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Why Oil Booms And Busts Happen
By Nawar Alsaadi
Oil Price, Al-Jazeerah, CCUN,
March 1, 2016
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What if I told you that there was a period in history where oil demand
declined by 5 million barrels per day and non-OPEC supply increased by 5
million barrels per day, yet oil price rallied more than 50 percent? Would
you believe me? If your answer is yes, then you guessed right. This was
the period from 1979 to 1985; it was a period during which global oil
demand declined from over 61 million barrels to 56 million barrels and
non-OPEC supply increased from 32 million barrels to 37 million barrels.
Yet prices rallied from $17 a barrel in 1979 to $26 a barrel in 1985,
while reaching as high as $35 in 1981.
This illogical world of
rising prices, collapsing demand and expanding non-OPEC supply was made
possible by a 15.5 million barrels reduction in OPEC’s supply between 1979
and 1985 as OPEC cut production from 30.5 million barrels in production in
1979 to 15 million barrels in 1985, and most of that reduction was
voluntary.
The maintenance of this artificially high price band by
OPEC (at the expense of its production) led the oil majors to increase
their capex from $24 billion in 1979 to as high as $44 billion by 1982,
which naturally resulted in a drilling explosion with annual O&G wells
drilled increasing from 66,000 in 1979 to a peak of 107,000 in 1984. This
investment and drilling frenzy lead to more than a doubling in the Finding
and Development (F&D) costs from $5 per barrel in 1979 to around $12 by
the mid-1980s.
(Source: Sanford Bernstein) IMG URL:
http://cdn.oilprice.com/images/tinymce/2016/Pushinghard.jpg
The increase in the F&D cost during that time was not the result of
resource scarcity, or extraction complexity, it was the product of a
substantial inflation in service costs due to an unexpected surge in
activity caused by manipulated prices. Once OPEC ceased manipulating the
market, prices quickly reverted back to their pre-manipulation economic
equilibrium level in the mid-teens, while F&D costs settled back into the
$5 a barrel range.
(Source: Statista) IMG URL:
http://cdn.oilprice.com/images/tinymce/2016/Pushinghard1.jpg
This unfortunate price manipulation episode by OPEC led to the creation of
substantial overcapacity in the petroleum industry as it brought forward
and accelerated the development of unneeded oil resources, it greatly
reduced demand, and it created significant excess capacity within OPEC
itself. It took the world until 1991 to achieve the same level of oil
demand reached in 1979, then from 1991 it took the world a decade and a
half of demand growth and the emergence of China in the early 2000s, to
exhaust all that non-OPEC excess capacity and OPEC spare capacity that was
created during the 1979 to 1985 timeframe.
The birth of a
new bull market
The 1979-1985 oil bull market is what a
manipulated market looks like, and this market has no resemblance to the
bull market that preceded the current price collapse. Unlike the early 80s
price surge, oil prices were not manipulated higher in the early 2000s,
but rose due to natural supply and demand forces.
In 2005 oil
prices averaged $54 per barrel, a near doubling from the $28 per barrel at
the start of the decade. 2005 is often mentioned as the official start of
the 2000s raging oil bull market that lasted for almost ten years, except
for a brief interruption following the financial crisis.
(Source:
CIBC) URL:
http://cdn.oilprice.com/images/tinymce/2016/Pushinghard2.jpg
Between the years 2000 and 2005 OPEC increased its crude and NGL
production by 4 million barrels per day, inching up total production from
30.7 million to 34.8 million barrels, however this was insufficient to
meet the over 7 million barrels per day growth in global demand growth
during this period, with OPEC excess capacity virtually eliminated, the
additional increase in supply had to come from non-OPEC sources.
However, after rising from 46 million bpd to 49 million bpd (all liquids)
from 2000 to 2004; non-OPEC supply stalled at around 49 million bpd for 3
years from 2004 to 2006, before finally crossing into the 50 million bpd
mark in 2007. The pressure on non-OPEC to increase production could only
translate into a sizable increase in prices, which in turn encouraged the
industry to significantly increase its capex spending.
(Source:
IMF) URL:
http://cdn.oilprice.com/images/tinymce/2016/Pushinghard3.jpg
World supply hits a wall ... U.S. supply to the rescue
Yet, as
prices exploded higher and capex spending hit record after record,
something curious happened: Non-OPEC all liquids supply (ex-U.S.) ground
almost to a halt, after crossing 43.4 million bpd barrels in 2007,
non-OPEC (ex-U.S.) all liquids supply increased by a measly 1.5 million
bpd over a 7 years period, a period during which demand increased by over
6.6 million bpd.
As a matter of fact, between 2010 and 2014
non-OPEC (ex-U.S.) supply did not grow at all as it averaged around 44.5
million bpd for five years, while demand increased by 4.1 million bpd
during this time. OPEC did marginally better than non-OPEC supply
(ex-U.S.), OPEC production stagnated at 34.6 million bpd from 2007 to
2010, before increasing to 36.6 million bpd by 2014, or increasing by 2
million bpd from 2007 to 2014 (OPEC did cut supply in late 2008 and 2009
in response to the financial crises).
Powered by the shale
revolution, U.S. supply was a different story, from 2010 to 2014 U.S. all
liquids supply grew by 4.2 million bpd, thus meeting the totality of
global demand growth in the 5 years preceding the current crisis.
Eventually, the strong increase in shale production combined with the
resumption of growth in OPEC production led to prices collapsing by late
2014.
(Click to enlarge) (Source: Semper Augustus Capital) URL:
http://cdn.oilprice.com/images/tinymce/2016/Pushinghard4SMAL.jpg
So very different, so very the same
This
brief oil market history illustrates the substantial difference between
what transpired in 1979-1985 and what happened between 2005 and 2014.
While the 1980s oil bull market was an unquestionably manipulated market
that was bound to collapse at some point, the 2000s oil bull market was
mostly driven by market fundamentals. The resolution to the last oil bull
market was delivered by market forces as high prices unleashed new sources
of supply, namely U.S. shale oil. This was different from the 1986 oil
price collapse which was triggered by OPEC ceasing its doomed effort to
artificially inflate oil prices.
Yet, OPEC hands are not
completely clean in this price collapse episode. The oil price collapse of
2014 was compounded in 2015 by the arrival of geopolitically restricted
oil from several OPEC countries. Iraq increased its production by 650,000
bpd in 2015. This supply should have been added to the market many years
ago, but due to decades of turmoil, this oil only made it to the market
last year. Saudi Arabia’s decision to bring in some of its spare capacity
to the market (450,000 bpd production increase) last year also added to
the oversupply situation that was created by market forces.
Additionally, politically restricted oil from Iran is being introduced to
the market in 2016, thus yet again contributing to the oversupply. The
sizable increase in Iraqi, Saudi and Iranian oil exports to the market in
2015 and 2016 has created (unintentionally or intentionally) the reverse
of the OPEC price manipulation episode from 1979 to 1985. This time oil
prices are being forced lower by a geopolitical oil supply increase that
has little to do with market supply and demand fundamentals; just as OPEC
aggressively withdrawing oil supply from the market in 1979 to 1985 had
nothing to do with supply and demand fundamentals.
What
now?
The surge in shale oil production between 2010 and
2014 was the trigger to this oil crisis, and thus a reduction in non-OPEC
supply through a reduction in shale/global oil capex is a proper response
to shale’s oversupply. This is how free markets balance themselves.
However, the arrival of the above mentioned geopolitical oil has
interfered with the natural balancing mechanism. As oil prices overshot to
the downside (and stayed low) due to the arrival of the geopolitically
constrained non-market sensitive oil, the O&G industry has been forced to
under invest in future oil supply as cash flows dried up and financing
costs skyrocketed. The extent of under investment in shale has even been
more severe with capex cuts averaging double the global average.
The substantial capex-to-supply lag for most of non-OPEC oil and OPEC’s
unwillingness to restrict production or gradually ease back the increase
in geopolitical supplies has forced an undue burden on shale/tight oil to
balance the market on its own. Yet the shale balancing mechanism is far
from perfect, shale while relatively fast moving in comparison to other
sources of supply, is still a much less efficient balancing tool in
comparison to OPEC. This in turn means the market is lacking the proper
tools to balance itself in a timely manner in order to avoid a supply
crisis down the line, as the ongoing large capex cuts flow to all non-OPEC
supply (as well as some OPEC supply) through higher decline rates, and
deferred or cancelled greenfield supply projects.
This delayed
rebalancing caused a large build up in global inventories; those excess
inventories could act as a shock absorber of sorts once supply
undershoots, but it remains unclear whether excess inventories alone or in
combination with OPEC will be able to compensate for an eventual dual
collapse of both shale and non-OPEC supply in the context of sustained
demand growth.
Conclusion
This oil
boom-bust cycle is not a repeat of the 1980s, however the arrival of shale
oil to the global oil scene has created a new oil pricing reality.
Nonetheless, it is highly unlikely that this new oil reality is anywhere
close to $30 or $40 a barrel as the futures curve is indicating and many
forecasters are forecasting.
Outside of Iran and Libya, OPEC is
producing close to its maximum capacity, with little prospect of a sizable
increase in supply over the next several years. In essence, OPEC alone is
not in a position to compensate for shale and non-OPEC declines as well as
meet future demand growth. Yet, for shale and non-OPEC to assist OPEC and
grow a price in the $60 to $70 range is most likely required to incent the
development of marginal oil reserves.
By 2017 as global demand and
supply come into balance, and inventories start to draw oil prices may
snap back substantially above the $60-$70 price range as the market
transitions from a flood to a drought at some point next year, however
once the next price spike period settles down as shale production catches
up to demand once again, prices will likely settle in the $60 to $70 range
long term, and remain there until the next noticeable change in
demand/supply fundamentals or until the arrival of unforeseen geopolitical
events.
Article Source:
http://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/Why-Oil-Booms-And-Busts-Happen.html
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