SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Gold/Mining/Energy : Big Dog's Boom Boom Room -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: JimisJim who wrote (189613)3/13/2015 9:44:18 PM
From: robert b furman3 Recommendations

Recommended By
CommanderCricket
FJB
Salt'n'Peppa

  Respond to of 206093
 
Hi Jimi,

First time I've seen Bakken peak in March and Permian by April.

Restarting refineries and topping off SPR should allow storage to be reduced.

Would not the driving season also at least represent a seasonal demand increase?

Bob

All this negative storage stories is coming almost panic like as commodity futures expiration close out Tuesday - seems convenient just a bit?

Bob



To: JimisJim who wrote (189613)3/14/2015 6:09:14 AM
From: Ditchdigger  Respond to of 206093
 
Are "bartered" barrels of oil fully accounted for in the various numbers reporting agencies figures?
I suspect with oil producing nations currencies crashing vs the usd, barter for barrels will become more common place.
I see Venezuela's situation as the wild card out there.

Tissue paper-for-Venezuelan oil swap offered by Trinidad
fuelfix.com



To: JimisJim who wrote (189613)3/14/2015 6:58:20 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 206093
 
Back fired on Saudis Prices Drop, Production Hums Along Despite Brimming Supply

Oil Prices Drop as Production Hums Along Despite a Brimming Supply

LONDON — Just as the oil market appeared to be stabilizing, the price of crude resumed its descent on Friday.

The drop, of about 4 percent, came after a report from the International Energy Agency warning that oil pouring into tank farms in the United States might “soon test storage capacity limits.”

The agency, whose reports are closely monitored by oil traders, said that overflowing storage “would inevitably lead to renewed price weakness.” American production of oil continues to increase despite recently announced cutbacks in new drilling by producers.

The price of West Texas Intermediate, the American benchmark, fell to around $45 a barrel on Friday, while Brent, the international benchmark, fell below $55 a barrel.

The Department of Energy has proposed adding five million barrels of oil to the Strategic Petroleum Reserve. The purchase, which requires congressional approval, would be added in June and July. But 9.4 million barrels of oil a day are being produced in the United States. Kevin Book, an analyst with ClearView Energy Partners, said that the proposed purchase was not an attempt to support falling prices but instead “appears to derive from a statutory obligation.”

With the price of crude oil plummeting, why some countries are faring much better than others.

Video by Quynhanh Do on Publish DateJanuary 27, 2015. Photo by Carlos Garcia Rawlins/Reuters.
Richard Mallinson, an analyst at Energy Aspects, a London-based research firm, said that with winter coming to an end in much of the world, the oil market was most likely due for a spell of softness. Refineries in Europe and Asia will now be undergoing routine maintenance, leading to a period of weaker demand for crude. “We are expecting another period of weakness,” Mr. Mallinson said in an interview.

Additionally, striking refinery workers in the United States reached a tentative deal this week to end their walkout. Although the walkout affected 12 refineries, it had minimal impact on production as managers and other workers kept the plants running.

While prices rose to more than $60 a barrel for Brent recently, the fundamentals in the market had not changed greatly since oil prices hit multiyear lows in the early part of this year, the agency said in its report. The supply of oil from the United States, which has increased production by more than four million barrels a day since 2009 — more than the total output of either Iraq or Iran — shows little sign of slowing down, the agency said.

At the same time, Russian exports have been rising, and Saudi Arabia, the third of the world oil production leaders, increased output slightly in January and February.

The Saudis under King Salman, who succeeded his brother Abdullah in January, are not showing any signs of readiness to abandon their policy of maintaining production and defending their share of the market regardless of the consequences for prices.

Those low prices have helped lift demand for oil to higher levels than forecasters expected in places like India, Brazil and Indonesia. Even China, whose economy is widely reported to be slowing, is still lapping up lots of crude. Overall demand, which is up more than a million barrels per day over last year, according to Energy Aspects, has trimmed expected inventory builds outside of the United States.

Stronger-than-expected global demand helps explain the wider-than-usual gap in pricing between Brent, which is used as a reference in much of the globe, and W.T.I. With operators in the United States largely barred from exporting crude, the surplus barrels have nowhere to go, and inventories have risen to near record levels.

The price snapback did not materialize out of thin air. It was aided by the frigid weather in the Northeast United States, which raised demand for heating oil, and other factors like flows into commodity investment funds.

Still, seasoned traders were taken by surprise by the roughly 30 percent rise in Brent prices to over $60 a barrel since the six-year lows in January. When oil was scraping bottom, for instance, trading companies like Trafigura Beheer booked fleets of tankers to use as storage to take advantage of the steep spread between current prices for crude and those further out. With current prices having risen sharply, the trading companies have returned most of those ships to normal duties.

But now the mood is turning. “These props to the market are now starting to buckle,” analysts at Citigroup wrote in a recent note to clients. If the United States and other global powers manage to reach a deal with Iran over its nuclear program, for instance, that could clear the way for a big surge in Iranian production.

Iraqi production, which was disrupted by weather in February, has also come back. Exports from Gulf Arab states like the United Arab Emirates and Kuwait are also running strong, analysts say, aided by aggressive discounting of their crude.

“There is so much oil out there, and it looks like it is going to build up some more,” said Michael Lynch, president of Strategic Energy and Economic Research, a market analysis firm.

Clifford Krauss contributed reporting from Houston.
A version of this article appears in print on March 14, 2015, on page B3 of the New York edition with the headline: Oil Prices Drop as Production Hums Along Despite a Brimming Supply. Order Reprints| Today's Paper| Subscribe



To: JimisJim who wrote (189613)3/14/2015 5:34:44 PM
From: Ed Ajootian  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 206093
 
JimisJim, the piece you posted was only looking at US production, and in posting the piece from Energy Economist I was responding to that piece. The IEA may be more accurate than the EIA but does the IEA try to put out forecasts as often as the EIA?

Regarding your thoughts on storage and fracklog, I don't view the storage & fracklog overhangs as being something that would have anything other than a relatively ST impact on keeping prices down, when and if supply were to come into balance with demand.

Using the analogy with natty, when we have had big storage overhangs, then followed by supply coming back into balance with demand (or better yet, demand getting stronger than supply), we've seen the natty price start to move up even at the same time that natty storage levels were still higher than the 5 year average. I can see a similar dynamic regarding oil. As we know the oil & gas markets are looking out 6-9 months and they tend to like to extrapolate current/anticipated production trends vs. looking at what the supply/demand situation is right at the moment. Storage and fracklog is a one-time, non-recurring issue --- once the excess storage is sold or the uncompleted wells are completed, that's it, the issue goes away.

Hopefully we are not at the point here where, when someone wants to discuss a particular point about oil prices, they have to address all of the factors that impact oil prices.