$30 Oil Again? Energy Market Fundamentals Might Suggest Downturn in Prices

© AFP 2023 / FABIO BUCCIARELLISmoke is seen rising from the the burning leftovers of an oil refinery over oil fields near the oil rich city of Ramlan, on October 20, 2013 near the Syrian Kurdish town of Derik
Smoke is seen rising from the the burning leftovers of an oil refinery over oil fields near the oil rich city of Ramlan, on October 20, 2013 near the Syrian Kurdish town of Derik - Sputnik International
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Global oil prices could sink to as low as $30/bbl once again as oversupply still lingers, the US dollar might rebound should growth tick up, and energy investors might start cashing out now that oil has enjoyed a bull market.

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Kristian Rouz — After oil's massive 70% rebound from its 12-year low in January to its current price of $50/bbl, global oil prices might post steep declines soon, retreating back to as low as $30/bbl in the near-to-medium-term. Recent developments in the oil market, including a 20% gain in prices in April alone, might resemble a similar pattern seen in March-June 2015, when crude prices rallied from their multi-year lows only to crash dramatically in the second half of the year amid concerns of global oversupply.

This time around, however, the oil glut remains intact, while US-based shale oil producers have proven resilient to lower revenues, and the recent gains in oil prices are stemming from the dollar's weakness and assumptions that major oil producing nations could reach an agreement to curb their crude output. Yet, should the US Federal Reserve hint at the next round of monetary tightening amid an acceleration of the economy, the dollar is poised to go up again, providing a potential turning point in the current oil rally.

Oil prices nearly hit $50/bbl on Friday, having rolled off their 2016 high; throughout April, the Brent benchmark posted its best one-month rally in seven years. Brent futures contracts ended the last week of April at $48.13/bbl, having rallied 21.5% in April, the commodity's best result since May 2009. 

​The rebound in oil prices from below $30/bbl in January is partially based on easing concerns of an oil market oversupply as US inventories shrunk in Q1 and a possible deal to curb crude output is speculated to be in the making between Saudi Arabia, Russia and other major producers. Another factor is, amid nearly-stalling economic growth in the US, which added a dismal 0.5% in Q1 despite favorable winter conditions, the dollar has been sliding steadily throughout the year thus far, its value having dropped over 5% against its major peers. Oil prices, denominated in US dollars, therefore, rose automatically.

The current oil rally, however, is largely speculative. Aside from the weakening dollar and hopes for a production curb deal, market fundamentals have not changed significantly since January, when oil prices were at their lowest. OPEC crude output hit its historic highest in April, at 10.5 mln bpd, while international oil inventories are still rather high, with no indication of a fuel shortage in any of the advanced economies.

"The issue is that we haven't seen price rallies… correlate with fundamentals," Hamza Khan of the financial services company ING Group said. "The fundamentals — high stocks, high production — haven't changed."

A handful of international financial enterprises, including Commerzbank AG, BNP Paribas SA, and UBS Group AG, warned the oil prices might collapse as soon as in May, repeating last year's scenario of a massive plunge in prices after a solid rebound. 

​"There are dangerous parallels to 2015," Eugen Weinberg of Frankfurt-based Commerzbank said. "The market already appears overheated and a correction is overdue."

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The reason that could happen is the oil market's exposure to an abundance of speculative positions. Current buying bets on oil futures have contributed greatly to the rebound in oil amidst an overall optimistic market sentiment, yet, should oil prices reach some point where speculators decide to cash out, a crash in prices is deemed inevitable. Based on current fundamentals, including the amount of active oilrigs in the US, fuel costs and supply-demand balance, the profit-taking stage could start after oil prices hit $55/bbl.

In 2015, Brent gained roughly 45% in the first half of the year, rebounding to $68/bbl before sinking significantly. The gains in prices reversed at the point where US oil output hit its highest, at 9.61 mln bpd. The current situation is even more volatile — initial gains in prices have been about 70%, while OPEC production is at its historic highs of over 10 mln bpd, whilst US crude output is at 8.9 mln bpd.

Besides, the US could potentially boost crude output yet again — a recovery in prices would embolden shale drillers.

"The recent rally in oil prices may be self-defeating as it throws a life-line to US shale producers," Harry Tchilinguirian of the London branch of BNP Paribas said.

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However, the US shale industry would hardly recover in the near-term. According to Bank of America Merrill Lynch observations, "non-OPEC oil supply is indeed hanging off a cliff," with international oil production likely shrinking in the April-May period for the first time since 2013.

Neither would shale drillers die off easily. Despite rife disinvestment in the energy sector, oil prices have not been low enough to completely wipe out fracking companies in North America. The oil supply is above demand worldwide, and there are tankers full of oil floating in the sea waiting for a buyer.

Another factor playing against any assumptions that oil prices would stand firm is the declining discount in the spot US oil market, making stockpiling oil in North America for later delivery less profitable. Oil companies, therefor. would push to sell immediately in order to save on the expense of storage. 

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