No balance: oil markets
still oversupplied, now growth is stuttering
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[July 13, 2016]
By Henning Gloystein
SINGAPORE/LONDON (Reuters) - Oil
industry hopes that markets are about return to balance, ending a
global glut that pulled down prices by over 70 percent between 2014
and early 2016, might be abruptly dashed.
Despite recent disruptions and output cuts, there is mounting
evidence that plentiful supplies and brimming inventories will delay
a much-quoted rebalancing of oil markets.
"The market needs to stop worrying about this balance and
concentrate on the now," said Matt Stanley, a fuel broker at Freight
Investor Services in Dubai.
"We rallied on the back of supply outages, wildfires and seemingly
increased demand. Well, Shell have lifted force majeure at
(Nigeria's) Bonny ... the wildfires are out and Canada is close to
full production, and (U.S.) gasoline demand is at 15-month lows," he
added.
Not just are supplies improving, now demand may be waning.
With the United States and Europe stagnating, Asia has been the main
pillar of oil demand growth. But that too is now stuttering, with
tanker flows into the region down for four straight months, Thomson
Reuters Eikon data shows.
One indicator of a continuing glut is the shape of the forward crude
oil futures curve <0#LCO:>, which has been in contango for much of
this year, meaning that oil for sale at a later date is more
expensive than that for immediate delivery.
This makes it attractive for traders to store oil for sale later and
is seen as a key sign of oversupply.
In fact, so much oil is now stored that the world is running out of
space, forcing traders to charter supertankers in which to keep
unsold fuel.
There is so much oil in storage that it could take well into 2018
for the glut to clear.
"There are still excess stocks on the market – hundreds of millions
of barrels of surplus oil. It will take a long time to reduce this
inventory overhang," Saudi Energy Minister Khalid al-Falih told a
German newspaper.
While headline figures such as Chinese car sales and gross domestic
growth (GDP) remain strong, both have slumped most of this year.
China's new passenger vehicle sales, while still huge at over 2
million per month, have fallen by a quarter since reaching their
December peak.
Counting on a continuing boom, China's oil refiners are producing so
much fuel that even its huge domestic market can't cope, resulting
in a surge of Chinese fuel exports into an already glutted Asian
market.
Furthermore, China's program to build up strategic petroleum
reserves (SPR), a strong source of crude demand over the past years,
may slow sharply or even halt soon, as its available storage
facilities are full or close to capacity.
As a result, U.S. bank JPMorgan expects a "15 percent month-on-month
decline in China's crude imports in September."
The impact on oil consumption of Britain's vote to leave the
European Union is likely to delay the supply/demand rebalancing
further, probably by six months.
INDIA NOT THE NEW CHINA
The U.S. Energy Department cut its forecast for oil demand growth in
2016, and increased its demand growth forecast for 2017, according
to a monthly outlook issued on Tuesday.
U.S. oil demand is expected to grow 160,000 barrels per day in 2016,
compared with previous expectations for 220,000 bpd, according to
the department. Demand will grow 120,000 bpd in 2017, compared with
60,000 bpd previously.
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Excess natural gas is being flared, or burnt off, at a flare stack
at the refinery in Tula November 21, 2013. REUTERS/Henry Romero
"It doesn't look as though we'll put much of a dent in global (oil) inventories
until the second half of 2017," said Tim Evans, energy futures specialist at
Citigroup in New York.
"The market is making considerable progress relative to the surplus of the past
two years, but it's going to take more time to bring inventories back down to
more normal levels," he added.
Many in the oil industry hope India will pick up the baton from China and act as
the global driver for oil demand growth.
Yet such hopes are premature as India remains, for the time being, too poor to
get anywhere near China's fuel consumption.
While its demand may now be growing faster than China's, its outright
consumption remains far lower, as seen in vehicle sales.
India sells some 16 million motor bikes per year, similar to China. Yet in
China, some 2 million new passenger vehicles hit the road every single month (25
million in 2015), up from around one million just five years ago.
In India, by contrast, car sales have stagnated between 200,000 and 300,000 per
month for years, and never recovered from their historic peak of just over
300,000 reached in 2011.
Meanwhile, Asia's two most developed major economies, Japan and South Korea, are
grappling with a steady and likely terminal decline in oil demand.
Some pin their hopes on Southeast Asia, where large emerging markets such as the
Philippines, Vietnam, Thailand and Indonesia have huge potential. But like
India, the region still lags China in terms of development for it to act as a
substitute.
In short, the sort of fuel demand growth seen in Asia over the past decade may
be a thing of the past.
While few expect the region's demand to fall outright, many say the oil industry
needs to adjust to a future of lower Asian growth just like the coal and steel
industry has had to.
Again, the automobile sector provides a clue. "Car sales in Asia, including in
China, are falling amid economic downturn," Tae-nyen Kim, executive managing
director of Korea Automobile Association, told Reuters.
(Reporting by Henning Gloystein in Singapore,; additional reporting by Jane
Chung in Seoul and Ahmad Ghaddar in London, editing by David Evans)
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