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Hurricane Delta Has Moved On but Perfect Storm Now Hits Oil

Published 10/12/2020, 03:05 PM
Updated 10/12/2020, 03:07 PM
© Reuters.

By Barani Krishnan

Investing.com - The effects of Hurricane Delta may be wearing off, but the perfect storm arrived anyway on Monday for crude prices, driving the market down almost 3%.

The lifting of a force majeure at Libya’s largest oilfield, the end of a Norwegian oil industry strike and signs that U.S. producers were adding to output as Delta exited the Gulf Coast of Mexico came together to roil the market.

Adding to the weight on oil was a forecast by seevol.com that show stockpiles at Cushing, the delivery point for contracted U.S. crude, up by 3.9 million barrels for the week ended Oct. 9.

“Overall, the crude market appears to have failed at the 50 day and 200 day moving average and just got back under the 100 day this morning,” said Scott Shelton, energy futures broker at ICAP (LON:NXGN) in Durham, North Carolina.

“I still think the market is rudderless and susceptible to MACRO-driven rallies, but the information is looking worse for oil despite improving margins, and I think we could see another move to $38.” 

New York-traded West Texas Intermediate, the key indicator for U.S. crude prices, settled at $39.43 per barrel, down $1.17, or 2.9%, on the day. The move wiped out almost a third WTI’s 9.5% gain for last week. 

London-traded Brent crude, the global benchmark for oil, settled down $1.13, or 2.6%, at $41.71. Brent rose 9.1% last week.

Production in Libya, a member of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), is expected to rise to 355,000 barrels per day (bpd) after force majeure at the Sharara oilfield was lifted on Sunday.

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Rising Libyan output will pose a challenge to OPEC+ - a group comprising OPEC and allies including Russia - and its efforts to curb supply to support prices.

Hurricane Delta, which inflicted the biggest blow in 15 years to energy production in the U.S. Gulf of Mexico last week, was downgraded to a post-tropical cyclone at the weekend.

Workers headed back to production platforms on Sunday and French oil major Total restarted its 225,500 barrel per day Port Arthur refinery in Texas.

Prices were also pressured by a jump in new COVID-19 cases, which has raised the specter of more lockdowns which could dampen demand for oil.

Infections are at record levels in the U.S. Midwest. In Europe, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced new coronavirus lockdown measures while Italy — which shocked the world with the horror of its Covid-19 saga in March — was preparing fresh nationwide restrictions.

Latest comments

Everything cited in the story has been verified by market events -- from the colluding factors that formed the perfect storm for today's price action to the moving-day averages, Libyan/Norwegian situations and Covid threats. If you are unable to accept any of this, then you are living in an alternate reality.
$MPC is going to make a massive rally this spring
..but the break even point is lowering and adapting by means of cutting any less necessary expense..survival made possible things that would have occured in more years.But Biden, Opec+ (Russia and especially Arab Countries need to cash in on more sales, as Saudi Aramco IPO has shown) and new lockdowns remain big and fundamental X.I think that this may well be a Value trap for know, but there are some very interesting trade to be made at these prices like EPD, ENB and perhaps CXO. Who knows..I don't.
Do we really think “lockdown measures” are the issue? There are new methods of commerce, green energy, global warming, employment uncertainty, lack of wage growth in USA, and tariffs all of which were clearly having a negative affect on US petro consumption prior to covid, and although they may have been amplified or accellerated by covid, they will continue after covid has been tamed. Public safety policy seems to be an easy scapegoat for the short sighted. Just my two cents.
the world was consuming 100 million bpd of crude oil... what is it exactly that you're talking about here? are you contesting that oil demand is 100 million bpd ?
You got it right! Stocks to follow. You can't always pretend to have a strong economy, just by flooding it with fresh money and endless boyscouts' mottos.
Everything cited in the story has been verified by market events -- from the colluding factors that formed the perfect storm for today's price action to the moving-day averages, Libyan/Norwegian situations and Covid threats. If you are unable to accept any of this, then you are living in an alternate reality.
this c.lown always comes after the fact... no insight for.the future... citing a futures traders (very reliable source btw)
Sam Houston, I suppose everyone who has an alternate view is a c.lown from your perspective. Wonderful way of hiding your bias :)
By the way, Shelton happens to be a bull who's also a realist at most times -- unlike those who have their heads so buried in the sand.
with winter coming, wouldn't oil and NG be preparing for demand increases to warm the houses people won't be leaving due to lockdown measures?
The industry gains mainly on transport, and only 40-50% need to heat their living space globally, also they have moved to electric heating.
 True, Jo. That's why the cold seasons are always a bit of a hit and miss.
nice point
“I still think the market is rudderless and susceptible to MACRO-driven rallies, but the information is looking worse for oil despite improving margins, and I think we could see another move to $38.”
Shelton is a bull, but also a realist near-term.
bullish 42 end game saudi
Since Ali Naimi retired in 2015, the Saudis have always been a step behind. Abdulaziz bin Salman, like his younger brother the Crown Prince, is more emotional than market-savvy.
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