Följ oss

Analys

US oil fundamentals deteriorating much more than global

Publicerat

den

SEB - analysbrev på råvaror
SEB - Prognoser på råvaror - Commodity

US equities gained 1% yesterday and the USD index pulled back 0.2% but neither commodities in general nor oil prices specifically got any tailwind from that. Brent crude pulled back 1% ydy to $58.74/bl and the whole forward curve moved down more or less comparably much. This morning Brent crude is recovering some of its losses gaining 0.4% to $59/bl.

Despite the ongoing overarching bearish oil sentiment the Brent crude front month has continued to bounce off at around $57.5/bl more or less every time a flurry of sell-off has hit the contract. It is clear that the spike in oil prices and the strong increase in front-end backwardation from those spikes have fallen back since the attacks on Saudi Arabia some weeks ago.

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

Deteriorating US crude fundamentals places increasing bearish pressure on WTI. Permian pipes to USGC are not enough. USGC ship-out capacity is needed as well. This leaves more control to Saudi Arabia and more bullishness to Brent crude. An important detail here is that the WTI crude curve structure has weakened much more than the Brent structure and that the front month spread between Brent and WTI has widened out from a low of $3.5/bl in mid-Aug to now $5.9/bl. I.e. it is not enough to get a large increase in the pipeline capacity feeding oil out of the Permian basin. One needs to load it onto ships and send it out of the US Gulf as well.

Obviously there is a bottleneck here getting oil out of the US leading to increasingly bearish local fundamentals in the US geography. US crude stocks are rising as a result and especially so because US refinery activity now is at a low seasonal level as well. US data on this tomorrow at 17:00 CET.

The Brent – WTI spread has widened out and the WTI crude curve structure has weakened much more than the Brent structure which basically has stabilized. With a large part of the speculative oil market being WTI-centric this has a very important impact on the overall oil market sentiment. “US oil fundamentals are weakening” = “global oil fundamentals are weakening” is a typical market conclusion. I.e. the bearish US crude sentiment rubs off on the global oil sentiment.

The widening Brent – WTI front end price spread helps to depress US WTI as well as Permian crude prices with the Permian local crude oil price currently pricing at $53.2/bl. This will help to depress drilling activity going forward.

Saudi Arabia Official Selling Prices higher for all grades to Asia for November. The Brent crude oil curve is still in clear backwardation signalling a globally tight physical market. The front end price has so far defied much price action below the $57.5/bl. On interesting fact is that Saudi Arabia’s lifted all its latest OSP’s (Official Selling Prices) for November crude deliveries to Asia by $0.2-0.7/bl with all OSPs now above the 10 year average values.

EU refining margins close to two year peaks. HFO 3.5% fuel drops like a rock and shipping consumes much more fuel. European refining margins are close to peak levels versus the peaks over the past 2 years. Middle distillate stocks are well below the 5-year average as we run into the northern hemisphere winter and the IMO-2020 is now kicking in harder and harder. What we see in the charts is that the high sulphur bunker oil spot price continues to fall like a rock versus Brent crude and is now trading at only $35.5/bl in the ARA region. The interpretation of this is that there is a surplus of this oil product in the market because it can soon no longer be legally used in the transportation sector. This product is being kicked out of the market and some other product needs to take its place instead. This is a tightening of the global liquids market which can be used for transportation uses. The skyrocketing tanker freight rates also means another thing: much higher shipping fuel consumption. The higher the rates, the faster the ships go and the more they consume. Much more.

Ch1: The Brent to WTI price spread was close to $10/bl and then deteriorated all the way down to $3.5/bl in early August as new US pipelines from the Permian to the USGC came online. Lack of shipping capacity has however blown the two grades apart again to now close to $6/bl. I.e. US crude is again locked in leading to increasing localized US bearish and WTI bearish pressure.

Oil

Ch2: Brent and WTI forward crude curves. Structures have weakened but WTI much more than Brent

Brent and WTI forward crude curves

Ch3: The 1-6 month backwardation for Brent and WTI. For WTI now close to zero. For Brent down to $1.4/bl

The 1-6 month backwardation for Brent and WTI

Ch4: All crude grades are lower. But the increaseing spreads helps to push Permian basin below average levels for this year

All crude grades are lower

Ch5: Saudi Arabia lifted OSPs for all grades to Asia for November

Saudi Arabia lifted OSPs for all grades to Asia for November

Ch6: Saudi Arabia’s OSPs to Asia ticking higher

Saudi Arabia’s OSPs to Asia ticking higher

Ch7: Saudi Arabia’s OSPs are above the 10yr average for all grades to Asia

Saudi Arabia’s OSPs are above the 10yr average for all grades to Asia

Ch8: The price of High Sulphur bunker oil (HFO 3.5%) continues to drop like a rock versus Brent crude in ARA. Mid-dist cracks continues to tick higher and we think it is just a matter of time before they jump higher.

The price of High Sulphur bunker oil

Ch9: European spot refining margins are close to two year peaks

European spot refining margins are close to two year peaks

Ch10: ARA Diesel versus Gasoline. Diesel prices are getting relatively stronger and stronger but gasoline prices have not yet crashed to zero.

ARA Diesel versus Gasoline

Ch11: Ranking versus 52 past weeks of Brent crude price and the net long speculative positions in Brent crude. Both are getting close to 52 weeks lows but not quite there yet.

Ranking versus 52 past weeks of Brent crude price

Ch12: Net long Brent and WTI speculative positions at fairly low levels but not yet all the way to the very lows.

Net long Brent and WTI speculative positions

Analys

Crude stocks fall again – diesel tightness persists

Publicerat

den

SEB - analysbrev på råvaror

U.S. commercial crude inventories posted another draw last week, falling by 2.4 million barrels to 418.3 million barrels, according to the latest DOE report. Inventories are now 6% below the five-year seasonal average, underlining a persistently tight supply picture as we move into the post-peak demand season.

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

While the draw was smaller than last week’s 6 million barrel decline, the trend remains consistent with seasonal patterns. Current inventories are still well below the 2015–2022 average of around 449 million barrels.

Gasoline inventories dropped by 1.2 million barrels and are now close to the five-year average. The breakdown showed a modest increase in finished gasoline offset by a decline in blending components – hinting at steady end-user demand.

Diesel inventories saw yet another sharp move, falling by 1.8 million barrels. Stocks are now 15% below the five-year average, pointing to sustained tightness in middle distillates. In fact, diesel remains the most undersupplied segment, with current inventory levels at the very low end of the historical range (see page 3 attached).

Total commercial petroleum inventories – including crude and products but excluding the SPR – fell by 4.4 million barrels on the week, bringing total inventories to approximately 1,259 million barrels. Despite rising refinery utilization at 94.6%, the broader inventory complex remains structurally tight.

On the demand side, the DOE’s ‘products supplied’ metric – a proxy for implied consumption – stayed strong. Total product demand averaged 21.2 million barrels per day over the last four weeks, up 2.5% YoY. Diesel and jet fuel were the standouts, up 7.7% and 1.7%, respectively, while gasoline demand softened slightly, down 1.1% YoY. The figures reflect a still-solid late-summer demand environment, particularly in industrial and freight-related sectors.

US DOE Inventories
US Crude inventories
Fortsätt läsa

Analys

Increasing risk that OPEC+ will unwind the last 1.65 mb/d of cuts when they meet on 7 September

Publicerat

den

SEB - analysbrev på råvaror

Pushed higher by falling US inventories and positive Jackson Hall signals. Brent crude traded up 2.9% last week to a close of $67.73/b. It traded between $65.3/b and $68.0/b with the low early in the week and the high on Friday. US oil inventory draws together with positive signals from Powel at Jackson Hall signaling that rate cuts are highly likely helped to drive both oil and equities higher.

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

Ticking higher for a fourth day in a row. Bank holiday in the UK calls for muted European session. Brent crude is inching 0.2% higher this morning to $67.9/b which if it holds will be the fourth trading day in a row with gains. Price action in the European session will likely be quite muted due to bank holiday in the UK today.

OPEC+ is lifting production but we keep waiting for the surplus to show up. The rapid unwinding of voluntary cuts by OPEC+ has placed the market in a waiting position. Waiting for the surplus to emerge and materialize. Waiting for OECD stocks to rise rapidly and visibly. Waiting for US crude and product stocks to rise. Waiting for crude oil forward curves to bend into proper contango. Waiting for increasing supply of medium sour crude from OPEC+ to push sour cracks lower and to push Mid-East sour crudes to increasing discounts to light sweet Brent crude. In anticipation of this the market has traded Brent and WTI crude benchmarks up to $10/b lower than what solely looking at present OECD inventories, US inventories and front-end backwardation would have warranted.

Quite a few pockets of strength. Dubai sour crude is trading at a premium to Brent  crude! The front-end of the crude oil curves are still in backwardation. High sulfur fuel oil in ARA has weakened from parity with Brent crude in May, but is still only trading at a discount of $5.6/b to Brent versus a more normal discount of $10/b. ARA middle distillates are trading at a premium of $25/b versus Brent crude versus a more normal $15-20/b. US crude stocks are at the lowest seasonal level since 2018. And lastly, the Dubai sour crude marker is trading a premium to Brent crude (light sweet crude in Europe) as highlighted by Bloomberg this morning. Dubai is normally at a discount to Brent. With more medium sour crude from OPEC+ in general and the Middle East specifically, the widespread and natural expectation has been that Dubai should trade at an increasing discount to Brent. the opposite has happened. Dubai traded at a discount of $2.3/b to Brent in early June. Dubai has since then been on a steady strengthening path versus Brent crude and Dubai is today trading at a premium of $1.3/b. Quite unusual in general but especially so now that OPEC+ is supposed to produce more.

This makes the upcoming OPEC+ meeting on 7 September even more of a thrill. At stake is the next and last layer of 1.65 mb/d of voluntary cuts to unwind. The market described above shows pockets of strength blinking here and there. This clearly increases the chance that OPEC+ decides to unwind the remaining 1.65 mb/d of voluntary cuts when they meet on 7 September to discuss production in October. Though maybe they split it over two or three months of unwind. After that the group can start again with a clean slate and discuss OPEC+ wide cuts rather than voluntary cuts by a sub-group. That paves the way for OPEC+ wide cuts into Q1-26 where a large surplus is projected unless the group kicks in with cuts.

The Dubai medium sour crude oil marker usually trades at a discount to Brent crude. More oil from the Middle East as they unwind cuts should make that discount to Brent crude even more pronounced. Dubai has instead traded steadily stronger versus Brent since late May.

The Dubai medium sour crude oil marker
Source: SEB graph, calculations and highlights. Bloomberg data

The Brent crude oil forward curve (latest in white) keeps stuck in backwardation at the front end of the curve. I.e. it is still a tight crude oil market at present. The smile-effect is the market anticipation of surplus down the road.

The Brent crude oil forward curve (latest in white)
Source: Bloomberg
Fortsätt läsa

Analys

Brent edges higher as India–Russia oil trade draws U.S. ire and Powell takes the stage at Jackson Hole

Publicerat

den

SEB - analysbrev på råvaror

Best price since early August. Brent crude gained 1.2% yesterday to settle at USD 67.67/b, the highest close since early August and the second day of gains. Prices traded to an intraday low of USD 66.74/b before closing up on the day. This morning Brent is ticking slightly higher at USD 67.76/b as the market steadies ahead of Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s Jackson Hole speech later today.

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

No Russia/Ukraine peace in sight and India getting heat from US over imports of Russian oil. Yesterday’s price action was driven by renewed geopolitical tension and steady underlying demand. Stalled ceasefire talks between Russia and Ukraine helped maintain a modest risk premium, while the spotlight turned to India’s continued imports of Russian crude. Trump sharply criticized New Delhi’s purchases, threatening higher tariffs and possible sanctions. His administration has already announced tariff hikes on Indian goods from 25% to 50% later this month. India has pushed back, defending its right to diversify crude sourcing and highlighting that it also buys oil from the U.S. Moscow meanwhile reaffirmed its commitment to supply India, deepening the impression that global energy flows are becoming increasingly politicized.

Holding steady this morning awaiting Powell’s address at Jackson Hall. This morning the main market focus is Powell’s address at Jackson Hole. It is set to be the key event for markets today, with traders parsing every word for signals on the Fed’s policy path. A September rate cut is still the base case but the odds have slipped from almost certainty earlier this month to around three-quarters. Sticky inflation data have tempered expectations, raising the stakes for Powell to strike the right balance between growth concerns and inflation risks. His tone will shape global risk sentiment into the weekend and will be closely watched for implications on the oil demand outlook.

For now, oil is holding steady with geopolitical frictions lending support and macro uncertainty keeping gains in check.

Oil market is starting to think and worry about next OPEC+ meeting on 7 September. While still a good two weeks to go, the next OPEC+ meeting on 7 September will be crucial for the oil market. After approving hefty production hikes in August and September, the question is now whether the group will also unwind the remaining 1.65 million bpd of voluntary cuts. Thereby completing the full phase-out of voluntary reductions well ahead of schedule. The decision will test OPEC+’s balancing act between volume-driven influence and price stability. The gathering on 7 September may give the clearest signal yet of whether the group will pause, pivot, or press ahead.

Fortsätt läsa

Guldcentralen

Aktier

Annons

Gratis uppdateringar om råvarumarknaden

*

Populära