Global oil markets seem
to have moved back into balance thanks to strong growth in fuel consumption and
a series of large supply disruptions in major crude producing nations.
Reuters
report continues:
Motorists'
soaring consumption of cheap gasoline in the United States as well as in some
large emerging economies, including India and Mexico, will help boost global
oil demand by more than 1.4 million barrels per day in 2016.
Consumption
had already risen by 1.8 million bpd in 2015 and is predicted to increase by
well over 1.0 million bpd again next year, marking the strongest and most
sustained increase in demand since before the financial crisis.
On
the supply side, U.S. oil production is expected to fall by 700,000 bpd between
2015 and 2016 as lower prices curb onshore shale drilling.
And
a lengthening list of supply disruptions from Libya, Nigeria, Venezuela and
Canada among others has grown to more than 3 million bpd.
While
stocks of crude and fuels remain unusually high following heavy oversupply in
2014 and 2015 they are no longer increasing.
The
shift from oversupply to market balance is evident in the relationship between
nearby and deferred futures prices.
The
link between timespreads, consumption, production and inventories has been
established since the 1930s and is closely watched by traders.
In
general, periods of oversupply and increasing inventories are associated with a
contango in futures prices, where the price for nearby contracts is lower than
for those maturing later.
Excess
demand and falling stocks are normally associated with backwardation, the
opposite condition, where the price for nearby contracts is higher than for
deferred dates.
Over
the past 30 years, shifts in the market balance from oversupply to excess
demand have normally been heralded by a change from contango to backwardation
and vice versa (http://tmsnrt.rs/25JCRCQ).
In
the last six months, the degree of contango in both Brent and WTI futures has
shrunk significantly, consistent with signs of strong demand and faltering
supply (http://tmsnrt.rs/1VJVnIo).
Both
futures markets continue to trade in a small contango but that is consistent
with a market very close to balance.
Since
2005, the "normal" condition in the crude oil market has been a small
contango (between 1985 and 2004 the typical condition was a small backwardation
and the reason for the shift is controversial).
Between
2005 and 2014, the first and seventh WTI contracts traded in contango more than
70 percent of the time (reversing the previous tendency to trade in backwardation
more than 70 percent of the time).
The
current contango in WTI prices at around US$2.00 per barrel is not
significantly different from the average contango of US$1.50 per barrel between
2005 and 2014 (http://tmsnrt.rs/1VJVmnN).
The
current Brent contango at around US$1.70 per barrel for the first six months is
not far from the decade average of US$0.73.
The
risks to the supply-demand-price outlook now appear reasonably balanced which
is being reflected in both spot prices and the timespreads.
On
the supply side, crude production could surprise on the upside in the next 12
months if some of the current disruptions are resolved.
If
Nigeria's government can restore security in the delta, more than 0.5 million
bpd of extra supply could return to market relatively quickly ("Militant
attacks have cut Nigerian oil output by half a million bpd", Reuters, Jun
6).
U.S.
shale production could also stabilize and start to rise again if oil prices
remain at or above the US$50 per barrel level.
The
number of rigs drilling for oil and gas in the United States rose last week for
the first time in nine months, probably in response to the recent rise in
prices.
But
the bigger risk in the medium term comes from demand, which is now growing much
faster than new sources of supply.
Investment
in oil exploration and production have been slashed in response to the collapse
in prices since the middle of 2014.
As
the cycle turns, however, significant increases in investment will be needed to
replace declining output from existing oil fields and meet the continued growth
in consumption, which may require a further price increase.
By 2018, assuming the global economy avoid recession, higher prices will be needed to restrain super-fast growth in demand and incentivize quicker growth in supply.
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