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3 Reasons Oil And Gas Prices Could Be Headed Lower

Published 03/11/2021, 05:57 AM
Updated 07/09/2023, 06:31 AM

Oil prices are maintaining their OPEC+ boost from last week.

Oil 300 Minute Chart

Nevertheless, aside from a brief spike due to a thwarted missile attack on Saudi Arabia, prices of the commodity haven’t risen all that much.

Below, some factors that could move oil and gasoline prices in the coming weeks.

1. Can OPEC+ maintain the price surge?

Last week’s OPEC+ meeting didn't go the way most traders and analysts expected. Instead of easing supply cuts, which would have cooled the market, OPEC+ decided to keep production rates unchanged for April.

In addition, Saudi Arabia announced it plans to continue to keep its extra 1 million bpd of production off of the market for at least another month.

Brent 300-Minute Chart

This news set off a rally in oil prices with Brent gaining more than 5% and WTI rising 5%. But traders should be cautious about assuming that these price increases represent new price floors for the oil benchmarks.

First, the OPEC+ decision to keep its quotas (which amount to about 8 million bpd less than the group would probably produce absent quotas) only applies through the end of April. OPEC+ will meet again at the beginning of April to negotiate production rates for May.

This strategy of regularly adjusting quotas in reaction to the market is fairly new, because OPEC and OPEC+ had previously set production rates for at least 6 months at a time.

Second, production rates are not necessarily supply rates. According to data from two tanker-tracking services, Saudi oil exports did not decline in February as much as they should have, in accordance with Saudi Arabia’s extra 1 million bpd production cut. Exports did show further decline at the end of the month, but data still indicate that Saudi Arabia was maintaining export levels by selling stored oil.

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Third, traders should keep in mind that Russia, again, secured OPEC+’s blessing to increase its oil production in April by 130,000 bpd. Though Russia’s compliance with production quotas has been better in the recent winter months, Russia does have a history of overproducing.

Experience indicates that it is likely Russia will overproduce, and it will be able to increase production more easily in the spring and summer months as Siberia thaws.

2. U.S. gasoline prices are accelerating, but for how long?

Higher crude oil prices aren’t entirely to blame for higher gasoline prices in the U.S. Last month’s freeze in Texas disrupted about 40% of U.S. refining capacity, and it’s still not all back online yet.

According to the EIA, refinery operating rates in the PADD3 region, which includes Texas and the Gulf Coast are still only operating at 61% of normal. For comparison, this is the lowest the refinery utilization rate has been in this region since 2010.

Gasoline stocks in the U.S. are also the lowest they have been for this time of year since 2015 and are also well below the 5-year average for this time of year. Gasoline stocks are typically higher in March, in preparation for the summer driving season, when demand rises and stocks draw down.

Part of the reason gasoline stocks are lower than average for this time of year: refineries haven’t been operating at their usual rates and crude oil has been going into storage instead of to refineries.

Traders should expect this imbalance to even out as refinery utilization returns to normal and crude oil stocks are drawn down, especially after the refineries complete their scheduled switch-overs to produce summer blend this month and next. The question is, whether refineries will be able to keep up with demand as we head into the summer driving season.

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They should have no problem doing so if U.S. demand stays in the 8 to 9 million bpd range, but some analysts believe U.S. demand could grow to 10 million bpd this summer. That would put pressure on prices to rise.

In addition, traders should keep an eye on gasoline exports, because the U.S. maintains a robust gasoline export business. If refiners can get even higher prices selling gasoline abroad, they will. This would put further pressure on prices to rise, and it is unclear how the current administration in Washington, D.C. would react to significantly higher gasoline prices.

3. Will Iranian oil return to the market?

With Saudi Arabia and other Middle Eastern suppliers keeping a significant amount of oil off of the market, India and China are turning towards Iran to satiate their appetites for cheaper crude.

India was dismayed by OPEC+’s decision not to increase production. India clearly felt snubbed when Saudi oil minister Abdulaziz bin Salman said India shouldn’t complain about rising oil prices since India bought and stored plenty of cheap oil in 2020. Perhaps in response, India told its state refineries to diversify their sources away from their current mix of Arab oil.

According to a report from Reuters, both China and India are preparing to increase their imports of Iranian oil in the near future. The Iranian National Oil Company (NIOC) started reaching out to customers in Asia after U.S. President Joseph Biden took office, under the assumption that the sanctions against Iranian oil will be lifted.

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According to data from Reuters, China more than doubled its imports of illicit Iranian oil between December, 2020 and the end of February, 2021. India had halted its Iranian oil imports due to the U.S. sanctions. According to some Indian officials, refineries in India could resume importing from Iran as soon as June.

Traders should watch oil from Iran as it will likely impact the market, regardless of whether sanctions are officially lifted. Even the news of an increase in illicit oil sales to China (or the start of illicit sales to India) would be enough to push prices lower.

Latest comments

The article substantively deals only with crude oil, but the title erroneously indicates that it also deals with natural gas. Gas has different markets and a different future than crude.
EIA predicts oil will be back to 55usd in H2 when producers turn the taps on. Russia said they don't want oil to be over 55USD so US fracking does not take market share from them. India and China are not buying at current prices, they are drowning from their reserves and waiting for Iran to go back fully online.
its amazing how people think they know , like this author , not enough exprience , not enough common sense ,,,,, being a book worm does not translate to good market forecast , if books wrote everthing , profs would be the richest in the world , obviously not the reality
Right. Professors deal in vagaries, not at all like your comments here, which are "obviously" chock full of references to facts, data, and clearly reasoned arguments. It's "amazing" how well you avoided the temptation to engage in ad hominem. 'If comments wrote everything', internet geniuses would be the richest people in the world. Obviously, not the reality.
bad judgement , dont agree
how are your
hello
I think the main issue was missed.Isreal and Iran tensions. Iran is selling oil for a long time now, but with Biden looking for trouble in the middle east to sell weapons to them....this to me, is the cause of the oil price going up
because there done gouging..winter weather.. investor createsmy expensive gas and oil.bills for personal gains...lol
Try English ?
All energy prices will remain elevated. Far left controls the government & its policies. AOC, Biden, et al want everyone to use mass transportation. Facilitated by elevated raw materials (iron, copper, palladium, rubber, etc.), plastics, glass... On the way: higher gas taxes, vehicle taxes, tolls......
wow. they really don't have a reason for the ridiculous hike in gas! stockpiles grew +13mil barrels, nothing happened on missile strike, the TX refineries could be online but its just they choose not to. All things that COULD happen! BS! just greed. i hope everyone decides NOT to drive for a month to send a message back!
The price at the moment is not the market price, of the price depends from the demanding and the surplus the oil price would be around 30$, not 60$. They can't keep this negotiations forever, because not all the country from the OPEC+ suffers the same way with this deal. That's why this text make sense.
Completely agree. Ive been yelling this all over twitter and @bloomberg on fintwit for over a month now. Its exapserating
I'll give you 3 reasons why they won't be heading lower:  1) Biden 2) Biden 3) Biden.
Isnt Ell so inocent? I believe she is a kind soul and a Biden supporter. Lol
Does Biden mean war lmao
Is in the oilfield like the higher price of oil. Means we have a job. Better than a year ago when oil was a negative number.
I am sorry I am going to disagree with you Ellen, first our oil supply has lost 120,000 workers, also out of the winter storm in Texas only 7 of the 18 refiners were online, now maybe that has changed. But that constitute a 54% run on gasoline. So your telling us were up to 61% now. I really think there is some fudging with the numbers and your not getting me to sell my shares.
The fact that the market is "heated" would have saved you an article
Nothing in the article states the real reason for the prices to go up and it is the inflation is going up too.
Ell, i know writing about oil is a tough thing to do with so many variables, but is it really? OPEC and the other producers are really like the mob and can flip through their roll a dex of excuses on why they are or are not producing....war, rocket attacks, Biden policy, Covid, EV’s, Biden policy... well you get it. We all know they took it in the shorts a year ago and now that the world is getting vaccinated and jumbo jets and cruise ships will be working harder than ever as the warm weather arrives the demand for liquid gold will increase. But, here come the excuses on why and how they will jack the ppb up. They only have about 10 - 20 years until the EV infrastructure is in place and then those producers will be in the same position as the beeper manufacturers were. Enjoy the $90 oil and thanks Joe Biden.Go TSLA!
tesla is still the worst long term EV play....oil isn't going anywhere. as it becomes cheaper, developing nations will simply consume more.
Petey, TSLA isnt just an EV company though....the tree hugers will win eventually just like BLM... the corporations are buying into the whole clumate change thing.
some comments on Libya would be good, also part of equation.
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