A $3
trillion shift year from oil producers
to global consumers.
Joe Weisenthal
TheStalwart
February 1, 2016 — 4:49 AM EET
Bloomberg
Economists
are still hotly debating whether the oil crash has been a net positive for
advanced economies.
Optimists
argue that cheap oil is a good thing for consumers and commodity-sensitive
businesses, while pessimists point to the hit to energy-related investment and
possible spillover into the financial system.
A new note
from Francisco Blanch at Bank of America Merrill Lynch, however, puts the oil
move into a much bigger perspective, arguing that a sustained price plunge
"will push back $3 trillion a year from oil producers to global consumers,
setting the stage for one of the largest transfers of wealth in human
history."
Blanch and
his team already see evidence that the fall in the price of crude is having a
positive impact on demand, and say that it could accelerate even further if
prices don't pick up.
Says
Blanch: "Alternatively in a lower oil price scenario, e.g. if prices were
to average just $40 over the next five years which is close to the current
forward curve, demand would grow by 1.5 million barrels per day, which is 0.3
above our base case. Finally, at $20 oil demand would grow by an explosive by
1.7 per year on average, 0.5 above the base case, on our estimates."
Meanwhile,
in emerging markets, where much of the story of late has been about
disappointing economic growth, Blanch still sees huge upside potential in terms
of automobile penetration and consumption.
Take China for
example, where the strategist sees the oil plunge helping to fuel a boom in SUV
sales: "Moreover, the low oil price is encouraging Chinese consumers to
buy increasingly larger cars. Sales of SUVs, the heaviest passenger vehicles
category, are up 60 percent year-on-year in the last three months, while
overall passenger vehicle sales are growing robustly at 22 percent."
And it's
not just emerging markets where the impact of cheaper gasoline is being seen.
After years
of stagnation, vehicle miles traveled in the U.S. clearly ticked higher in 2015.
Combine
these trends with the decline in, say, Saudi Arabia's foreign exchange
reserves, or the stock price of any oil company, and you can see the dramatic
wealth shifts now taking place in the world.
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