Is Oil's New Normal A State Of Permanent Price Instability?

 | Jan 15, 2019 08:07

Goldman Sachs says it won't be `hoodwinked' on commodities again as it recommends investors buy into this year’s comeback story in oil, despite last year’s spectacular collapse. Saudi Energy Minister Khalid al-Falih, meanwhile, does his best to drive the bullish charge in oil, vowing to cut hundreds of thousands of barrels per day in supply.

On the other hand, Bloomberg Intelligence Commodity Strategist Mike McGlone says U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude may find itself in a “$50-per-barrel cage” for an extended period, in spite of higher prices sought by bulls. JPMorgan also says that while output cuts by the OPEC+ producer club should help prices, heightened global macro risk anxiety posed by China and its slowing growth will limit any support from supply-side corrections.

Meanwhile, JBC Energy warns of another spike in U.S. output that could neuter the Saudi cuts, predicting that shale oil production could reach new record highs “significantly above 12 million bpd” this month.

The truth, according to New York-based Energy Intelligence, could be somewhere between all these.

h3 Oil Companies Face An Unwelcome Reality In 2019/h3

In a multi-dimensional analysis on the vagaries of energy production, trading and consumption, the publisher of Petroleum Intelligence Weekly said multiple structural changes within oil have made it nearly impossible to forecast trends or prices with reliability. Energy Intelligence adds:

“After reeling from the sudden near-40 percent collapse in oil prices late last year, oil companies face an unwelcome reality moving into 2019.”

“Instead of predictable prices or slow, linear changes, firms face the prospect of ongoing gyrations in shorter, faster cycles—a reality that will force them to remain conservative in spending and treat each price recovery as a welcome, but likely temporary, relief.”