oil producers. However, if China buys more from the US, it may buy less from other countries.   Ellen JingYuan He  Associate Vice President ellenj@bcaresearch.com     Footnotes 1By deducting crude oil used in refineries and in direct final consumption from the total supply, we derived the flow of inventory and the level of changes in inventory. By using the cumulative value of the flow inventory data, we were able to derive the stock of inventory. We assume the initial inventory in 2006 was zero. This assumption is reasonable as the first fill of the SPR was in 2007 and the stock of CPR was extremely low at that time as well. In addition, based on the data from the National Bureau of Statistics, we found out that the direct final consumption of crude oil without any transformation only accounted for about 1-2% of total supply. 2 In 2004, the government planned three phases of SPR construction, targeting 10-12 million tons of crude oil SPR for the first phase, 28 million tons for the second phase, and another 28 million tons for the third phase. 3The import quota for independent refiners in 2021 has been increased by 20% (about 823 kbpd), and the country’s refinery capacity will expand at about 500 kbpd per year over 2021-2025. Cyclical Investment Stance Equity Sector Recommendations
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