The US dollar's upside momentum has faded, but oil prices remain
depressed. Many observers try, too hard perhaps, to link the decline
in commodity prices in general, and oil in particular, to the appreciation of
the dollar. Yet the situation is considerably more
complicated.
There is a case that can be made that the decline in commodity prices
reflects slower world growth prospects in general. Demand in China,
the key consumer of commodities, has softened, and its crackdown on using
commodities to disguise capital flows, or use as collateral for loans, may also
be weighing on demand. This weakness in the global economy stands in
contrasts to the US economy, which grew 4.6% in Q2, and appears to have been around 3% in Q3. This contrast, or divergence, has helped bolster the
dollar.
However, this conventional narrative does not do justice to the supply
side. From a high level, more often than not, dramatic moves in
commodities seem to be a reflection of supply shocks more than demand
shocks. For example, record harvests in the US explain the decline
in grain prices more than the dollar or a slowing of the world economy
can.
Oil prices have fallen by 17-20% since mid/late June. There may
be some role for the global slowdown and the appreciation of the dollar, but these are not the main drivers. We see two main forces.
The first is Saudi Arabia. It usually acts as the swing producer, cutting
output when prices are low and increasing output when prices are high. It
is not cutting output presently. To the contrary it looks to have stepped
up its output. The key question is why?
As in many important developments, this too could be over-determined
(meaning more than one cause or consideration). First would be Saudi
Arabia's domestic considerations. It depends on oil revenues to finance
the government's activities, including a generous welfare program. By
boosting output, it can maintain
overall revenues in a soft oil price environment.
Second, some suggest may also be a favor to the US in that a fall in oil prices adds to the pressure on Russia. I am sympathetic to arguments that it was the collapse in oil prices more than the Reagan-inspired arms race that ultimately led to the fall of the Soviet Union. While it is possible that Saudi Arabia changed tactics are part of some kind of pact with the US, it does not seem compelling and is contradicted by a third consideration. A decline in oil prices, especially if a move below $80-$85 a barrel can be sustained, it could change the dynamics of the US shale projects.
Fourth, the Saudi oil stance may be a warning shot to OPEC, which meets early
next month. By boosting output, it may enhance its effort to
reinstate discipline within OPEC. Its internal battle within OPEC means
that if it does not pick-up market share, its rival Iran would. Some
observers think there is a proxy war of sorts being fought between Saudi Arabia
and Iran. Libya and Venezuela domestic considerations do not favor cuts
in output. Separately, Russia may also be inclined to step up production
to limit the decline in revenues.
US output is another supply side shock. In the week through
October 3, US crude output was 8.88 mln barrels a day, and for the 48
continental states, it was highest weekly figure since 2010. Since 2008,
the EIA estimates that US oil output is up more than 70%. Its 2014
forecast of average daily output in the US this year of 8.53 mln barrels can be
surpassed. During that same week, US oil imports were 7.71 mln
barrels a day. This is about 1.5 mln barrels a day than the average in
the 2011-2013 period. The EIA expects imports to fall to 6 mln barrels a
day next year.
Through the week of October 3, US crude inventories rose by five mln
barrels. The consensus had forecast a build of a little more than one
million barrels. Crude inventories are about 2% above the five year
average, and refinery utilization has fallen to the lowest since
June.
Talk of peak oil and the demise of the dollar spurred fantastic talk of a
return to $150 a barrel and higher. It was supposed to support the
shift in the world economic order, leaving aside the fact that China is a
larger importer of oil, or that the world economy does better (at least in the
short and medium term) with cheaper energy. While scenarios are
high oil prices have been gamed out, we suspect not sufficient attention
has been given to the opposite, and just as plausible a scenario of a further
material drop in oil prices.
The 10-year average (120-month) of WTI is about $82.00 a barrel. In
2011 and 2012, it hit $75-$77. These do not seem like unreasonable
medium-term targets. Technically, a break of $73 a barrel could send WTI
toward $64, which corresponds with the 2010 low. A break of that would
indeed be significant.
Oil: More about Supply than the Dollar
Reviewed by Marc Chandler
on
October 09, 2014
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