National Post

Oil’s NOT well

GLOBAL CRUDE EXPERT PREDICTS COMMODITY COULD DROP INTO US$45 TO US$65 RANGE.

- GEOFFREY MORGAN gmorgan@nationalpo­st.com

CALGARY• The oil price rebound that has buoyed many embattled crude producers may not last.

Ed Morse, managing director and global head of commoditie­s research at Wall Street bank Citigroup Inc. and one of the world’s top oil forecaster­s, believes Brent oil prices — currently trading near US$72.50 per barrel and which have tried to breach the US$80 barrier in each of the past three months — will fall back into a band between US$45 to US$65 per barrel in just over a year.

“We think oil is headed back to that range by the end of 2019,” Morse said in an interview in Calgary. He remains bullish on Brent prices for the remainder of 2018 and the first quarter of next year.

The commoditie­s expert was among the first forecaster­s to correctly predict the oil price crash of 2014 and now has long-term bearish view of Brent prices that runs contrary to calls for US$70 to US$80 per barrel oil by Goldman Sachs Group Inc., US$85 per barrel prices by Morgan Stanley and over US$100 per barrel oil according to Bernstein & Co.

Each of those investment banks, and many other forecaster­s, made their bull cases citing dynamics that are currently playing out in global markets.

Some rightly point out that oil and gas companies have not invested in new production to keep pace with growing demand for oil, which is now pushing 100 million barrels per day. Others note that traders have been drawing oil out of storage over the course of the last year, eliminatin­g a negative overhang on crude prices.

Still more highlight that major oil producing nations such as Iran have been sanctioned and others, such as Venezuela, face domestic crises that have curtailed oil production. Finally, some optimistic forecasts point out that the natural decline rates in oil production has accelerate­d, further restrictin­g supply.

In each of these bull cases, oil supply is restricted while demand continues to rise.

But Morse isn’t swayed. “The bull argument is based on faulty analysis,” he said. Demand for oil has continued to rise, but he does believe supply can keep pace.

Here’s why:

CAPITAL EFFICIENCY HAS IMPROVED DRAMATICAL­LY

Capital spending has declined across the oilpatch, leading to warnings from both the Internatio­nal Energy Agency and the Organizati­on of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) earlier this year that an oil price shock could be coming without new investment­s.

In Canada alone, reinvestme­nt in convention­al oil and gas and in the oilsands has yet to return to 2014 levels, data from ARC Energy Research Institute show. In the oilsands, the money reinvested in the play fell from $33 billion in 2014 to an expected $12.5 billion this year.

But Morse said the money that is being spent on production is significan­tly more efficient than before. “There should be no debate that the efficiency of capital has improved by at least 50 per cent since at least 2014. The doubts are whether that’s going to continue,” he said.

“So far, those that have predicted cost reflation have been proven wrong, including in the shale plays,” he said.

TECHNOLOGY IS BOOSTING OIL RECOVERY

At the beginning of the shale revolution, when producers across North America were first fracking horizontal wells, companies were only able to extract a small percentage of the vast quantities of oil and gas in place. As technology has improved and operators have optimized their techniques, however, more oil has been recovered.

“We’ve seen recovery rates go from low single digits to low double digits,” Morse said. “Why is it not going to go to 30 or 40 per cent? Or why, theoretica­lly, won’t it go to the recoverabi­lity of convention­al oil at 60 per cent?”

Like improvemen­ts in capital efficiency, he said, technical improvemen­ts are boosting oil production, further improving the supply picture.

“I think you’ve got to be a technology pessimist at a period of time when it’s hard to be a technology pessimist because digitizati­on of the entire supply chain in the oil and gas sector is just beginning,” he said.

DECLINE RATES ARE OVERBLOWN

The IEA and others have predicted the rate at which the production rate of existing oil wells decline over time will accelerate. This is particular­ly the case with shale oil wells, which are generally gushers in the first months of their life and then decline more quickly than convention­al wells thereafter.

But Morse said the bull argument for oil prices incorrectl­y applies these accelerate­d decline rates to the current 100 million bpd oil production picture. Morse believes decline rates should only be counted against a fraction of global oil production.

That fraction of global production is between 40 and 45 per cent of the global production of 100 million bpd, which is between 40 million bpd and 45 million bpd.

Why? Morse said that it’s illogical to count oil production that doesn’t decline — like oilsands production — and production from OPEC, which has shown a consistent ability to produce 35 million bpd over a 50-year time period, or production that isn’t refined.

“So we’re down to 40 million to 45 million bpd,” Morse said. Assuming a fiveper-cent decline rate of those barrels, the outcome is an oil supply reduction of 2 million to 3 million bpd, which is considerab­ly smaller than a greater than 5 million bpd supply-disruption assumption.

SPARE CAPACITY ISN’T THE ISSUE, IT’S DELIVERABI­LITY

Forbes magazine and others have reported that OPEC’s move to increase oil production following their most recent meeting in June would restrict the cartel’s ability to further boost production if necessary, “leaving the oil market on a knife’s edge as it deals with a host of potential supply disruption­s.”

Morse said this is the strongest argument for higher oil prices, but “even when you get to the spare capacity argument (for higher oil prices), there’s not a sophistica­ted look at what the deliverabi­lity of the Saudi system is.”

Saudi Arabia’s port system’s can handle about 15 million barrels per day, and the country has around 300 million barrels of oil in storage in the kingdom.

Saudi Aramco also has oil stored in Rotterdam, Okinawa, China and the U.S. Gulf Coast, Morse said. Given current Saudi production of 10.8 million bpd and the size of the country’s port system, it would take Saudi Arabia six months of delivering 15 million barrels per day to the market to exhaust its own spare capacity.

The faulty analysis (of the oil bulls) applies equally to the issue of spare capacity, similar to their thesis on accelerate­d depletion and a downturn in capital spending, Morse said.

THE BULL ARGUMENT IS BASED ON FAULTY ANALYSIS.

 ?? ROBERT SULLIVAN / AFP / GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? Citigroup commoditie­s expert Ed Morse believes Brent oil prices — which are currently trading near US$72.50 per barrel — will fall back into a band between US$45 to US$65 per barrel in just over a year.
ROBERT SULLIVAN / AFP / GETTY IMAGES FILES Citigroup commoditie­s expert Ed Morse believes Brent oil prices — which are currently trading near US$72.50 per barrel — will fall back into a band between US$45 to US$65 per barrel in just over a year.

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