Business Day (Nigeria)

Oil prices stuck in limbo as uncertaint­y mounts

- OLUSOLA BELLO

Oil prices are unlikely to move much higher from the current levels in the low $40s, at least not for the rest of the year, a growing number of analysts and industry profession­als say.

According to Oilprice. Com, Oil has been stuck in a narrow trading range in the low $40s more or less since July after the market began to worry that even with large supply cuts from OPEC+ and curtailmen­ts in the U.S., demand will not recover fast and strong enough to draw down the record-high inventorie­s that had built in the second quarter.

This year has been a year of uncertaint­ies on all markets, including the oil market, but it looks as if uncertaint­ies have grown since we entered the second half of 2020, instead of abating as analysts had predicted earlier this year.

Uncertaint­ies about a second wave of COVID-19 and renewed restrictio­ns on social gatherings in several major European economies are weighing on oil market sentiment. China’s ability to continue propping up oil demand with record- high crude oil purchases is also called into question. The U.S. election is another major uncertaint­y and whatever the result, the markets, including the energy market, will be impacted.

In recent weeks, uncertaint­ies over when (if ever) oil demand will return to the precrisis levels have increased with demand recovery basically stalled and China appearing to slow down its oil imports.

A lot of the major players on the oil market, including some of the largest independen­t oil traders such as Trafigura and Mercuria, have been bearish on oil near term, expecting global stocks to build in the fourth quarter – due to weak demand – before starting to decline. The biggest independen­t oil trader in the world, Vitol Group, however, was quite bullish two weeks ago. The world’s stockpiles of oil have diminished by around 300 million barrels since peaking at 1.2 billion barrels early this summer, and are expected to decline by another 250 million-300 million barrels between September and December, Vitol’s chief executive

Russell Hardy told Bloomberg in mid-september.

But another executive at Vitol, executive committee member Chris Bake, said on Gulf Intelligen­ce’s weekly energy podcast on Sunday that demand is looking more uncertain amid a “huge amount of uncertaint­y” about COVID-19, economies, monetary stimulus, and oil demand.

“The convention­al wisdom going into the fourth quarter was that things were going to improve,” Bake said, noting that “it doesn’t feel like we have a huge catalyst” for the rest of the year.

According to Bake, there is a “big push-pull between the demand and supply side, and the demand side right now looks very uncertain; the supply side probably will need to adjust to that.”

The deteriorat­ing demand outlook comes just as OPEC+ is preparing to further ease – as of January – the current production cuts, leading to speculatio­n that the group is set for a turbulent dialogue in the fourth quarter about its supply-fixing decisions.

There is uncertaint­y about OPEC+ “holding the line without making another move,” Vitol’s Bake said on the Gulf Intelligen­ce podcast.

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