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    Home»Commodities»China’s third plenum: implications for solar power, copper, steel, oil refining and grains
    Commodities

    China’s third plenum: implications for solar power, copper, steel, oil refining and grains

    July 9, 20246 Mins Read


    “We are watching and waiting to see what gets delivered in the property, infrastructure and manufacturing sectors,” he said.

    China is the world’s biggest importer of commodities and its dominant supplier of clean energy, so decisions taken in Beijing ripple across the world. Policies that address the energy transition, President Xi Jinping’s “new productive forces” in hi-tech industries and unified national markets are likely to have a direct impact on commodities supply and demand.

    Other areas that could provide cues for bulls and bears alike include the housing crisis, tax and debt issues, and rural reform.

    A flock of sheep roamed between solar panels at a solar photovoltaic power plant in Gonghe County at the Hainan Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture in northwest China’s Qinghai Province on June 29, 2024. Photo: Xinhua.

    Solar power consolidation could spur spending on grid

    The solar sector is going through a rough patch. Excess capacity and fierce competition have pushed prices to record lows. At the same time, the grid is struggling to cope with all the electricity generated by China’s world-beating roll-out of renewable energy.

    Solving the industry’s problems has become a leading priority for Beijing, which is counting on solar as one of the “new three” drivers of economic growth.

    If the plenum focuses on unifying China’s highly regional markets, then the electricity grid would be a great place to start. A lot of China’s solar power comes from mega-bases in the interior, far from the country’s major cities.

    Nationwide trading that allows clean power to be delivered to where it’s needed, based on market prices, would help solve the industry’s issues with bottlenecks and wastage.

    That could mean more spending on grid connections, which would also help raise demand for metals like copper and aluminium.

    Copper wires at the workshop of Tongling Nonferrous Metals Group Holdings in Tongling of Anhui province in eastern China on November 13, 2023. Photo: VCG.

    Is copper central to Beijing’s economic plan?

    Copper has retreated from a record high in May after buyers in China balked at higher costs while the economy is gripped by factory deflation and a protracted property crisis.

    The pullback in prices has restore consumption to some degree. But to sustain that, the market may need to see more evidence that copper demand is central to Beijing’s plans to revive the economy.

    Citigroup expects the plenum to deliver greater support from investment in the grid and clean energy, as well as more help for the property market. For all of copper’s green credentials, housing is still a major source of consumption, including from the appliances that often accompany a home purchase.

    Xi’s plan to nurture emerging tech-heavy industries that will help China pivot from the old economy to the new could also be a focus. In the transport sector, that means electric vehicles, for sure, said Li Xuezhi, head of Chaos Ternary Research Institute.

    But measures to foster growth in the so-called low-altitude economy – drones and even flying cars – as well as more prosaic initiatives, like digital traffic management systems, would also boost demand for metals like copper and tin, he said.

    Tsingshan’s Dinson Iron and Steel Company production plant in Manhize village in Mvuma, Zimbabwe on June 20, 2024. Photo: Reuters

    Support for property sector may do little to help steel

    The steel market remains a bastion of the old economy and has taken one of the biggest hits from the nation’s real estate woes.

    Even more property support at the plenum would hardly move the dial, because steel demand relies on new construction rather than cheaper mortgages or clearing unsold homes. And China simply does not need as many houses as it used to.
    But restructuring the country’s finances away from heavily indebted local authorities could deliver a win for the market, according to Vivek Dhar, an analyst at Commonwealth Bank of Australia.

    “A shift toward more central government debt and less local government debt opens up more spending potential,” he said.

    That could mean more powder for state spending on public works – catnip to steel markets – although it must be said that Beijing has so far avoided the massive splurges that have characterised previous downturns.

    And infrastructure spending is becoming less steel intensive as the economy matures in any case.

    A plant of China National Petroleum Corporation’s (CNPC’s) Jilin branch in Jilin, northeast China’s Jilin Province on April 20, 2021. Photo: Xinhua.

    Has China’s oil demand peaked?

    Few markets are as threatened by China’s swing to clean energy as crude oil. The nation’s rapid acceptance of electric vehicles (EVs) means demand in the world’s top importer may already have peaked.

    Further policy support for EVs will not be popular among oil refiners staring at unprecedented overcapacity.

    But the plenum could have another nasty surprise under the bonnet. Beijing may be considering measures to raise funds by broadening the tax take, an unwelcome development for the shadier corners of the industry that have already drawn scrutiny over their tax affairs, said Amy Sun, a project manager at GL Consulting in Guangzhou.

    China’s independent refiners, or teapots, have a history of skirting taxes to shore up their razor thin margins. About 40 per cent of petrol and diesel sold by teapots wasn’t properly taxed last year, according to research from China National Petroleum Corp., the nation’s biggest oil company.

    Reform would “motivate local authorities to monitor tax compliance by the independent refiners, leaving limited space for tax evasion,” Sun said.

    That could crush profits even further in a sector that accounts for about a quarter of the nation’s oil processing. The upshot may be fewer teapots, according to Sun – and a solution of sorts to the nation’s capacity glut.

    Machines harvested corns in Fujin City in northeast China’s Heilongjiang province on November 1, 2023. Photo: Xinhua.

    Grains

    Rural reform and food security continue to top Beijing’s agenda. The long view is that, as vast as the country is, it does not have enough farmland relative to the number of its citizens.

    China has just 7 per cent of the world’s arable land but feeds about 20 per cent of the global population, according to research from JPM Morgan Chase & Co., with any shortfalls made up by imports.

    But there are short-term stresses that Beijing may need to address. Farmers have seen their incomes slump as ample supply combines with poor demand to weaken prices for staples like wheat and corn.

    Freeing up more arable land, giving farmers the financial backing to take advantage, and buttressing the country’s ability to swiftly recover from extreme weather events, could all be among measures announced at the plenum.



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