The
Petroyuan Was Born This Week. Here's What It Means
31 March, 2018
It
has been promised for 25 years. Its coming has been heralded as a
world-changing event. It has launched a thousand headlines in the
last few months. And it happened this week. But if you blinked you
would have missed it.
What
am I talking about? Why, the launch of a Chinese yuan-denominated oil
futures contracts on the Shanghai International Energy Exchange, of
course! Or, in more headline-appropriate terms: The Birth of the
Petroyuan!
Considering
this event has been in the works for literally a quarter of a century
(since the Chinese tried and failed to launch such a contract in
1993), the event came and went with remarkably little fanfare, even
from the ChiCom mouthpiece press. Take Xinhua's decidedly low-key
announcement: "China
launches crude oil futures trading."
No celebration of the glorious arrival of the dawn of a new monetary
order. No bold proclamations about the impending dominance of the
Chinese benchmark in global oil sales. Not even a screed about how
the fearless leader, President
For Life Xi,
is bravely steering the country toward a petroyuan utopia. Just:
China on Monday launched trading of the yuan-denominated crude oil futures contracts at the Shanghai International Energy Exchange, which is the first futures listed on China's mainland to overseas investors.
The listed futures for trading are contracts to be delivered from September this year to March 2019. The benchmark prices of 15 contracts were set at 416 yuan (65.8 U.S. dollars), 388 yuan and 375 yuan per barrel, varied by delivery dates.
Li Qiang, Shanghai's Party chief, and Liu Shiyu, chairman of China Securities Regulatory Commission, together rang the gong to open the trading session.
Oh,
and the name of this earth-shaking, world-changing futures contract?
"SC1809." It's like they're going out of their way to make
this as unremarkable as possible.
But
still, here it is. The event that everyone's been waiting for. A
first, tentative step toward the petroyuan and one potential way for
the international community to step away from the petrodollar. So
what does it mean?
Well,
that really depends whether you're talking short-term or long-term.
I've
discussed the long-term ramifications of this move before, most
notably in "China’s
New World Order: Gold-backed oil benchmark on the way."
Quick recap: The Shanghai Energy Exchange's yuan-denominated oil
contracts, combined with the Shanghai Gold
Exchange's yuan-denominated
gold fix means
that it may one day be possible for a country (like, oh, say, Russia)
to sell oil to China in yuan and exchange that yuan for gold, thus
completely bypassing the dollar.
Cue
the "end of the dollar paradigm" theme here.
But
hold on just a minute. That certainly is the long-term vision that is
being pursued here, and there's no doubt that China, Russia, Iran and
many other countries around the world would jump at the chance to
create a viable alternative to the petrodollar...but are we really
that close? Short answer: No. No, we aren't.
Longer
answer: Remember when China promised to build an alternative to the
SWIFT Network that the banks use to transmit transaction data between
countries? You know, the one that's "totally not political"
even though the EU strong-armed it into de-listing
Iranian banks for
political reasons in 2012? And then remember how it emerged that
China's so-called SWIFT "alternative" was actually going
to be run on the SWIFT Network itself?
Do
you think there might be some similar shenanigans going on with this
petrodollar "alternative?" If so, then might I just say you
are an extremely jaded and skeptical person. You are also correct, so
give yourself a cookie.
Just
read the fine print on the SC1809 contracts, as related by Xinhua:
"At the beginning, US dollars can be used as deposit and for
settlement. In the future, more currencies will be used as deposit."
So (for the moment, at least) this isn't a golden ticket for
bypassing the dollar. Overseas traders will still be putting dollars
in and getting dollars out. The yuan will just be the denomination of
the contract.
Also,
the prospect of SC1809 challenging Brent Crude or WTI for the title
of "global oil benchmark" is still a long ways off. China's
capital controls and pegging of the yuan mean that it is still
useless as a world reserve currency or an international settlement
currency. Until Beijing releases its death grip on the yuan, it's not
going to be embraced by China's foreign trading partners, let alone
non-Chinese trading partners elsewhere in the world.
Another
factor: China's commodities markets are no stranger to the same
speculative frenzy that have led to the highly-risky,
highly-leveraged “umbrella
trusts”
and “Wealth
Management Products”
and stock-collateralized
loans of
the Chinese
stock bubble and bust.
When nickel debuted on the Shanghai exchange in 2015, trading volume
surpassed that of the benchmark future on the London Metal Exchange
within six weeks. But that volume was part of a general speculative
madness. Most Chinese trading steel rebar futures, for example,
had no
idea what they were trading;
they just saw it as another investment opportunity.
So
it is not difficult to imagine a similar frenzy happening with
yuan-denominated oil futures. It's just another chance for the big
returns that Chinese investors have come to expect from the
rigged-i-est of the world's rigged markets (to coin a phrase). If
such a frenzy does eventuate, though, those investors may want to
take note of what happened in China's commodities futures market in
2016. When things got too hot, the
Chinese government stepped in to
tighten regulations, restrict trading hours and boost fees. In the
oil futures space, too, the government can and will intervene
whenever they don't like the direction of the market.
Having
said all of that, make no mistake: the long-term trend, should it be
allowed to continue, is toward the rise of the petroyuan. Consider:
- China has a bid in to buy a 5% stake in Saudi Aramco, and Beijing has been openly courting Riyadh with its Belt and Road Initiative.
- State-owned oil and gas giant PetroChina is buying up companies all along the Belt and Road path, preparing for the Chinese-dominated global trading future.
All
of these developments point the way toward a future where China and
its trading relationships tip the scale away from the petrodollar and
toward the petroyuan. Assuming Beijing does loosen the reins and
allow liberalization of the yuan, it will eventually make more sense
for nations to settle their bilateral trade with China in yuan
directly rather than going through the dollar.
Of
course, this all depends on these trends being allowed to continue,
which is still an open question. After all, we know what happens
to nations
that try to step out from
under the petrodollar umbrella.
At
any rate, don't look for the world to change overnight. But
historians of a future era may just be recording March 26, 2018 as
the day the change started.
UPDATE
- China to start paying yuan for oil
No
sooner had I penned my editorial on how "The Petroyuan Was Born
This Week" then the next piece of the puzzle arrived: China is
set to start buying oil directly with yuan this year. You may not
know it, but this could be one of the most important stories of the
decade.
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