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AT-A-GLANCE
- Many commodities follow the Li Keqiang index with lags of four to six quarters
- Industrials metals such as aluminum and copper show the strongest correlations
- Crude oil, corn, wheat and soybean oil also have strong correlations
- The Li Keqiang index is much more positively correlated with movements in commodities than China’s official GDP
Over the past 16 years, China’s “Li Keqiang” Index, has been highly correlated with the prices of many commodities including agricultural and energy products, and industrial metals. The pandemic period has been no exception. In fact, between 2005 and 2021, the index has consistently shown a more positive correlation with every major commodity than has China’s official GDP (Figure 1). This may be because it works especially well as a proxy for China’s manufacturing sector.
Figure 1: Commodities show a higher correlation with Li Keqiang than China’s GDP
The Li Keqiang Index includes only three components: rail freight volumes, electricity production, and bank loans. The index dipped sharply in Q1 2020 amid China’s lockdown, corresponding to a sharp drop in the prices of most commodities. It then rebounded to show year-on-year economic growth rates of as high as 17% by early 2021. During this period, commodity prices surged with the prices of many goods rising 100% or more off their 2020 lows. In recent months China’s growth has slowed sharply to around 5-6% and commodity markets have tended to see more sideways price action.
Prior to the pandemic, the Li Keqiang Index showed a great deal more variability than China’s official GDP, which spent many years growing at an annualized pace of around 6.5-7.0% per year. The Li Keqiang index showed much sharper slowdowns in 2009 and in 2014-16 than the official GDP did, while showing much stronger economic growth from 2010-12 and 2017-19 (Figure 2). With a few exceptions like gold, commodity markets tended to follow what the Li Keqiang index was doing – sometimes with a significant lag of up to one year or more.
Figure 2: Pre-pandemic, the Li Keqiang Index showed greater variability than China’s official GDP
Going into 2022, the main downside risk for China is its property sector, where construction activity is slowing, and real estate prices have begun to decline. Balancing against this risk is easier monetary policy. At a time when many central banks have either begun to tighten policy or appear potentially poised to do so soon, the People’s Bank of China is actively easing monetary policy, having recently reduced its reserve requirement ratio for the second time this year (Figure 3). A lower reserve requirement ratio might boost the availability loans to China’s corporations. Bank loans account for 40% of the index.
Figure 3: China is easing monetary policy even as the rest of the world tightens
Crude Oil: energy markets pay a great deal of attention to the swing producers of oil, but China may well be the swing consumer. Pre-pandemic oil consumption was fairly stable in Europe and the U.S., but it grew rapidly in China, especially during periods when China’s economy was growing quickly. As such, it comes as little surprise that crude oil prices follow the Li Keqiang index, and sometimes with long lags. Peak correlation for oil comes 4-5 quarters after a change in the Li Keqiang index (Appendix Figures 1 and 2).
Appendix Figure 1
Appendix Figure 2
Industrials metals: aluminum and copper show the strongest correlation to the Li Keqiang index. Unlike most other commodities, the metals have shown a strong contemporaneous correlation to changes in the Li Keqiang index as well as strong lagged correlations. That said, the correlation peaks at around one year (four quarters) for both metals (Appendix figures 3-6).
Appendix Figure 3
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Appendix Figure 10
Agricultural goods: corn, soybean oil and wheat demonstrate among the highest correlations with the Li Keqiang index and the correlation tends to peak five to six quarters after a move in the index –somewhat later than the peak correlation for metals and energy goods. Soymeal, like gold, tends to have a negative correlation with Li Keqiang. The difference is that corn, wheat and soybean oil can be used as biofuels and tend to correlate positively with crude oil prices. As such, they may be more heavily influenced by changes in the pace of China’s growth rate. By contrast, soybean meal is used primarily as animal feed and, like lean hog prices, shows little response to changes in the pace of Chinese growth. Finally, soybeans fall somewhere between bean oil, which is strongly correlated, and soymeal, which shows little correlation (Appendix figures 11-20).
Appendix Figure 11
Appendix Figure 12
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Appendix Figure 14
Appendix Figure 15
Appendix Figure 17
Appendix Figure 19
Appendix Figure 20
The bottom line is that variations in the pace of China’s growth rate have continued to reverberate through commodity markets, often with significant lags of one year or more. For the moment, many commodity markets may still be benefitting from the extraordinary rebound in China’s manufacturing sector in the second half of 2020 and the first half of 2021. The future of China’s manufacturing growth depends on which forces prove more powerful: booming demand for manufactured goods and an easier monetary policy or a sharp slowdown in the pace of growth in China’s real estate and construction sectors. Data from the second half of 2021 suggest that the pace of growth in China has slowed substantially and, if the past is any guide, this might suggest a somewhat softer demand for many commodities in 2022.
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