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Oil price drop turns up heat on emerging market crude exporters
Macdonald Dzirutwe - Reuters -
15/04
A steep drop in crude oil prices largely due to U.S. President Donald Trump's tariffs will squeeze budgets of emerging market oil exporters, analysts said, while the potential economic slowdown could also curb any benefits for importers.
Summary
Companies
Oil price drop seen hitting exporters disproportionately
Angola faced a margin call after bond market rout
Nigeria's carry trade stops being attractive on oil fall
Gulf exporters likely to weather pressure better thanks to reserves, lower debt
NAIROBI/LAGOS, April 15 (Reuters) - A steep drop in crude oil prices largely due to U.S. President Donald Trump's tariffs will squeeze budgets of emerging market oil exporters, analysts said, while the potential economic slowdown could also curb any benefits for importers.
Concerns about the impact of a tit-for-tat trade war on global growth and demand for oil sent Brent crude prices plummeting by more than 20% within a week to a four-year low after Trump announced his sweeping tariffs on April 2.
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Prices have since recovered some ground to around $66 per barrel from below $60.
Turkey, India, Pakistan, Morocco and much of emerging Europe relying on oil imports are set to see some benefits from lower prices of crude. But oil exporting states including Gulf countries, Nigeria, Angola, Venezuela and to some degree Brazil, Colombia and Mexico will feel the pain of losing a chunk of hard-currency revenues, investors said.
"Losers will be hit relatively harder than the upside seen in importing countries," said Thomas Haugaard, portfolio manager for emerging market debt at Janus Henderson Investors.
"Oil exports often contribute considerably to public finances which will spill over into credit risk premiums."
Current oil prices are well below the average budget assumptions of $69 across main oil exporters' year-ahead projections, as calculated by Morgan Stanley, flagging Angola and Bahrain as the countries most sensitive.
Angola is already feeling the pinch.
It had to pay $200 million last week after JPMorgan issued a margin call on the southern African nation's $1 billion total return swap, the finance ministry said.... [Short citation of 8% of the original article]
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