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Commodities Week Ahead: Sub-$20 Oil On Target; Gold Clings To Under $1,500

Published 03/23/2020, 07:44 AM
Updated 09/02/2020, 02:05 AM

How long will it be before crude trades in the teens?

It's a question without doubt in the minds of us all, though another question to be asked is what will happen to shale oil at those prices.

West Texas Intermediate, the benchmark for U.S. crude, came within less than $1 of snapping the $20 per barrel support in Asian trade as the week opened to more coronavirus horrors in Italy and across Europe.

WTI Futures Weekly Price Chart

In the United States, the crisis reached a new dimension as at least one member of the Senate was reported infected and several others in self-quarantine as the assembly struggled to find common ground between President Donald Trump's party and rival Democrats on a massive relief package for the pandemic.

Total U.S. Covid-19 cases reached nearly 35,000, growing at a pace of 2,000 a day, while deaths approached 500.

It’s important to remember that regardless of the stimulus or whatever diplomatic maneuver the Trump administration has in mind to restore the failed OPEC+ production pact between the Kremlin and Riyadh, physical demand for oil will take time to return.

WTI at below $20 looks more plausible than ever, with hundreds of millions of people locked in their homes and not driving, flying or doing the things they usually do to get the oil in the tanks moving and refilled.

Largest Ever Oil Surplus Looming

“The largest oil supply surplus the world has ever seen in a single quarter is about to hit the global market from April, creating an imbalance of around 10 million barrels per day (bpd),” analysts at Rystad Energy said in a note.

Supply could surpass oil demand by an average of nearly 6 million bpd in 2020, resulting in an accumulated implied storage build of 2.0 billion barrels this year, the consultancy estimated.

“Based on our rigorous analysis, we find that the world currently has around 7.2 billion barrels crude and products in storage, including 1.3 billion to 1.4 billion barrels currently onboard oil tankers at sea,” its analysts said.

Further, the consultancy estimated that, on average, 76% of the world’s oil storage capacity was already full and current average filling rates indicated by balances were unsustainable.

“At the current storage filling rate, prices are destined to follow the same fate as they did in 1998, when Brent fell to an all-time low of less than $10 per barrel,” said Paola Rodriguez-Masiu, Rystad Energy’s senior oil markets analyst.

For Balance, Capex/Rig Cuts May Follow

As Dominick Chirichella of the Energy Management Institute in New York noted, U.S. crude production remained at a record high of 13.1 million bpd last week despite the oil rig count being down by 152 or 18% year-on-year.

U.S. oil drillers were currently deploying 664 rigs versus an October 2014 high of 1,609, but producing 4.23 million bpd more oil. “This is a production gain of 3.6 times more per rig,” said Chirichella.

Indeed, if U.S. crude slipped below $20 — or even spends a sustained period under $30 — the financial havoc brought on shale producers themselves might solve part of the problem for OPEC+ and the market.

“We’re going to see a new level of capex cuts and production discipline that could amaze us,” said John Kilduff, founding partner at New York energy hedge fund Again Capital, adding:

“It’s the only choice drillers across the U.S. have: cut or go bankrupt.”

Until now in 2020, only one firm in the U.S. oil patch — Pioneer Energy Services (OTC: PESXQ) — has filed for bankruptcy.

But many others, like Chesapeake Energy (NYSE:CHK) and Whiting Petroleum (NYSE:WLL) were already carrying heavy debt burdens before this month’s 55% drop in crude prices. Several have now moved toward slashing expenditure, exploration and production.

Pioneer, one of the leading producers in the Permian Basin of Texas and New Mexico, said it was running a series of lower output models to decide on next steps.

EOG Resources (NYSE:EOG) also said it planned cutbacks, Diamondback Energy (NASDAQ:FANG) reduced its completion crew from nine to six while Parsley Energy (NYSE:PE) slashed its 2020 free cash flow outlook to at least $85 million from a prior view of at least $200 million. Continental (NYSE:CLR) said it will reduce its average rig count in the Bakken to 3 from 9 currently, and in Oklahoma to 4 from 10.5.

Gold Between Rock And Hard Place

In gold’s case, a retest of $1,500 levels is likely this week though holding there might still be a problem.

U.S. gold futures hit an eight-month low of just above $1,450 an ounce last week, extending the previous week’s drop of 9.3%, which was its worst slide in 37 years. The yellow metal lost its $1,500 perch as investors liquidated their longs to raise cash as the Dow crashed beneath the key 20,000 point level.

Gold Futures Weekly Price Chart

“Gold is really caught between a rock and a hard place and that’s depreciating its safe haven label,” said Tariq Zahir, founder of New York-based Tyche Capital Advisors, which runs a Global Macro Commodities Program.

“For now, all eyes are on the Dow taking it on the chin, though for some that also means a buying opportunity to get in [to gold] at below $1,500.”

Latest comments

Can we clarify what this means for Gold? Any predictions?
Look at te charts of the last 24 hours, explains it all.
LOW oil prices always sort themselves out.  No one can make money at $ 23 / bbl so I am already aware that the major I used to work for (retired now) has started shutting in some higher cost fields and has drastically cut capital spending for the rest of 2020.  That will  mean very few new wells for 2020.......and less production.   Less production means higher prices again - in time.
Rey Jasmilona Agustin
What will happen to Shale Sir!  Let's talk about what will happen to our ability to produce energy affordably globally rather than holding a profiteering mentality of doom and gloom.  On every front, damage is occurring daily. Shale will simply, shut wells and cap drilling.  Best storage in the world in underground.....  Yes consolidation will occur stateside.  But to simply think the USA shale will be dysfunctional and disappear & not have the ability pick up where production stopped is naive to all parties involved.   Traders may go to Saudi Arabia for cheap oil until the point refineries can't store it and oil traders have no more tankers to store it in this contango environment for future sales.  But sorry, at this price point, quantity and volume will not work.  $5 more dollars down,  SA will practically be giving it away and in the end, then only thing that will save them is being last man standing.  Another words, oil dries up as predicted in the next 30 years, and they have it.
I don't really feel bad for them because they got greedy and had a big hand in crushing the oil market. All with something that's not economical and hurts the environment.
 It's free-market enterprise. They saw the opportunity and piled on. It was a good ride (debt-ridden, no doubt) for them and now is a time for adjustment. I believe in the American spirit of comeback.
I don't believe in shale but I'll go with the rest of what you said.
Am I wrong in assuming that any bounce in oil today (stocks and ETFs) is based on nothing since the oil prices are being controlled by the Saudi Russia dispute right now?
It's the wholesale demand destruction globally because of all the shutdowns, particularly in aviation and, to a certain extent, road travel, Rob. And, of course, the Saudi-Russian game of chicken doesn't help.
do not beleive this better
Kareem Sultan, believe what suits you.
Price will not go to this by the Will Of GOD
I just read the first sentence. it raises the question, how long to we all, including you, lose our jobs?
Matt, please read my replies to Cloud Atlas and Andrew Carson. And yes, I'm aware it affects us all, including me.
thank you for your thoughtful replies. My problem is the moment I sell my massive positions in OAS, there will be surprise news the day after and they'll all bump up 1 to 2 hundred percent. usually by now, I'd be in margin and would be squeezed out ; but fortunately (like Buffet who bought $10 billion of then ********share OXY now 9.50$ share) I'm hoping someone huge like him and someone small like me can ride this out. I believe, unless this is the end of the US market and a start of a war, if anything recovers it would have to be the very fuel (oil) of every business on the planet - save solar panel and electric cars of course ;)
 We'll get through this, of course. God Bless America (me as a writer, speaking:) ) Bests to your positions too.
Ho hum.
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