|

The commodities feed: Secondary tariffs on Venezuelan Oil boost prices

Risk assets rose amid suggestions the Trump administration will take a more measured approach with tariffs. Oil got an additional boost after the US announced secondary tariffs on buyers of Venezuelan oil.

Energy – Secondary tariffs on Venezuelan Oil buyers

Oil prices rose yesterday after President Trump announced 25% US tariffs on any country buying Venezuelan oil. The news helped ICE Brent break above US$73/bbl, settling at its highest since late February. Oil, along with broader risk assets, also benefited from suggestions the Trump administration may take a more targeted approach with reciprocal tariffs.

In recent years, Venezuela increased oil production and exports as the Biden administration eased sanctions, providing a waiver to Chevron to operate in the country. Venezuela produced 918k b/d of crude oil in February, up from 760k b/d in 2023, while it exports around 750k b/d. As such, this move could mean a fairly sizeable tightening in the global oil balance.

The largest buyers of Venezuelan crude oil are China, the US and India. However, the volumes to the US should stop as Chevron’s sanction waiver to operate in Venezuela expires on 27 May. Also, tariffs will start on 2 April, the same day broader reciprocal levies may be introduced. This should be supportive for heavier crude oil grades, of which Venezuela is a key exporter.

Metals – Sentiment over tariffs improves

Hopes Donald Trump’s next round of tariffs, due to be announced on 2 April , could be more measured supported industrial metals prices at the start of the new week. On Friday, Trump signalled “flexibility” in his plan for reciprocal tariffs. Reports over the weekend suggest tariffs could be narrower in scope and potentially exempt some industries. Copper is trading just below $10,000/t after advancing above this key level late last week. In February, Trump instructed the US Commerce Department to mull potential copper import tariffs. That triggered a sharp rally in copper prices and has traders shifting metal from global London Metal Exchange (LME) warehouses to the US. Copper is likely to remain supported amid the front-running of tariffs. And tightening of the ex-US physical market as more metal makes its way to the US ahead of any potential levies.

Agriculture – Favourable weather for Cocoa crops

Weather conditions in most of the cocoa-producing regions in West Africa continue to support prices. Recent reports suggest that the weather has become favourable in some regions -- including Ivory Coast, Ghana, and Cameroon -- with decent rains helping cocoa pod development. Meanwhile, cocoa arrivals at Ivorian ports totalled 13,161 tonnes over the last week, which takes cumulative arrivals so far this season to 1.43m tonnes, up around 12% year on year.

Read the original analysis: The commodities feed: Secondary tariffs on Venezuelan Oil boost prices

Author

ING Global Economics Team

ING Global Economics Team

ING Economic and Financial Analysis

From Trump to trade, FX to Brexit, ING’s global economists have it covered. Go to ING.com/THINK to stay a step ahead.

More from ING Global Economics Team
Share:

Markets move fast. We move first.

Orange Juice Newsletter brings you expert driven insights - not headlines. Every day on your inbox.

By subscribing you agree to our Terms and conditions.

Editor's Picks

EUR/USD climbs toward 1.1800 on broad USD weakness

EUR/USD gathers bullish momentum and advances toward 1.1800 in the second half of the day on Tuesday. The US Dollar weakens and helps the pair stretch higher after the employment report showed that Nonfarm Payrolls declined by 105,000 in October before rising by 64,000 in November.

GBP/USD climbs to fresh two-month high above 1.3400

GBP/USD gains traction in the American session and trades at its highest level since mid-October above 1.3430. The British Pound benefits from upbeat PMI data, while the US Dollar struggles to find demand following the mixed employment figures and weaker-than-forecast PMI prints, allowing the pair to march north.

Gold extends its consolidative phase around $4,300

Gold trades in positive above $4,300 after spending the first half of the day under bearish pressure. XAU/USD capitalizes on renewed USD weakness after the jobs report showed that the Unemployment Rate climbed to 4.6% in November and the PMI data revealed a loss of growth momentum in the private sector in December. 

XRP dips as bearish pressure persists despite ETF growth

Ripple is finding footing above $1.90 at the time of writing on Tuesday after a bearish wave swept across the broader cryptocurrency market, building on persistent negative sentiment.

Ukraine-Russia in the spotlight once again

Since the start of the week, gold’s price has moved lower, but has yet to erase the gains made last week. In today’s report we intend to focus on the newest round of peace talks between Russia and Ukraine, whilst noting the release of the US Employment data later on day and end our report with an update in regards to the tensions brewing in Venezuela.

BNB Price Forecast: BNB slips below $855 as bearish on-chain signals and momentum indicators turn negative

BNB, formerly known as Binance Coin, continues to trade down around $855 at the time of writing on Tuesday, after a slight decline the previous day. Bearish sentiment further strengthens as BNB’s on-chain and derivatives data show rising retail activity.