China’s Commodities Eye Banner Year as Focus Shifts to Stimulus

Evidence of China’s rapid economic rebound has reignited hopes of a banner year for demand in the world’s top commodities importer. How Beijing chooses to support the recovery at its upcoming annual policy meeting will now be the focus of markets from copper to crude and soybeans.

(Bloomberg) — Evidence of China’s rapid economic rebound has reignited hopes of a banner year for demand in the world’s top commodities importer. How Beijing chooses to support the recovery at its upcoming annual policy meeting will now be the focus of markets from copper to crude and soybeans.

China’s reopening, and the policy measures that accompany it, are likely to raise demand and prices across a raft of raw materials after the final throes of Covid Zero caused consumption to nosedive last year. But the nature of that support could be crucial to sorting out which markets win most from the government’s renewed focus on economic growth.

The population’s newfound freedom has buoyed sentiment around commodities like oil and fuels, which are keyed to improved mobility after years of lockdowns and transport restrictions. In contrast, metals and power markets have been slower to see the benefits after the Lunar New Year holiday in January dented industrial activity.

President Xi Jinping has made lifting domestic demand a priority. That could signal less emphasis at the National People’s Congress, which begins on Sunday, on Beijing’s usual means of boosting the economy via infrastructure investment. The unexpectedly robust revival in factory activity in February could also douse expectations that the government needs to raise direct spending to keep the economy on track.

If policymakers opt to favor consumption, perhaps via measures to expand credit, then markets for items such as crude, gasoline and derivative products like plastics will reap the reward. Although more spending on consumer goods like cars and appliances will lift metals usage, it’s unlikely to offset the much bigger demand from the airports, railways and bridges that China has built in the past.

Despite the mounting strain on government finances, Beijing can’t ignore infrastructure spending because so much of the economy, which includes the world’s biggest steel, cement and aluminum industries, is geared toward construction. And many of these firms are state-owned. 

UBS Global Wealth Management thinks the Congress will set China’s growth target this year at 5% or more, after the economy grew just 3% in 2022. To support that, it expects local government bond sales, the backbone of infrastructure investment, to be at least as high as last year’s 3.65 trillion yuan ($530 billion).

But the type of investment is changing, particularly in light of the climate emergency. That means more solar farms, power storage facilities and expansions of the grid are on the cards, perhaps using less steel and cement but requiring more materials like copper and aluminum that are deemed critical to the energy transition. 

The beleaguered property market also remains crucial as a source of commodities demand, mainly in terms of building materials but also the purchases that often accompany a new home. So any further measures to shore up that sector will be closely watched.

“The NPC is expected to stimulate both consumption and infrastructure,” said Wei Lai, an analyst with Zijin Tianfeng Futures Co. “If it can also soften its tone on curbing the property sector, or stress its support for private enterprises, that would be something beyond expectations.”

The Week’s Diary

(All times Beijing unless noted.)

Thursday, March 2

  • Last day of Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko’s visit to China
  • China Carbon Neutral Summit in Shanghai, day 1
  • EARNINGS: Yunnan Energy New Material

Friday, March 3

  • Caixin’s China services & composite PMIs for February, 09:45
  • China weekly iron ore port stockpiles
  • Shanghai exchange weekly commodities inventory, ~15:30
  • China Carbon Neutral Summit in Shanghai, day 2

Saturday, March 4

  • Nothing major scheduled

Sunday, March 5

  • National People’s Congress begins in Beijing

On The Wire

Russia’s top miner, MMC Norilsk Nickel PJSC, is selling some of its metal in yuan at prices set in Shanghai, a sign of how the invasion of Ukraine is redrawing global commodity flows and handing greater power to China.

–With assistance from Sarah Chen and Kathy Chen.

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