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Three Reasons China is Positioned to be the Oil Sector’s Next Big Profit Play

By Keith Fitz-Gerald
Investment Director
Money Morning/The Money Map Report

If you’re looking for the next “Big Oil” play, bet on Beijing.

As we’ve been reporting for the past several years, China has been on a global commodities shopping spree, which includes locking up every source of oil that it can. The Red Dragon has cut deals in Africa, South America Russia and the Middle East – and won’t stop there. Even the mainstream news media is finally becoming aware of this crucial trend.

But here’s the thing. It’s not enough just to know that this is happening. In order to profit, an investor really needs to understand why it’s happening – and to invest accordingly. Investors who lack this insight may make the strategic misstep of betting heavily (or exclusively) on the Western heavyweights – Exxon Mobil Corp. (NYSE: XOM), BP PLC (NYSE ADR: BP) or Royal Dutch Shell (NYSE ADR: RDS.A, RDS.B) – while ignoring the oil sector’s real growth story, which is China.

Just this year alone:

  • China and Russia have signed a multi-billion-dollar, intergovernmental agreement to construct an oil line from Russia that will supply oil directly to China. Actually seven agreements in one, the terms depict a deal worth trillions of dollars – including a 20-year oil contract to pump Russian oil to the Chinese market. In return, China has agreed to provide a total of $25 billion in loans to Russian oil companies Transneft and OAO Rosneft Oil Co. China even gets a cut of Rosneft’s production, as part of the deal.

  • In Africa, China’s CNOOC Ltd. (NYSE ADR: CEO) and Sinopec Shanghai Petrochemical Co. (NYSE ADR: SHI) are teaming up to buy a $1.3 billion stake in Angolan offshore development rights from U.S.-based Marathon Oil Corp. (NYSE: MRO). A key point of note: Angola – historically one of Exxon’s favorite investment targets – has recently overtaken Nigeria as Africa’s biggest oil producer.

  • While noting that it’s hardly a done deal, The Wall Street Journal did report earlier this month that China National Petroleum Corp. (CNPC) is interested in buying all or a part of Argentina’s YPF SA (NYSE ADR: YPF) for $14.5 billion.

  • In Africa, China’s CNOOC Ltd. (NYSE ADR: CEO) and Sinopec Shanghai Petrochemical Co. (NYSE ADR: SHI) are teaming up to buy a $1.3 billion stake in Angolan offshore development rights from U.S.-based Marathon Oil Corp. (NYSE: MRO). A key point of note: Angola – historically one of Exxon’s favorite investment targets – has recently overtaken Nigeria as Africa’s biggest oil producer.

  • Reports continue to circulate that CNPC will be taking the majority stake in Iraq’s Rumaila oilfield from BP. Rumaila is Iraq’s biggest oil field, producing more than a million barrels of crude oil per day.

  • And China has become quite chummy with Brazil’s Petroleo Brasileiro (NYSE ADR: PBR). Petrobras is developing a huge new offshore field – one of the biggest new discoveries in decades, in fact – and any deal would include a production-supply agreement.

This flurry of deals hasn’t been a surprise to Money Morning readers. Even so, it’s worth taking a moment to look at some of the key catalysts behind many of these deals. Let’s look at the Top Three:

  • Nervous Reserves: China is sitting on the world’s largest pile of cash – more than $2.3 trillion by some estimates. With an estimated 70% of that, or about $1.61 trillion, in U.S. dollars, there is no question it’s a huge source of financial firepower strength at a time when global markets are uncertain, if not downright weak. But it’s also a liability, too, in that China can’t diminish its high-concentration of greenback holdings without pushing the dollar off a cliff. So buying oil is a great way for China to diversify its reserves without kneecapping poor old Uncle Sam.

  • Those Not-So-Free “Free” Markets: China has less faith in the “free” markets than the West does. Ironically, the United States and other Western powers are partly to blame for Beijing’s free-market skepticism. For instance, not only did the United States slam the door in China’s face when China tried to buy Unocal Corp. [now a part of Chevron Corp. (NYSE: CVX)]  a few years back, but when former U.S. President George W. Bush invaded Iraq, the war summarily cut off China’s ability to source oil from that Middle East member of the OPEC 12 (the Organization of the Oil Producing and Exporting Countries). Prior to the invasion, Beijing really didn’t consider the need to diversify China’s foreign-oil sources so our military action prompted their economic reaction. Now the genie’s out of the bottle.

  • Peerless Perspective: China’s leaders know that they must lock up oil supplies at a time when the Western world can’t seemingly be bothered to understand that this is a zero-sum game. In other words, China views the global financial crisis as an opportunity to be exploited for economic gain and the security of its people, not as a problem to be solved. China understands the big picture, and even though we apparently painted it, the West doesn’t.  By scouring the earth for oil at a time when the West is hamstrung by the global financial crisis, not only is China able to strike more favorable deals at more favorable prices, but it’s locking up huge supplies of commodities for its own use for years, even decades, to come. In doing so – and this is the part of the equation so many experts don’t get – these resources are no longer available for our use here in the United States, which has major supply and pricing implications for this market.

Bamboozled by the Western media – which has perpetuated the “global-recession-means-lower-demand” story – it simply hasn’t dawned on most people here in the West that China doesn’t care about the major long-term impact this global buying spree will have on our economy.
Besides, this whole story thesis is flat out wrong. While the recession is definitely dampening our use of oil and gasoline, China’s oil demand is growing by more than 20% a year. And of the 8 million barrels a day that China already uses, half comes from imports. Beijing sees those as troubling statistics, which means that China:

  • Absolutely must lock up as many significant external supplies oil as possible right now.

  • And must accelerate its domestic exploration-and-processing efforts at warp speed.

Nor is this a static situation. China’s auto market is growing by 50% a year. It’s already the world’s largest, having passed the United States earlier this year. In fact, according to some estimates, China will have more cars on its roads in the next 20 years than all those we currently have in this country – even if you include the engine-less “restoration project” your next-door neighbor’s son has sitting under an oak tree in their back yard.

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China’s never known high prices and its consumers haven’t either. So they don’t care like we do about what “price” is posted at the pump. Sure, you can argue as many Western analysts do, that China’s fuel is highly subsidized, but so what? That’s a moot point. Consumers who remember what it was like back when gasoline was 99 cents a gallon aren’t going to grouse about how it now costs $6 a gallon – these newly minted motorists will merely see gasoline as just part of the cost of having a car.

Because it understands its need for continual economic progress – as well as the role oil has to play to make that a reality – China is doing whatever it takes to guarantee future supplies, including structuring deals in ways that have caught Western companies by surprise. For instance, China’s companies are looking at how they can get a deal done by giving the other party something it actually needs. Moreover, in a move that’s as frustrating to Western leaders as it is surprising, many of these deals come with no strings attached. I suppose you could call it the “Red Dragon Option” – although Western firms would do well to embrace these as potential Harvard Business Review case studies.

After reading this overview, a U.S investor might want to conclude that China’s already got this one wrapped up and that “any resistance is futile.” But that’s not necessarily true. While China’s grown by leaps and bounds in terms of its financial sophistication when it comes to these deals, the country still lacks the relative exploration-and-production technology to go after the deep-water reserves and complicated fields where most of the still-undiscovered oil remains. Those are also the same kinds of locations where natural gas may be the better bet.

And that suggests that investments in both sectors – including deep-water drillers and companies that specialize in natural-gas liquification -may pay off for investors anxious to dine with the Red Dragon, instead of being listed as an entrée on the menu.

[Editor's Note: The global economic recovery will create an estimated $300 trillion worth of global-investing-profit opportunities. To find out how to capitalize and profit, you just need to know where to look.

And for that, you need a guide. As part of a new report, Money Morning Investment Director Keith Fitz-Gerald details "the $300 trillion global recovery that nobody's talking about" - as well as the six "lifetime" profit plays this powerful global money wave will open up to those who understand what's really playing out on the global investing stage right now.  To read this report, please click here.]

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7 Responses to “Three Reasons China is Positioned to be the Oil Sector’s Next Big Profit Play”

  1. P. Denaco says:

    Nice job hitting the “big boys” US investors are likely to overlook! Also, I commend your use of US trading symbols.

  2. William Patalon III says:

    Thanks very much for taking the time to comment. And we particularly appreciate the specific kind of feedback you offered here.

    We decided, from the outset, that we not only wanted Money Morning to be informative, we also wanted it to be easy to use. Including the ticker symbols, as well as the hyperlinks to the stock quotes offered by Google Finance, was actually one of our key early decisions.

    Thanks, too, for your comments on Keith’s story. We will continue to look for story angles that you hopefully will informative and useful — as well as unique (meaning you won’t find these stories anywhere else).

    Again, comments such as these really help us as we continue to tweak our offerings. So thanks very much for taking the time to post them.

    Respecfully;

    William Patalon III
    Executive Editor
    Money Morning

  3. [...] (A): That’s right. As I noted in a column earlier this week, China has gone on a global shopping spree in the commodities sector, and is locking up long-term [...]

  4. Karuppaiah.M.Kart says:

    It is good ton here the china is the big apitisier of Crude and its products.U see i m supplying plenty of Asphalt/Bitumen for Chinese from gulf and my experience is the same and in future the r the no:uno in energy sector.My contact MohammedKart.mob:+973 36774869. Signd on 20082009..i.e.,August 20,2009.

  5. Smitty says:

    Did you catch the story about the US ex-import bank loaning Brazil’s Petrobras $10 billion, and get this the Brazillians are gonna use the fund to cut out American oil companies and re-nationalize oil resources for free healthcare to buy Socialist votes so Brazil will shortly be a full blown Socialsit state like Venezuela. The Brazillians have already begun the process of “cutting out” foreign investors now that they have “big stupid money” and are withdrawing offshore oil drilling contracts.

    Americans are now directly funding their own adversaries.

  6. Douglas Orchard says:

    As a retired Brit your Company codes are just for the NYSE– could you include the London SE codes where possible to make it easier for us Brits to make investments, please.

  7. [...] Money Morning: Three Reasons China is Positioned to be the Oil Sector’s Next Big Profit Play [...]

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From New China Trader:

 The Financial Bonanza That’s Just About to Hit

Two years ago I stopped in the lounge at the Four Seasons in Shanghai having a drink after a long day of meetings. Sitting next to me at the bar was the CEO of a Silicon Valley company that had just outsourced its entire manufacturing operations to China.

As we watched the hustling crowd going by on the sidewalk outside, he asked me if I had ever seen anything like the energy in this city.

“Never,” I told him.

“My kids are never gonna know what hit ‘em,” he said. “And my grandkids,” he added, shaking his head, “are toast.”

Some people resent this. I’m not one of them. The world is what it is and you can either participate in it and profit from it or sit back and complain.

The U.S. economy will eventually be eclipsed by China’s. You and I can’t change that. So my goal is to make as much money off it as possible. And to help you do the same.