Crude oil prices recovered by the end of
the week, with the Brent crude price settling above $60 per barrel after
deteriorating below that level during the week. The Brent price rose to
$62.70 per barrel and WTI rose to $53.80 per barrel.
The price market structure for the Brent crude price has flipped to a
slight backwardation after hovering in a slight contango for the past
two weeks. Even if the OPEC+ output cut of 1.2 million barrels per day
(bpd) is yet to be reflected in the market, this signals an upcoming
tight market amid strong supply-demand fundamentals and a well-balanced
market for the first half of 2019.
Conversely, some market participants assumed a far more bearish
fundamental outlook, while output cuts by the Organization of the
Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) should limit inventory builds and
settle the market in a sustainable range above $75 per barrel for Brent,
especially when the US continues to push for zero waivers on Iranian
crude oil imports.
Iran’s crude oil output averaged 3.8 million bpd in 2017 and fell to 2.7
million bpd by the end of 2018, despite the US granting waivers in
early November 2018 to eight of the largest importers of Iranian crude
oil. If the US does not intend to renew the waivers, Iran’s crude oil
output is likely to fall further below 2.5 million bpd.
The International Energy Agency’s (IEA) monthly report came with
stronger oil demand this year compared with 2018, despite the expected
economic slowdown amid concerns over economic growth in China and the
US.
The IEA also reported that US oil output will rise by 1.3 million bpd in
2019, though S&P Global Platts reported US oil rigs dropping for
the ninth consecutive week when Brent prices fell below $70 per barrel
in mid-November 2018. Baker-Hughes drilling statistics show that the US
oil-rig count has been moving in a relatively narrow band of 858-886
since June 2018.
China, as the world’s second-largest economy and largest crude oil
importer, took advantage of the low oil prices in late 2018 and imported
a record 10.35 million bpd in December 2018, amid independent refiners
lifting their import quotas. China’s crude oil imports in 2019 are
likely to rise before the impact of the OPEC+ output cuts on the market.
In late 2018, US refiners that have enjoyed record wide discounts of
Western Canadian Select (WCS) to WTI are now threatened as this discount
has narrowed amid Alberta’s output cuts of 325,000 bpd throughout 2019.
Consequently, US refining margins are threatened, while American
refiners are already struggling with a glut of refined product
inventories. Wide Canadian price spreads have played a major role in
justifying rampant refinery utilization in the US, particularly in the
mid-continent. Nevertheless, the narrowed discount means higher
net-backs for Canadian oil sands producers.
The US Energy Information Administration (EIA) reported mid-continent
refining utilization capacity averaging around 93 percent in 2018, when
US refiners basically profited from the widening WTI/WCS spread.
Planned winter maintenance in US refineries started in early January.
This will give some relief to the US downstream amid robust refined
product inventories. Some refiners might choose to extend maintenance in
an effort to bring a degree of balance to the oversupplied refined
products market.
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