Houston Chronicle

Slow global economic growth leads experts to predict supply will outweigh demand in 2020 as inventorie­s continue to increase

- By Javier Blas

Oil bulls thought 2020 would be their year.

After half a decade of lower spending on new projects, oil production growth was supposed to slow to a trickle just as demand was supercharg­ed by a once-in-ageneratio­n shake up in the shipping fuel market. Many market commentato­rs predicted if $100 a barrel for oil was going to make a come back, it would happen in 2020.

Excitement is fading fast. The first official assessment of 2020 comes from the Internatio­nal Energy Agency on Friday, but a first look at forecasts from consultant­s and traders for supply and demand balances show persistent surpluses, not the deficit that was expected to underpin rising prices.

The culprits: rising shale production, a slowing global economy and the prospect of a deepen

ing trade war.

“The balances for 2020 were already worrisome, and the downgrade in demand we are contemplat­ing put them potentiall­y in the ugly category,” said Roger Diwan, an OPEC watcher at consultant firm IHS Markit Ltd.

Consultant­s and oil traders have already taken a first stab, and their supply and demand results show a balanced market, at best. Many forecast supply will exceed consumptio­n, perhaps by a large margin.

The oil market, showing characteri­stics typical of an equity market, is already starting to reflect the potential for a surplus in 2020. Despite a tight physical market because of Russia’s pipeline contaminat­ion crisis and U.S. sanctions on Iran and Venezuela, oil prices briefly dipped below $60 last week, down more than 20 percent from a high above $75 in late April.

“The market is asking why it should bother going long for just three months when the future looks bleak,” said Amrita Sen, chief oil analyst at Energy Aspects Ltd.

The bearish outlook for next year is a problem for the OPEC+ alliance led by Saudi Arabia and Russia. If the 2020 forecast proves correct, the group might be forced to keep in place its output cut far longer than originally anticipate­d to prevent a surge in global oil inventorie­s.

The OPEC+ alliance is set to meet in the next few weeks in Vienna to discuss its production policy for the second half of 2019.

The bulls weren’t completely wrong in their analysis for next year: the shipping fuel changes, known as IMO 2020, are all but certain to boost demand for diesel, perhaps pushing that particular corner of the petroleum market into a deficit. However, supply growth, fueled by a resilient U.S. shale industry, continues to surprise to the upside.

“The dynamic of the market has changed because of shale,” Ben van Beurden, chief executive officer of Royal Dutch Shell Plc, said in a panel at the St. Petersburg Internatio­nal Economic Forum last week.

What neither bulls nor bears could anticipate is President Donald Trump and his erratic policies, which have thrown wrench after wrench into the gears of the global economy. Earlier this month, the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund cut its forecast for economic growth in China — the engine of demand for commoditie­s — to 6 percent next year, the lowest since 1990 and less than half the peak of 14.2 percent in 2007.

“There is growing evidence of a sharper-than-expected slowdown in demand,” said Martijn Rats, oil analyst at Morgan Stanley in London.

Across the world’s top oil consumers, year-on-year consumptio­n growth came to a halt in March. April demand figures, still preliminar­y, also show little increase.

The first tentative glances into 2020 by oil consultant­s are nearly unanimous about the prospect of oversupply — a view shared in private by major commodity trading houses. The surpluses are all the more remarkable because none are predicting a recovery in Iranian and Venezuelan output. Over the last year, the combined output of the two troubled OPEC producers has dropped by roughly 2.2 million barrels a day — equal to what Germany consumes.

S&P Global Platts, the owner of what was previously named PIRA Energy Group, Inc. , put the surplus next year at around 400,000 barrels a day in a report to clients in May. The Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion, the statistica­l arm of the U.S. Department of Energy, sees an excess of 100,000 barrels a day . And Energy Aspects, another influentia­l consultant popular with hedge funds and big trading houses, sees a large stock-build of 500,000 barrels a day. IHS Markit expects a total surplus of 800,000 barrels a day next year.

The surpluses, however, mask notable difference­s within the petroleum market, with most consultant­s anticipati­ng a larger overhang in refined products than in crude.

Although the Paris-based IEA hasn’t yet published its first detailed look into 2020, it offered some glimpses of its thinking earlier this year when it published a five-year outlook from 2019 to 2024. In that report, it forecast oil demand next year at 102 million barrels a day and production from non-OPEC countries plus condensate­s from OPEC at 71.9 million barrels. That will leave a gap for OPEC crude to fill of just 30.1 million barrels, close to the cartel’s current production.

Since the publicatio­n of the report, the IEA has raised its non-OPEC supply view for 2019 and lowered its demand forecast, suggesting if the cartel keeps pumping at current levels, production will exceed demand in 2020.

 ?? Gregory Bull / Associated Press ?? U.S. oil output is surging so fast that the United States could soon overtake Saudi Arabia as the world’s biggest producer.
Gregory Bull / Associated Press U.S. oil output is surging so fast that the United States could soon overtake Saudi Arabia as the world’s biggest producer.
 ?? Saul Loeb / AFP / Getty Images ?? Oil market investors who thought the price of the commodity would exceed $100 a barrel were forced to watch as the price dropped below $60 in early June. Bullish attitudes toward oil have diminished greatly as consultant­s and government agencies have estimated there will be a surplus in global reserves in the coming year.
Saul Loeb / AFP / Getty Images Oil market investors who thought the price of the commodity would exceed $100 a barrel were forced to watch as the price dropped below $60 in early June. Bullish attitudes toward oil have diminished greatly as consultant­s and government agencies have estimated there will be a surplus in global reserves in the coming year.
 ?? Courtney Sacco / Associated Press ?? Trade war concerns, slow global economic growth and U.S. shale production have contribute­d to the rise in oil inventorie­s.
Courtney Sacco / Associated Press Trade war concerns, slow global economic growth and U.S. shale production have contribute­d to the rise in oil inventorie­s.
 ?? Amer Hilabi / AFP/Getty Images ?? Saudi Energy Minister Khalid al-Falih chairs the OPEC+ meeting on May 19.
Amer Hilabi / AFP/Getty Images Saudi Energy Minister Khalid al-Falih chairs the OPEC+ meeting on May 19.

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