Oil & Gas Prices - Aug 8
Posted: Mon Aug 08, 2022 9:32 am
Opening Prices:
> WTI is down $0.96 to $88.05/bbl, and Brent is down $0.84 to $94.08/bbl. < Up 0.27 to $89.28 at the time of this post (9:20 am CT)
> Natural Gas is down -41.2c to 7.652/MMBtu. < Down 0.44 to $7.63 at the time of this post.
AEGIS Notes
Oil
Oil has a choppy start to the week as the market continues to weigh the potential hit to demand from an economic slowdown
> WTI is at $88.05/Bbl, down 96c, as concerns about a recession hitting oil demand weighed on prices
> Both WTI and Brent recouped some losses on Friday after jobs growth in the U.S., the world's top oil consumer, unexpectedly accelerated in July
China's oil imports in July showed some tentative signs of a demand recovery after a steep decline earlier this year owing to strong Covid-19 restrictions
> July's crude imports increased by 1% from June's four-year low to 8.8 MMBbl/d, although they were still 9.5% lower year-over-year, according to customs data
> The increase in inflows in July was likely contributed by independent refineries increasing their crude imports by 25.4% to 3.16 MMBbl/d in July from 2.52 MMBbl/d in June
Goldman Sachs maintains its Brent outlook for 2023 at $125/Bbl while lowering its 3Q22 and 4Q22 forecasts to $110/Bbl and $125/Bbl, respectively, down from $140/Bbl and $130/bbl (Bloomberg)
> "We believe that the case for higher oil prices remains strong, even assuming all these negative shocks play out, with the market remaining in a larger deficit than we expected in recent months," said GS analysts in an Aug. 7 note to clients
> The price of Brent dropped by about 9% last week, while WTI dropped by nearly 10%. Futures are currently at their lowest in six months
MY TAKE: The FEAR of a recession will probably prove to less than the reality, especially when it comes to transportation fuel demand. After the draws from the SPR stop and we get past the mid-term elections oil price should go up. Space heating fuels (oil, propane and natural gas) are all too low for this time of year.
Natural Gas
Asian spot prices jump on Russian supply concerns, Pelosi's Taiwan visit (Reuters)
> Asian spot LNG prices continued their rise towards record levels this week on an expected pick-up in demand from China as it eases COVID rules and ongoing concerns over curtailed Russian supply to Europe
> The average LNG price for September delivery into north-east Asia was estimated at $45/mmBtu, up $2.5, or 5.9%, from the previous week. That is close to record levels slightly over $48/mmBtu hit in December 2021
> LNG cargo prices into North Asia are trading above European prices at the moment, due to a rebound in demand in the world’s largest importing region
NOAA still expects an above-normal Atlantic hurricane season (NOAA)
> NOAA forecasters have slightly decreased the likelihood of an above-normal Atlantic hurricane season to 60% (lowered from the outlook issued in May, which predicted a 65% chance)
> NOAA’s update to the 2022 outlook — which covers the entire six-month hurricane season that ends on Nov. 30 — calls for 14-20 named storms (winds of 39 mph or greater), of which 6-10 could become hurricanes (winds of 74 mph or greater). Of those, 3-5 could become major hurricanes
> AEGIS notes that most LNG export facilities are along the gulf coast and an active hurricane season could put a significant amount of U.S. gas demand at risk if a storm was to impact the area
Watch the Saturday Summary at https://www.weatherbell.com/premium/ to get an update on why tropical storm activity is likely to pick up in a few weeks. Joe Bastardi expects two hurricanes to impact the U.S. late in August.
> WTI is down $0.96 to $88.05/bbl, and Brent is down $0.84 to $94.08/bbl. < Up 0.27 to $89.28 at the time of this post (9:20 am CT)
> Natural Gas is down -41.2c to 7.652/MMBtu. < Down 0.44 to $7.63 at the time of this post.
AEGIS Notes
Oil
Oil has a choppy start to the week as the market continues to weigh the potential hit to demand from an economic slowdown
> WTI is at $88.05/Bbl, down 96c, as concerns about a recession hitting oil demand weighed on prices
> Both WTI and Brent recouped some losses on Friday after jobs growth in the U.S., the world's top oil consumer, unexpectedly accelerated in July
China's oil imports in July showed some tentative signs of a demand recovery after a steep decline earlier this year owing to strong Covid-19 restrictions
> July's crude imports increased by 1% from June's four-year low to 8.8 MMBbl/d, although they were still 9.5% lower year-over-year, according to customs data
> The increase in inflows in July was likely contributed by independent refineries increasing their crude imports by 25.4% to 3.16 MMBbl/d in July from 2.52 MMBbl/d in June
Goldman Sachs maintains its Brent outlook for 2023 at $125/Bbl while lowering its 3Q22 and 4Q22 forecasts to $110/Bbl and $125/Bbl, respectively, down from $140/Bbl and $130/bbl (Bloomberg)
> "We believe that the case for higher oil prices remains strong, even assuming all these negative shocks play out, with the market remaining in a larger deficit than we expected in recent months," said GS analysts in an Aug. 7 note to clients
> The price of Brent dropped by about 9% last week, while WTI dropped by nearly 10%. Futures are currently at their lowest in six months
MY TAKE: The FEAR of a recession will probably prove to less than the reality, especially when it comes to transportation fuel demand. After the draws from the SPR stop and we get past the mid-term elections oil price should go up. Space heating fuels (oil, propane and natural gas) are all too low for this time of year.
Natural Gas
Asian spot prices jump on Russian supply concerns, Pelosi's Taiwan visit (Reuters)
> Asian spot LNG prices continued their rise towards record levels this week on an expected pick-up in demand from China as it eases COVID rules and ongoing concerns over curtailed Russian supply to Europe
> The average LNG price for September delivery into north-east Asia was estimated at $45/mmBtu, up $2.5, or 5.9%, from the previous week. That is close to record levels slightly over $48/mmBtu hit in December 2021
> LNG cargo prices into North Asia are trading above European prices at the moment, due to a rebound in demand in the world’s largest importing region
NOAA still expects an above-normal Atlantic hurricane season (NOAA)
> NOAA forecasters have slightly decreased the likelihood of an above-normal Atlantic hurricane season to 60% (lowered from the outlook issued in May, which predicted a 65% chance)
> NOAA’s update to the 2022 outlook — which covers the entire six-month hurricane season that ends on Nov. 30 — calls for 14-20 named storms (winds of 39 mph or greater), of which 6-10 could become hurricanes (winds of 74 mph or greater). Of those, 3-5 could become major hurricanes
> AEGIS notes that most LNG export facilities are along the gulf coast and an active hurricane season could put a significant amount of U.S. gas demand at risk if a storm was to impact the area
Watch the Saturday Summary at https://www.weatherbell.com/premium/ to get an update on why tropical storm activity is likely to pick up in a few weeks. Joe Bastardi expects two hurricanes to impact the U.S. late in August.