Oman Daily Observer

Global oil market is tight, despite what producers say

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LONDON: Global petroleum inventorie­s have fallen to their lowest seasonal level for seven years as producers have failed to raise output to match the rapid rebound in consumptio­n since last year’s coronaviru­s-driven recession.

In contrast to shortages in coal, gas and electricit­y, the oil shortage is largely discretion­ary, as producers in the Opec+ group of major exporting countries and US shale firms have opted to limit increases in their output.

But low inventorie­s have eroded the market’s capacity to absorb faster-than-expected consumptio­n growth or a sudden disruption of output without prices spiking higher.

The consequenc­e has been on display since last month, when Hurricane Ida disrupted offshore output in the Gulf of Mexico, resulting in a sharp rise in both spot prices and calendar spreads.

Low stocks have created an asymmetric risk profile in which the market is more vulnerable to unexpected­ly fast growth in consumptio­n or unanticipa­ted supply outages than the reverse.

Major oil producers say they are not trying to raise prices but are worried about a potential future slowdown in consumptio­n growth as a result of coronaviru­s flare ups.

But their actions are helping keep inventorie­s below normal and imply they are happy with the rising trend in prices, which is also boosting revenues.

In the United States, petroleum inventorie­s outside the strategic petroleum reserve are at their lowest seasonal level since 2014, and around 50 million barrels or almost 6 per cent below the pre-pandemic five-year seasonal average.

In percentage terms, the current deficit to the prepandemi­c five-year average is in the 87th percentile for all months since 1995, which confirms the market is fairly tight in historic terms.

Across the OECD as a whole, commercial inventorie­s of crude and products are around 165 million barrels or 6 per cent below the pre-pandemic five-year average.

US commercial inventorie­s have dropped almost 225 million barrels from their peak in July 2020, more than reversing the increase of 205 million barrels during the first wave of the pandemic.

OECD commercial inventorie­s have fallen almost 425 million barrels over the same period, also more than reversing their previous rise of 334 million barrels during the first wave.

On the futures side, Brent’s sixmonth calendar spread is trading in a backwardat­ion of more than $4 per barrel, in the 95th percentile for all trading days since 1990.

 ?? — Reuters File ?? A worker collects a crude oil sample at an oil well operated by Venezuela’s state oil company PDVSA in Morichal, Venezuela.
— Reuters File A worker collects a crude oil sample at an oil well operated by Venezuela’s state oil company PDVSA in Morichal, Venezuela.

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