Arab Times

Oil prices down as global economic growth concerns intensify

Demand growth to decelerate in 2019 amid trade tensions

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SReport prepared by NBK

eptember closed with oil prices trading at or below where they were on the eve of the missile strike on Saudi Arabia’s oil infrastruc­ture. Internatio­nal crude benchmarks Brent and West Texas Intermedia­te (WTI) ended the month at $60.78 (+0.68% mtd; +13% ytd) and $54.1/bbl (-1.9% mtd; +19.1% ytd), respective­ly. Having given up all their gains accrued in the aftermath of the attack on Saudi’s Abqaiq/Khurais oil processing center, both oil markers have since fallen further, with Brent breaching the $60 barrier to close at $58.4.bbl by the end of the first week of October. This was the marker’s lowest level since August.

Once again, concerns about the health of the global economy – and by implicatio­n oil demand – have come to the fore, fueling the bearish sentiment. The latest setback for oil was triggered by weaker-than-expected US manufactur­ing and employment data. This, allied to the news that the US had opened another front in its trade war, by slapping tariffs on European exports, to go along with those measures already imposed on China, has only reinforced the narrative of a weakening global economy.

The 14 September drone attacks on Saudi Arabia’s Abqaiq oil and gas processing facility and Khurais oil field knocked out 5.7 mb/d of Saudi crude production, close to half of the kingdom’s production capacity, and 5% of global oil supplies. The internatio­nal community has blamed Iran for the attacks, even though the Houthis claimed responsibi­lity. When the oil markets reopened, Brent spiked by more than 20%, from $60.22 to $71.95 in intraday trading before paring back gains to $69 by Monday’s close. Geopolitic­al risk, of minimal concern in the era of burgeoning US shale supplies, was seemingly back with a vengeance, as markets woke up to realizatio­n that the infrastruc­ture of one of the world’s most important oil suppliers was vulnerable to disruption from foreign forces. And twothirds of the world’s entire crude production buffer – oil that could be pumped at short notice to offset supply losses elsewhere – was tied up in Saudi Arabia’s 2.3 million barrels of spare crude production capacity.

However, supply outage concerns proved relatively fleeting; Brent fell 6.5% to $64.6/bbl by the close of the second trading session and fell in eight of the next thirteen sessions. Reasons for the sell-off are various: concerns over the length of the disruption were allayed by Saudi reassuranc­es that production would be up to speed relatively quickly – within two days Abqaiq had recovered 43% (2 mb/d) of its production and within three weeks’ Saudi output was back up to 9.9 mb/d, according to the Energy Minister; the Saudis moved quickly to reassure export customers that it possessed sufficient crude stocks (188 mb, equivalent to 28 days of export cover) with which to honor contract deliveries; various energy agencies and houses weighed in by confirming that global crude supplies in storage provided ample short term cover; and lastly a de-escalation in the rhetoric surroundin­g the incident by the internatio­nal community even while the US proceeded to tighten sanctions on Iran.

The IEA has left unchanged its oil

A group of AUB management and employees at the Avenues Mall Smart Branch.

demand growth forecast for 2019 and 2020 at 1.1 mb/d and 1.3 mb/d, respective­ly. The first six months of 2019 saw one of the weakest first halves of demand growth (0.5 mb/d) since 2008, amid deteriorat­ing global trade relations. Global commercial crude stocks (OECD stocks) continue to trend higher, increasing for the fourth consecutiv­e month to reach 2,931 mb in July. Stock levels are at their highest in almost two years and 19.7 mb above the 5-year avg, which is one of OPEC’s targets.

OPEC+ compliance fell to 116.5% in August from 142.5% in July, with Russia, Saudi Nigeria and Iraq among those producers increasing output. Neverthele­ss, August was the second month in a row that both OPEC and its non-OPEC partners recorded above 100% compliance. The combined output cut was 1.4 mb/d, 200 kb/d more than mandated by the Vienna agreement. For Saudi-led OPEC-11, production increased in August by 225 kb/d to 25.78 mb/d, bringing compliance down to 120.3% from 148% in July. OPEC compliance in September – when that data is released later this month – should increase due to the impact of the drone attacks on Saudi Arabian production.

In the markets’ risk assessment, geopolitic­s has been deemphasiz­ed in favor of global economic growth concerns. In their reasoning, in a world plainly still awash in oil, the threat posed by weakening global economic and oil demand fundamenta­ls should assume greater importance than the threat to global oil supplies posed by supply outages. The downward movement in oil prices has, therefore, reflected that. While the assessment seems reasonable in view of rising global trade frictions and faltering economic data coming out of Europe and the OECD, geopolitic­al risks are present. It appears unlikely that geopolitic­al risk-related oil volatility will subside without some kind of movement on or resolution to the vexed issue of the Iran nuclear agreement.

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