By Duncan Miriri and MacDonald Dzirutwe
NAIROBI/LAGOS (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.
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. The total return swap is a loan issued by the lender last December, backed by Angola’s dollar bonds.
“The current context has affected the commodities market and emerging market Eurobonds, including the trading level of Angolan Eurobonds, and has triggered a margin call. Angola fulfilled its obligation on time and in cash,” the ministry told Reuters on Monday.
Angola opted for the collateralised loan to manage liabilities at a time when its Eurobond market access faced uncertainties due to high external debts to a range of foreign creditors including China and other commercial lenders.
Like other so-called frontier issuers, average yields on Angola’s dollar bonds have surged to double digits in the selloff of risky assets following the U.S. tariffs.
The International Monetary Fund classifies Angola’s debt as being at risk of high debt distress, but the Angolan government said the country’s debt trajectory remains solid and on a stable path.