Crude Oil: Year In Review

 | Dec 24, 2015 10:13

  • OPEC gives up
  • US lifts export ban
  • Record Russian and Saudi output
  • US rig decline and inventory build-up
  • Chinese demand
  • Hedge fund positioning
  • NOK, CAD, the oil currencies
  • h3 OPEC gives up/h3

    OPEC’s wily plan to keep supplying the market with oil, drive prices to a level that will bankrupt the competition, which will in turn reduce output and lead to price recovery is taking a little longer than first imagined.

    Just like its meeting over a year ago, the latest meeting of the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Counties (OPEC) in December sent the oil price to new multi-year lows. This time OPEC failed to even agree on a quota. An apparent row between Saudi Arabia and Iran has led to the removal of any kind of production ceiling, which previously stood at 30m bpd.

    So at least until the next OPEC meeting in the summer, oil prices must reflect no production ceiling. Oil plummeted 40% after OPEC’s decision in November 2014; an equivalent percentage plunge from the time of the December 2015 meeting would take it to around $25 per barrel.

    h3 US lifts export ban/h3

    Less than a week after the US Congress agreed a deal to lift the ban on US exports, the price of front-month WTI futures, the benchmark for US crude oil briefly rose to a premium over Brent, the international benchmark. The spread between Brent and WTI has reached parity without any US export deals being signed. The US produces intermediate and light sweet crude, not the sour oil that refineries are used to receiving from the Middle East so there may be some delay before a meaningful amount of US exporting takes place. In 2016, with demand for the more desirable light sweet crude not constrained by a US export ban and supply falling as producers reduce output, the price of WTI should start to consistently trade back above the price of Brent like it did in 2010, before the shale boom.

    h3 Record Russian and Saudi output/h3

    A cutback in future capital expenditure at global oil companies will eventually reduce supply. In the short term, record oil output controlled by national governments both inside and outside of OPEC like Saudi Arabia and Russia is flooding the market, leading to over-supply and low prices. National governments are producing oil at record levels to make up the revenue deficit brought on by lower prices. The two countries are currently number one and two in the word for production and the budgets of the national governments are heavily dependent on oil revenue.

    The charts below show a general uptrend in levels of production over the past five years from both Saudi Arabia and Russia, with a notable spike beginning in the summer of 2014 when oil prices first started to sink.

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    h3 Chart of Saudi Arabia oil production (millions b/d) from 2010-2015/h3