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Speculators Are Abandoning Oil

1. China’s bauxite imports surge

China

– There are concerns that Indonesia might put a ban on bauxite exports, the raw material used for aluminum production, following restrictions on nickel exports. Nickel prices recently spiked.

– “While such a development would support bauxite and in turn aluminum prices, it would be less impactful for China than the nickel ban, in our view,” Standard Chartered wrote in a note.

– A 2014 ban on exports led China to diversify away from Indonesia. Prior to 2014, Indonesia accounted for 77 percent of China’s bauxite supply, but in the first half of 2019, only 13 percent of China’s bauxite supply came from Indonesia.

– Now, more than half of China’s bauxite comes from Guinea.

– China’s bauxite imports hit an all-time high in July.

2. Big Oil bets on Big Wind

Big Oil

– Norwegian oil company Equinor (NYSE: EQNR) will spend $11 billion on the Dogger Bank wind project in the UK North Sea.

– According to Rystad Energy, this will not only be the company’s largest project through 2026, but it will rank as the six largest offshore project in the entire world over that period. That includes offshore oil and gas projects.

– In fact, offshore wind can offers a path forward for oil companies and for servicers. “Equinor’s mega offshore wind investment promises hope for a deflated service industry. An eleven-digit investment program – a rare occurrence within the offshore oil and gas industry – is entirely unprecedented in the offshore wind space,” Audun Martinsen, head of oilfield services research at Rystad Energy, said in a statement.

– The value of new offshore oil FIDs could fall from $60 billion in 2019 to $43 billion by 2022. “The influx of offshore wind contracts worth billions of dollars will be welcomed with open arms by marine contractors,” Martinsen said.

3. Gold demand rises as weak economic data multiplies

Gold

– Gold prices are down from their early September highs, but still traded above $1,510 this week as fears of a global economic slowdown continue to mount.

– Data from Germany showed a steep contraction in manufacturing activity, and the service sector, which has proved more durable, is also finally showing signs of a slowdown.

– “Gold was therefore in considerable demand as a safe haven yesterday, as reflected in high ETF inflows,” Commerzbank said in a September 24 note.

– “The gold ETFs tracked by Bloomberg registered inflows of 15.5 tons yesterday, their largest daily inflow in three months.”

4. Speculators abandon oil

Speculators

– While investors flocked to gold in recent days (see above), they are decidedly less enthusiastic about oil futures.

– Bank of America Merrill Lynch says that the muted price reaction following the initial spike in crude prices after the Abqaiq attack could be because of the decline of speculative positions.

– “Poor investor returns and reduced risk appetite across the broker/dealer community have reduced the involvement of non-commercial market participants for some time now,” Bank of America said.

– Meanwhile, producers used the brief spike in prices to hedge forward production.

– “Said differently, the oil market still does not reflect meaningful upside price risks despite the damage to Saudi Arabia’s oil infrastructure, the largest single oil supply disruption ever recorded,” the investment bank said.

5. Outages reach record

Outages

– The muted price reaction in oil is remarkable given the scale of current outages. At 5.7 mb/d, the Abqaiq attack was the single largest supply disruption in history.

– Immediately after the attack, speculation spiked that the U.S. or Saudi Arabia (or both) would retaliate militarily against Iran. But the massive supply outages may help explain their reluctance.

– “With global oil supply disruptions already at exceptionally high levels due to supply losses in Venezuela and Iran, the blow to Saudi crude processing capacity makes any retaliation path dangerous to the market,” Bank of America Merrill Lynch said.

– “True, there are emergency stocks available across the OECD and China. But oil spare capacity around the world is minimal outside of Saudi Arabia,” the bank added.

6. Flaring soars this year, but could fall back

FLaring

– Natural gas flaring in the U.S. has spiked this year, with much of West Texas alight day and night. The U.S. has averaged 1.1 mcf/d of flaring this year, up from 0.835 mcf/d in 2018.

Kinder Morgan (NYSE: KMI) brought the Gulf Coast Express pipeline online this week, with enough capacity to supply the equivalent of 10 million U.S. homes per day, according to Reuters.

– “We have long expected a quick fill of Gulf Coast Express from three sources – new production, existing production that is currently being flared and rerouting gas that is now flowing in directions that are not as economically alluring as sending it to the Gulf Coast,” Rich Redash, head of global gas planning at S&P Global Platts Analytics, told Reuters.

– More pipelines are expected to come online in 2020, which should help reduce the rate of flaring.

– More infrastructure will help Permian producers bring gas to market and trim rates of flaring, but it will also sink natural gas prices more broadly as more supply hits the market.

7. Oil industry under fire

Oil Industry

– Oil executives were given a frosty reception on the sidelines of the UN summit this week. Activists, governments and increasingly investors are demanding more drastic cuts to emissions.

– A report by the U.N.-backed Principles of Responsible Investing (PRI), representing investors with $86 trillion under management, warned that oil industry spending is not aligned with climate goals.

– The PRI report “aims to fundamentally reset investors’ forward-looking risk management, strategic asset allocation and company engagement.”

– The conclusion? The report predicts “an abrupt and disruptive” policy response from governments by 2025 as climate change worsens.

– That could lead to a peak in oil demand by 2026-2028 generally, and by 2025 in the transportation sector specifically. That is dramatically earlier than 2040, the baseline assumption from the IEA.

– “We foresee an inevitable policy response by 2025 that will be forceful, abrupt and disorderly because of the delay,” Fiona Reynolds, chief executive of the PRI, said in a statement. “This will create considerably greater disruption than many investors and businesses are prepared for today.”

oilprice.com



One Comment on "Speculators Are Abandoning Oil"

  1. REAL Green on Sun, 29th Sep 2019 6:07 am 

    “Some Chinese Electric Cars Are ‘Simply Worthless’: Industry Body”
    https://tinyurl.com/yyo6b89a Caixin global

    “It’s “inevitable” that China’s electric cars have little resale value and some are inherently worth little, according to one of China’s top auto industry bodies…The discrepancy of technologies used in Chinese electric cars is also large, meaning certain models are not reliable and are “simply worthless,” the association said…The nation is the world’s largest NEV market, after building up huge capacity on the back of generous government incentives. But the huge buildup, often using older technologies, has led to observations that much of the nation’s output is far from cutting-edge.”

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