Will The U.S. Allow China To Purchase American Energy Assets?

 | May 11, 2020 01:37PM ET

  • The bear market in crude oil took the price to negative territory- China has bought commodity assets for decades
  • China had purchased assets in the US and around the world

  • Will the US allow the Chinese to purchase and control its commodity production after COVID-19?

  • Crude oil has been more than a wild ride over the past week. After trading to a low of negative $40.32 per barrel on April 20, the continuous futures contract traded to a high of $26.74 on May 7. Crude oil rose by over $67 per barrel in a little over three weeks.

    A potent bearish cocktail of evaporating demand on the back of the global pandemic and OPEC and Russia’s decision to flood the market with the energy commodity in early March created an unprecedented period of selling in the NYMEX crude oil futures market. The price fell to the lows in the aftermath of the most significant production cut in history when OPEC, Russia, and other oil-producing nations trimmed output by 9.7 million barrels per day. As some optimism that there is light at the end of a dark tunnel when it comes to COVID-19 appeared, the price of oil recovered.

    Meanwhile, debt-laden oil companies in the US and around the globe are still teetering on the brink of bankruptcy. Without government aid and bailouts, we could see substantial consolidation in the energy sector over the coming weeks, months, and perhaps years.

    With many production assets worth pennies on the dollar, the Chinese could step up to purchase future output at bargain-basement prices. Over the past years, they bought vast oilfields in the Permian Basin without so much as a blink of an eye from the US government. As many politicians are pointing their fingers at China as the cause of the pandemic, the world’s second-leading economy could use the deflationary price action as an opportunity to add to commodity holdings.

    The strategy is nothing new for China, a nation that purchased raw material assets around the world for decades when opportunities arose. The United States Oil Fund (NYSE:USO) follows the price of a portfolio of crude oil futures contracts on NYMEX.

    The bear market in crude oil took the price to negative territory- China has bought commodity assets for decades

    On April 20, the price of crude oil fell into negative territory for the first time in history.