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Brent crude is crawling higher but its feet are slipping

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Price action – Marginal gains in the front but losses in the back end curve

SEB - Prognoser på råvaror - CommodityFrom Friday to Friday last week Brent 1mth crude gained 0.3% to $55.99/b. Longer dated contracts however continued to erode with the Brent December 2020 contract losing 1.1% to $54.84/b. In perspective it closed at the lowest level since April 2016 last week when it closed at $54.47/b last Wednesday. With muted price action the volatility naturally continued lower last week with 30 day rolling annualized volatility for the 1mth contract ending last week at 20.3% down from 25.1% Friday the week before. We have not seen such a low level of volatility since October 2014 and it is likely to continue yet lower. Probably heading to 15%. Shale oil flexibility clearly helps to mute the price action. In addition the market is now close to balance and lower volatility is natural in such a situation. However, the longer term normal volatility in the crude oil market is about 30%. Thus we are probably heading towards half of the historical normal level.

OPEC is tightening up the front end market but reviving US crude oil production is softening the medium term balance

Oil projectionsOPEC is delivering on cuts thus driving the market increasingly into backwardation. This is pushing front month contract higher versus longer dated contracts. However, longer dated contracts are slipping thus leaving the Brent 1mth contract with little gain despite a gradual shift to backwardation. There is still some contango in the very front of the forward curve but overall the Brent 1mth contract is now trading above the Brent Dec-2020 contract. At close on Friday we had Brent 1mth at 55.99/b and Dec-2020 at 54.84/b. Thus for Brent 1mth, it is trying to crawl higher but its feet are slipping. Longer dated contracts are slipping.

OPEC is tightening up the front, but recovering US shale production is loosening up the longer dated part of the balance. That is why the longer dated contracts are slipping. US crude production last week rose above 9 mb/d for the first time since April 2016. For lower 48 production (where shale is the lion’s share), production rose by 17 kb/d w/w. Multiply by 52 and you get an annualized US production growth rate of 0.9 mb/d YoY. I.e. US shale oil production growth is back! If the +17 kb/d w/w was only noise it would mean nothing, but it is a trend. Our projection is for US shale oil production to grow at 18 kb/d w/w in February, 23 kb/d w/w in March and then gradually rising to 36 kb/d w/w in September equaling an annualized production growth rate of 1.9 mb/d before the growth rate is moderating after that again.

Since October 2016 US crude production has on averaged increased by 27.6 kb/d w/w. Most of this is probably not due to recovering shale oil production but rather due to commissioning of prior investments in the Gulf of Mexico. However, now onwards US crude production is going to increase on a weekly basis due to recovering US shale oil production.

OPEC is successful in its effort to dry up the market and shifting the crude oil forward curve into backwardation. It had probably hoped for a situation where the longer dated contracts stands at $55-60/b with Brent 1mth contract trading at a backwardation premium of some $5/b above that. It will probably get its $5/b backwardation premium but longer dated contracts are likely to slip lower thus leaving OPEC with limited gain at the front end of the curve. We still think that Brent crude will average $57.5/b in Q2-17 as also the front end of the curve is flipping into backwardation. The erosion in the longer dated contracts is likely to continue.

US oil rig count last week increased 5 rigs but implied shale oil rig count went up by 12 as directional and vertical count fell back. Over the last two weeks the US implied shale oil rig count is up by 15 or 7.5/week which is marginally higher than our projected 7 rigs per week for H1-17. This shifts our dynamic price forecast for 2019 marginally lower from $68.3/b to $67.9/b.

Over the last two weeks weekly inventory data for the US, EU, Singapore and floating storage has moved down by 3.1 mb and 9.7 mb respectively last two weeks. OPEC’s medicine is working shifting the market increasingly into backwardation as a result. Declining inventories – that’s the proof of the pudding. That makes investors bullish. Not surprisingly speculative positions in WTI increased yet higher to a new record last week.

Analys

Crude oil comment: US inventories remain well below averages despite yesterday’s build

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Brent crude prices have remained stable since the sharp price surge on Monday afternoon, when the price jumped from USD 71.5 per barrel to USD 73.5 per barrel – close to current levels (now trading at USD 73.45 per barrel). The initial price spike was triggered by short-term supply disruptions at Norway’s Johan Sverdrup field and Kazakhstan’s Tengiz field.

Ole R. Hvalbye, Analyst Commodities, SEB
Ole R. Hvalbye, Analyst Commodities, SEB

While the disruptions in Norway have been resolved and production at Tengiz is expected to return to full capacity by the weekend, elevated prices have persisted. The market’s focus has now shifted to heightened concerns about an escalation in the war in Ukraine. This geopolitical uncertainty continues to support safe-haven assets, including gold and government bonds. Consequently, safe-haven currencies such as the U.S. dollar, Japanese yen, and Swiss franc have also strengthened.

U.S. commercial crude oil inventories (excl. SPR) increased by 0.5 million barrels last week, according to U.S DOE. This build contrasts with expectations, as consensus had predicted no change (0.0 million barrels), and the API forecast projected a much larger increase of 4.8 million barrels. With last week’s build, crude oil inventories now stand at 430.3 million barrels, yet down 18 million barrels(!) compared to the same week last year and ish 4% below the five-year average for this time of year.

Gasoline inventories rose by 2.1 million barrels (still 4% below their five-year average), defying consensus expectations of a slight draw of 0.1 million barrels. Distillate (diesel) inventories, on the other hand, fell by 0.1 million barrels, aligning closely with expectations of no change (0.0 million barrels) but also remain 4% below their five-year average. In total, combined stocks of crude, gasoline, and distillates increased by 2.5 million barrels last week.

U.S. demand data showed mixed trends. Over the past four weeks, total petroleum products supplied averaged 20.7 million barrels per day, representing a 1.2% increase compared to the same period last year. Motor gasoline demand remained relatively stable at 8.9 million barrels per day, a 0.5% rise year-over-year. In contrast, distillate fuel demand continued to weaken, averaging 3.8 million barrels per day, down 6.4% from a year ago. Jet fuel demand also softened, falling 1.3% compared to the same four-week period in 2023.

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China is turning the corner and oil sentiment will likely turn with it

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Brent crude is maintaining its gains from Monday and ticking yet higher. Brent crude made a jump of 3.2% on Monday to USD 73.5/b and has managed to maintain the gain since then. Virtually no price change yesterday and opening this morning at USD 73.3/b.

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

Emerging positive signs from the Chinese economy may lift oil market sentiment. Chinese economic weakness in general and shockingly weak oil demand there has been pestering the oil price since its peak of USD 92.2/b in mid-April. Net Chinese crude and product imports has been negative since May as measured by 3mth y/y changes. This measure reached minus 10% in July and was still minus 3% in September. And on a year to Sep, y/y it is down 2%. Chinese oil demand growth has been a cornerstone of global oil demand over the past decades accounting for a growth of around half a million barrels per day per year or around 40% of yearly global oil demand growth. Electrification and gassification (LNG HDTrucking) of transportation is part of the reason, but that should only have weakened China’s oil demand growth and not turned it abruptly negative. Historically it has been running at around +3-4% pa.

With a sense of ’no end in sight’ for China’ ills and with a trade war rapidly approaching with Trump in charge next year, the oil bears have been in charge of the oil market. Oil prices have moved lower and lower since April. Refinery margins have also fallen sharply along with weaker oil products demand. The front-month gasoil crack to Brent peaked this year at USD 34.4/b (premium to Brent) in February and fell all the way to USD 14.4/b in mid October. Several dollar below its normal seasonal level. Now however it has recovered to a more normal, healthy seasonal level of USD 18.2/b. 

But Chinese stimulus measures are already working. The best immediate measure of that is the China surprise index which has rallied from -40 at the end of September to now +20. This is probably starting to filter in to the oil market sentiment.

The market has for quite some time now been staring down towards the USD 60/b. But this may now start to change with a bit more optimistic tones emerging from the Chinese economy.

China economic surprise index (white). Front-month ARA Gasoil crack to Brent in USD/b (blue)

China economic surprise index (white). Front-month ARA Gasoil crack to Brent in USD/b (blue)
Source: Bloomberg graph and data. SEB selection and highlights

The IEA could be too bearish by up to 0.8 mb/d. IEA’s calculations for Q3-24 are off by 0.8 mb/d. OECD inventories fell by 1.16 mb/d in Q3 according to the IEA’s latest OMR. But according to the IEA’s supply/demand balance the decline should only have been 0.38 mb/d. I.e. the supply/demand balance of IEA for Q3-24 was much less bullish than how the inventories actually developed by a full 0.8 mb/d. If we assume that the OECD inventory changes in Q3-24 is the ”proof of the pudding”, then IEA’s estimated supply/demand balance was off by a full 0.8 mb/d. That is a lot. It could have a significant consequence for 2025 where the IEA is estimating that call-on-OPEC will decline by 0.9 mb/d y/y according to its estimated supply/demand balance. But if the IEA is off by 0.8 mb/d in Q3-24, it could be equally off by 0.8 mb/d for 2025 as a whole as well. Leading to a change in the call-on-OPEC of only 0.1 mb/d y/y instead. Story by Bloomberg: {NSN SMXSUYT1UM0W <GO>}. And looking at US oil inventories they have consistently fallen significantly more than normal since June this year. See below.

Later today at 16:30 CET we’ll have the US oil inventory data. Bearish indic by API, but could be a bullish surprise yet again. Last night the US API indicated that US crude stocks rose by 4.8 mb, gasoline stocks fell by 2.5 mb and distillates fell by 0.7 mb. In total a gain of 1.6 mb. Total US crude and product stocks normally decline by 3.7 mb for week 46.

The trend since June has been that US oil inventories have been falling significantly versus normal seasonal trends. US oil inventories stood 16 mb above the seasonal 2015-19 average on 21 June. In week 45 they ended 34 mb below their 2015-19 seasonal average. Recent news is that US Gulf refineries are running close to max in order to satisfy Lat Am demand for oil products.

US oil inventories versus the 2015-19 seasonal averages.

US oil inventories versus the 2015-19 seasonal averages.
Source: SEB graph and calculations, Bloomberg data feed, US EIA data
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Analys

Crude oil comment: Europe’s largest oil field halted – driving prices higher

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Since market opening on Monday, November 18, Brent crude prices have climbed steadily. Starting the week at approximately USD 70.7 per barrel, prices rose to USD 71.5 per barrel by noon yesterday. However, in the afternoon, Brent crude surged by nearly USD 2 per barrel, reaching USD 73.5 per barrel, which is close to where we are currently trading.

Ole R. Hvalbye, Analyst Commodities, SEB
Ole R. Hvalbye, Analyst Commodities, SEB

This sharp price increase has been driven by supply disruptions at two major oil fields: Norway’s Johan Sverdrup and Kazakhstan’s Tengiz. The Brent benchmark is now continuing to trade above USD 73 per barrel as the market reacts to heightened concerns about short-term supply tightness.

Norway’s Johan Sverdrup field, Europe’s largest and one of the top 10 globally in terms of estimated recoverable reserves, temporarily halted production on Monday afternoon due to an onshore power outage. According to Equinor, the issue was quickly identified but resulted in a complete shutdown of the field. Restoration efforts are underway. With a production capacity of 755,000 barrels per day, Sverdrup accounts for approximately 36% of Norway’s total oil output, making it a critical player in the country’s production. The unexpected outage has significantly supported Brent prices as the market evaluates its impact on overall supply.

Adding to the bullish momentum, supply constraints at Kazakhstan’s Tengiz field have further intensified concerns. Tengiz, with a production capacity of around 700,000 barrels per day, has seen output cut by approximately 30% this month due to ongoing repairs, exceeding earlier estimates of a 20% reduction. Repairs are expected to conclude by November 23, but in the meantime, supply tightness persists, amplifying market vol.

On a broader scale, a pullback in the U.S. dollar yesterday (down 0.15%) provided additional tailwinds for crude prices, making oil more attractive to international buyers. However, over the past few weeks, Brent crude has alternated between gains and losses as market participants juggle multiple factors, including U.S. monetary policy, concerns over Chinese demand, and the evolving supply strategy of OPEC+.

The latter remains a critical factor, as unused production capacity within OPEC continues to exert downward pressure on prices. An acceleration in the global economy will be crucial to improving demand fundamentals.

Despite these short-term fluctuations, we see encouraging signs of a recovering global economy and remain moderately bullish. We are holding to our price forecast of USD 75 per barrel in 2025, followed by USD 87.5 in 2026.

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