Thursday 26 December 2024
 
»
 
»
WEAK SUPPLY ISSUE BITES

Oil prices 'heading lower this year, to sink further in 2019'

WASHINGTON, June 9, 2018

Oil prices are heading for a downturn later this year and will sink even lower in 2019 as the fundamentals of supply and demand weaken, said a report.
 
Despite oil prices recently rising to three-and-half year highs, the investment bank left its forecast for international benchmark Brent crude unchanged at $69.30 a barrel. On Friday, Brent was trading at just under $77 a barrel, off its recent high of $80.50, reported CNBC, citing a research note by top US bank JP Morgan.
 
JP Morgan now sees US West Texas Intermediate crude averaging $62.20 a barrel, down $3 from its last estimate. WTI was trading at nearly $66 a barrel Friday, after nearly touching $73 a barrel two weeks ago.
 
"While geopolitical tensions and lingering risks of large supply disruptions remain an upside risk throughout the second half in 2018, we think that prices will be corrected downwards towards end of the year and remain capped in 2019," JP Morgan analyst Abhishek Deshpande wrote in the note.
 
The bank knocked down its 2019 Brent forecast by $1, to $63 a barrel. It lowered its outlook for WTI slightly to $58.25 a barrel. June's Opec meeting might be one of the worst since 2011, says expert.
 
An Opec meeting in two weeks will determine the short-term price movement, said the bank. 
 
Oil market heavyweights Russia and Saudi Arabia have recently signaled they could ease a deal between the 14-member Opec and other producers to limit output, which has been in place since January 2017.
 
The Saudis and Russia are wary of prices rising high enough to dent demand as Venezuela's output continues to decline amid an economic crisis and as US sanctions come into force against Iran, Opec's third-biggest producer. 
 
Oil prices suggest the market is betting on an output increase of about 400,000 barrels a day, according to JP Morgan.
 
"We think there might be one last hurrah (upside) when it comes to prices especially if Opec were to announce a release of barrels which is less than what markets have priced in currently," observed Deshpande.
 
Still, JP Morgan thinks the rally would unwind. That's because any move by Opec to ease output caps would signal a return to pre-2017 production levels. 
 
It would also tip the finely balanced oil market towards oversupply starting in the fourth quarter, when the restored barrels are likely to start arriving at import terminals.
 
JP Morgan already believes the supply-and-demand fundamentals of the market are poised to weaken.
 
The bank expects oil demand to grow more slowly than previously anticipated, which correlates to J.P. Morgan's downward revisions to economic growth in Europe, Latin America and the Middle East.
 
On the supply side, global output is poised to rise by 2 million barrels a day in 2018, 200,000 barrels a day higher than JP Morgan's last forecast. 
 
Supply from outside Opec is set to rise by 2.2 million barrels a day, driven by a surge in output from the US, which is quickly closing in on top producer Russia, which pumps about 11 million barrels a day.
 
JP Morgan does see a path to a higher oil price in 2018 and 2019. In its high-case scenario, Brent averages $74.55 a barrel this year and $78.75 next year. 
 
The catalysts for a higher price include Opec and Russia extending their output limits into 2019 and the wealth of geopolitical risks throughout the market.
 
"The risk of oil prices gravitating towards the high case remains high given the rise in geopolitical tensions and potential risk to large scale disruptions to oil supply from key oil producing countries such as Iran and Venezuela in particular," Deshpande said. 



Tags: Saudi Arabia | Russia | Oil Prices | JP Morgan |

More Energy, Oil & Gas Stories

calendarCalendar of Events

Ads