INSIDE U.S. OIL
Transcription
INSIDE U.S. OIL
INSIDE U.S. OIL Monday, October 13, 2014 Futures (Front Month) NYMEX light crude Close Net Change Pct Change U.S. Cash Crude $85.82 $0.05 0.06 $88.72 Poseidon Thunder Horse $2.26 -$0.02 0.77 $2.56 $0.02 0.92 $90.21 $0.16 0.18 $763.75 -$2.50 0.33 NYH RBOB Brent/WTI spread -$4.39 -$0.11 2.51 USG ULSD Reuters 321 Crack Spread $13.23 -$0.21 1.59 USG Prompt Gasoline NYMEX RBOB gasoline NYMEX heating oil ICE Brent crude ICE gas oil CHART OF THE DAY Click on the chart for full-size image Price Light Louisiana Sweet U.S. Cash Crude Products (Values in Cents/Gal) NYH Prompt Heating oil Net Change Differential Diff Change $0.08 2.95 $0.07 $83.82 $0.06 1.70 $0.30 $86.42 -$0.02 0.85 $0.17 Price 247.67 230.81 252.92 229.56 Net Change Differential Diff Change 4.25 -0.17 3.75 1.96 -8.00 5.75 -2.75 -5.00 0.50 0.63 0.00 9.50 JOHN KEMP ON MARKETS COLUMN– Oil producers enter supercycle's dark side Oil producers are getting another brutal reminder that theirs is a business characterised by long, deep price cycles. John Kemp is a Reuters market analyst. The views expressed are his own. Click here to read the rest of his column TODAY’S MARKETS OIL: Brent crude oil fell below $88 a barrel, its lowest in almost four years, after key Middle East producers signalled they would keep output high even if that meant lower prices. "In light of these comments, one should not expect any OPEC output cuts before the Nov. 27 meeting," said Bjarne Schieldrop, chief commodity analyst at SEB in Oslo. MARKET NEWS China trade data eases slowdown fears, more stimulus may still be needed EXCLUSIVE-Privately, Saudis tell oil market: get used to lower prices FOREX: The yen rose to a one-month high against the dollar and traded near 11-month peaks against the euro, as investors turned cautious on concerns about the health of the global economy. "We look for further yen upside against the dollar in coming weeks, as U.S. (interest) rates are likely to adjust near-term lower," said Petr Krpata, currency strategist at ING. "For dollar/yen, 107 yen could be tested again today." INTERVIEW-BoA oil analyst who predicted downturn now sees floor Kuwait says OPEC unlikely to cut output to support prices -KUNA For chart watchers, oil in 'technical graveyard' facing deeper rout EXCLUSIVE-Oil trader hall avoids big loss, expects market to struggle Statoil exits Shah Deniz with $2.25 bln sale to Petronas Colombian farmers sue BP over pipeline's environmental impact -FT GLOBAL MARKETS: Stocks started the week on a negative note and crude oil prices fell to near-four-year lows with forecast-beating Chinese trade data unable to lighten investors' mood about the health of the global economy. "We're still looking quite poorly, on the markets. The nervousness is still there," said Terry Torrison, managing director at Monaco-based McLaren Securities. U.S. EVENTS TO WATCH TODAY (EST) NO EVENTS SCHEDULED FOR TODAY OIL ANALYTICS: ASIA SWAPS FORWARD CURVE INSIDE U.S. OIL October 13, 2014 OIL ANALYTICS: ASIA SWAPS FORWARD CURVE (0830 GMT) ICE BRENT FUTURES FORWARD DUBAI SWAPS FORWARD CURVE ICE Brent Fut. Fwd Curve Dubai Swaps Fwd Curve 93.00 92.94 1M - 1Y 1M Yield 91.00 90.87 92.00 90.00 1M - 1M Yield 90.50 89.50 91.00 89.00 88.50 90.00 88.00 87.50 89.00 .12 .12 1M 1M 2M 3M 4M 5M 6M 7M 8M 9M 10M 11M 1Y 1M FO180 FOB CARGO SG FWD CURVE FO3.5% BARGES ARA FORWARD CURVE FO180 FOB Cargo SG Fwd Curve FO3.5% Barges ARA Fwd Curve 1M - 1M Yield 522.00 521.00 1M - 1Y 1M Yield 492.00 492.00 519.00 488.00 516.00 484.00 513.00 480.00 510.00 476.00 .12 .12 1M 1M FO380 FOB CARGO SG FORWARD CURVE FO380 FOB Cargo SG Fwd Curve 2M 3M 4M 5M 6M 7M 8M 9M 10M 11M 1Y 1M NAPHTHA CFR JAPAN FORWARD CURVE Naphtha CFR Japan Fwd Curve 1M - 1Y 1M Yield 593.00 592.00 591.00 590.00 1M - 1M Yield 770.00 767.50 765.00 760.00 589.00 755.00 588.00 587.00 750.00 586.00 586.00 .12 1M 2M 3M 4M 5M 6M 7M 8M 9M 10M .12 11M 1Y 1M 1M 2 INSIDE U.S. OIL October 13, 2014 OIL ANALYTICS: ASIA SWAPS FORWARD CURVE (0830 GMT) NAPHTHA CIF NWE FORWARD CURVE Naphtha CIF NWE Fwd Curve NAPHTHA FOB SG FWD CURVE Naphtha FOB SG Fwd Curve 1M - 1Y 1M Yield 1M - 1Y 1M Yield 746.00 745.00 740.00 83.00 82.85 82.50 735.00 82.00 730.00 81.50 725.00 81.00 720.00 80.50 .12 .12 1M 2M 3M 4M 5M 6M 7M 8M 9M 10M 1M 11M 1Y 1M ICE GO FUT. FWD CURVE ICE GO Fut. Fwd Curve 2M 3M 4M 5M 6M 7M 8M 9M 10M 11M 1Y 1M GO FOB CARGO SG FORWARD CURVE GO FOB Cargo SG Fwd Curve 1M - 1M Yield 768.00 767.75 1M - 1Y 1M Yield 105.61 105.00 767.00 766.00 104.00 765.00 103.00 764.00 102.00 763.00 101.00 .12 762.00 1M .12 1M JET FUEL FOB CARGO SG FWD Jet Fuel FOB Cargo SG Fwd Curve 1M - 1M Yield 106.11 106.00 105.00 104.00 103.00 102.00 .12 1M 3 2M 3M 4M 5M 6M 7M 8M 9M 10M 11M 1Y 1M INSIDE U.S. OIL October 13, 2014 MARKET NEWS China trade data eases slowdown fears, more stimulus may still be needed EXCLUSIVE-Privately, Saudis tell oil market: get used to lower prices BEIJING, Oct 13 (Reuters) - China's surprisingly strong trade performance in September may reduce the chances of aggressive policy action such as an interest rate cut, but the prospects of a prolonged property slump suggests more measures are still needed to shore up the economy. With the euro zone and Japanese economies floundering, a bounce in China's exports and imports would be welcome news for the world economy and investors increasingly worried about flagging global growth. But economists said it was too early to tell if China's trade sector has turned the corner, noting that its unexpectedly buoyant imports last month could be due to one-off factors, such as factories taking advantage of sliding global commodity prices to replenish inventories of iron ore, copper and oil. Exports rose 15.3 percent in September from a year earlier, beating a median forecast in a Reuters poll for a rise of 11.8 percent and quickening from August's 9.4 percent rise, data showed on Monday. LONDON/NEW YORK, Oct 12 (Reuters) - Saudi Arabia is quietly telling oil market participants that Riyadh is comfortable with markedly lower oil prices for an extended period, a sharp shift in policy that may be aimed at slowing the expansion of rival producers including those in the U.S. shale patch. Some OPEC members including Venezuela are clamoring for urgent production cuts to push global oil prices back up above $100 a barrel. But Saudi officials have telegraphed a different message in private meetings with oil market investors and analysts recently: the kingdom, OPEC’s largest producer, is ready to accept oil prices below $90 per barrel, and perhaps down to $80, for as long as a year or two, according to people who have been briefed on the recent conversations. The discussions, some of which took place in New York over the past week, offer the clearest sign yet that the kingdom is setting aside its longstanding de facto strategy of holding prices at around $100 a barrel for Brent crude in favor of retaining market share in years to come. INTERVIEW-BoA oil analyst who predicted downturn now sees floor Kuwait says OPEC unlikely to cut output to support prices KUNA NEW YORK, Oct 13 (Reuters) - As Iraqi militants advanced on Baghdad with M-16s and stolen tanks in June, most investors and traders in the jittery oil markets believed oil prices would spike even higher. But as oil prices crested at $115 in mid-June, there were clear indications of the drop that has ensued and shocked markets in the past weeks, according to Francisco Blanch, a Bank of America analyst who predicted that oil prices would moderate in the fourth quarter. Blanch told Reuters in an interview that graphs of the forward price curve and signals from leaders of Saudi Arabia that they were comfortable with lower prices pointed to increasing supplies and a decline in prices. Still, even Blanch, who has been one of the most bearish analysts in the industry this year has been surprised by the size of the recent rout that has wiped more than 20 percent off the oil price since the start of September. DUBAI/KUWAIT, Oct 12 (Reuters) - OPEC is unlikely to cut oil production in an effort to prop up prices because such a move would not necessarily be effective, Kuwait's oil minister Ali alOmair was quoted as saying by state news agency KUNA on Sunday. Brent crude oil settled at $90.21 a barrel on Friday after earlier falling to $88.11, the lowest since December 2010, as Saudi Arabia said it raised production last month, adding to perceptions that the kingdom is looking to defend market share, rather than prices. Oil ministers from the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) are scheduled to meet in Vienna on Nov. 27 to consider whether to adjust their output target of 30 million barrels per day (bpd) for early 2015. KUNA also quoted Omair as saying $76-77 a barrel might be the level that would end the oil price slide, since that was the cost of oil production in the United States and Russia. For chart watchers, oil in 'technical graveyard' facing deeper rout Oil trader Hall avoids big loss, expects market to struggle NEW YORK, Oct 10 (Reuters) - World oil prices are on the brink of sliding another $10 or more, according to chart analysts who say the over 20 percent drop since June has wiped out key support levels and left behind a "technical graveyard". On Friday, Brent crude dropped to its lowest level in nearly four years before ending near flat at $90.21 a barrel. A combination of unrelenting supply from the U.S. shale oil boom and disappointing demand from Europe and China has walloped markets, with Saudi Arabia reluctant to curtain output. According to analysts who use historical chart patterns to anticipate price movements, the worst may not be over. On a weekly chart, Brent futures had earlier closed in on $88.49 a barrel - the pivot support level representing a 76.4 percent Fibonacci retracement of their most recent high and low from February to June of 2012. Oct 10 (Reuters) - Renowned oil trader Andy Hall said his $3 billion commodities hedge fund lost less than 1 percent in September, despite a tumble in global crude markets, which he said will continue to struggle from huge supplies, a letter he wrote to his investors showed. It was a surprising outlook from a hedge fund manager who was once one of the most outspoken bulls in oil, suggesting he had turned short, or bearish, on the market, at least in the near-term. Hall's Westport, Connecticut-based Astenbeck Capital Management, which manages approximately $3.2 billion, returned a negative 0.7 percent last month, according to the letter seen by Reuters on Friday. It was the second month in a row that he had escaped a punishing rout in oil, after posting a gain of nearly 1 percent in August. Year-to-date, Astenbeck is up 12 percent. 4 INSIDE U.S. OIL October 13, 2014 MARKET NEWS (Continued) Statoil exits Shah Deniz with $2.25 bln sale to Petronas Colombian farmers sue BP over pipeline's environmental impact -FT OSLO, Oct 13 (Reuters) - Norway's Statoil has sold its remaining 15.5 percent stake in the Shah Deniz gas project in Azerbaijan to Malaysia's Petronas for $2.25 billion as part of asset sales to shore up returns to shareholders. Like other oil majors, Statoil has been selling assets to protect margins eaten up by rising costs and, in recent weeks, falling oil prices. It earlier sold a 10 percent stake in Shah Deniz. Monday's deal also includes Statoil's stakes in a South Caucasus pipeline company and two other firms. Its second-quarter production from the Shah Deniz field was 38,000 barrels oil equivalent per day, Statoil said. The European Union sees the venture as a means of reducing EU reliance on energy imports from Russia. It is expected to supply 20 percent of the EU's needs in the long-term from proven gas reserves estimated at 1.2 trillion cubic metres. Oct 12 (Reuters) - Seventy-three farmers from Colombia are suing BP Plc the company negligently managed the construction of the Ocensa oil pipeline in Colombia during the mid1990s, which caused severe damage to their land, the Financial Times reported. The group of farmers, called "campesinos," claim pipeline construction activities by British company Equion Energia, formerly BP Exploration (Colombia) Limited, severely reduced the productivity of their farms, and are seeking about 18 million pounds ($28.93 million) in compensation, the FT reported. A number of Colombian farmers are scheduled to travel to London to provide evidence in the case, which will be argued with reference to contractual and extra-contractual liability under Colombian law, the paper said. BEYOND THE HEADLINES amount of economic and technological inertia. It takes many years for a price change to start having a meaningful impact on production and consumption, which is why many of the impacts of the earlier rise in prices are only now beginning to be felt. For the same reason, however, once those deep-cyclical changes are under way, they are extremely difficult to arrest or reverse. Like a supertanker, changes in supply and demand wrought by price rises in 2002-2012 have developed a momentum of their own and cannot easily be stopped. Just as oil prices had to overshoot in 2008 to overcome the natural inertia in the system and force big increases in supply and reductions in demand, prices will now probably need to over correct on the downside to put the oil market on to a new course. The existence of this long cycle is confirmed by the fact that each temporary peak in prices since July 2008 has been lower than the last, which indicates that a gradual shift in both supply and demand have been under way, producing a gradual price downward. The same unwinding of the super-cycle is evident in other commodities, notably the thermal coal market. Benchmark coal prices to Europe exhibit identical behaviour: a massive escalation between 2002 and 2008, followed by the recession, a partial recovery by 2011, and then a gradually falling trend in which each temporary peak is lower than the last. Broadly similar pricing patterns are evident in other major industrial commodities as diverse as aluminium and copper. The best way to characterise the current fall in oil and other commodity prices is that it is the downswing of a long price cycle that dates from around 2002. During the upswing, the synchronised rise in the price of many industrial and agricultural commodities was dubbed by analysts as a “super-cycle”. In their excitement, many investors and businesses focused on the “super” and forgot about the “cycle”, ignoring the fact that at least some of the increase in prices would eventually need to be reversed. COLUMN-Oil producers enter supercycle's dark side By John Kemp LONDON, Oct 10 (Reuters) - Oil producers are getting another brutal reminder that theirs is a business characterised by long, deep price cycles. Benchmark Brent futures have dropped below $90 a barrel, the lowest level since December 2010, but that actually understates the extent of the damage. The problem with using December 2010 as a baseline is that oil prices at the time were hugely distorted by the cyclical downturn in demand caused by the financial crisis and the ensuing recession. Most analysts would agree these effects were temporary and give little insight into long-term oil-market trends. If the period covered by the recession (late 2008 to early 2011) is excluded to give a more representative picture, the price of Brent has not been this low since February 2008, when price increases were still accelerating towards their eventual peak five months later. And if prices are adjusted for inflation (using average U.S. hourly earnings), Brent prices are at the lowest level in real terms since October 2007, exactly seven years ago (http:// link.reuters.com/paj23w). The oil industry has always experienced very long, slow and deep cycles in supply, demand and prices: the current downturn is no exception. Both the surge in oil supplies and slowdown in demand are the lagged response to the increase in prices which started in 2002 and lasted until 2012, albeit with a hiatus during the recession between 2008 and 2011. It was the stimulus of high and rising prices which made the application of hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling possible in the North American shale oil plays. And it was the panic brought on by rising fuel bills which prompted households, businesses and governments to conserve fuel by turning to energy efficiency and substitutes such as ethanol and natural gas. Fuel supply and demand are characterised by an enormous 5 INSIDE U.S. OIL October 13, 2014 ANALYTIC CHARTS Daily NYMEX Crude - 30 Min Daily ICE Brent Crude - 30 Min Daily ICE Gas Oil - 30 Min Daily NYMEX RBOB Gasoline - 30 Min Daily ICE Heating Oil - 30 Min Daily NYMEX Heating Oil - 30 Min (Inside U.S. Oil is compiled by Renuka Vijay Kumar in Bangalore) For more information: Learn more about our products and services for commodities professionals, click here For questions and comments on Inside U.S. Oil newsletter, click here Contact your local Thomson Reuters office, click here Your subscription: To find out more and register for our free commodities newsletters, click here © 2014 Thomson Reuters. All rights reserved. This content is the intellectual property of Thomson Reuters and its affiliates. Any copying, distribution or redistribution of this content is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Thomson Reuters. 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