Energy & Precious Metals - Weekly Review and Outlook

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By Barani Krishnan

Investing.com -- There’s information and then there’s disinformation. This past week, governments to markets were trying to figure out how much information - and disinformation - there is to China’s zero-Covid policy and its extended lockdown of Shanghai.

Déjà vu of a 2020 China mired in pandemic catastrophe weighed on the sentiment in oil this week, even as the EU-Russia face-off over Ukraine suggests crude prices have little way to go but up.

Global oil benchmark Brent and U.S. crude’s West Texas Intermediate, or WTI, benchmark settled down on Friday, logging a third weekly loss in four, reacting to the Covid clampdown on Shanghai, as well as the prospect of weaker global growth and higher interest rates.

According to official government data released this week, China’s economy grew 4.8% year on year in January-March.

But the IMF and banks including UBS, Bank of America and Barclays this week downgraded their growth forecasts for China in 2022.

Nomura’s forecast was especially pessimistic, a growth of just 3.9%, that would mark China’s slowest growth rate since 1990 – apart from 2020, when the pandemic derailed the global economy.

Economists said despite the positive first-quarter data, storm clouds were on the horizon as retail sales, a key indicator of economic health, fell 3.5% in March compared with the same period last year.

The gloomy outlook provided a temperature check of the world’s second-largest economy, while dubious Covid-19 death rates focused attention on Beijing’s reputation for secrecy and narrative control at all costs.

But what really bothers analysts is that President Xi Jinping’s intent to force China to hew to a zero-tolerance approach towards the virus comes long after the rest of the world has moved on from the pandemic.

In most countries, including the United States, guidelines stipulate that any death where Covid-19 is a factor or contributor is counted as a Covid-related death.

But in China, health authorities count only those who died directly from Covid-19, excluding those whose underlying conditions were worsened by the virus, said Zhang Zuo-Feng, an epidemiologist at the University of California, Los Angeles.

“If the deaths could be ascribed to underlying disease, they will always report it as such and will not count it as a Covid-related death, that’s their pattern for many years,” said Jin Dong-yan, a virologist at the University of Hong Kong’s medical school.

That narrower criteria means China's Covid-19 death toll will always be significantly lower than those of many other nations.