How black swans are shaping planet panic
March 11, 2020
by Pepe
Escobar
Is the planet under the spell of a pair
of black swans – a Wall Street meltdown, caused by an alleged oil war between
Russia and the House of Saud, plus the uncontrolled spread of Covid-19 – leading
to an all-out “cross-asset pandemonium” as billed by Nomura?
Or, as German analyst Peter Spengler
suggests, whatever the averted climax in the Strait of Hormuz has not brought
about so far “might now come through market forces”?
Let’s start with what really happened
after five hours of relatively polite discussions last Friday in Vienna. What
turned into a de facto OPEC+ meltdown was quite the game-changing plot twist.
OPEC+ includes Russia, Kazakhstan and
Azerbaijan. Essentially, after enduring years of OPEC price-fixing – the result
of relentless US pressure over Saudi Arabia – while patiently rebuilding its
foreign exchange reserves, Moscow saw the perfect window of opportunity to
strike, targeting the US shale industry.
Shares of some of these US producers
plunged as much as 50% on “Black Monday.” They simply cannot survive with a
barrel of oil in the $30s – and that’s where this is going. After all
these companies are drowning in debt.
A $30 barrel of oil has to be seen as a
precious gift/stimulus package for a global economy in turmoil – especially
from the point of view of oil importers and consumers. This is what Russia made
possible.
And the stimulus may last for a while.
Russia’s National Wealth Fund has made it clear it has enough reserves (over
$150 billion) to cover a budget deficit from six to ten years – even with oil
at $25 a barrel. Goldman Sachs has already gamed a possible Brent crude at $20
a barrel.
As Persian Gulf traders stress, the key
to what is perceived in the US as an “oil war” between Moscow and Riyadh is
mostly about derivatives. Essentially, banks won’t be able to pay those
speculators who hold derivative insurance against a steep decline in the price
of oil. Added stress comes from traders panicking with Covid-19 spreading
across nations that are visibly unprepared to deal with it.
Watch the Russian game
Moscow must have gamed beforehand that Russian
stocks traded in London – such as Gazprom, Rosneft, Novatek and Gazprom Neft –
would collapse. According to Lukoil’s co-owner Leonid Fedun, Russia may lose up
to $150 million a day from now on. The question is for how long this will be
acceptable.
Still, from the beginning Rosneft’s position was
that for Russia, the deal with OPEC+ was “meaningless” and only “cleared the way” for American shale oil.
The consensus among Russian energy giants was that
the current market setup – massive “negative oil demand,” positive “supply
shock” and no swing producer – inevitably had to crash the price of oil. They
were watching, helplessly, as the US was already selling oil for a lower price
than OPEC.
Moscow’s move against the US fracking industry was
payback for the Trump administration messing with Nord Stream 2. The
inevitable, steep devaluation of the
ruble was gamed.
Still, what happened post-Vienna essentially has
little to do with a Russia-Saudi trade war. The Russian Energy Ministry
is phlegmatic: Move on, nothing to see
here. Riyadh, significantly, has been emitting signs the OPEC+ deal may be back
in the cards in the near future. A feasible scenario is that this sort of shock
therapy will go on until 2022, and then Russia and OPEC will be back to the
table to work out a new deal.
There are no definitive numbers, but the oil market
accounts for less than 10% of Russia’s GDP (it used to be 16% in 2012). Iran’s
oil exports in 2019 plunged by a whopping 70 %, and still, Tehran was able to
adapt. Yet oil accounts for over 50% of Saudi GDP. Riyadh needs oil at no less
than $85 a barrel to pay its bills. The 2020 budget, with crude priced at
$62-63 a barrel, still has a $ 50 billion deficit.
Aramco says it will be offering no fewer than
300,000 barrels of oil a day beyond its “maximum sustained capacity” starting
April 1. It says it will be able to produce a whopping 12.3 million barrels a
day.
Persian Gulf traders say openly that this is
unsustainable. It is. But the House of Saud, in desperation, will be digging
into its strategic reserves to dump as much crude as possible as soon as
possible – and keep the price war full tilt. The (oily) irony is that the
top price war victims are an industry belonging to the American protector.
Saudi-occupied Arabia is a mess. King Salman is in
a coma. Every grain of sand in the Nefud desert knows Jared of Arabia Kushner’s
WhatsApp pal MBS has been de facto ruler for the past five years, but the
timing of his new purge in Riyadh speaks volumes. Princes Mohammed bin Nayef,
the king’s nephew, and Ahmed bin Abdulaziz, his younger brother, are now really
in detention.
The CIA is fuming: Nayef was and remains Langley’s
top asset. When the Saudi regime spin denounced “Americans” as partners in a
possible coup against MBS, that word needed to be read as “CIA.” It’s just a
matter of time before the US Deep State, in conjunction with disgruntled
National Guard elements, comes for MBS’s head – even as he articulates taking over total
power before the G-20 in Riyadh next November.
Black Hawk Down?
So what happens next? Amid a tsunami of scenarios,
from New York to all points Asia, the most optimistic say that China is about
to win the “people’s war” against Covid-19 – and the latest figures confirm it.
In this case, global oil demand may increase by at least 480,000 barrels a day.
Well, that’s way more complicated.
The game now points to a confluence of Wall Street
in panic; Covid-19 mass hysteria; lingering, myriad aftershocks of Trump’s
global trade mess; the US election circus; total political instability in
Europe. These interlocked crises do spell Perfect Storm. Yet the market angle
is easily explained: that may be the beginning of the end of Wall Street
artificially inflated by tens of trillions of US dollars pumped by the Fed
through quantitative easings and repos since 2008. Call it the calling of the
central bankers’ bluff.
A case can be made that the current financial panic
will only subside when the ultimate black swan – Covid-19 – is contained.
Borrowing from the famous Hollywood adage, “No one knows anything,” all bets
are off. Amid thick fog, and discounting the usual amount of disinformation, a
Rabobank analyst, among others, came up with four plausible Covid-19 scenarios.
He now reckons it’s getting “ugly” and the
fourth scenario – the “unthinkable” – is not far-fetched anymore.
This implies a global economic crisis of, yes,
unthinkable magnitude.
To a great extent, it will all depend on how fast
China – the inescapable crucial link in the global just-in-time supply chain –
gets back to a new normal, offsetting interminable weeks of serial lockdowns.
Despised, discriminated against, demonized 24/7 by
the “system leader,” China has gone full Nietzsche – about to prove that
whatever does not kill you makes you stronger when it comes to a “people’s war”
against Covid-19. On the US front, there’s scant hope that the gleaming Black
“helicopter money” Hawk will crash down for good. The ultimate Black Swan will have the last word.
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