Analys
Iraqi oil production and exports at stake

The Brent crude oil price spiked 3.6% on Friday to $68.6/bl on the back of the US killing of the Iranian general Qassem Soleimani. This morning it jumps 2.3% to $70.2/bl. Though so far not a single drop of oil supply has been lost.
Iranian retaliation and then US re-retaliation are however imminent. The US has already pre-selected 52 Iranian targets. Eventual loss of supply in the Middle East may however be in Iraq down the road and not so much due to near term retaliations.

US forces in Iraq now seem likely to be kicked out of the country and Iraq will then most likely “fall into the arms of Iran”. As former acting head of the CIA, Michael Morell, put it: “I think we’ve now ended any hope of keeping Iraq out of Iran’s arms.”
If Iran and Iraq become one large Shia Muslim centre of gravity in the Middle East, then US sanctions towards Iran would naturally be extended also to Iraq leading to a decline in Iraqi oil production and exports. This now looks very much like the way it is moving. The U.S. president on Sunday threatened to impose sanctions on Iraq if the Iraqi parliament voted to expel US troops from the country.
It is very clear that if it wasn’t for the fact that the oil market lost more than 3 m bl/d of crude oil supply from Iran and Venezuela since the end of 2016 it would not have been possible for the US to grow its crude oil production by more than 4 m bl/d over the same period and thus become oil independent and still have an oil price today of more than $60/bl. It is also quite clear that the lost supply from Iran and Venezuela to a large degree is the result of US sanctions towards these two nations and that these sanctions basically have paved the way for US oil production growth and oil independence.
It would of course be very bearish for the oil market if supplies from Iran and Venezuela came back into the market. That will probably happen at some point in time. However, we do not think that this will happen any time soon (years). Production and exports from these two countries will most likely be kept out of the market as long as the US needs room to grow its oil production and exports. The more correct focus may instead be to ask who is next in line to be kicked out of the oil market in order to make room for growing US oil production and exports? Right now, it seems likely to be Iraq.
It might be a tall order to accuse Donald Trump of such simple mercantile motives. But we need look no further than to the Russian gas pipeline Nord Stream 2 which stretches from Ust-Luga in Russia through the Baltic Sea and to Greifswald in Germany. In December the U.S. Senate imposed sanctions on companies working on the pipeline in order to prevent it from being completed. Their explanation was that they did it to protect Europe from becoming too dependent on Russian gas exports. But the sanctions are against the will of the EU. As such this looks bluntly as a move by the U.S. to prevent Russian gas flowing to the EU thus making room for growing U.S. gas exports to Europe instead.
The situation for Iran is of course extremely difficult. Donald Trump basically killed on of its highest-ranking generals with a precision drone high in the sky while he was playing golf at his resort in Florida (or at least he was at his resort there). The feeling of helplessness must be pervasive. If Iran now retaliates and kills U.S. armed forces (which seems likely) they will just see more devastating retaliations in return. The only real hope for Iran it seems is if they could get China fully over to their side and ramp up oil exports to China. While China wants its oil it most likely won’t go in the face of the U.S. doing so in large volumes. But if Iranian sanctions are extended also to Iraq it could be different.
Our general view for 2020 is that there will be involuntary losses of supply in the middle east in the year to come. Either through military action like the one in September when Saudi Arabian oil production was cut in half by the drone strike at its Abqaiq oil reprocessing plant or increased U.S. sanctions for example towards Iraq. The Iranian situation was probably the key source of the disruptive events in the middle east in 2019. This “source problem” has now just become much worse. The consequence of these “most likely losses of supply to come” in the middle east will be that the oil price will be elevated, global oil surplus will be avoided, and U.S. oil production growth and exports can re-accelerate again.
Ch1: Cumulative oil production change in the U.S. versus Iran + Venezuela. U.S. production growth would not have been possible without the losses of supplies from Iran and Venezuela and those losses were largely due to sanctions from the U.S.

Ch2: Crude oil production in m bl/d in the US, Iran, Iraq and Venezuela

Ch3: Iraq and Iran might be a large Shia Muslim force if Iraq now votes to expel U.S. troops. The U.S. on Sunday threatened Iraq with sanctions if U.S. troops are expelled.

Ch4: The EU wants gas from Russia via the new Nord Stream 2 pipeline. The U.S. doesn’t want it. It want’s to export gas to the EU

Analys
Brent crude up USD 9/bl on the week… ”deal around the corner” narrative fades
Brent is climbing higher. Front-month is at USD 106.3/bl this morning, close to a weekly high and a USD 9/bl jump from Mondays open. This is the move we flagged as a risk earlier in the week: the market shifting from ”a deal is around the corner” to ”this is going to take longer than we thought”.

Analyst Commodities, SEB
During April, rest-of-year Brent remained remarkably stable around USD 90/bl. A stability which rested on one single assumption: the SoH reopens around 1 May. That assumption is now slowly falling apart.
As we highlighted yesterday: every week of delay beyond 1 May adds (theoretically) ish USD 5/bl to the rest-of-year average, as global inventories draw 100 million barrels per week. i.e., a mid-May reopening implies rest-of-year Brent closer to USD 100/bl, and anything pushing into June or July takes us meaningfully higher.
What’s changed in the last 48 hours:
#1: The US military has formally warned that clearing suspected sea mines from SoH could take up to six months. That is a completely different timescale from what the financial market is pricing. Even a political deal tomorrow does not immediately reopen the strait.
#2: Trump has shifted his tone from urgency to ”strategic patience”. In yesterday’s press conference: ”Don’t rush me… I want a great deal.” The market is reading this as a president no longer feeling pressured by timelines, with the naval blockade running in the background.
#3: So far, the military activity is escalating, not de-escalating. Axios reports Iran is laying more mines in SoH. The US 3rd carrier strike group (USS George H.W. Bush) is arriving with two countermine vessels. Trump yesterday ordered the US Navy to destroy any Iranian boats caught laying mines. While CNN reports that the Pentagon is actively drawing up plans to strike Iranian SoH capabilities and individual Iranian military leaders if the ceasefire collapses. i.e., NOT a attitude consistent with an imminent deal!
Spot crude and product prices eased off the early-April highs on a combination of system rerouting and deal optimism. Both now weakening. Goldman estimates April Gulf output is reduced by 14.5 mbl/d, or 57% of pre-war supply, a number that keeps getting worse the longer this drags on.
Demand-side adaptation is ongoing: S. Korea has cut its Middle East crude dependence from 69% to 56% by pulling more from the Americas and Africa, and Japan is kicking off a second round of SPR releases from 1 May. But SPRs are finite.
Ref. to the negotiations, we should not bet on speed. The current Iranian leadership is dominated by genuine hardliners willing to absorb economic pain and run the clock to extract concessions. That is not a setup for a rapid resolution. US/Israeli media briefings keep framing the delay as ”internal Iranian divisions”, the reality is more complicated and points toward weeks and months, not days.
Our point is that the complexity is large, and higher prices have only just started (given a scenario where the negotiations drag out in time). The market spent April leaning on the USD 90/bl rest-of-year assumption; that case is diminishing by the hour. If ”early May reopening” is replaced by ”June, July or later” over the next week or two, both crude and products have meaningful room to reprice higher from here. There is a high risk being short energy and betting on any immediate political resolution(!).
Analys
Market Still Betting on Timely Resolution, But Each Day Raises Shortage Risk
Down on Friday. Up on Monday. The Brent June crude oil contract traded down 5.1% last week to a close of $90.38/b. It reached a high of $103.87/b last Monday and a low of $86.09/b on Friday as Iran announced that the Strait of Hormuz was fully open for transit. That quickly changed over the weekend as the US upheld its blockade of Iranian oil exports while Iran naturally responded by closing the SoH again. The US blew a hole in the engine room of the Iranian ship TOUSKA and took custody of the ship on Sunday. Brent crude is up 5.6% this morning to $95.4/b.

The cease-fire is expiring tomorrow. The US has said it will send a delegation for a second round of negotiations in Islamabad in Pakistan. But Iran has for now rejected a second round of talks as it views US demands as unrealistic and excessive while the US is also blocking the Strait of Hormuz.
While Brent is up 5% this morning, the financial market is still very optimistic that progress will be made. That talks will continue and that the SoH will fully open by the start of May which is consistent with a rest-of-year average Brent crude oil price of around $90/b with the market now trading that balance at around $88/b.
Financial optimism vs. physical deterioration. We have a divergence where the financial market is trading negotiations, improvements and resolution while at the same time the physical market is deteriorating day by day. Physical oil flows remain constrained by disrupted flows, longer voyage times and elevated freight and insurance costs.
Financial markets are betting that a US/Iranian resolution will save us in time from violent shortages down the road. But every day that the SoH remains closed is bringing us closer to a potentially very painful point of shortages and much higher prices.
The US blockade is also a weapon of leverage against its European and Asian allies. When Iran closed the SoH it held the world economy as a hostage against the US. The US blockade of the SoH is of course blocking Iranian oil exports. But it is also an action of disruption directed towards Europe and Asia. The US has called for the rest of the world to engaged in the war with Iran: ”If you want oil from the Persian Gulf, then go and get it”. A risk is that the US plays brinkmanship with the global oil market directed towards its European and Asian allies and maybe even towards China to force them to engage and take part. Maybe unthinkable. But unthinkable has become the norm with Trump in the White House.
Analys
TACO (or Whatever It Was) Sends Oil Lower — Iran Keeps Choking Hormuz
Wild moves yesterday. Brent crude traded to a high of $114.43/b and a low of $96.0/b and closed at $99.94/b yesterday.

US – Iran negotiations ongoing or not? What a day. Donald Trump announced that good talks were ongoing between Iran and the US and that the 48 hour deadline before bombing Iranian power plants and energy infrastructure was postponed by five days subject to success of ongoing meetings. Iranian media meanwhile stated that no meetings were ongoing at all.
Today we are scratching our heads trying to figure out what yesterday was all about.
Friends and family playing the market? Was it just Trump and his friends and family who were playing with oil and equity markets with $580m and $1.46bn in bets being placed by someone in oil and equity markets just 15 minutes before Trump’s announcement?
Was Trump pulling a TACO as he reached his political and economic pain point: Brent at $112/b, US Gas at $4/gal, SPX below 200dma and US 10yr above 4.4%?
Different Iranian factions with Trump talking with one of them? Are there real negotiations going on but with the US talking to one faction in Iran while another, the hardliners, are not involved and are denying any such negotiations going on?
Extending the ultimatum to attack and invade Kharg island next weekend? Or, is the five day delay of the deadline a tactical decision to allow US amphibious assault ships and marines to arrive in the Gulf in the upcoming weekend while US and Israeli continues to degrade Iranian military targets till then. And then next weekend a move by the US/Israel to attack and conquer for example the Kharg island?
We do not really know which it is or maybe a combination of these.
We did get some kind of TACO ydy. But markets have been waiting for some kind of TACO to happen and yesterday we got some kind of TACO. And Brent crude is now trading at $101.5/b as a result rather than at $112-114/b as it did no the high yesterday.
But what really matters in our view is the political situation on the ground in Iran. Will hardliners continue to hold power or will a more pragmatic faction gain power?
If the hardliners remain in power then oil pain should extend all the way to US midterm elections. The hardliners were apparently still in charge as of last week. Iran immediately retaliated and damaged LNG infrastructure in Qatar after Israel hit Iranian South Pars. The SoH was still closed and all messages coming out of Iran indicated defiance. Hardliners continues in power has a huge consequence for oil prices going forward. The regime has played its ’oil-weapon’ (closing or chocking the Strait of Hormuz). It is using it to achieve political goals. Deterrence: it needs to be so politically and economically expensive to attack Iran that it won’t happen again in the future. Or at least that the US/Israel thinks 10-times over before they attack again. The highest Brent crude oil closing price since the start of the war is $112.19/b last Friday. In comparison the 20-year inflation adjusted Brent price is $103/b. So Brent crude last Friday at $112.19/b isn’t a shockingly high price. And it is still far below the nominal high of $148/b from 2008 which is $220/b if inflation adjusted. So once in a lifetime Iran activates its most powerful weapon. The oil weapon. It needs to show the power of this weapon and it needs to reap political gains. Getting Brent to $112/b and intraday high of $119.5/b (9 March) isn’t a display of the power of that weapon. And it is not a deterrence against future attacks.
So if the hardliners remain in power in Iran, then the SoH will likely remain chocked all the way to US midterm elections and Brent crude will at a minimum go above the historical nominal high of $148/b from 2008.
Thus the outlook for the oil price for the rest of the year doesn’t depend all that much of whether Trump pulls a TACO or not. Stops bombing or not. It depends more on who is in charge in Iran. If it is the hardliners, then deterrence against future attacks via chocking of the SoH and high oil prices is the likely line of action. It is impacting the world but the Iranian ’oil-weapon’ is directed towards the US president and the the US midterm elections.
If a pragmatic faction gets to power in Iran, then a very prosperous future is possible. However, if power is shifting towards a more pragmatic faction in Iran then a completely different direction could evolve. Such a faction could possibly be open for cooperation with the US and the GCC and possibly put its issues versus Israel aside. Then the prosperity we have seen evolving in Dubai could be a possible future also for Iran.
So far it looks like the hardliners are fully in charge. As far as we can see, the hardliners are still fully in control in Iran. That points towards continued chocking of the SoH and oil prices ticking higher as global inventories (the oil market buffers) are drawn lower. And not just for a few more weeks, but possibly all the way to the US midterm elections.
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