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Shale oil reaction function is changing and OPEC is happy

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

Brent crude had a strong week last week with four out of five closes at the highest level since late September. Recession fears eased (US 10yr moved from 1.71% to 1.94%) and optimism for a US-China trade deal improved. A 1.1% gain in the USD index was not able to hold Brent crude back from gaining 1.3% over the week with a close of $62.51/bl. Brent crude oil is selling off 1% this morning trading at $61.9/bl weighted down by the equity sell-off in Hong Kong / China

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

OPEC+ has signalled that its members are not overly eager to make deeper cuts at their upcoming meeting (5 December). This has given the oil price some temporary set-backs but it was not at all enough to hold back the oil price last week.

OPEC must be thrilled to see that US shale oil production is slowing and slowing and it is all happening at a Brent crude oil price of about $60-65/bl (WTI $57/bl ytd av). The fear has of course been that you would need to push the WTI price down below $45/bl in order to slow down US shale oil production growth. That was the last price inflection point back in May 2016 at which US shale oil activity accelerated again following the 2014/15 sell-off. The “shale oil reaction function” (activity as a function of the oil price) has clearly changed.

This change has not at all been incorporated into spot and forward prices yet. The longer dated WTI prices are typically between $50-53/bl from 2021 and all out to 2030. These prices are nominal. If we look at the forward WTI price for 2030 it is currently $52.3/bl in nominal terms. If we adjust for the US 10yr inflation swap of 1.92% this converts to a real forward price of $43.1/bl.

There is no doubt that the US has plenty of shale oil resources left. It is also clear that the US shale oil players have the technology to extract at a strong growth pace. This is also what OPEC has reflected in its latest World Oil Outlook where it projects US shale oil production to grow by another 5.3 m bl/d from 2019 to 2030.

The big question is of course at what price will this happen? Will it happen at a real forward WTI price of $45-50/bl? The current US shale oil slow-down basically says no. Market action so far this year is instead saying that at WTI $55/bl activity and production is slowing rapidly.

We have asked US shale oil players what they would do if the WTI price moved to $65-70/bl in 2020. The response was quite clear: Pay down debt, pay dividends and engage in share buy-backs if possible. So no expansion again even with a WTI price moving to $65-70/bl. This is in stark contrast to forward WTI prices currently saying that US shale oil will deliver strong volume growth at a real forward price of $45-50/bl. Yes, the US has lots of shale oil resources and it can deliver lots of growth but at what price? That’s the question. The current market assumption that this will happen year after year at a real oil price of $45-50/bl is in our view wrong. That is also what this year’s shale oil activity is showing.

Getting back again to Occidental Petroleum, the biggest US shale oil player in the Permian basin, and its recent announcement that it will slash capex spending in shale oil by 50% in 2020. What does this mean? The shale oil well completion rate in the US is now typically running at around 1400 wells/month. If this completion rate declines by only 10% then US shale oil production will experience zero growth.

US shale oil players have been kicking out drilling rigs all of 2019. Last week 7 more oil rigs were kicked out. That’s a monthly decline rate of about 30 drilling rigs per month. The average decline rate so far this year is about 20 rigs per month. I.e. the rig decline is speeding up and the latest message from Occidental says that this is not at all the end of it with more rig declines to come.

So OPEC should be highly content. The market is punishing US shale oil players at WTI $55/bl and Brent at $60/bl. Puh, what a relief. You don’t need to go all the way down to $45/bl and below before US shale oil production growth tapers.

OPEC is totally happy with an oil price (Brent) of $60-65/bl and especially so because they see that at this price US shale oil activity is actually cooling down. We should see a very confident OPEC when they meet in December.

At some point in time here there is likely going to be a repricing of the longer dated WTI prices as the understanding sinks in that US shale oil production is not going to provide booming production growth for another 10 years at a real WTI price of $45-50/bl.

Ch1: Local US Permian crude oil price in USD/bl vs the 4 week change in US oil drilling rig count.

Local US Permian crude oil price in USD/bl vs the 4 week change in US oil drilling rig count

Ch2: US drilling rig count falling and falling

US drilling rig count falling and falling

Ch3: Brent and WTI forward price curves. The Brent crude oil curve is in backwardation as a reflection of current crude oil tightness. Still midterm depression on concerns for 2020

Brent and WTI forward price curves

Analys

Brent prices slip on USD surge despite tight inventory conditions

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SEB - analysbrev på råvaror

Brent crude prices dropped by USD 1.4 per barrel yesterday evening, sliding from USD 74.2 to USD 72.8 per barrel overnight. However, prices have ticked slightly higher in early trading this morning and are currently hovering around USD 73.3 per barrel.

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

Yesterday’s decline was primarily driven by a significant strengthening of the U.S. dollar, fueled by expectations of fewer interest rate cuts by the Fed in the coming year. While the Fed lowered borrowing costs as anticipated, it signaled a more cautious approach to rate reductions in 2025. This pushed the U.S. dollar to its strongest level in over two years, raising the cost of commodities priced in dollars.

Earlier in the day (yesterday), crude prices briefly rose following reports of continued declines in U.S. commercial crude oil inventories (excl. SPR), which fell by 0.9 million barrels last week to 421.0 million barrels. This level is approximately 6% below the five-year average for this time of year, highlighting persistently tight market conditions.

In contrast, total motor gasoline inventories saw a significant build of 2.3 million barrels but remain 3% below the five-year average. A closer look reveals that finished gasoline inventories declined, while blending components inventories increased.

Distillate (diesel) fuel inventories experienced a substantial draw of 3.2 million barrels and are now approximately 7% below the five-year average. Overall, total commercial petroleum inventories recorded a net decline of 3.2 million barrels last week, underscoring tightening market conditions across key product categories.

Despite the ongoing drawdowns in U.S. crude and product inventories, global oil prices have remained range-bound since mid-October. Market participants are balancing a muted outlook for Chinese demand and rising production from non-OPEC+ sources against elevated geopolitical risks. The potential for stricter sanctions on Iranian oil supply, particularly as Donald Trump prepares to re-enter the White House, has introduced an additional layer of uncertainty.

We remain cautiously optimistic about the oil market balance in 2025 and are maintaining our Brent price forecast of an average USD 75 per barrel for the year. We believe the market has both fundamental and technical support at these levels.

Oil inventories
Oil inventories
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Analys

Oil falling only marginally on weak China data as Iran oil exports starts to struggle

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SEB - analysbrev på råvaror

Up 4.7% last week on US Iran hawkishness and China stimulus optimism. Brent crude gained 4.7% last week and closed on a high note at USD 74.49/b. Through the week it traded in a USD 70.92 – 74.59/b range. Increased optimism over China stimulus together with Iran hawkishness from the incoming Donald Trump administration were the main drivers. Technically Brent crude broke above the 50dma on Friday. On the upside it has the USD 75/b 100dma and on the downside it now has the 50dma at USD 73.84. It is likely to test both of these in the near term. With respect to the Relative Strength Index (RSI) it is neither cold nor warm.

Lower this morning as China November statistics still disappointing (stimulus isn’t here in size yet). This morning it is trading down 0.4% to USD 74.2/b following bearish statistics from China. Retail sales only rose 3% y/y and well short of Industrial production which rose 5.4% y/y, painting a lackluster picture of the demand side of the Chinese economy. This morning the Chinese 30-year bond rate fell below the 2% mark for the first time ever. Very weak demand for credit and investments is essentially what it is saying. Implied demand for oil down 2.1% in November and ytd y/y it was down 3.3%. Oil refining slipped to 5-month low (Bloomberg). This sets a bearish tone for oil at the start of the week. But it isn’t really killing off the oil price either except pushing it down a little this morning.

China will likely choose the US over Iranian oil as long as the oil market is plentiful. It is becoming increasingly apparent that exports of crude oil from Iran is being disrupted by broadening US sanctions on tankers according to Vortexa (Bloomberg). Some Iranian November oil cargoes still remain undelivered. Chinese buyers are increasingly saying no to sanctioned vessels. China import around 90% of Iranian crude oil. Looking forward to the Trump administration the choice for China will likely be easy when it comes to Iranian oil. China needs the US much more than it needs Iranian oil. At leas as long as there is plenty of oil in the market. OPEC+ is currently holds plenty of oil on the side-line waiting for room to re-enter. So if Iran goes out, then other oil from OPEC+ will come back in. So there won’t be any squeeze in the oil market and price shouldn’t move all that much up.

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Analys

Brent crude inches higher as ”Maximum pressure on Iran” could remove all talk of surplus in 2025

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SEB - analysbrev på råvaror

Brent crude inch higher despite bearish Chinese equity backdrop. Brent crude traded between 72.42 and 74.0 USD/b yesterday before closing down 0.15% on the day at USD 73.41/b. Since last Friday Brent crude has gained 3.2%. This morning it is trading in marginal positive territory (+0.3%) at USD 73.65/b. Chinese equities are down 2% following disappointing signals from the Central Economic Work Conference. The dollar is also 0.2% stronger. None of this has been able to pull oil lower this morning.

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

”Maximum pressure on Iran” are the signals from the incoming US administration. Last time Donald Trump was president he drove down Iranian oil exports to close to zero as he exited the JCPOA Iranian nuclear deal and implemented maximum sanctions. A repeat of that would remove all talk about a surplus oil market next year leaving room for the rest of OPEC+ as well as the US to lift production a little. It would however probably require some kind of cooperation with China in some kind of overall US – China trade deal. Because it is hard to prevent oil flowing from Iran to China as long as China wants to buy large amounts.

Mildly bullish adjustment from the IEA but still with an overall bearish message for 2025. The IEA came out with a mildly bullish adjustment in its monthly Oil Market Report yesterday. For 2025 it adjusted global demand up by 0.1 mb/d to 103.9 mb/d (+1.1 mb/d y/y growth) while it also adjusted non-OPEC production down by 0.1 mb/d to 71.9 mb/d (+1.7 mb/d y/y). As a result its calculated call-on-OPEC rose by 0.2 mb/d y/y to 26.3 mb/d.

Overall the IEA still sees a market in 2025 where non-OPEC production grows considerably faster (+1.7 mb/d y/y) than demand (+1.1 mb/d y/y) which requires OPEC to cut its production by close to 700 kb/d in 2025 to keep the market balanced.

The IEA treats OPEC+ as it if doesn’t exist even if it is 8 years since it was established. The weird thing is that the IEA after 8 full years with the constellation of OPEC+ still calculates and argues as if the wider organisation which was established in December 2016 doesn’t exist. In its oil market balance it projects an increase from FSU of +0.3 mb/d in 2025. But FSU is predominantly part of OPEC+ and thus bound by production targets. Thus call on OPEC+ is only falling by 0.4 mb/d in 2025. In IEA’s calculations the OPEC+ group thus needs to cut production by 0.4 mb/d in 2024 or 0.4% of global demand. That is still a bearish outlook. But error of margin on such calculations are quite large so this prediction needs to be treated with a pinch of salt.

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