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Commodities Week Ahead: Global Pact Slows Inevitable Oil Crash; Gold Shines

Published 04/13/2020, 04:39 AM
Updated 09/02/2020, 02:05 AM

Buy the fact, sell the rumor: that’s the likely course for oil as misplaced faith in an output pact achieved by major producers leads to a rebound, before underwhelming production cuts from the deal and speculation of storage tanks hitting capacity trigger a new selloff.

WTI Weekly TTM

West Texas Intermediate, the U.S. benchmark for crude, was up 5% by early afternoon in Asia while London-traded Brent, the global benchmark rose about 4%. It was just the kind of turnaround that Saudi Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman and Russian President Vladimir Putin, along with their new, unexpected ally — U.S. President Donald Trump — had been hoping would occur. Had there not been a deal, the outcome might have been disastrous, taking prices without a blip into the teens.

Proposed OPEC++ Cuts Can't Reverse Brent's Deep Contango

Yet, despite their mood for self-congratulation — especially Trump who tweeted that it was a “great deal for all” after the end of a four-day marathon session of video conferences he stayed on top of — the path of least resistance for oil is lower as the cuts pledged remained below a third of demand estimated lost to the COVID-19. 

Worse, global oil storage tanks could run out of space in the coming weeks as more production, albeit reduced, hits a market where consumption remains anemic at best while inventories continue to climb. 

“A production cut deal across the globe required extraordinary collaboration, that unfortunately will fall well short of stabilizing oil markets,” said Ed Moya, senior market analyst at online trading platform OANDA.

“The number of holes in this production cut deal will make it hard for anyone to feel confident that a firm bottom is in place.”

Under the deal, which was hastily released on Sunday afternoon in New York — just hours before the open of Tokyo markets — the Saudi-led OPEC+, which includes Russia, announced it is to cut 9.7 million barrels a day, just below the initially-proposed 10 million bpd.  

The United States, Brazil and Canada — countries that never before had collaboration with OPEC in its 60 years — will contribute another 3.7 million barrels on paper as their production declines. 

Mexico, the country that infamously held up the deal for more than 72 hours — balking first at the 400,000 bpd cut demanded by OPEC+; then agreeing to a 100,000-bpd trim with the U.S. providing the balance 250,000-300,000 bpd; before disagreeing again to any reductions — remained out of the deal. That demonstrated the Saudis’ inability to call the shots anymore in the global market for oil, even as Riyadh’s Energy Minister Abdulaziz bin Salman proudly declared to Bloomberg that “OPEC+ is up and alive” and that he was “more than happy with the deal.” 

“Refuse to eat your brussel sprouts long enough and your parents WILL let you leave the table,” Dan Pickering, founder and chief investment officer at Pickering Energy, tweeted, referring to the Saudis’ weakened position. “Mexico wins holdout … catalyst done, reality arriving. Shut-ins on low price/full storage come next. Ugliness.” 

Brent Oil Weekly TTM

“The proposed OPEC++ cuts alone cannot reverse the deep contango curve of Brent prices in a meaningful or lasting way as storage is needed to remain economical to handle the current and still coming oversupply,” said Louise Dickson, oil market analyst at the Oslo, Norway-based Rystad Energy.

“Benchmark Brent at the low $30s cannot be supported as a bigger contango is required to pay for storage that will soon be needed."

Contango refers to a situation in commodities where the front-month contract in a particular market trades at a discount to further months for delivery.  

In Brent’s case, spot crude for June settled on Friday at a discount of nearly $9 a barrel to the contract scheduled for delivery in a year’s time. Such a market dynamic allows traders to buy crude immediately, put it in storage somewhere, and try to gain by selling it forward. While that may be lucrative for the individual, the oil sitting in storage shows up as part of global inventories, further depressing the spot price. 

“Even if in some perfect world we see full OPEC++ compliance and 10 million bpd in cuts, this still leaves an incredible minimum 10 million bpd supply overhang for 2Q20,” said Dickson. He also cited the chasm between pledged cuts and what’s actually delivered to the market. 

“We find it very unlikely that the full 10 million bpd cut will be implemented as May 1 is just three weeks away and cuts of that size take time to realize. The oil machine is not as flexible as just simply turning off the tap or pressing a button,” he said. 

Rystad’s Chief Analyst Per Magnus Nysveen adds: 

“There is about 700 million barrels of crude storage left, at land and sea, so only 30 days left if no prompt cuts take place. With 10 million bpd cuts, we will hit the wall 2 weeks later. So to get through May we need at least 5 million bpd mote cuts quickly, and all producers should now contribute their fair share.”

New York-based consultancy Energy Intelligence makes the same point. It said the market was immediately focused on the remainder of April — the messiest month of oil balances, thus far — and what to do with upcoming barrels in May. 

“March ran a staggering 14 million barrels per day surplus and April’s will be similar as shut-ins help offset some demand loss,” Energy Intelligence said.  “A production cut would only start to clean up the balances on paper starting in May, while the physical oil market would remain swamped until June.”  

Moya of OANDA concurred, saying the demand outlook for now remained bleak, although the cuts agreed at the weekend could support an implied stock draw in the second half of the year. 

“Oil prices should remain heavy in the short-term, but that could quickly change if optimism grows that the US and Europe could see major parts of their economy opening by June,” he said.  

“There will be a time to eventually turn bullish on oil, but for now WTI crude prices could continue to show signs of stabilizing in the mid-$20s.” 

Central Bank Cash Pushing Gold To $1,800?

As for gold, the trajectory for $1,800 per ounce seems in place, though the path may be fraught with volatility by investors looking to cash out quickly if stocks come under fresh pressure next week from a tumble in crude prices. 

Gold Weekly TTM

Fundamentally, markets are flooded with cash from central banks around the world which is inflating gold prices at this highly uncertain time.  

The Federal Reserve announced a $2.3 trillion effort to bolster local governments and small and mid-sized businesses on Friday, the latest in an expanding suite of programs meant to keep the U.S. economy intact as the country battles the coronavirus pandemic. 

The test will come for gold if we see the stock market turn down again, given that the yellow metal has been quite closely correlated with equities lately, while the dollar remains a safe haven of choice.

Latest comments

we need to become dependent on electricity. shutdown all US production, sue all oil companies in the US, give the money to Amazon, Google and Tesla and then if in the rare chance we need any fuel we'll buy it from foreign sources
Yes, I'm all for EV, Matt.
Have to agree. I changed my car to ev 6 months ago. Additional advantage is that I dont have to visit gas stations anymore.
opec only wants the floor under the current prices that's why they only agreed to 10 mbpd output cut ,because they know with current oil prices shale oil is dying which will further reduce the future oil production.  the fall of shale oil was inevitable but the spread of covid-19 accelerate the process. this time opec is not ready to give another lifeline to shale oil.
We'll see. Everyone wants to extinguish shale. But it's proven to be a cat with nine lives :)
I agree with inderjeet. This move leaves ammunition if covid makes a return later in the year or Q2 and Q3 earnings reports scare the markets again. there was support before the deal, this solidifies it. market is also underestimating the lowest rig count in how many years. oil is moving opposite the market. go WTI young man...long
 It will be a tug of war with weekly EIA numbers, Baker Hughes on Friday and IEA monthly (now periodically at times, as Fatih Birol responds more to media queries these days)
we have already come through the peak of the crisis and oil price had very srong support levels furthermore with this oil cut deal oil will certainly bounce up when buyers will come and they will come. for the inventories capacity it is a repeated and outdated propagndaa that oil price will be in minus etc we said the peak of the crisis already passed and oil will be bullish this week only! its about the facts not what we wish to happen and Asia is back to work!!
You're missing the point. This is a weekly outlook that intends to guide readers over the typical five-day session, with an extended 14- to 21-day horizon in some cases. You need to read every paragraph to see the timeline in each instance. Please read the last two, and you can see the order of objectivity.
Those Saudi Princes might have to sell one or two of their solid gold Lamboghinis before this energy crisis is over...
A yatch or two? MBS has at least one over-glorified boat. But seriously, the arrogant (murderous, if I may add) Crown Prince got egg on his face for misreading the market. He doesn't have the sensibility to act gracefully under pressure; neither the audacity to show nerves of steel -- like Ali Naimi -- through a storm. He's just a modern-day gangster in royal garb, who surrounds himself with armed gangs and has killed too many (politically) that he today has more enemies than friends. Karma is inevitable.
There is something called ESD(emergency shot down)
Thank you for sharing your insights Mr Krishnan. Major oil price increase does need restart of economy after Covid-19. Although we have had some good news about declining incidence, but there are also some new cases in Asia. Another thing would be Covid striking the major oir producing facilities. That could lead unexpected decline in production. In the long term oil has some serious upside pressure and this is the asset you should follow closely.
Please read the last two paragraphs, Juhani, to understand the different timelines of outlook in the story.
Buy gold on every dip and buy aggresively that is the new normal
For how much more dollar 100? 200? & Think of Force of gravity.
and Rajiv: It's behaving exactly as this paragraph says: "As for gold, the trajectory for $1,800 per ounce seems in place, though the path may be fraught with volatility by investors looking to cash out quickly if stocks come under fresh pressure next week from a tumble in crude prices."
Also to add. Europe & UK are off. This article seems a little premature. You published your opinions which need to have a more solid information base. I'm sure a person in your position could have done a more well founded article. Not about being a bull or a bear here. Just about what it should have been. No offences intended.
this makes no sense! if we have only 1/3 of the demand, then the prices we reached were also 1/3. But saying we go lower after announcing a deal, seems quite naive. That too before Aramco announces its OSP. The whole aim of the exercise WAS to prop up the prices. I'm sure these leaders would not want to look foolish infront of well, forget the world, atleast not infront of Mexico.
Zaid Kidwai, before you run off with more criticism about the article, please read the last two paragraphs. This is a weekly outlook, with the typical five-day horizon that usually extends into a 14-day and sometimes 21-day outlook. As I respond to you, Brent has already turned negative. Yes, oil will rebound firmly over time -- it has to, come on; no one can afford to continue selling at $20 per barrel -- yet, the path of least resistance is lower in the near term. I have done this for nearly 30 years. Insya Allah, we both are right: Me about the near term, and you about the longer one. Take care and wish you the best with your positions.
You are simply wrong mr. Bear
Read my response to Zaid Kidwai.
Zaid/Saif: Here is Bloomberg's version Trump’s Oil Deal: The Inside Story of How the Price War Ended https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020-04-13/trump-s-oil-deal-the-inside-story-of-how-the-price-war-ended
Further from Jeffrey Halley, analyst at OANDA: "With a demand shock estimated at between 15 to 30 million barrels of oil a day, depending on who you talk to, it is clear that the OPEC+ agreement contains more hope than reality. The entire construction is underwhelming, to say the least, and really relies on production collapsing in the US and Canada to deliver the level of cuts required. Or a V-shaped recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic. The agreement should be enough to stop oil from revisiting its March lows and staying there; it will not be enough to, in all likelihood, prevent oil sliding to a new lower equilibrium."
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