It’s been a tumultuous four years for US commodity
industries that found themselves a key focus of the White House through its
aggressive trade policy agenda.
From steel and aluminum tariffs to grain subsidies to
boosting exports of liquefied natural gas, very few corners of the global
commodities market eluded Donald Trump’s attention. There was at least one
memo, executive order, pronouncement or tweet bringing some sort of attention
to uranium, soybeans, and rare earths, the kinds of materials that haven’t
received attention from American presidents in years.
Now, with Joe Biden winning the election,
how will the next US President diverge from his predecessor, and where he might
keep the status quo?
Steel and aluminum
The biggest issues in steel and aluminum are very
similar, given these two industries — especially steel — were a top priority
for the Trump administration. Tariffs aren’t expected to go away any time soon under
Biden, and market participants have adjusted for the 25% duty on steel imports
and the 10% levy on aluminum.
Removing them would be like catching a falling knife:
It would alienate voters across the Midwest who helped Biden across the finish
line. It would also lead US Steel Corp. and Century Aluminum Co, among others,
and the United Steelworkers union to lobby for some sort of new trade action to
protect their industries.
“WITH A BIDEN VICTORY, WHAT
YOU’RE GOING TO EXPECT IS A LOT LESS TRADE UNCERTAINTY, AND THAT IS GREAT FOR
OIL PRICES”
Edward Moya, senior market analyst at Oanda
Biden is more likely to maintain the tariffs and work
with key allies — including the European Union, Japan and Canada — to form a
bloc opposing the subsidies China gives to its industries, which produce more
than half of the world’s steel and aluminum. The Trump administration openly
shunned multilateral trade partnerships, so this would be a big change in
policy. It’s still unclear, though, what policies Biden would enact to further
protect the industries, both of whom claim need more help.
LNG
Trump administration officials criss-crossed Europe
and Asia in 2019 touting US LNG exports as “freedom gas” and “molecules of US
freedom,” but trade wars hurt sales as did environmental concerns over flaring
in the Permian Basin and other emissions associated with production and
shipment.
Biden didn’t state a position about LNG on his
campaign website but boasts a plan to reduce methane emissions and flaring,
which European buyers would welcome. Biden was vice president when the Obama
administration approved permits for all six of the current LNG export
terminals.
Political observers believe that Biden would bring
the US back into the Paris Agreement, an environmental treaty between nearly
200 nations to reduce greenhouse gas pollution. With buyers across the globe
seeking greener or carbon-neutral LNG cargoes, the move might benefit US
exporters.
“Our biggest concern is American LNG exports to Asia
and to Europe, and how those have declined as a consequence of some of these
trade wars,” said Mike Sommers, the president of the American Petroleum
Institute. As a previous longtime member of the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee, Biden “has a firm understanding of how important American energy
independence is from a foreign policy perspective as well,” he said.
Oil
Energy will likely be on the table in US trade talks
with China.
“As long as US. energy production such as shale oil,
LPG and natural gas exceeds domestic demand, America would be an exporter,”
said Sandy Fielden, director of research for Morningstar Inc. “So China, as
the world’s largest consumer, will use energy as a bargaining chip. A Biden
administration would implement a measured trade policy without the Trump
tit-for-tat noise.”
“With a Biden victory, what you’re going to expect is
a lot less trade uncertainty, and that is great for oil prices,” said Edward
Moya, a senior market analyst at Oanda. “We see the best demand when
globalization is trending.”
Despite ratcheting up sanctions on Venezuela’s state
oil company, Trump wasn’t able to dislodge Nicolas Maduro. Analysts say
that a Biden victory won’t necessarily reverse all the measures taken against
Maduro.
Biden will seek to re-enter the 2015 Iranian nuclear
deal and lift sanctions on the country, according to RBC Capital Markets’ Helima
Croft. “We continue to anticipate Iran being able to return around 1 million
barrels a day of exports back to the market by the second half of 2021,” Croft
said in a note.
Dairy
US officials have pushed for stricter Canadian
enforcement of the terms of dairy trade outlined in the US-Mexico-Canada
Agreement, an area that could see fresh attention after the election. Only a
small portion of US cheese, dry milk and other dairy products crosses the
border to Canadian markets. Still, many American dairies and processors have
insisted that primarily their lower-value ingredients like powders are imported
by Canada, while higher-value finished products like fine cheeses are largely
barred. The US and other large dairy producers around the globe have also
criticized Canada’s below-market-priced exports as unfair competition.
A Biden presidency may slow some progress the
industry is pushing for as guidelines around trade between the US and Canada
cement through the end of the year. While dairy policy tends to capture
bipartisan support, some market watchers are concerned that Biden’s team may
not share the Trump administration’s skepticism of Canada’s dairy trade and
pricing systems, potentially delaying or tempering efforts to change them.
Grains
A Biden presidency could lead to warmer trade
relations with China, supporting the rally in corn, wheat and soybeans, which
hit a four-year high. He may roll back tariffs on Chinese goods, paving the way
for more US exports of agricultural products to Asia.
Exports to China have surged, but that’s largely due
to market forces that made America the best source of corn and soybeans. Many
earlier this year speculated that China would wait until the election to
question the phase-one trade deal or trigger a clause that allows the Asian
nation not to fulfill its pledges due to the pandemic.
Even with the surge in the second half of the year,
shipments of agricultural and related products through September were about 38%
of the deal target. The US Trade Representative’s office said last month that
71% of the target has been reached.
China is rebuilding its hog herd more quickly than
expected after being hit by African swine fever, a deadly virus that kills most
infected pigs within 10 days. The Asian nation has already purchased a record
amount of American corn, and sales of soybeans are running at their highest
level in data going back to 1991. US pork exports are at a record and sorghum
and beef sales also gained a boost.
“China is implementing and purchasing under the phase
one agreement,” Dave MacLennan, Cargill’s CEO, said in a Bloomberg TV
interview. But “most of the activity we believe is driven by pure economics,
demand driven,” he said.
(By Joe Deaux, with assistance from Justina
Vasquez, Stephen Cunningham, Sergio Chapa, Andres Guerra Luz, Sheela
Tobben, Lucia Kassai, Mike Jeffers and Isis Almeida)
Source: mining.com