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« on: January 13, 2015, 02:04:55 pm »
I get a daily report from my OTC oil broker in London every day. From time to time I might post it here....
Oil bears firmly in control
Equity indices suffered a volatile start to the week as yet another big slump in oil prices weighed on investor appetite for risk and dragged energy shares lower. Risk assets did appear to be rebounding in early trading on hopes that the Federal Reserve would extend its time frame for the eventual normalisation of interest rates following last week’s mixed US jobs report. However, fears of a global economic slowdown compounded by further oil price weakness along with concerns that the latest US corporate earnings will fall short of expectations ensured that caution dominated market sentiment. Risk aversion looks set to continue this morning as oil resumes its downward path whilst investors shrug-off stronger-than-expected Chinese trade data.
Global oil supply shows no signs of let-up, so far
This week will see the release of the latest set of monthly reports on supply/demand. We will find out whether there is any recognition that global demand has been stimulated by falling oil prices over the last month and whether OPEC believes that it has started to reclaim market share at the expense of non-OPEC suppliers. The EIA will release its report this afternoon, OPEC on Thursday and the IEA on Friday. Below we take a look at the latest available supply data, recent changes in Official Selling Prices from Middle Eastern oil producers and how slumping oil prices have altered price forecasts for this year.
Energy Intelligence published their December global output figures at the end of last week and it did nothing to encourage oil bulls. They put global oil supply at 96.717 mbpd last month, up 982,000 bpd on November. Non-OPEC supply grew by less than 300,000 bpd (+0.51%) with the US producing 87,000 bpd more in December than the month before. OPEC output jumped 612,000 bpd (+2.04%). OPEC crude oil market share increased from 31.30% in November to 31.61% in December whilst the cartel's share including NGL/condensates and other oil rose from 38.23% to 38.55% during the same period.
Looking at the latest OSPs for February from Iraq, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia, the message is that there is relatively good demand emerging from Asia whilst Europe and the US are over supplied. The above-mentioned Persian Gulf producers all increased their differentials to the Far East for next month whilst cutting them for the rest of the world. Asian buyers will have to pay around 50-60 cents/bbl more for their crude purchases in February than this month whilst the cut to Europe and the US varies between $2.10/bbl (Arab Extra Light and Light Mediterranean Ras Tanura) and 10 cents/bbl (Arab Extra Light US Gulf). We have learnt overnight that Iran also raised its OSP to Asian customers. They will sell their light crude 60 cents/bbl and their heavy crude 65 cents/bbl more expensive than in January.
With global supply staying high in December and Persian Gulf OPEC producers clearly determined to stick to their strategy, oil price forecasters have had no option but to revise down their latest estimates for this year. The latest revision came from Goldman Sachs who published their updated report yesterday. The investment bank cut its 2015 WTI forecast from $73.75/bbl to $47.15/bbl and Brent from $83.75/bbl to $50.40/bbl. The price pressure is expected to be most pronounced in the first quarter with the three-month forecast for Brent standing at $42 against a price curve for this period of currently around $49/bbl. SocGen and Citi have also cut their 2015 price forecast this year.
Money managers are resilient
Whilst there are no fundamental signs emerging that oil prices are close to their bottom, money managers are taking a different view. Financial investors in both WTI and Brent increased their net length last week by 3,000 and 15,000 contracts respectively, despite a price drop of more than $6/bbl during the latest reporting period.
In fact, Brent net length has increased in 11 out of the last 14 weeks even though prices have fallen from $94 /bbl to $51/bbl. Although net speculative length has been rising, its composition has undergone significant changes. When speculators were least exposed in Brent at the end of September last year, they were net long 36,704 lots composed of gross length of 194,099 contracts and a gross short position of 157,395 contracts. Last week net length stood at 140,169 contracts consisting of 254,232 lots of long positions and 114,063 lots of short positions.
This was the first week that saw not only a significant reduction in short positions but also a more than 26,000 lots increase in long positions. In other words, net length grew not only because of short-covering but also due to fresh long positions entering the market. Whilst this seems bullish further price weakness could easily force these longs abandon their positions in the near future. Yesterday’s price fall did nothing to make them feel better as WTI lost $2.29/bbl, Brent $2.68/bbl, Heating Oil 489 points and RBOB 487 points. In a sign of demand revival China’s crude oil imports hit a record high of 7.15 mbpd in December. This, however, seems to have failed to change the prevailing sentiment as Brent has lost another $2/bbl this morning. At the moment the bottom is not in sight