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April 9,
2024
By Oil Price
Intelligence Report
As bullish sentiment continues to
build and Brent settles comfortably above
the $90 mark, oil prices look set to continue to climb this week.
- German industrial production
finally broke through the cycle of gloom after it posted a 2.1%
increase in February, well above the consensus
expectation
of a 0.5% rise month-over-month.
- Although Germany’s manufacturing is still below its pre-pandemic
levels, the surprise hike in activity fuelled this week’s copper rally
and reinforced the expectation of the ECB cutting rates from June
onwards.
- In contrast to actual figures, business sentiment in Germany remains
sour as the S&P Global PMI index dropped as low as 41.6 in March, from
42.5 in February, suggesting the country’s manufacturers don’t
necessarily share the optimism.
- Europe has been the laggard continent in terms of rising commodity
demand as oil demand keeps on trending flat, electricity demand has
now declined for two consecutive years, and steel production has
fallen to its lowest level on record.
Market Movers
- UK-based oil major Shell (LON:SHEL) and
Saudi Aramco (TADAWUL:2222) are reportedly vying
for the LNG assets of Pavilion Energy, a trading firm set
up by Singapore’s Temasek, in a deal that could be worth 2 billion.
- UK oil major BP (NYSE:BP) is
reportedly
nearing an agreement with Anglo-French upstream firm Perenco to divest
its Amherstia, Cashima, and Immortelle gas fields in Trinidad and
Tobago.
- French energy major TotalEnergies (NYSE:TTE) has
postponed a
final investment decision on its Papua LNG project to 2025, saying
more alignment would be required with engineering contractors.
Tuesday, April 09, 2024
Brent crude futures have established a firm footing over the $90 per
barrel mark and not even a brief opening for a potential ceasefire in
Gaza managed to pull it lower. Mexico cutting oil exports will ensure
bullish sentiment continues to build in the coming weeks, with further
directionality set by the US and Chinese inflation numbers this week,
potentially even paving the way for a climb closer to $95 per barrel.
LNG Prices Keep Calm Despite Strong Asian Buying.
Spot LNG prices in Asia have been
rangebound
in recent weeks around $9 per mmBtu despite higher-than-usual buying
from China and Japan as European LNG imports are set to drop to a
7-month low of 8 million tonnes on high gas inventories.
Mexico Keeps on Cutting Oil Exports. Having
withdrawn 436,000 b/d of crude oil exports in April, Mexico’s state
oil firm Pemex
intends to
cut its May exports by 330,000 b/d. The country has refrained from
declaring force majeure on its supply contracts despite stretched
crude production.
Guyana Struggles to Launch Its Gas Bonanza.
Whilst Guyana’s oil production has been surging recently, its $1.9
billion gas-to-power project is
running at
least six months behind schedule, with operator ExxonMobil (NYSE:XOM)
forced to halt 400,000 b/d of production for a month in Q3.
Iraq Mulls Restart of Idled Pipeline. The
restart of Kurdish crude exports to the Turkish coast is unlikely to
materialize anytime soon, but Baghdad is
repairing
the 350,000 b/d Kirkuk-Ceyhan pipeline destroyed by ISIS in 2014,
potentially re-routing some of its exports as soon as next month.
Hedge Funds Embrace the Bullish Mood.
Portfolio investors
purchased
the equivalent of 37 million barrels in key oil-related futures and
options in the week ending April 2, with net length in Brent now
standing at 300 million barrels whilst the outlook on WTI is more
cautious, at 208 million barrels of net length.
Nigeria’s Fuel Woes Bubble to the Surface.
Nigeria’s national oil company NNPC is
reported to
owe $3 billion to fuel traders in the African country as the
reimposition of fuel subsidies makes retail sales a loss-making
business for the NOC, with payments taking more than 130 days to come
through.
Shell Mulls Delisting from London Exchange.
UK-based energy major Shell (LON:SHEL) is
reportedly
looking at all options including switching its listing from London to
New York, saying that if the European valuation gap doesn’t improve by
mid-2025, the company could make a move.
Fierce Pipeline Dispute Moves to FERC. US
midstream firm Energy Transfer (NYSE:ET) has asked
the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission to look into the
activities
of Williams Cos Inc., saying it builds interstate pipelines without
approval whilst the latter claims ET is blocking other operators from
building new projects by not allowing them to cross existing pipes.
Guinea Is Running Out of Electricity. The
African country of Guinea is
facing an
electricity market collapse as the state-owned utility firm announced
it would deepen power cuts as energy sources get depleted, stemming
from extremely low hydropower generation as well as breakdowns at
thermal plants.
Copper Bulls Are Riding High Again. The
three-month LME copper benchmark contract
reached
$9,450 per metric tonne for the first time since January 2023 as a
steady inflow of hedge fund investments keeps the bullish momentum
going, buoyed by improving manufacturing data from the EU.
Panama Canal Water Levels to Rise. The
Panama Canal Authority indicated that water levels in the Gatun Lake
should gradually increase from the end of May as the rainy season
takes over in Latin America, with drought-heavy El Nino conditions
giving way to La Nina, bringing more rainfall.
Leaking Gulf of Mexico Pipeline to Restart Soon.
The Main Pass Oil Gathering (MPOG) pipeline has
successfully
undergone a line integrity test and will be restarted soon after
transportation was halted for more than six months, shutting 61,000
b/d of offshore production, following a November spill.
Floods Prompt Russian Refinery Shutdown.
Russian oil company Forteinvest shut its 135,000 b/d Orsk refinery in
southern Russia because of unprecedented flooding on the Ural River,
halting ongoing maintenance works as its product stocks would be
enough to cover 10 days of regional fuel consumption.
Tom Kool
Editor, Oilprice.com
Green Play Ammonia™, Yielder® NFuel Energy.
Spokane, Washington. 99212
www.exactrix.com
509 995 1879 cell, Pacific.
exactrix@exactrix.com
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