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Guldet fortsätter i sin breda konsolidering

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Teknisk analys på guld från Axier EquitiesI den tekniska analysen av Guldet den 6 mars, var priset 1 707,20 USD/oz och vi stod just i sviterna efter det kraftiga raset på 6 procent som vi fick bevittna på skottdagen. Vår inställning vid det aktuella datumet var att vi kunde få se en kort rekyl upp med några procent, men att risken för nya nedgångar därefter var överhängande.

1 625 USD/oz var det stöd som vi i första hand riktade uppmärksamheten mot. Och på längre sikt var det 1 526 USD/oz som var det viktiga golvet i konsolideringen på veckobasis. 1 804 USD/oz var taket i denna konsolidering (se diagrammet). Först när någon av dessa nivåer bröts, skulle en långsiktig signal falla på plats igen. Fram till dess räknade vi med en fortsatt sidledes rörelse inom detta breda område.

En blick i backspegeln idag visar oss att vi från datumet vid förra analysen fick en uppgång på någon procent, men sedan vände guldet snabbt ned igen. Vårt mål vid 1 625 USD/oz träffades den 22 mars, då lägsta notering denna dag blev just 1 625,0 USD/oz.

Från denna nivå startade guldet ett nytt uppgångsförsök som lyfte priset till 1 697 USD/oz den efterföljande veckan. Vid denna nivå tog dock kraften slut igen och en ny nedgång påbörjades, där vi under innevarande vecka fått se stödet vid 1 625 USD/oz brytas, och istället blev 1 613 USD/oz lägsta notering. Det långsiktiga stödet vid 1 526 USD/oz kommer med andra ord närmare, även om det återstår en bit.

På veckobasis kvarstår den tidigare prognosen; Guldet konsoliderar inom området 1 526 USD/oz och 1 804 USD/oz. Det är först när någon av dessa nivåer bryts, som vi får signaler om den långsiktiga utvecklingen för guldet.

Trend för guldkurs - Graf 2012

Vi har nu också fått två fallande toppar i år; Den första på 1 792,7 USD/oz den 28 februari och den andra på 1 696,9 USD/oz den 27 mars. Med 30 dagar mellan två fallande toppar, har vi fått ytterligare tekniska signaler på att uppgången har tagit en paus och att guldet behöver hämta mer kraft, innan det kan bli tal om några långsiktiga uppgångar igen.

Kortsiktigt ser vi dock nu att guldet bör närma sig en botten. Eftersom volatiliteten är hög just nu är det svårt att sätta en exakt nivå på vart vi kommer att få se startskottet för nya uppgångar. Men i rekylen upp, som bör påbörjas inom kort, är marstoppen på 1 696,9 USD/oz lite extra intressant att bevaka.

Du kan handla GULD med följande minifutures:
Uppgång MINILONG GULD Omed en hävstång kring 5,44
Nedgång: MINISHRT GULD R med en hävstång kring 4,20

Läs mer om minifutures på RBS hemsida

[box]Denna analys publiceras på Råvarumarknaden.se med tillstånd och i samarbete med Axier Equities.[/box]

Ansvarsfriskrivning

Den tekniska analysen har producerats av Axier Equities. Informationen är rapporterad i god tro och speglar de aktuella åsikterna hos medarbetarna, dessa kan ändras utan varsel. Axier Equities tar inget ansvar för handlingar baserade på informationen.

Om Axier Equities

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Analys

Brent crude will pull back if the US climbs down its threats towards Iran

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SEB - analysbrev på råvaror

Brent crude rose 2.7% last week to $65.88/b with a gain on Friday of 2.8%. Unusually cold US winter weather with higher heating oil demand and likely US oil supply outages was probably part of the bullish drive at the end of last week. But US threats towards Iran with USS Abraham Lincoln being deployed to the Middle East was probably more important.

Bjarne Schieldrop, Chief analyst commodities, SEB
Bjarne Schieldrop, Chief analyst commodities, SEB

Brent crude has maintained the gains it got from 8 January onwards when it rose from the $60/b-line and up to around $65/b on the back of Iranian riots where the US added fuel to the fire by threatening to attack Iran in support of the rioters. This morning Brent has tested the upside to $66.54/b. That is short of the $66.82/b from 14 January and Brent has given back part of the early gains this morning and is currently trading close to unchanged versus Friday’s close with a dollar decline of 0.4% not enough to add much boost to the price yet at least.

Brent crude front-month prices in USD/b

Brent crude front-month prices in USD/b
Source: Bloomberg

The rally in Brent crude from the $60/b-line to its current level of $65-66/b seems to be tightly linked to an elevated risk of the US attacking Iran in support of the rioters. Bloomberg reported on Saturday that the US has dispatched the USS Abraham Lincoln aircraft carrier and its associated strike group to the Middle East. It is a similar force which the US deployed to the Caribbean Sea just weeks before the 3 January operation where Maduro was captured. The probability of a US/Israeli attack on Iran is pegged at 65-70% by geopolitical risk assessment firms Eurasia Group and Rapidan Energy Group. Such a high probability explains much of the recent rally in Brent crude.

The recent rally in Brent crude is not a signal from the oil market that the much discussed global surplus has been called off. If we look at the shape of the Brent crude oil curve it is currently heavily front-end backwardated with the curve sloping upwards in contango thereafter. It signals front-end tightness or near term geopolitical risk premium followed by surplus. If the market had called off the views of a surplus, then the whole Brent forward curve would have been much flatter and without the intermediate deep dip in the curve. The shape of the Brent curve is telling us that the market is concerned right now for what might happen in Iran, but it still maintains and overall view of surplus and stock building unless OPEC+ cuts back on supply.

It also implies that Brent crude will fall back if the US pulls back from its threats of attacking Iran.

Brent crude forward curves in USD/b.

Brent crude forward curves in USD/b.
Source: Bloomberg
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Analys

Oil market assigns limited risks to Iranian induced supply disruptions

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SEB - analysbrev på råvaror

Falling back this morning. Brent crude traded from an intraday low of $59.75/b last Monday to an intraday high of $63.92/b on Friday and a close that day of $63.34/b. Driven higher by the rising riots in Iran. Brent is trading slightly lower this morning at $63.0/b.

Bjarne Schieldrop, Chief analyst commodities, SEB
Bjarne Schieldrop, Chief analyst commodities, SEB

Iranian riots and risk of supply disruption in the Middle East takes center stage. The Iranian public is rioting in response to rapidly falling living conditions. The current oppressive regime has been ruling the country for 46 years. The Iranian economy has rapidly deteriorated the latest years along with the mismanagement of the economy, a water crisis, encompassing corruption with the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps at the center and with US sanctions on top. The public has had enough and is now rioting. SEB’s EM Strategist Erik Meyersson wrote the following on the Iranian situation yesterday: ”Iran is on the brink – but of what?” with one statement being ”…the regime seems to lack a comprehensive set of solutions to solve the socioeconomic problems”. That is of course bad news for the regime. What can it do? Erik’s takeaway is that it is an open question what this will lead to while also drawing up different possible scenarios.

Personally I fear that this may end very badly for the rioters. That the regime will use absolute force to quash the riots. Kill many, many more and arrest and torture anyone who still dare to protest. I do not have high hopes for a transition to another regime. I bet that Iranian’s telephone lines to its diverse group of autocratic friends currently are running red-hot with ”friendly” recommendations of how to quash the riots. This could easily become the ”Tiananmen Square” moment (1989) for the current Iranian regime.

The risks to the oil market are:

1) The current regime applies absolute force. The riots die out and oil production and exports continue as before. Continued US and EU sanctions with Iranian oil mostly going to China. No major loss of supply to the global market in total. Limited impact on oil prices. Current risk premium fades. Economically the Iranian regime continues to limp forward at a deteriorating path.

2) The regime applies absolute force as in 1), but the US intervenes kinetically. Escalation ensues in the Middle East to the point that oil exports out of the Strait of Hormuz are curbed. The price of oil shots above  $150/b.

3) Riots spreads to affect Iranian oil production/exports. The current regime does not apply sufficient absolute force. Riots spreads further to affect oil production and export facilities with the result that the oil market loses some 1.5 mb/d to 2.0 mb/d of exports from Iran. Thereafter a messy aftermath regime wise.

Looking at the oil market today the Brent crude oil price is falling back 0.6% to $63/b. As such the oil market is assigning very low risk for scenario 2) and probably a very high probability for scenario 1).

Venezuela: Heavy sour crude and product prices falls sharply on prospect of reduced US sanctions on Venezuelan oil exports. The oil market take  on Venezuela has quickly shifted from fear of losing what was left of its production and exports to instead expecting more heavy oil from Venezuela to be released into the market. Not at least easier access to Venezuelan heavy crude for USGC refineries. The US has started to partially lift sanctions on Venezuelan crude oil exports with the aim of releasing 30mn-50mn bl of Venezuelan crude from onshore and offshore stocks according to the US energy secretary Chris Wright. But a significant increase in oil production and exports is far away. It is estimated that it will take $10bn in capex spending every year for 10 years to drive its production up by 1.5 mb/d to a total of 2.5 mb/d. That is not moving the needle a lot for the US which has a total hydrocarbon liquids production today of 23.6 mb/d (2025 average). At the same time US oil majors are not all that eager to invest in Venezuela as they still hold tens of billions of dollars in claims against the nation from when it confiscated their assets in 2007. Prices for heavy crude in the USGC have however fallen sharply over the prospect of getting easier access to more heavy crude from Venezuela. The relative price of heavy sour crude products in Western Europe versus Brent crude have also fallen sharply into the new year.

Iran officially exported 1.75 mb/d of crude on average in 2025 falling sharply to 1.4 mb/d in December. But it also produces condensates. Probably in the magnitude of 0.5-0.6 mb/d. Total production of crude and condensates probably close to 3.9 mb/d.

Iran officially exported 1.75 mb/d of crude on average in 2025 falling sharply to 1.4 mb/d in December.
Source: Data by Bloomberg and US EIA

The price of heavy, sour fuel oil has fallen sharply versus Brent crude the latest days in response to the prospect of more heavy sour crude from Venezuela.

The price of heavy, sour fuel oil has fallen sharply versus Brent crude the latest days in response to the prospect of more heavy sour crude from Venezuela.
Source: SEB graph, Bloomberg data feed
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The oil market in 2026 will not be about Venezuela but about OPEC+ cutting or not

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SEB - analysbrev på råvaror

Lower this morning as Rodriguez opens for US cooperation. Brent crude is down 1.4% to USD 69.95/b this morning. The acting president in Venezuela, Delcy Rodriguez, has struck a much more conciliatory tone and offered to cooperate with the US. This reduces the risk for an extended embargo on Venezuelan oil exports with oil potentially flowing freely out of Venezuela in not too long if Rodriguez actually do cooperate as the US whishes.

Bjarne Schieldrop, Chief analyst commodities, SEB
Bjarne Schieldrop, Chief analyst commodities, SEB

Venezuela is not a big oil producer today. It produced 960 kb/d in November. At the same time it consumes some 400 kb/d with net to the world exports of only 560 kb/d. Supply risk to the global oil market is thus very limited as it stands today.

Venezuela produced closer to 2.4 mb/d in 2015. But years of corruption plus US sanctions has eroded production capacity. Its oil infrastructure is worn down. Engineers who could get jobs in other countries have left. 

What makes everyone lift their eyebrows over Venezuela with respect to oil is that it has the world’s largest oil reserves. The idea is that US capital coupled with Venezuelan oil reserves could lead to a major upturn in oil production. But it will require billions and billions of dollar and also time to drive production higher.

China has poured billions into infrastructure in Venezuela with most of it lost due to corruption. While Rodriguez now has opened for cooperation with the US, the corrupt regime under Maduro is probably still fully intact. It may not be all that safe for US oil majors to pour billions in capex into Venezuela.

Venezuela has the potential to produce significantly more oil. But lots of money and time to materialize it. Yes, it has the world’s largest oil reserves, but the world is full of oil reserves. The key question is thus more about where do you want to place your capex? What reserves will yield the greatest returns and the lowest risks versus corruption and geopolitics? Impressions from latest headlines is that US money is already knocking on the door in Venezuela, but it is too early to say whether such a dollar-flow will really materialize in the end or not.

The global oil market in 2026 will not be about Venezuela. It will be about OPEC+ balancing act between oil price and market share. Making cuts or not. The IEA projected in December that the world will only need 25.6 mb/d from OPEC in 2026 versus a production in November of 29.1 mb/d. If the IEA is correct then the OPEC will need to cut production by 3.5 mb/d to keep the oil market balanced.

Brent crude is at USD 69.95/b and OPEC+ confirmed this weekend that it will keep production unchanged in Q1-26. The consequence is that the oil price is heading lower by the week. We expect OPEC+ to shift from ”hold” to ”cut” as Brent crude moves to the low 50ies.

Venezuela crude oil production in mb/d

Venezuela crude oil production in mb/d
Source: Bloomberg

Production by OPEC versus what IEA projects is needed by the group in 2026.

Production by OPEC versus what IEA projects is needed by the group in 2026.
Source: IEA and Bloomberg

Global observable oil inventory level according to the IEA in December.

Global observable oil inventory level according to the IEA in December.
Source: IEA
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