Oil Price Forecast - Feb 26
Posted: Mon Feb 26, 2018 3:45 pm
"We remain unwaveringly confident in the crude market's long-term bullish fundamentals, and, as our Canadian team detailed last month, we believe the change in market structure (to near-term sustained backwardation) for WTI contracts also dampens the potential headwind from the long speculative position." - Raymond James, 2-26-2018 Energy Industry Brief
Raymond James has not waived from their oil price forecast, which they published on 1-2-2018
WTI Forecast:
Q1 2018 = $60
Q2 2018 = $65
Q3 2018 = $65
Q4 2018 = $70
2019 = $60
2020 = $60
"Where could we be wrong? As always, there are numerous potential wildcards. On the bullish side, there is always the prospect of
further unforeseen outages as civil unrest lingers in Libya, Venezuela, and Nigeria. Additionally, the recent North Sea field outage
showed that accidental mishaps are also inevitable from time to time. Finally, we are modeling acceleration in 2018 U.S. oil
production that might not fully materialize due to oilservice bottlenecks, stagnating well productivity improvements, and/or a more
conservative approach to capital allocation by E&Ps. (On the latter point, we will be closely tracking E&P budget announcements
over the next few months.) Finally, we project that non-OPEC, ex-U.S. supply will grow slightly yet consistently through 2020 despite
sharply reduced spending in those geographic regions. Given that a sizable portion of that uplift depends on project startups, delays
may erase the forecasted growth. On the bearish side, the perennial wildcards of Libya, Venezuela, and Nigeria could potentially see
production uplift if and when the security situation stabilizes. For example, regime change in Venezuela might cause a near-term
spike in oil prices but ultimately could result in an improved environment for the oil industry and thus stabilizing production declines
or even increases. Finally, while oil demand displacement from EV adoption will be irrelevantly small for the foreseeable future, the
broader economic environment (rising U.S. interest rates, global currency volatility, etc.) could lead to lower-than-expected global
demand growth." - Raymond James 1-2-2018
Raymond James has not waived from their oil price forecast, which they published on 1-2-2018
WTI Forecast:
Q1 2018 = $60
Q2 2018 = $65
Q3 2018 = $65
Q4 2018 = $70
2019 = $60
2020 = $60
"Where could we be wrong? As always, there are numerous potential wildcards. On the bullish side, there is always the prospect of
further unforeseen outages as civil unrest lingers in Libya, Venezuela, and Nigeria. Additionally, the recent North Sea field outage
showed that accidental mishaps are also inevitable from time to time. Finally, we are modeling acceleration in 2018 U.S. oil
production that might not fully materialize due to oilservice bottlenecks, stagnating well productivity improvements, and/or a more
conservative approach to capital allocation by E&Ps. (On the latter point, we will be closely tracking E&P budget announcements
over the next few months.) Finally, we project that non-OPEC, ex-U.S. supply will grow slightly yet consistently through 2020 despite
sharply reduced spending in those geographic regions. Given that a sizable portion of that uplift depends on project startups, delays
may erase the forecasted growth. On the bearish side, the perennial wildcards of Libya, Venezuela, and Nigeria could potentially see
production uplift if and when the security situation stabilizes. For example, regime change in Venezuela might cause a near-term
spike in oil prices but ultimately could result in an improved environment for the oil industry and thus stabilizing production declines
or even increases. Finally, while oil demand displacement from EV adoption will be irrelevantly small for the foreseeable future, the
broader economic environment (rising U.S. interest rates, global currency volatility, etc.) could lead to lower-than-expected global
demand growth." - Raymond James 1-2-2018