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Today's Downturn Sets Markets Up For A Dramatic
Oil Price Spike
By
Nick Cunningham
Oil Price, Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, August 9, 2016
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Another oil price downturn threatens to deepen the plunging levels of
investment in upstream oil and gas production, which could create a more
acute price spike in the years ahead.
Oil and gas companies have
gutted their capex budgets, necessary moves as drillers went deep into the
red following the crash in oil prices. But the sharp cutback in investment
means that huge volumes of oil that would have otherwise come online in
five or ten years now will remain on the sidelines.
The industry
will cut spending by
$1 trillion through 2020, according to Wood Mackenzie. Those
reductions are creating a "ticking
time bomb" for oil supply. The consultancy projects that the market
will see 5 million barrels of oil equivalent per day (mboe/d) less this
year, compared to expectations before the collapse of oil prices. And next
year, the industry will produce 6 mboe/d less than it otherwise would have
had the spending cuts not been made.
This is creating the
conditions for a supply crunch and a price spike. The reason is simple:
demand continues to rise by some 1.2 million barrels per day each year,
but supplies are no longer growing because of the spending cuts. That is
not a problem today as production still slightly exceeds demand and high
levels of crude oil and refined products sit in storage. But by as early
as the end of 2016 the oil market could tip into a supply deficit. And
because the industry has scaled back so intensely on capex, global
supplies could fall short of demand for quite a while. The end result
could be a dramatic price spike.
This scenario has been described
before by Wood Mackenzie, which published an estimate earlier this year
that put the total value of cancelled projects over the past two years at
$380 billion, projects that would have yielded
27 billion barrels of oil and gas.
So far, the markets are not
pricing in the brewing supply crunch. Oil prices continue to fall, and
speculators have taken the most
pessimistic position in months, selling off long bets and buying up
shorts.
Oil analysts and forecasters do not see a rapid rise in
prices either. A Bloomberg survey of 20 analysts revealed a median price
forecast of just $57 per barrel in 2017. No doubt that record levels of
inventories are on their minds – even if oil production itself flips into
a supply/demand deficit, it could take years to work through storage
levels.
"We're looking at a market that's still in a very slow
process of rebalancing and we don't think that you'll get a sustainable
deficit until the second quarter of 2017," Michael Hsueh, a strategist at
Deutsche Bank AG, told Bloomberg. "Those deficits are necessary to draw
down global inventories, but that will still take until the end of 2018,
it appears."
But the swing from surplus to deficit could be more
dramatic than many think. Now that oil is once again entering a bear
market, with WTI and Brent
dropping to $40 per barrel, the industry could be forced to slash
spending even deeper than it already has, leaving even more oil reserves
undeveloped. And in any case, it is possible that high storage levels and
the two-year production surplus is leading to a myopic view of the future
– just because the markets are oversupplied today does not meant that they
will in several years' time.
Wood Mackenzie says that while U.S.
shale has been the hardest hit by the steep fall in investment, the shale
industry will be the first to bounce back because of the short-cycle
nature of shale drilling. The price spike will lead to a resurgence in
shale, and Wood Mackenzie is predicting that shale production doubles from
the 2015 high-watermark of 4.5 million barrels per day to 8.5 mb/d by the
mid-2020s.
But that is a long way off for oil executives dealing
with deteriorating balance sheets and rising debt levels.
Link to
original article:
http://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/Todays-Downturn-Sets-Markets-Up-For-A-Dramatic-Oil-Price-Spike.html
***
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