China's fossil-fuel phase-out fails to alarm big oil investors

11th September 2017 By: Bloomberg

HONG KONG – In the first day of trading after China said it’s working on a deadline to end sales of fossil-fuel-powered vehicles, shares are holding ground in the oil companies that stand to lose out.

The listed units of China’s big three oil companies – PetroChina, Cnooc and China Petroleum & Chemical – all posted gains in early trading on Monday in Hong Kong, most likely buoyed by a tick up in crude prices. China Petroleum, better known as Sinopec, which is also trading Monday without the right to receive its next dividend, rose 1.7% after stripping out the impact of the payout.

Plug-in cars are forecast to account for a third of the global auto fleet by 2040 and displace about eight-million barrels a day of oil production, according to Bloomberg New Energy Finance estimates before China’s announcement. The boss of Royal Dutch Shell has warned liquids demand could peak in the early 2030s as electrification accelerates.

Whether China’s announcement changes the outlook for oil demand remains to be seen, but for the time being, investors in the nation’s producers are holding firm. Not so, however, the companies that mine the lithium used in electric vehicle batteries.

Perth-based Galaxy Resources, which began exports to China this year, advanced as much as 6.8% in Sydney, while Brisbane-based Orocobre, with an operation in Argentina, climbed as much as 3.4%. China’s Jiangxi Ganfeng Lithium jumped as much as 6.3% and Tianqi Lithium added as much as 3.5%.