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China’s Virus Outbreak Upends Global Commodity Trade Flows

World’s Biggest Commodity Engine Is Roiled by Chinese Virus Blow

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Global commodities trade is being thrown into chaos by China’s coronavirus crisis, as the top user of raw materials receives the worst demand shock since the 2008 financial crisis.

The flow of almost every major commodity is at risk: China’s oil demand has plunged 20% and refineries are curbing operations, liquefied-natural-gas buyers may have to stop taking some deliveries, coal mines are staying shut, copper smelters are mulling output cuts, and crop shipments are stuck at ports.

China’s Virus Outbreak Upends Global Commodity Trade Flows

There’s already evidence of havoc across the commodities world. A major Chinese refiner wants to offload West African crude cargoes it no longer needs, while demand for Latin American oil has stalled. Australia will quarantine ships and Indonesia plans to stop food imports. Miners Anglo American Plc and Rio Tinto Group have restricted travel, and OPEC is considering an emergency meeting.

The outbreak has dragged down raw material prices as well, with U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude on Monday dropping below $50 a barrel for the first time in more than a year. Industrial metals and agricultural commodities also declined.

“This could impact the entire global supply chain,” said Bart Melek, head of global commodity strategy at TD Bank in Toronto. “There are limitations in air transport already. In China, logistics are challenging and there are measures being taken. For some industries that means goods produced in China may not arrive to the United States.”

More on the commodities impact of the virus:

The disruptions show the far-reaching impact of the deadly virus, which spread over the Lunar New Year holiday and has dampened the outlook for growth in the world’s second-biggest economy. While industrial activity typically slows during the break, the epidemic is delaying the resumption of operations. Additionally, gasoline and jet-fuel demand has been hurt by travel cuts.

China’s Virus Outbreak Upends Global Commodity Trade Flows

Russian President Vladimir Putin and Saudi King Salman bin Abdulaziz discussed the global energy market Monday as oil markets tumbled, the latest signal that the OPEC+ producer alliance is trying to build a consensus for an output cut to prop up prices. While the kingdom has been pushing for action since last week, it has met resistance from Russia.

Meanwhile, Chinese officials are said to be hoping the U.S. will agree to some flexibility on pledges in their phase-one trade deal, as Beijing tries to contain a health crisis.

Chinese commodity prices collapsed on the first day of trading after the Lunar New Year break on Monday, as investors returned to markets gripped by fear over the impact the coronavirus. The country’s three major raw-material exchanges were hit by a wave of selling as Chinese traders got their first opportunity to catch up with losses inflicted on overseas markets while they had been on holiday.

Metals, energy and agriculture futures were all hammered, with iron ore, crude, copper and palm oil contracts all sinking by their daily allowable limit within seconds of markets opening. Shares in commodity producers also tumbled as stock markets resumed trading.

China’s Virus Outbreak Upends Global Commodity Trade Flows

Commodities have been clobbered around the world, from copper in London to palm oil in Kuala Lumpur over fears about the economic fallout from the virus. More than a dozen Chinese provinces have announced an extension of the new year holiday by more than a week in a bid to halt the spread of the virus, which has killed hundreds of people and sickened thousands.

--With assistance from Alfred Cang, Javier Blas, Sharon Cho, Stephen Stapczynski, Winnie Zhu, Anuradha Raghu, Yoga Rusmana, Dan Murtaugh, Ben Sharples, Jing Yang, Sarah Chen and Bill Lehane.

To contact the reporters on this story: Pratish Narayanan in New York at pnarayanan9@bloomberg.net;Maria Elena Vizcaino in New York at mvizcaino1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Lynn Doan at ldoan6@bloomberg.net, Pratish Narayanan, Joe Carroll

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.