Column: Hedge funds gamble OPEC will tighten oil market
too much: Kemp
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[January 02, 2018]
By John Kemp
LONDON (Reuters) - Hedge funds are the most
bullish about oil prices in years, expecting further gains even as
prices touch multi-year highs and ignoring the risk linked to such a
large concentration of positions.
A record net long position has been accumulated by hedge funds and other
money managers, amounting to 1,183 million barrels in the five biggest
futures and options contracts covering crude, gasoline and heating oil.
Portfolio managers held a record 1,328 million barrels of long positions
in Brent, WTI, U.S. gasoline and U.S. heating oil on Dec. 26, according
to data published by regulators and exchanges.
By contrast, hedge funds held only 145 million barrels of short
positions, the lowest level for 10 months and among the lowest at any
point since the start of 2013.
Fund managers now hold more than nine long positions for every short
position, the most bullish picture for at least five years (http://tmsnrt.rs/2CduGpC).
There are record net long positions in Brent crude (561 million
barrels), WTI (461 million barrels) and U.S. heating oil (82 million
barrels).
There are also large, if not quite record, net long positions in U.S.
gasoline (79 million barrels) and European gasoil (131 million barrels).
In many of these contracts hedge fund positioning appears extremely
stretched, with the ratio of long to short positions at multi-year
highs.
DOWNSIDE RISK
The concentration of so many bullish positions poses a significant
downside risk to prices if and when portfolio managers decide to close
them out and realize some of their paper profits.
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For the time being, however, most fund managers are ignoring the liquidation
risk and focusing on the prospect of further price increases first.
There are plenty of reasons to be bullish about the outlook in 2018. The global
economy is in a synchronized upswing and world trade is growing at the fastest
rate since the start of the decade.
Stocks of crude and products have fallen significantly since the middle of 2017.
Oil demand is growing rapidly while OPEC and its allies have extended their
production pact until at least the middle of the year.
History suggests OPEC is more likely to tighten the oil market too much and
allow prices to overshoot on the upside than rather than relax production cuts
too early and risk prices falling back.
Such was the case after both the previous oil market slumps in 1997/98 and
2008/09, with prices overshooting the producer group's initial targets.
OPEC’s tightening bias probably explains why many hedge funds remain bullish
despite benchmark Brent prices moving towards $70 a barrel.
The main downside risk comes from a resurgence of U.S. shale oil production,
with WTI prices now above $60 a barrel.
If shale output starts to climb faster than expected OPEC could be forced to
halt production cuts earlier than currently envisaged.
The existence of so many hedge fund long positions could eventually magnify the
downside risk posed by U.S. shale.
However, most hedge fund managers seem to have concluded that the risk is some
way off and prices have more scope to climb before the inevitable correction.
Related column:
"Brent prices caught in the calm before the storm?" Reuters, Dec. 20
(Editing by David Goodman)
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