The head of the world’s biggest mining company intensified his warnings that U.S. trade protectionism under President Donald Trump would threaten global growth and the fight against poverty.

While applauding efforts by the administration to boost U.S. growth and infrastructure spending, BHP Billiton Ltd. Chief Executive Officer Andrew Mackenzie said the consequences of restricting free trade would be “pretty bloody awful.”

BHP, which is also the largest overseas investor in U.S. shale, “is very anxious about the possibility that instead of that good leadership, we could have bad leadership from the U.S. on global free trade," the Scottish-born executive said in an interview with Bloomberg TV at a conference in Florida on Monday. 

Global long-term growth is about 3 percent but needs to be 4 percent to get more people out of poverty, he said. “And that won’t happen under a protectionist regime and protectionist leadership in the U.S.”

Mackenzie and Chairman Jacques Nasser met Trump in New York last month, before his inauguration, to discuss the resources sector. Melbourne-based BHP is a partner in Arizona’s Resolution copper project with Rio Tinto Group, which has urged the new administration to accelerate approvals.

Trade-War Scenarios

Mackenzie’s concerns echo those from leaders of the world’s biggest banks, which have warned investors of Trump’s potential to roil markets and slow global trade. Standard Chartered Plc Chief Executive Officer Bill Winters, the former head of JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s investment bank, said last week that he’s mapping out scenarios “if things get very messy and we get into the trade-war zone.”

So far, many investors appear unruffled, driving equity gauges including the Dow Jones Industrial Average to record highs. Stocks have risen as corporate results and European growth figures boosted optimism that the Trump administration will only bolster already-strengthening economies.

Improved demand prospects have also fueled a rally in commodity prices which, in the case of copper, has been supported by supply disruptions in Chile and Indonesia.
After years of cutbacks to cope with low prices, the industry is trying to figure out what to do with the windfall, Mackenzie said, and how much should go back to shareholders versus being reinvested to secure future production.

“My sense is that people will be quite reluctant to invest given what’s gone on,” he said. Even so, BHP would make acquisitions for the right kind of ore bodies he said, but “they’re very hard to come by.”

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