Chart Of The Day: Why Goldman Sachs Is Oil Bullish, But Expect To Be Whipsawed

 | Jul 21, 2021 14:34

During trading on Wednesday, gains in crude oil were scaled back, after Tuesday’s rebound. This followed an unexpected build in US inventories, underscoring concerns for reduced demand as the spread of the Delta strain of COVID-19 accelerates globally.

Yesterday's API data saw US stocks swell by 806,000 barrels for the week through July 16, bringing the total in storage to totalling just under 50 million barrels.

The surprise build follows a week in which there was a drawdown in inventories of more than 4 million barrels, in line with estimates. The negative print exacerbated a selloff in crude, as investors priced in the recent OPEC+ breakthrough agreement to increase output from pandemic levels, as a way of meeting the anticipated sharp increase in demand as the global economy reopens.

Is this shift in trend—from a drawdown to an unforeseen build, in the same week, at the same time that US equities suffered their first weekly drop in a month—a speed pump or something more ominous: escalating concerns that the rampant pandemic will disrupt what till now was expected to be a vigorous economic recovery.

Hard to know at this stage, but analysts at Goldman Sachs, for one, are maintiaining their bullish outlook on the commodity and don't see a reason to change their position at this juncture.

Even after OPEC’s output increase, the market remains tight according to current demand projections—which would of course change, if social restrictions persist. Right now, Goldman is forecasting that the virus’s impact on demand will be in the region of 1 million barrels a day, and then only for a few months, less so if vaccines prove effective in limiting the number of hospitalizations in developed markets, where demand potential is highest this summer.

The technicals confirm Goldman’s accelerating oil price trajectory.