What Happens to China Large-Cap (FXI) When Oil Drops Below $30?
What happens when WTI crude oil drops below $30? Producer stress, geopolitical implications, and disinflation effects.
How China Large-Cap (FXI) Responds
Scenario Background
WTI crude below $30/barrel represents extreme oversupply or demand destruction. US shale producers typically need $45-65/barrel to break even, so sustained prices below $30 force production curtailment, capex cuts, and bankruptcies. OPEC+ producers (particularly high-cost producers like Iran, Venezuela, Algeria) face fiscal stress at these levels.
Read full scenario analysis →Historical Context
WTI below $30 has occurred rarely: April 2020 briefly hit -$37 (front month contract expiry anomaly), 2016 saw $26 low, 2001 saw $17, and 1998 saw $10. The post-2014 period saw multiple dips below $30 as shale production forced price discovery. The 1986 collapse saw oil fall from $30 to $10 within months. Each sub-$30 episode has been relatively brief (6-12 months) as supply response followed.
What to Watch For
- •WTI below $30 sustained for 3+ months
- •OPEC+ production cuts announced
- •US rig count declining below 300
- •Energy HY defaults rising
- •Saudi Arabia fiscal stress signals
Other Assets When Oil Drops Below $30
Other Scenarios Affecting China Large-Cap (FXI)
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