Citi: 'We should all fear Oilmageddon'

Markets are currently in a well-oiled "death spiral," according to analysts at Citigroup.

"It appears that four inter-linked phenomena are driving a negative feedback loop in the global economy and across financial markets," the analysts led by Jonathan Stubbs write, citing the resilient US dollar, lower commodities prices, weaker trade and capital flows, and declining emerging market growth.

Traders of crude oil and natural gas: A global recession, triggered by lower commodities prices, would leave nowhere to ...
Traders of crude oil and natural gas: A global recession, triggered by lower commodities prices, would leave nowhere to hide, the Citi analysts say. Photo: Bebeto Matthews

"It seems reasonable to assume that another year of extreme moves in US dollar (higher) and oil/commodity prices (lower) would likely continue to drive this negative feedback loop and make it very difficult for policy makers in emerging markets and developing markets to fight disinflationary forces and intercept downside risks," they add. "Corporate profits and equity markets would also likely suffer further downside risk in this scenario of Oilmageddon."

Their case is bolstered by a collection of charts showing the linkages between the four factors cited above, including the importance of lofty oil prices to the ready supply of petrodollars circulating in the world economy and flowing to financial assets. Oil exporters have enjoyed more than $US6 trillion ($8.4 trillion) flowing into their current accounts, according to Citi's estimates, implying some $US4 trillion of capital in sovereign wealth funds (SWFs).

"But, the collapse in oil/commodity prices and sharp fall in the pace of world trade means that these same economies will likely experience an aggregate current account deficit for the first time since 1998," says Citi. "In turn, this is likely to put pressure on SWF and broader emerging market liquidity as governments and emerging market economies would need to 'lean' on reserves in order to maintain economic, political and social stability. This has clear feedback loops across emerging markets."

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Accordingly, the impact of the feedback loop is being felt far and wide in financial markets, extending even to US inflation expectations. Where once 10-year inflation breakevens had little relationship with the price of oil they have for the past two years moved in tandem. With house forecasts for a 4 per cent strengthening of the trade-weighted US dollar and oil prices at $US50 by the end of the year, Citi offers some hope that the feedback loop can be partially reversed though not necessarily broken. Should the bank's base case of stabilising currency and commodities markets materialise, the analysts say, financial assets should respond accordingly and recover.

However, a move "the other way would add fuel to a 'significant and syncronised' global recession," the bank warns.

"We should all fear Oilmageddon," Citi concludes. "Global recession, as we define it, would leave nowhere to hide in equities. Cash wins."

Bloomberg

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