Oil & Gas Prices - Jan 19

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dan_s
Posts: 37335
Joined: Fri Apr 23, 2010 8:22 am

Oil & Gas Prices - Jan 19

Post by dan_s »

You must register on the EPG website to attend my next live Oil & Gas Market Update set for Friday, January 21. Ryan Ray, President of Ray Global Advisors will be my special guest.

Opening Prices:
> WTI is up 60c to $86.03/Bbl, and Brent is up 50c to $88.01/Bbl.
> Natural gas is down 2.6c to $4.257/MMBtu.

AEGIS Notes
Oil


Oil hit a seven-year high, and the IEA turned bullish on its outlook
> The International Energy Agency said the market looked tighter than previously thought as demand proving resilient to Omicron (Bloomberg)
> Oil futures also received a boost after an explosion on Tuesday knocked out a key crude pipeline running from Iraq to Turkey

In the IEA’s latest monthly report, the agency said global inventories have plunged over the last 12 months < As I have been telling you for months in my weekly podcasts.
> Stocks are down by more than a billion barrels since the peak of May 2020 and are well below pre-pandemic levels, the report said
> The IEA, which advises most major economies, raised projections for global oil demand by 200 MBbl/d for both 2021 and 2022
> Consumption of oil-based products increase by 5.5 MMBbl/d in 2021 and IEA forecasts an increase of another 3.3 MMBbl/day in 2022

OPEC+’s spare capacity could diminish to 3 MMBbl/d, from about 5 MMBbl/d currently, the IEA said. This could leave the market vulnerable to price volatility, even as output grows in the U.S., Canada, and Brazil, the agency said. < It is my opinion that OPEC+ spare capacity is much lower than 5 million bpd. 14 countries in the cartel have admitted that they cannot produce up to their quotas and even Russia has produced less than their quota for the last two months.

Natural Gas

Gas futures are down this morning, with the prompt contract trading 2.6c lower near $4.257
> Weather models for January continue to show promise. The gas-weighted heating degree day total for January increased by 7.3 HDDs to 995 HDDs, its highest mark yet
> Production is still down by a little over 3 Bcf/d from December's high of 96.1 Bcf/d, but Canadian imports have offset most of the decline this month and are up by 3.1 Bcf/d year-to-date

EQT Corp (EQT) (one of my Top Picks in our Sweet 16) achieves certification for 4 Bcf/d of Appalachian natural gas production - NGI
> EQT said that 80% of its gas now holds a "responsibly-sourced gas" certification under standards set by Equitable Origin (EO) and MiQ
> The company announced plans to certify its gas last April as part of a shift to a more ESG-conscious strategy. The certifications "provide a transparent, verified method" to track environmental, social, and governance (ESG) commitments
> EQT is the nation's largest gas producer, responsible for nearly 4.5% of U.S. dry gas production. The certification may give the gas more potential for premium pricing
> AEGIS notes that the company said in its last investor presentation that it's firm capacity (500 MMcf/d) for sale on its Mountain Valley Pipeline will be sold only to a company that has certified responsibly-sourced gas
Dan Steffens
Energy Prospectus Group
dan_s
Posts: 37335
Joined: Fri Apr 23, 2010 8:22 am

Re: Oil & Gas Prices - Jan 19

Post by dan_s »

The Energy Report: $87 In A Flash
By Phil Flynn (Jan 19, 2022 09:16AM ET)

The soon-to-be expiring February WTI oil contract hit $87.00 in a flash as surging demand, falling supply, and a spattering of geopolitical risk has got the market surging higher. Oil was already rocking on reports that OPEC production is not keeping up with their expectations for strong demand. Their counterparts at the International Energy Agency admitted that they had once again underestimated global oil demand. I know, we are all shocked, aren’t we?

The Biden administration is worried and even suggests that another release from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve might be in the offing, but don’t you think you should try to sell the oil you have already released? The U.S. SPR oil has to compete in China with illicit Iranian oil that is sold under market value. We are also seeing surging production of supposed sanctions oil from Venezuela.

Geopolitical tension may be reduced a bit because Russia has not invaded Ukraine, and a headline that Russian Deputy Defense Minister said: “We do not believe there will be a military conflict in Europe.” Yet a pipeline explosion caused the late-night jump in the oil market.

Reports are that the Iraq-Turkey oil pipeline halted after the explosion and fire. The line usually carries 450kb/d from northern Iraq and feeds Mid-Eastern refineries. Reports say the fire is out and could soon be back online but is not welcomed in what all acknowledge is a very tight market.

Reuters reported that oil’s rally might extend further in the next few months due to recovering demand and limited capacity in OPEC+ to add supply, and prices could break $100 a barrel, OPEC officials have told Reuters. Oil last traded at $100 a barrel in 2014, after averaging $110 a barrel over the previous two years.

Rising shale output and competition among the world’s top oil producers in 2014 heralded a period of lower prices that appears to have come to an end as the global economy emerges from the pandemic. Outages in Libya and elsewhere, plus a limited impact on demand from the Omicron coronavirus variant, have fueled further gains in 2022. The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries does not publish oil price forecasts and has not had an official price target for years. Officials and ministers from OPEC and allies led by Russia, a group known as OPEC+, are often reluctant to discuss likely price direction, or preferred price levels, on the record.

The Wall Street Journal reported that global oil demand is expected to exceed pre-pandemic levels this year thanks to growing COVID-19 immunization rates, as recent virus waves haven’t proved severe enough to warrant a return to strict lockdown measures, the International Energy Agency said Wednesday. < My take is and has been that this world must move out of Pandemic World. Covid-19 or whatever variant we have now, is just one of thousands of things trying to kill us. Omicron is basically a mild cold. Global population growth (over 220,000 more people per day) = energy demand growth. We must have an "All of the above" energy plan, which will see oil, gas and coal demand growth through at least 2050.

In its monthly oil market report, the IEA hiked its oil demand growth forecast for the coming year by 200,000 barrels a day, to 3.3 million barrels a day. The Paris-based agency also raised its demand growth forecasts for 2021 by 200,000 barrels a day to 5.5 million barrels a day.

Factoring in the IEA’s more optimistic forecasts are signs that recent coronavirus variants have been faster spreading but less fatal, helping boost global economic resilience to the virus and allowing states to continue on a path of gradually winding down lockdown restrictions. The IEA said:

“The number of COVID cases is exploding worldwide, but measures taken by governments to contain the virus are less severe than during earlier waves, and their impact on economic activity and oil demand remains relatively subdued.”

Natural gas should bounce soon as we should get a significant withdrawal. Bloomberg reports that:

“The Texas power grid and the natural gas drillers, wind farms and solar arrays that supply it are facing their second test in less than a month as subzero weather bears down on the Lone Star state.”

According to the National Weather Service, temperatures in wide swaths of the second-largest U.S. state are forecast to plunge to well below normal in the coming days.

We continue to be bullish but be on guard for corrections. Look for breaks to position and hedge.
Dan Steffens
Energy Prospectus Group
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