The Energy Space
Energy Price Outlook
It was deja vu all over again for the oil markets yesterday, as both WTI and Brent made small losses within inside-day trading ranges. The incremental information in yesterday's session basically included pressure from weak oil demand and increasing worries about the upcoming German local elections, while support came from increased speculation about accommodative monetary policies in Japan and China. In the background, pressure will remain in place from the likelihood of upcoming gains in DOE crude oil stocks, and from Tuesday's monthly EIA report which showed 2014 supply growth outpacing demand 1.7 mb/d to 1.35 mb/d. The upside will continue to focus on improving economic data, managed money account buying, increased regulation of Arctic drilling permits in the wake of Shell's incident, and refinery issues at Motiva's Port Arthur facility. Chinese trade data will be released Wednesday evening and will give the latest read on the strength of oil imports. We would maintain our June WTI-Brent trade entered on Jan 4th at -$14.25 with a target at -$8.00. The ramp-up of the Seaway pipeline to higher capacities this week should narrow that spread.
Brent finished 18c/bbl lower yesterday while WTI ended down 5c/bbl. Both markets weakened initially on the stronger dollar, which has been reacting to increasing concern in Germany. Local elections will take place on Jan 20th, and could see Chancellor Merkel's coalition partners suffer defeat. Ms. Merkel herself remains popular, but the prospect of a diminished coalition could present difficulties in the ongoing effort of European leaders to assist Greece and Spain. The euro has generally fallen over the last week or so on the prospect. The U.S. debt ceiling debate is receiving only scant attention, but may see Senate Leader McConnell take the helm from Speaker Boehner after the fiscal cliff episode. The debt ceiling is only a minor negative, in our view, as it's unlikely that it won't be raised. Oil demand in yesterday's DOE numbers provided a fresh wake up call, as it fell 1.14 mb/d on the week. It may have been influenced by year-end factors and could rebound next week, however, it's still just 137 kb/d above the two-year low and a sign that the economy remains weak. The fiscal cliff and the weakness in investment assets that occurred in late-Dec may have scared some consumers into not spending or traveling, so at least a partial rebound is justified next week. Oil stocks didn't gain as much as anticipated, but product stocks exceeded expectations due to higher refinery utilization in mid- and late-Dec. We would expect those trends to reverse, and for oil stocks to resume building at a healthy pace in the weeks to come.
The fresh bullish news mainly came from expectations of fresh stimulus in Japan that could be announced as soon as this Friday. The new gov't has been undertaking efforts to expand growth, and could push the BOJ to announce fresh QE at its Jan 22nd meeting. The market is also focusing on the potential that the Chinese central bank cuts its reserve requirements, although there isn't a timeline for such an action. Shell's drilling in the Arctic may be on ice in the near-term, as the company is receiving fresh scrutiny from the U.S. Interior Department following the Dec 29th-31st incident where a drilling rig was lost, recaptured, and then grounded. A 60-day assessment of drilling will be done, which could affect future permitting for Arctic exploration. Lastly, Brent may receive some support from Iraq's halt of exports to the Turkish port of Ceyhan due to a fault in the pipeline. The line was shipping 425,000 b/d prior to the shutdown.
Natural Gas
Feb futures finished 10.5 cents lower yesterday at $3.113/mmbtu. Weather was the primary concern once again as private forecasters are predicting warmer temperatures beyond 10 days from now. NOAA's 8-14 day maps have moderated some of the below-normal temperatures that had been forecast over the last few days. The market appears likely to continue lower until there's significant and lingering cold weather in the forecast.
Bloomberg had a good article yesterday on politics and energy, suggesting that Energy Secretary Chu may leave his post soon. It suggested that Mr. Chu's replacement as well as second term Obama administration initiatives may be guided by the EPA's study on the effects of fracking which is due in 2014. The concern could then be that any new regulations on fracking could be mishandled and then slow development. Of course, a replacement for Lisa Jackson at the EPA is a more immediate concern, after she announced her resignation last month. The outgoing governor of Washington Christine Gregoire is one potential candidate.
The impact on the natural gas market could be mixed. It may be negative over the next year until the EPA's fracking study is published, as the status quo may dominate. It could then be bullish for prices if fracking regulations are mishandled. Another question may be whether the same level of aggressiveness that the green agenda promoted by Pres Obama and Sec'y Chu had four years ago ends up returning. Without another 2009 style stimulus packed with windmills and given the new level of fiscal austerity in Washington, the only way that the green agenda will receive much gov't backing is if fossil fuel prices rise considerably. The growth in fracking may prevent that from happening.
Global Economic & Dollar News
» The BOJ may undertake further policy easing at its Jan 22nd meeting, according to Reuters. Japan's government will announce new emergency economic measures intended to boost growth.
» House Speaker Boehner said that he may agree to monthly hikes in the debt ceiling. The statement is being considered as a "blink" on the issue, meaning that he may be more in favor of dragging his feet" rather than allowing the limit to be breached.
Energy News
» Iraq Halted Crude Exports to the Turkish port of Ceyhan due to a fault in the pipeline. The line was shipping 425,000 b/d prior to the shutdown
» Shell's Drilling in the Arctic will be subject to fresh scrutiny by the U.S. Interior Department. A 60-day assessment of drilling will be done, which could affect future permitting for Arctic exploration.
» API's Gerard said that the U.S. is quickly becoming the epicenter of world energy production and that U.S. energy reserves are "unrivaled."
Upcoming Events
Thu - Chinese Trade Data, Oil Imports (Wed evening)
Thu - ECB & BOE Meetings
Thu - Natural Gas Inventories (10:30am EST)
Tue - API Inventories (4:30pm EST)
Wed - Iran-IAEA Meeting
Wed - EIA Weekly Oil Inventories (10:30am EST)
Jan 18th - IEA's Monthly Report
Jan 20th - German Local Election
Jan 29-30 - FOMC Meeting
Feb 12th - EIA's Short-Term Outlook
Feb 24-25 - Italian election
Mar 1st - Sequester Begins
May 31st - OPEC Meeting
Analysis
EIA Inventory Review
Oil stocks gained 1.3 MB in yesterday's report, which was small considering the 11.1 MB drawdown seen in the previous week. There may have been an element of follow-through to the numbers, however, as product inventories surged again as refiners apparently made efforts late in the year to liquidate their crude oil stocks. That trend should abate in next week's numbers as conditions return to normal. Oil stocks were boosted by a recovery in imports as well as a decrease in demand. However, the biggest takeaway we had was not from the latest data, but from the ongoing downward shift in the five-year average of demand. A look at the five-year average over the last six years shows this, with 2007 being the last strongest yester. This is mostly the result of economic weakness in the U.S. and partly due to efficiency (miles driven are still down from 2007 levels). What's disappointing, is that this appears to be the new norm, which will impact oil producers and refiners going forward. The data and our analysis follow below.
*The API convergence figures are the amounts that EIA data need to change in order to match the previous day's API figures
Crude oil stocks were +1.3 MB vs. +2.0 MB expected. Stock levels began the new year at 40.58 MB above the five-year average compared to 39.82 MB above it last week and 50.11 MB above at its 2012 peak. Imports were a large contributor and gained 1.25 mb/d on the week. They typically increase for the first 2-3 weeks of a new year before stabilizing. Demand fell 1.14 mb/d on the week and also contributed to the increase in oil stocks. The demand level of 17.76 mb/d was just 137 kb/d above the lowest level seen in the last two years. Demand was potentially weakened by worries over the fiscal cliff at year-end, which may have offered an adverse wealth effect causing consumers to button up their finances. The surge in refinery utilization in late-2012 has helped to boost product stocks and was partially responsible for the sharp decline in crude stocks last week. That could unwind going into next week's data, as oil stocks usually embark on a 41.6 MB build through early-May. Cushing stocks increased 332 kb/d in yesterday's report, but may fall over the next week or two as the Seaway pipeline ramps up to 400 kb/d capacity. The inventory data offered slight pressure on oil prices, and we would expect that to continue over the coming week.
Gasoline stocks were +7.4 MB vs. +2.3 MB expected. They sit 14.84 MB above the five-year average, which compares to 10.88 MB above it last week. There wasn't much to explain the sharp increase in stocks per se....demand fell 508 kb/d but was countered by a 532 kb/d decrease in production. It's more likely that the increases in production seen in mid-Dec are to blame for the jump, which could then have a negative effect in the weeks to come. Gasoline inventories typically build sharply into early-Feb before supplies begin being shipped for increases in demand tied to late-spring and the summer driving season. The data offered pressure on gasoline prices after the report, but the market was able to recover fairly quickly. We would anticipate gasoline stocks to build at a more normal rate going forward, so yesterday's numbers may be only slightly negative.
Distillate stocks were +6.8 MB vs. +1.8 MB expected. The build helped to correct the inventory shortage that's been growing since April of last year. Inventories are now 16.83 MB below the five-year average vs. 21.62 MB below it last week. The build was helped by a 170 kb/d decrease in demand and by a 56 kb/d increase in production. Imports were +89 kb/d and also added to stocks. Prices fell initially after the data were reported, but the market climbed back as the day progressed. We would anticipate that above-normal temperatures this winter may cause demand to remain somewhat weak, and in turn, cause inventories to decline at a rate slower than the five-year average would otherwise suggest.
Grains Commentary
Published Wednesday morning, 1/9/12
The markets are now in a holding pattern until Friday's release of another USDA crop report and with that all bets are off as this report has produced some massive moves over the past 7 years.
As we have gone through all the various estimates it still amazes me that with today's technology and constant streaming of information there can be such a chasm of numbers that are calculated. I have read from various news sources that there are estimates as low as 489 for a corn CO and has high as 725, the bean numbers are not as drastic but range from 120 to 155. The bottom line is still massive unknowns exist even with crops harvested nearly 3-4 months ago. The market is very sensitive that the corn export figure will continue to drop and it does not look as if it's ready to pick up anytime soon as SA remains cheaper, the one factor to monitor is the prices that continue to trade in China are near the highs and if China needs to import corn then all bets are off. The bigger factor for corn is the ethanol grind, this past year will be the first in the past 6 that there was not an increase in ethanol, but looking forward margins are on the rise and with deferred corn at $575 this maybe the year that ethanol quickly starts to rise again. The bean story is one that beats to a different drum, China crush margins are profitable and even though they have purchased SA beans yesterday through June it shows that the appetite is not slowing. The US margins are also profitable which should promote additional crush to take place.
The SA crops continue to grow with CONAB releasing its estimates earlier today with beans now at 82.7 vs. 82.6 last month and corn now at 72.2 vs. 71.9 last month, remember that these figures were calculated in the middle of December and would think that they are even higher than this now.
The outside markets are still somewhat benign this AM with the exception of Matif rapeseed that has gained another 8 Euros, this is up over 3.2% in the past 36 hours. The DCE is higher in the soy-complex and corn is unchanged which is still trading at $10. The OI in corn is up 3588, wheat dropped by 2860, beans dropped by 1238, meal was up 9679 and oil increased by 2169.
The option markets remain well bid as trade prepares for the USDA report and as history shows that these figures typically don't sustain the levels once the figures are released. The reality is that with SA weather as good as it is it's difficult to see any influential news coming in until we move into March and start focusing on US planting intentions and have the acreage battle start. The bean put skew is still steep and favors buying put spreads and possibly doing it in ratios. The bean oil still seems to be a dog that is sleeping but while sleeping there are things changing around the globe in the veg-oil markets, it might be worth looking to own some deferred call spreads for the 401k, if this dog awakes in a bad mood it could scare all the shorts out very quickly and shift it to the long side with its teeth showing. The wheat market still has big shorts and with China continuing to buy high protein wheat from the US and Canada and how cheap it is vs. corn look to own some upside types of plays.
On Dec. 27, EOXLive published a 2013 outlook for crude oil and natural gas. If you have not received it or would like a copy, please email tpawlicki@eoxlive.com.