Australian LNG facilities

The Commodities Feed: Oil fundamentals remain supportive

The oil market remains well supported on the back of constructive fundamentals, and Russia’s ban on diesel and gasoline exports also adds support. The calendar this week is looking fairly quiet.

 

Energy - Speculative appetite grows

The oil market has held relatively steady in recent days with tightness in the physical market coupled with Russia’s recent export ban on diesel and gasoline offset by a fairly hawkish FOMC meeting last week. As a result, Brent continues to hold above US$93/bbl. Speculators continue to become more constructive towards the market with the speculative net long in ICE Brent growing by 17,904 lots over the last reporting week to 265,531 lots as of last Tuesday. This is the largest net long speculators have held since March, and the increase over the week was predominantly driven by short covering. Similarly, speculators increased their net long in NYMEX WTI by 15,084 lots over the reporting week

The Commodities Feed: Anticipating LNG Strike Action and Market Dynamics

The Commodities Feed: Anticipating LNG Strike Action and Market Dynamics

ING Economics ING Economics 21.08.2023 10:00
The Commodities Feed: LNG strike action looms We should get more clarity on potential strike action at Australian LNG facilities later this week, with workers giving a deadline for talks. Gold prices remain under pressure, but Jackson Hole could bring increased volatility later in the week.   Energy - Moving closer to LNG strike action The global natural gas market should get more clarity around potential strike action at Australian LNG facilities this week. Over the weekend, workers at Woodside said they will give the company until the end of Wednesday to come to a deal - otherwise they will call industrial action. Workers said that they would give 7 working days notice if strike action is to be taken. Woodside’s North West Shelf (NWS) facilities have a capacity of around 16.7mtpa, equivalent to a little over 4% of global supply. We should also get more clarity on what workers at Chevron’s Gorgon and Wheatstone facilities decide by 24 August. These two facilities have a combined capacity of 24.5mtpa. Given that European gas storage is now around 91% full, we believe any strength in prices should be short-lived. We would need to see a large amount of the at-risk capacity (41.2mtpa) offline for a prolonged period in order to lead to a significant change in European fundamentals, at least over the next month or two. Chinese trade data released last week shows that LNG imports in July totalled 5.86mt, down from 5.96mt the previous month, although, still up 24.3% YoY. This leaves cumulative LNG imports at 39.24mt, up 9.3% YoY. These stronger YoY flows are to be expected, given the impact of covid-related lockdowns last year. It is important to point out that cumulative imports are still down more than 13% from 2021 levels.   Trade data also showed that Chinese diesel exports grew significantly, with 910kt exported over July, up from 290kt in June and a 153% increase YoY. This leaves cumulative exports at 8.4mt - an almost 250% increase YoY. Stronger run rates and larger export quotas have supported these stronger flows, whilst a strong global middle distillate market more recently will also be supportive of these flows. The latest rig data from Baker Hughes shows that the number of active oil rigs in the US fell by 5 over the week to 520 - the lowest level since March last year. The US has lost 107 oil rigs since early December and it is not too surprising that this reduced drilling activity means that oil production growth forecasts for later this year and through 2024 are looking relatively modest. Primary Vision’s frac spread count shows that it is not just drilling activity which is falling - US completion activity is also trending lower, with the frac spread count falling by 6 over the last week to 256. The latest positioning data shows that speculators increased their net long in ICE Brent by 19,748 lots to 230,735 lots. This is despite oil prices edging lower over the reporting period. The move was driven by fresh longs, suggesting that some speculators took advantage of more recent price weakness to enter the market from the long side. Positioning data for NYMEX WTI shows that speculators liquidated longs over the week, with the net long declining by 31,338 lots to 178,820 lots. Finally, speculators remain constructive towards middle distillates, increasing their net long in ICE gasoil by 5,703 lots to 93,941 lots - the largest position since March 2022. The market appears to be concerned about the fact that ARA gasoil inventories are still looking quite tight and we are yet to start seeing a build in inventories as we edge closer towards the start of winter.
The Commodities Feed: Delayed LNG Strike Action and Tightening Oil Market Fundamentals

The Commodities Feed: Delayed LNG Strike Action and Tightening Oil Market Fundamentals

ING Economics ING Economics 08.09.2023 10:17
The Commodities Feed: LNG strike action delayed The oil market has shrugged off the weakness seen in equity markets with strong fundamentals continuing to support prices. Meanwhile, European gas prices came under pressure yesterday with delayed strike action at Australian LNG facilities raising hopes that parties could come to a deal.   Energy - Saudis increase prices into most regions Sentiment in the oil market remains constructive after Saudi Arabia and Russia decided to extend their voluntary supply cuts by three months. ICE Brent managed to edge higher yesterday, settling at US$90.60/bbl, whilst the Brent Dec’23/Dec’24 spread continues to surge, settling at a backwardation of US$7.28/bbl, up from less than US$4/bbl in late August. The strength in time spreads is clearly indicating tightness in the oil market. Our balance sheet shows that the market remains in deep deficit through until year-end, before moving back into a small surplus in 1Q24. While this surplus may lead to some price weakness early next year, we believe that it will be short-lived with the market set to return to deficit over the latter part of 2024.   Following the extension of Saudi cuts and the tightness in the market, it was no surprise that Saudi Arabia increased its official selling prices (OSP) for most grades of its crude into most regions. The flagship Arab Light into Asia saw its OSP raised by US$0.10/bbl MoM to US$3.60/bbl over the benchmark for October - the highest level seen so far this year. All other grades into Asia also saw increases, while similar action was taken for grades into the US and Med. Europe was the only region which saw some relief, with OSP’s for all grades cut. API data released overnight was constructive, showing that US crude oil inventories fell by 5.5MMbbls, This is larger than the roughly 2MMbbls draw the market was expecting. In addition, crude oil inventories at the WTI delivery hub, Cushing, declined by 1.35MMbbls. On the product side, gasoline stocks fell by 5.1MMbbls, while distillate stocks increased by 300Mbbls. The increase in distillate stocks was marginal but will help ease some concern over low middle-distillate inventories as we head into the northern hemisphere winter. The more widely followed EIA inventory report will be released later today.   Natural gas prices came under significant pressure yesterday with TTF falling by almost 10%. This is after growing optimism that strike action at two of Chevron’s LNG facilities in Australia may be avoided. Partial strike action was meant to start at Gorgon and Wheatstone today. However, this has been delayed until tomorrow as the company and unions continue to work towards a deal. The two facilities make up around 6% of global LNG supply so the market continues to watch these developments closely. The European market will also have to deal with lower Norwegian gas flows for a little bit longer than originally anticipated. Field maintenance at several fields, including Troll has been extended by a couple of days. Total Norwegian flows are around 137mcm/day, compared to more than 300mcm/day in mid-August.
The Commodities Feed: Oil fundamentals remain supportive

The Commodities Feed: Oil fundamentals remain supportive

ING Economics ING Economics 25.09.2023 11:25
The Commodities Feed: Oil fundamentals remain supportive The oil market remains well supported on the back of constructive fundamentals, and Russia’s ban on diesel and gasoline exports also adds support. The calendar this week is looking fairly quiet.   Energy - Speculative appetite grows The oil market has held relatively steady in recent days with tightness in the physical market coupled with Russia’s recent export ban on diesel and gasoline offset by a fairly hawkish FOMC meeting last week. As a result, Brent continues to hold above US$93/bbl. Speculators continue to become more constructive towards the market with the speculative net long in ICE Brent growing by 17,904 lots over the last reporting week to 265,531 lots as of last Tuesday. This is the largest net long speculators have held since March, and the increase over the week was predominantly driven by short covering. Similarly, speculators increased their net long in NYMEX WTI by 15,084 lots over the reporting week to 294,396 lots - the largest position held since February last year. However, speculators cut their net long in ICE gasoil, which fell by 6,940 lots over the week to 59,359 lots as of last Tuesday. The current net long is likely somewhat larger than this, given the move seen in the gasoil market following Russia's ban on diesel and gasoline exports. As we mentioned in our note last week, while the ban only reinforces our supportive view on middle distillates, we do not believe it will remain in place for long, given the domestic storage constraints that will be soon faced by not allowing roughly 1MMbbls/d of diesel exports. The latest data from Baker Hughes shows that the US oil rig count fell by 8 over the last week to 507. This is the first weekly decline in 3 weeks and sees a resumption in the fall we have seen for much of this year. The number of active oil rigs has fallen by 114 rigs since the start of the year. The fall in rig count this year is what has given OPEC+ the confidence to cut output without having to worry too much about losing market share to non-OPEC producers. European natural gas prices managed to settle more than 9% higher over the course of last week. This is despite strike action at Australian LNG facilities coming to an end, along with Norwegian gas flows continuing to recover as capacity at the Troll field returns following maintenance. With EU storage almost 95% full and supply risks subsiding, we would expect to see some downward pressure on the front end of the curve.

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