Följ oss

Analys

SHB Veckans Jordbrukskommentar – 18 mars 2016

Publicerat

den

Handelsbanken - Råvarubrevet - Nyhetsbrev om råvaror

Kvartalsrapport för råvaror från HandelsbankenVete

Terminspriserna på vete i både Paris och Chicago har gått ned under veckan. Vetet i Chicago har fallit omkring 2,5 procent trots en klar försvagning av den amerikanska dollarn under samma tid, pressat inte minst av fortsatt låga amerikanska exportsiffror – omkring 18 procent under samma tid förra året. Även för EU ligger exporten klart un-der förra året med ungefär 15 procent ned, och det är svårt att se någon större förändring där då ny skörd kommer allt närmare, inte minst för de stora importörerna i Nordafrika där skörden startar om bara ett par veckor.

Vädermässigt inte mycket att tala om för vetet, förutom rådande torra väder i viktiga veteregioner i USA. Dessa regioner ser ut att förbli ganska torra även under nästa vecka men därefter ser prognoserna bättre ut – amerikans-ka NOAA spår att kommande vår bjuder på normala eller något över normala nederbördsmängder. I Europa finns heller inte mycket väderproblem att oroas över, i Frankrike är exempelvis det höstsådda vetet i ett gott skick, 92 procent av arealen uppges ha grödor i skicket ”good/excellent”, dock två procentenheter lägre än i föregående rapport.

Vi kan fortfarande inte riktigt se varför vetepriserna ska börja stiga utan ett större väderproblem i någon av de viktigare spannmålsregionerna i världen, vilket visserligen kan komma snabbt. Terminer med längre löptid handlas med stor riskpremie, bl.a. för eventuella framtida väderproblem, ett påslag som rimligen bör försvinna/minska efter hand som tiden löper utan, förmodligen främst väderrelaterade, produktionsproblem. I dagsläget som sagt inga större väderproblem och höstsådda grödor i bättre skick än för ett år sedan. Vete på termin MATIF december 2016 går nu att sälja för omkring EUR 167 (SEK 1.540) per ton). För er som vill prissäkra er skörd men inte låsa priset med terminer, för att kunna ta del av en eventuell prisuppgång, erbjuder vi även optionshandel – hör gärna av er om det är av intresse.

Raps

Rapspriserna i Paris har gått upp något under veckan utan större nyheter direkt kopplade till raps. Visst stöd har kommit från högre priser på soja, råolja och canola i Kanada. Generellt sett inga väderproblem att rapportera om för raps – från ett av de större länderna i EU vad gäller rapsproduktion, Tyskland, rapporteras att det inte finns någon större utvintring att tala om och avkastningsnivån för skörd 2016 uppskattas till 5 ton per hektar. Raps no-vember 2016 handlas nu kring EUR 354 (SEK 3.270) per ton.

Majs

Majspriserna i Chicago har stigit något under veckan, delvis påverkat av en svagare amerikansk dollar samt visst skördefördröjande regn i Argentina. I Argentina är endast omkring 4 procent av skörden avklarad, klart mindre än vid samma tid förra året – vi ser dock inga skäl till större oro i dagsläget då prognoserna visar torrt väder igen i nästa vecka och avkastningsnivån hittills sägs vara mycket hög. Den amerikanska majsexporten går fortsatt rela-tivt trögt med en volym omkring 18 procent under samma tid förra året. I kommande veckor startar majsskörden i USA, än så länge utan oro för väder – mer långsiktiga prognoser, från amerikanska NOAA, pekar snarare på en vår utan väderrelaterade problem. Och väderproblem är som vi ser det vad som behövs för att priset ska gå upp.

Sojabönor

Priserna i Chicago på sojabönor har stigit marginellt under veckan dels som följd av en hel del skördefördröjande regn i Argentina – torrt väder väntas dock igen i nästa vecka och mer regn väntas istället i Brasilien. En del rappor-ter om avkastning i Argentina visar på något över förväntat och en del något under, men skörden är i ett väldigt tidigt skede och mer tillförlitlig information kommer efterhand som skörden fortgår när nederbörden minskat. Stöd till sojapriser har även kommit från stigande priser på råolja, palmolja och inte minst en försvagad amerikansk dollar. Likt för de övriga stora grödorna är den amerikanska exporten låg med volymer omkring 10 procent under förra året. Fortsatt stort fokus på skörden i Sydamerika och snart även sådd i USA.

[box]SHB Jordbrukskommentar är producerat av Handelsbanken och publiceras i samarbete och med tillstånd på Råvarumarknaden.se[/box]

Ansvarsbegränsning

Detta material är producerat av Svenska Handelsbanken AB (publ) i fortsättningen kallad Handelsbanken. De som arbetar med innehållet är inte analytiker och materialet är inte oberoende investeringsanalys. Innehållet är uteslutande avsett för kunder i Sverige. Syftet är att ge en allmän information till Handelsbankens kunder och utgör inte ett personligt investeringsråd eller en personlig rekommendation. Informationen ska inte ensamt utgöra underlag för investeringsbeslut. Kunder bör inhämta råd från sina rådgivare och basera sina investeringsbeslut utifrån egen erfarenhet.

Informationen i materialet kan ändras och också avvika från de åsikter som uttrycks i oberoende investeringsanalyser från Handelsbanken. Informationen grundar sig på allmänt tillgänglig information och är hämtad från källor som bedöms som tillförlitliga, men riktigheten kan inte garanteras och informationen kan vara ofullständig eller nedkortad. Ingen del av förslaget får reproduceras eller distribueras till någon annan person utan att Handelsbanken dessförinnan lämnat sitt skriftliga medgivande. Handelsbanken ansvarar inte för att materialet används på ett sätt som strider mot förbudet mot vidarebefordran eller offentliggörs i strid med bankens regler.

Analys

Brent slips to USD 64.5: sanction doubts and OPEC focus reduce gains

Publicerat

den

SEB - analysbrev på råvaror

After reaching USD 66.78 per barrel on Friday afternoon, Brent crude has since traded mostly sideways, yet dipping lower this morning. The market appears to be consolidating last week’s sharp gains, with Brent now easing back to around USD 64.5 per barrel, roughly USD 2.3 below Friday’s peak but still well above last Monday’s USD 60.07 low.

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

The rebound last week was initially driven by Washington’s decision to blacklist Russia’s two largest oil producers, Rosneft and Lukoil, which together account for nearly half of the country’s crude exports. The move sparked a wave of risk repricing and short covering, with Brent rallying almost 10% from Monday’s trough. Yet, the market is now questioning the actual effectiveness of the sanctions. While a full blacklisting sounds dramatic, the mechanisms for enforcement remain unclear, and so far, there are no signs of disrupted Russian flows.

In practice, these measures are unlikely to materially affect Russian supply or revenues in the near term, yet we have now seen Indian refiners reportedly paused new orders for Russian barrels pending government guidance. BPCL is expected to issue a replacement spot tender within 7–10 days, potentially sourcing crude from non-sanctioned entities instead. Meanwhile, Lukoil is exploring the sale of overseas assets, and Germany has requested extra time for Rosneft to reorganize its refining interests in the country.

The broader market focus is now shifting toward this week’s Fed decision and Sunday’s OPEC+ meeting, both seen as potential short-term price drivers. Renewed U.S.-China trade dialogue ahead of Trump’s meeting with President Xi Jinping in South Korea is also lending some macro support.

In short, while the White House’s latest move adds to geopolitical noise, it does not yet represent a true supply disruption. If Washington had intended to apply real pressure, it could have advanced the long-standing Senate bill enforcing secondary sanctions on buyers of Russian oil, legislation with overwhelming backing, or delivered more direct military assistance to Ukraine. Instead, the latest action looks more like political theatre than policy shift, projecting toughness without imposing material economic pain.

Still, while the immediate supply impact appears limited, the episode has refocused attention on Russia’s export vulnerability and underscored the ongoing geopolitical risk premium in the oil market. Combined with counter-seasonal draws in U.S. crude inventories, record-high barrels at sea, and ongoing uncertainty ahead of the OPEC+ meeting, short-term fundamentals remain somewhat tighter than the broader surplus story suggests.

i.e., the sanctions may prove mostly symbolic, but the combination of geopolitics and uneven inventory draws is likely to keep Brent volatile around the low to mid-USD 60s in the days ahead.

Fortsätt läsa

Analys

Sell the rally. Trump has become predictable in his unpredictability

Publicerat

den

SEB - analysbrev på råvaror

Hesitant today. Brent jumped to an intraday high of $66.36/b yesterday after having touched an intraday low of $60.07/b on Monday as Indian and Chinese buyers cancelled some Russian oil purchases and instead redirected their purchases towards the Middle East due to the news US sanctions. Brent is falling back 0.4% this morning to $65.8/b.

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

It’s our strong view that the only sensible thing is to sell this rally. In all Trump’s unpredictability he has become increasingly predictable. Again and again he has rumbled about how he is going to be tough on Putin. Punish Putin if he won’t agree to peace in Ukraine. Recent rumbling was about the Tomahawk rockets which Trump threatened on 10 October and 12 October to sell/send to Ukraine. Then on 17 October he said that ”the U.S. didn’t want to give away weapons (Tomahawks) it needs”.

All of Trump’s threats towards Putin have been hot air. So far Trump’s threats have been all hot air and threats which later have evaporated after ”great talks with Putin”. After all these repetitions it is very hard to believe that this time will be any different. The new sanctions won’t take effect before 21. November. Trump has already said that: ”he was hoping that these new sanctions would be very short-lived in any case”. Come 21. November these new sanctions will either evaporate like all the other threats Trump has thrown at Putin before fading them. Or the sanctions will be postponed by another 4 weeks or 8 weeks with the appearance that Trump is even more angry with Putin. But so far Trump has done nothing that hurt Putin/Russia. We can’t imagine that this will be different. The only way forward in our view for a propre lasting peace in Ukraine is to turn Ukraine into defensive porcupine equipped with a stinging tail if need be.

China will likely stand up to Trump if new sanctions really materialize on 21 Nov. Just one country has really stood up to Trump in his tariff trade war this year: China. China has come of age and strength. I will no longer be bullied. Trump upped tariffs. China responded in kind. Trump cut China off from high-end computer chips. China put on the breaks on rare earth metals. China won’t be bullied any more and it has the power to stand up. Some Chinese state-owned companies like Sinopec have cancelled some of their Russian purchases. But China’s Foreign Ministry spokesperson Guo Jiakun has stated that China “oppose unilateral sanctions which lack a basis in international law and authorization of the UN Security Council”. Thus no one, not even the US shall unilaterally dictate China from whom they can buy oil or not. This is yet another opportunity for China to show its new strength and stand up to Trump in a show of force. Exactly how China choses to play this remains to be seen. But China won’t be bullied by over something as important as its oil purchases. So best guess here is that China will defy Trump on this. But probably China won’t need to make a bid deal over this. Firstly because these new sanctions will either evaporate as all the other threats or be postponed once we get to 21 November. Secondly because the sanctions are explicit towards US persons and companies but only ”may” be enforced versus non-US entities.

Sanctions is not a reduction in global supply of oil. Just some added layer of friction. Anyhow, the new sanctions won’t reduce the supply of Russian crude oil to the market. It will only increase the friction in the market with yet more need for the shadow fleet and ship to ship transfer of Russian oil to dodge the sanctions. If they materialize at all.

The jump in crude oil prices is probably due to redirections of crude purchases to the Mid-East and not because all speculators are now turned bullish. Has oil rallied because all speculators now suddenly have turned bullish? We don’t think so. Brent crude has probably jumped because some Indian and Chinese oil purchasers of have redirected their purchases from Russia towards the Mid-East just in case the sanctions really materializes on 21 November.

Fortsätt läsa

Analys

Brent crude set to dip its feet into the high $50ies/b this week

Publicerat

den

SEB - analysbrev på råvaror

Parts of the Brent crude curve dipping into the high $50ies/b. Brent crude fell 2.3% over the week to Friday. It closed the week at $61.29/b, a slight gain on the day, but also traded to a low of $60.14/b that same day and just barely avoided trading into the $50ies/b. This morning it is risk-on in equities which seems to help industrial metals a little higher. But no such luck for oil. It is down 0.8% at $60.8/b. This week looks set for Brent crude to dip its feet in the $50ies/b. The Brent 3mth contract actually traded into the high $50ies/b on Friday. 

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

The front-end backwardation has been on a weakening foot and is now about to fully disappear. The lowest point of the crude oil curve has also moved steadily lower and lower and its discount to the 5yr contract is now $6.8/b. A solid contango. The Brent 3mth contract did actually dip into the $50ies/b intraday on Friday when it traded to a low point of $59.93/b.

More weakness to come as lots of oil at sea comes to ports. Mid-East OPEC countries have boosted exports along with lower post summer consumption and higher production. The result is highly visibly in oil at sea which increased by 17 mb to 1,311 mb over the week to Sunday. Up 185 mb since mid-August. On its way to discharge at a port somewhere over the coming month or two.

Don’t forget that the oil market path ahead is all down to OPEC+. Remember that what is playing out in the oil market now is all by design by OPEC+. The group has decided that the unwind of the voluntary cuts is what it wants to do. In a combination of meeting demand from consumers as well as taking back market share. But we need to remember that how this plays out going forward is all at the mercy of what OPEC+ decides to do. It will halt the unwinding at some point. It will revert to cuts instead of unwind at some point.

A few months with Brent at $55/b and 40-50 US shale oil rigs kicked out may be what is needed. We think OPEC+ needs to see the exit of another 40-50 drilling rigs in the US shale oil patches to set US shale oil production on a path to of a 1 mb/d year on year decline Dec-25 to Dec-26. We are not there yet. But a 2-3 months period with Brent crude averaging $55/b would probably do it.

Oil on water increased 17 mb over the week to Sunday while oil in transit increased by 23 mb. So less oil was standing still. More was moving.

Oil on water increased 17 mb over the week to Sunday while oil in transit increased by 23 mb. So less oil was standing still. More was moving.
Source: SEB graph and highlights, Vortexa data

Crude oil floating storage (stationary more than 7 days). Down 11 mb over week to Sunday

Crude oil floating storage (stationary more than 7 days).  Down 11 mb over week to Sunday
Source: SEB graph and highlights, Vortexa data

The lowest point of the Brent crude oil curve versus the 5yr contract. Weakest so far this year.

The lowest point of the Brent crude oil curve versus the 5yr contract. Weakest so far this year.
Source: SEB graph and highlights, Bloomberg data

Crude oil 1mth to 3mth time-spreads. Dubai held out strongly through summer, but then that center of strength fell apart in late September and has been leading weakness in crude curves lower since then.

Crude oil 1mth to 3mth time-spreads. Dubai held out strongly through summer, but then that center of strength fell apart in late September and has been leading weakness in crude curves lower since then.
Source: SEB graph and highlights, Bloomberg data

Fortsätt läsa

Guldcentralen

Aktier

Annons

Gratis uppdateringar om råvarumarknaden

*

Populära