Oil & Gas Prices - May 10
Posted: Tue May 10, 2022 10:03 am
Opening Prices:
> WTI is down $0.22 to $102.87/bbl, and Brent is down $0.48 to $105.46/bbl. < WTI up to $103.06 at the time of this post.
> Natural gas is down -48.1c to $6.545/MMBtu. < HH JUN22 contract up to $7.30 at the time of this post.
AEGIS Notes
Crude Oil
Oil fell to its lowest level since March
> WTI futures saw a nearly 6% slump on Monday to $101
> Chinese COVID-19 lockdowns persist and are threatening demand in addition to concerns of increasing recession risks and a strong US Dollar
Hungarian demands stall the EU’s efforts to ban Russian oil
> The Hungarian Prime Minister’s talk with the EU heads made progress but didn’t reach a breakthrough
> “We made progress, but further work is needed.” said EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen
> Further talks are due on Tuesday and unanimous approval of all 27 member states is required for the EU sanctions
> EU to soften sanctions by not banning EU owned vessels shipping Russian crude (BBG)
The oil ministers of Saudi Arabia and the UAE have warned that underinvestment is reducing spare capacity in all energy sectors
> Fuel costs have risen to a new high in the United States, prompting these remarks
> Average gasoline and diesel prices in the US hit a record-high $4.374/gal and $5.550/ gal this week
> Both the nation's ministers, however, stated that the market is already balanced and that OPEC+ does not need to boost its monthly production increases of 400k MBbl/d < Plus, the can't. OPEC+ production has been below quotas for 7 months in a row.
Natural Gas
Natural gas futures are down by another 5%, near $6.545 < Bounced quickly back to over $7.00.
> Prompt-month (June ’22) gas is down by around $1.50 or 19% from Friday’s settlement of $8.04
> Gas futures have given back quite a bit in the front of the curve, but beyond the Winter ‘22/’23 strip, prices have been fairly insulated. The Winter ‘22/’23, Summer ‘23, Winter ‘23/’24 strip prices are down by $1.13, $0.35, $0.32 at $6.52, $4.30, $4.65, respectively
> This morning’s pipeline nominations show lower-48 dry gas production is down by around 1.6 Bcf/d at 94.46 Bcf/d, or 1.8 Bcf/d removed from its near year-to-date high of 96.25 on Saturday, May 7
> Natural gas-fired power generation has also been very strong, even setting a seasonal record of 29.85 Bcf/d for power generation on Wednesday, May 4. The limited availability of gas-to-coal switching, and underperforming hydropower, have led to an increased need for gas for power generation
Production is around 1.7 Bcf/d higher year-over-year, with the Haynesville and Permian basins accounting for the increases
> South Central dry gas production is up by 4 Bcf/d year-over-year, while the Northeast, Rockies, and Gulf of Mexico regions are down by 0.27, 1.463, and 0.48 Bcf/d, respectively
> AEGIS notes that most of the production growth has come from the Haynesville and Permian basins because of pipeline capacity, and its proximity to growing demand from US LNG infrastructure
> This is why gas prices will stay high: Also, the 1.7 Bcf/d of production growth falls short of the year-over-year demand increases, which means the supply-demand backdrop will likely be tighter this summer, barring more growth.
> Early estimates suggest that U.S. industrial demand is up by 1 Bcf/d year-over-year, while LNG demand is up by around 2 Bcf/d year-over-year (0.7 Bcf/d from Sabine Pass Train 6 & 1.3 Bcf/d from Calcasieu Pass)
> Refilling Storage is not "Optional": Natural gas going to storage needs to exceed the 5-year average volumes going to storage by more than 1.5 Bcf per day from May to October in order to get the amount of gas in storage back to a safe level heading into the next winter heating season.
> WTI is down $0.22 to $102.87/bbl, and Brent is down $0.48 to $105.46/bbl. < WTI up to $103.06 at the time of this post.
> Natural gas is down -48.1c to $6.545/MMBtu. < HH JUN22 contract up to $7.30 at the time of this post.
AEGIS Notes
Crude Oil
Oil fell to its lowest level since March
> WTI futures saw a nearly 6% slump on Monday to $101
> Chinese COVID-19 lockdowns persist and are threatening demand in addition to concerns of increasing recession risks and a strong US Dollar
Hungarian demands stall the EU’s efforts to ban Russian oil
> The Hungarian Prime Minister’s talk with the EU heads made progress but didn’t reach a breakthrough
> “We made progress, but further work is needed.” said EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen
> Further talks are due on Tuesday and unanimous approval of all 27 member states is required for the EU sanctions
> EU to soften sanctions by not banning EU owned vessels shipping Russian crude (BBG)
The oil ministers of Saudi Arabia and the UAE have warned that underinvestment is reducing spare capacity in all energy sectors
> Fuel costs have risen to a new high in the United States, prompting these remarks
> Average gasoline and diesel prices in the US hit a record-high $4.374/gal and $5.550/ gal this week
> Both the nation's ministers, however, stated that the market is already balanced and that OPEC+ does not need to boost its monthly production increases of 400k MBbl/d < Plus, the can't. OPEC+ production has been below quotas for 7 months in a row.
Natural Gas
Natural gas futures are down by another 5%, near $6.545 < Bounced quickly back to over $7.00.
> Prompt-month (June ’22) gas is down by around $1.50 or 19% from Friday’s settlement of $8.04
> Gas futures have given back quite a bit in the front of the curve, but beyond the Winter ‘22/’23 strip, prices have been fairly insulated. The Winter ‘22/’23, Summer ‘23, Winter ‘23/’24 strip prices are down by $1.13, $0.35, $0.32 at $6.52, $4.30, $4.65, respectively
> This morning’s pipeline nominations show lower-48 dry gas production is down by around 1.6 Bcf/d at 94.46 Bcf/d, or 1.8 Bcf/d removed from its near year-to-date high of 96.25 on Saturday, May 7
> Natural gas-fired power generation has also been very strong, even setting a seasonal record of 29.85 Bcf/d for power generation on Wednesday, May 4. The limited availability of gas-to-coal switching, and underperforming hydropower, have led to an increased need for gas for power generation
Production is around 1.7 Bcf/d higher year-over-year, with the Haynesville and Permian basins accounting for the increases
> South Central dry gas production is up by 4 Bcf/d year-over-year, while the Northeast, Rockies, and Gulf of Mexico regions are down by 0.27, 1.463, and 0.48 Bcf/d, respectively
> AEGIS notes that most of the production growth has come from the Haynesville and Permian basins because of pipeline capacity, and its proximity to growing demand from US LNG infrastructure
> This is why gas prices will stay high: Also, the 1.7 Bcf/d of production growth falls short of the year-over-year demand increases, which means the supply-demand backdrop will likely be tighter this summer, barring more growth.
> Early estimates suggest that U.S. industrial demand is up by 1 Bcf/d year-over-year, while LNG demand is up by around 2 Bcf/d year-over-year (0.7 Bcf/d from Sabine Pass Train 6 & 1.3 Bcf/d from Calcasieu Pass)
> Refilling Storage is not "Optional": Natural gas going to storage needs to exceed the 5-year average volumes going to storage by more than 1.5 Bcf per day from May to October in order to get the amount of gas in storage back to a safe level heading into the next winter heating season.