Is $71 as good as it gets for oil bulls this year?
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[March 16, 2018]
By Amanda Cooper
LONDON (Reuters) - On the surface, things
look good for oil producers. Global oil demand is set to grow at its
fastest pace in three years and OPEC's discipline in sticking to output
cuts has been unprecedented.
All of this should help offset booming U.S. production.
But there are a few tell-tale signs in the oil market that paint a less
rosy picture.
After shrinking consistently for months, global oil stocks began rising
again at the start of this year.
But even before it became apparent that inventories had increased, the
oil futures market flipped into a structure that usually reflects the
perception that supply is greater than demand – known as contango, when
current-month prices are weaker than forward prices.
The International Energy Agency and the Organization of the Petroleum
Exporting Countries this week reported an increase in global
inventories, which declined for seven months in a row, thanks to OPEC's
coordinated 1.8-million-barrels-per-day joint production cut with other
major exporters such as Russia.
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The IEA, OPEC and the U.S. Energy Information Administration, the third
major forecasting body, have all underestimated the growth in production
outside of OPEC and specifically, in the United States.
For the first time since the effects of OPEC's production cut kicked in
around mid-2017, the three agencies are predicting the global oil market
will face a surplus in 2018.
(GRAPHIC: Non-OPEC supply vs global demand growth in 2018 - http://reut.rs/2FJCrVH)
The benchmark Brent crude futures contract hit a near-three-year high of
$71 a barrel in late January and might now struggle to move much above
its current levels around $65, analysts say.
"We believe the oil market is more fragile than it seems. Supply is
swiftly catching up to strong demand growth," said Norbert Ruecker, head
of commodity research at Julius Baer.
"According to our estimates, the global inventory tightening trend
should slow and eventually reverse with storage levels no longer
declining but again rising later this year."
(GRAPHIC: Major forecasters' estimates of global oil demand growth in
2018 - http://reut.rs/2HBBVtL)
Inventories in the world's most industrialized nations, the easiest to
monitor, have fallen by nearly 200 million barrels in the last 12
months, according to the IEA. But as the pace of decline wanes, so could
the patience of oil investors.
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An oil well pump jack is
seen at an oil field supply yard near Denver, Colorado, U.S.,
February 2, 2015. REUTERS/Rick Wilking/File Photo
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When prompt futures contracts trade above those for delivery further out, a
pattern known as backwardation, it pays to bet on a price rise, but a reversal
into contango wipes out that profitability.
Despite U.S. inventories falling to their lowest in two years, the U.S. futures
market is back in contango, albeit by a modest 5-10 cents a barrel. Brent, with
a backwardation of 16 cents, is not far off.
(GRAPHIC: U.S. crude oil futures structure - http://reut.rs/2FFvnhe)
"Contango and backwardation are both a fundamentally physical signal in terms of
surplus, but they are also strongly impacted by changes in speculative
positions," SEB head of commodity strategy Bjarne Schieldrop said.
"All the talk of OPEC saying the market will be in surplus this year and booming
shale oil production in the U.S. ... has placed a cap on the upside," he said.
"Prices have tried to move and have not been able to ... for (U.S. crude) and
Brent you still have some $80 billion in net long positions riding on the
positive roll-yield and if that turns negative, then you have a lot of dollars
suddenly in negative earnings, which means a sell-off."
This could push Brent below $60 in the near term, he said.
It might not be all doom and gloom, even with the beginnings of an inventory
build. Not all forecasts turn out to be correct, noted Richard Robinson, a fund
manager at Ashburton Investments.
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"We think demand is too bearish, or not bullish enough, and possibly people are
extrapolating too much (from U.S. output)," he said. "We think we could end the
year with production higher than it is now, but we think (the forecasters) might
be overcooking their supply growth expectations."
(GRAPHIC: Forecasts for demand for OPEC crude vs OPEC production - http://reut.rs/2FKfFx8)
(Reporting by Amanda Cooper; Editing by Dmitry Zhdannikov and Dale Hudson)
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