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The strongest Brent crude oil curve since May-2019

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

Baring the attack on Saudi Arabia in September which spiked the front-end of the Brent crude oil curve up to $71.95/bl for a moment and thus pushed the Brent curve into steep backwardation for a short period, we now have the strongest Brent crude oil curve since the end of May 2019. The Brent front month contract now trades at a $7.4/bl premium over the 5-year contract which is the highest level since late May.

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

The Since a low-point at the start of October the Brent crude oil curve has just become stronger and stronger by the day. This coincides nicely with the rebound (following a long, long decline) in the global manufacturing PMI. This is undoubtedly leading to a rebound in global oil demand growth as well or at least the end of the deterioration. It also fits well with the fact that we are now sailing right into the long-heralded IMO-2020 event which technically has a tightening effect on the global oil market. There has been much fear for a large H1-2020 oil market surplus, but OPEC has now largely eradicated that from happening. It’s anyhow predicted to be a temporary issue with a balanced marked again in H2-2020. Temporary supply gluts are easy to handle for OPEC if they choose to.

The IEA was out with its monthly Oil Market Report this week. Notable was that OECD inventories declined at the fastest pace in Sep and Oct since 2017 with crude oil inventories only 5 m barrels above last October. “Other products” (probably NGL) rose by 25 m barrels since last year.

Another notable thing was that non-OECD oil product demand rose by 1.3 m bl/d YoY to October. OECD demand declined 0.1 m bl/d YoY to October. In terms of OECD there is one very important issue. Gasoline, Jet, Diesel and LPG together grew by +0.6 m bl/d YoY to October with the first three of these growing on average 1% YoY. That is very strong. The weakness was again in the “Other” category which declined by 0.6 m bl/d YoY. So OECD demand growth weakness was in the unspecified “other” category while demand growth was solid also in the OECD region for the classic liquids.

Now add the ingredient of a large win for Boris Johnson and an “almost there” for the US – China trade war and up we go for Brent crude.

OPEC will hold the market through a potential surplus in H1-2020. Oil demand growth will likely rebound along with a rebound in global manufacturing. IMO-2020 adds strength to the oil market in H1-2020. US shale oil is probably slowing down faster than projected.

Ch1: OECD inventories by IEA falling the fastest since 2017

OECD inventories by IEA falling the fastest since 2017

Ch2: The Brent crude curve has the strongest structure since late May 2019 baring the event of the attack on Saudi Arabia. Graph showing Brent 1mth contract minus the 5 year contract.

The Brent crude curve

Analys

OPEC+ in a process of retaking market share

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SEB - analysbrev på råvaror

Oil prices are likely to fall for a fourth straight year as OPEC+ unwinds cuts and retakes market share. We expect Brent crude to average USD 55/b in Q4/25 before OPEC+ steps in to stabilise the market into 2026. Surplus, stock building, oil prices are under pressure with OPEC+ calling the shots as to how rough it wants to play it. We see natural gas prices following parity with oil (except for seasonality) until LNG surplus arrives in late 2026/early 2027.

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

Oil market: Q4/25 and 2026 will be all about how OPEC+ chooses to play it
OPEC+ is in a process of unwinding voluntary cuts by a sub-group of the members and taking back market share. But the process looks set to be different from 2014-16, as the group doesn’t look likely to blindly lift production to take back market share. The group has stated very explicitly that it can just as well cut production as increase it ahead. While the oil price is unlikely to drop as violently and lasting as in 2014-16, it will likely fall further before the group steps in with fresh cuts to stabilise the price. We expect Brent to fall to USD 55/b in Q4/25 before the group steps in with fresh cuts at the end of the year.

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

Natural gas market: Winter risk ahead, yet LNG balance to loosen from 2026
The global gas market entered 2025 in a fragile state of balance. European reliance on LNG remains high, with Russian pipeline flows limited to Turkey and Russian LNG constrained by sanctions. Planned NCS maintenance in late summer could trim exports by up to 1.3 TWh/day, pressuring EU storage ahead of winter. Meanwhile, NE Asia accounts for more than 50% of global LNG demand, with China alone nearing a 20% share (~80 mt in 2024). US shale gas production has likely peaked after reaching 104.8 bcf/d, even as LNG export capacity expands rapidly, tightening the US balance. Global supply additions are limited until late 2026, when major US, Qatari and Canadian projects are due to start up. Until then, we expect TTF to average EUR 38/MWh through 2025, before easing as the new supply wave likely arrives in late 2026 and then in 2027.

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Analys

Manufacturing PMIs ticking higher lends support to both copper and oil

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SEB - analysbrev på råvaror

Price action contained withing USD 2/b last week. Likely muted today as well with US closed. The Brent November contract is the new front-month contract as of today. It traded in a range of USD 66.37-68.49/b and closed the week up a mere 0.4% at USD 67.48/b. US oil inventory data didn’t make much of an impact on the Brent price last week as it is totally normal for US crude stocks to decline 2.4 mb/d this time of year as data showed. This morning Brent is up a meager 0.5% to USD 67.8/b. It is US Labor day today with US markets closed. Today’s price action is likely going to be muted due to that.

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

Improving manufacturing readings. China’s manufacturing PMI for August came in at 49.4 versus 49.3 for July. A marginal improvement. The total PMI index ticked up to 50.5 from 50.2 with non-manufacturing also helping it higher. The HCOB Eurozone manufacturing PMI was a disastrous 45.1 last December, but has since then been on a one-way street upwards to its current 50.5 for August. The S&P US manufacturing index jumped to 53.3 in August which was the highest since 2022 (US ISM manufacturing tomorrow). India manufacturing PMI rose further and to 59.3 for August which is the highest since at least 2022.

Are we in for global manufacturing expansion? Would help to explain copper at 10k and resilient oil. JPMorgan global manufacturing index for August is due tomorrow. It was 49.7 in July and has been below the 50-line since February. Looking at the above it looks like a good chance for moving into positive territory for global manufacturing. A copper price of USD 9935/ton, sniffing at the 10k line could be a reflection of that. An oil price holding up fairly well at close to USD 68/b despite the fact that oil balances for Q4-25 and 2026 looks bloated could be another reflection that global manufacturing may be accelerating.

US manufacturing PMI by S&P rose to 53.3 in August. It was published on 21 August, so not at all newly released. But the US ISM manufacturing PMI is due tomorrow and has the potential to follow suite with a strong manufacturing reading.

US manufacturing PMI by S&P
Source: Bloomberg
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Analys

Crude stocks fall again – diesel tightness persists

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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
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