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Case File
d-36736House OversightOther

Bank of America Merrill Lynch memo outlines commodities strategy and mentions Trump administration officials

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #014695
Pages
1
Persons
1
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The passage is an internal meeting invitation that discusses market outlook and references high‑profile officials (Saudi OPEC, Trump cabinet members) but provides no concrete allegations, financial tr Meeting scheduled with Francisco Blanch, head of Global Commodities at BAML. Discussion topics include OPEC production cuts, Saudi policy, US shale outlook, and potential Trump Mentions specific cab

This document is from the House Oversight Committee Releases.

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commoditiesfinancial-marketsopecpolicy-impacttrump-administrationmarket-analysishouse-oversightenergy-policy
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Extracted Text (OCR)

EFTA Disclosure
Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
From: Ens, Amanda i Sent: 1/27/2017 8:03:49 PM To: jeffrey E. [[email protected]]; Richard Kahn Subject: Meet with our Global Head of Commodities - Monday at 10:15am at One Bryant Park Attachments: image001.png Importance: — High Please let me know if you’re interested in joining a small group meeting with our head of Global Commodities. Apologies for the short notice but they just created this based on client request. ° Monday, January 30 at 10:15am at One Bryant Park (42" St & 6" Ave), Room 5F Francisco Blanch is a managing director and head of Global Commodities and Derivatives Research. Regular Research publications include: The Global Energy Weekly, Commodity Portfolio Monthly and Quantitative Investment Strategies Monthly. Research produced by the Commodities, Asset Allocation, and Global Derivatives teams has been recognized by Institutional Investor, Extel, Greenwich, Bloomberg, or Energy Risk, among others. Previously he was Head of Global Asset Allocation Research. Prior to joining Merrill Lynch, Blanch was an energy economist focusing on global oil & gas in the commodity research group at Goldman Sachs & Co. and consulted for the European Commission and other public and private organizations. Blanch has a masters degree in public administration from Harvard University and a doctorate in economics from Complutense University of Madrid. Key topics of discussion: 1 — OPEC / Saudi Policy - OPEC agreed to cut production by 1.2mb/d, along with 600kb/d from non-OPEC producers. Francisco believes Saudi’s key objective will be to push the oil forward curve into backwardation to 1)lower global refinery margins 2) lower prices for forward sellers and prevent capex spending 3) reduce downside oil price risks. Francisco believes it is in OPEC’s best interest to comply with the stated cuts, and thins Saudi remains under significant pressure to either achieve higher oil prices, or inevitably de-peg the Riyal. 2 - Oil fundamentals - OPEC’s cut has significant implications for supply/demand balances and throws the global market into a meaningful deficit for 2017. We estimate the global market will be in a 560kb/d deficit throughout 2017. US Shale output remains a headwind for a rebound in global balances and will vary with price. Given our $59/bbl 2017 outlook for WTI, Francisco believes shale will reverse its current trend before rebounding sequentially by 660kb/d between 2Q17 and 4Q17. 3 — US Energy Policy / Trump Administration — Francisco views the likelihood for Trump’s administration to implement a border adjustment tax to be extremely low, but recognizes that if a tax was imposed, it would have profound implications for EM demand and the WTI/Br arb. The appointment of key cabinet members Rex Tillerson, Rick Perry, and Scott Pruitt pose significant implications for the US energy sector. 4 — Commodity Macro — Forward inflation expectations around the world have jumped sharply since Trump’s victory. So far, rising inflation and steeper yield curves have neutralized the strong dollar, pushing commodities higher. We believe the recent breakdown in USD/Oil correlation since OPEC/Fed can persist so long as inflation expectations remain supported. However, a toxic mix of much faster-than-anticipated US interest rate hikes, a much stronger USD, and a trade war with China pose risks. Amanda Ens Director Bank of America Merrill Lynch Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Incorporated One Bryant Park, 5th Floor, New York, NY 10036 Phone: V obilc: i’

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