石油价格


上周,OPEC及其OPEC+伙伴同意深化减产并将其延长至2024年第一季度。此举几乎一致被视为支撑油价的一种手段,但并未达到预期效果。

最新减产让欧佩克的选择更少——石油和天然气 360

资料来源:路透社

在最初的上涨之后,基准价格再次下滑,周一上午亚洲布伦特原油跌破每桶 80 美元。

因此,至少目前来看,削减措施似乎未能达到目的。当然,市场可能仍能感受到供应紧张,但与此同时,OPEC 和 OPEC+ 似乎已经别无选择。剩下的都是痛苦的。

 欧亚集团分析师拉德·阿尔卡迪里 (Raad Alkadiri) 向英国《金融时报》表示,“市场将考验欧佩克+,以及每桶 80 美元是否真的是他们能够捍卫的底线 。” “此次降息被标榜为‘自愿性’,对市场的心理影响略有减弱,但如果全面降息实现,对市场的影响不容小视。”

事实上,尽管欧佩克+宣布了这一消息,但上周油价下跌而不是上涨的部分原因是人们怀疑部分减产仍只是纸面上的。在有报道称欧佩克成员国对于他们应该自由追求的产量水平存在内部分歧之后,这种怀疑出现了。

2024年上半年的总减产量定为 每天220万桶,相当于全球供应量的约2%。几年前,这足以成为交易者大量买入石油期货的理由。现在,情况并非如此。

路透社的克莱德·拉塞尔等人认为,这 表明 石油需求并不像欧佩克所说的那么强劲。能源分析师保罗·桑基(Paul Sankey)等其他人则 表示, 欧佩克可能会来个180度大转弯,降低价格,以抵消美国钻探商不断增加的产量。实物石油需求及其与石油期货市场的关系是这一切的核心。

欧佩克对此一直持乐观态度,正如国际能源署对此越来越悲观一样,最近预测需求增长将在 2030 年之前达到峰值。与此同时,有大量报告和预测预测 2020 年世界经济增长将疲弱。不久的将来。

有了这样的预测,就不难理解为什么在最近中东战争的最初冲击消退后,交易员们开始看跌。彭博社报道称 ,我们所认为的交易者有五分之一实际上是计算机算法,这就更容易理解了 。

商品交易顾问使用算法来跟踪市场并对各种商品下注。彭博社援引摩根大通和道明银行的数据,在石油领域,这些算法驱动的交易量占当天日均总交易量的 70%。

这意味着期货市场与石油现货市场的脱离程度比以前更加严重。反过来,这意味着欧佩克可能会陷入绝望,因为算法交易员(彭博社指出,算法交易员是趋势追随者和趋势夸大者)无视该卡特尔控制石油供应以及价格的任何尝试。

这将是一个危险的局面,特别是对于今年创下产量新纪录的美国生产商来说,尽管增长速度比前几年更慢、更温和。事实上,保罗·桑基上周向 CNBC 表示:沙特阿拉伯可能会决定改变方向,打开水龙头,向市场注入大量石油。问题是它是否有能力承担所有昂贵的能源转型计划。

另一方面,如果 2024 年第一季度的石油价格令人不满意,整个 OPEC(特别是沙特阿拉伯)可以进一步减产。考虑到市场对最新降息的反应,这将是一个冒险的举动。但与上述替代方案相比,这可能是风险较小的举措。

据路透社拉塞尔报道,市场对减产持怀疑态度的很大一部分原因是有关欧佩克内部分歧的消息。显然,这些表明并非该组织的所有成员都会真正执行削减计划。另一方面,许多欧佩克成员国即使按照原来的配额,产量仍然不足,而且价格仍然下跌。

对于欧佩克来说,这无疑是一个复杂的局面。正如最新的减产行动所表明的那样,减产越频繁,交易商就越会对石油需求前景提出质疑。另一方面,现货市场和期货市场之间存在分歧。

根据 Russell 引用的 Kpler 数据,今年迄今为止海运石油量增加了 186 万桶/日,现货市场看起来相当健康。期货市场似乎以自动交易为主,这在很大程度上影响着价格。无论如何,明年的欧佩克局势将值得关注。

 

作者:Irina Slav for Oilprice.com


原文链接/oilandgas360

Oil Price


Last week, OPEC and its partners from OPEC+ agreed to deepen and extend their production cuts into the first quarter of 2024. The move, almost unanimously seen as a means to propping up oil prices, did not have the desired effect.

Latest cuts leave OPEC with fewer options- oil and gas 360

Source: Reuters

After an initial jump, benchmarks slid again, with Brent crude dipping below $80 per barrel on Monday morning in Asia.

So, it seems that the cuts have, at least for now, failed in their purpose. Of course, the tighter supply may yet be felt on the market, but in the meantime, OPEC—and OPEC+—seems to be running out of options. And those that are left are painful ones.

“The market is going to test Opec+ and whether $80 a barrel is really a floor they can defend,” Raad Alkadiri, an analyst with Eurasia Group, told the Financial Times. “The cuts being billed as ‘voluntary’ undermines the psychological impact for the market a little, but if the full cut is realised, its impact on the market should not be discounted.”

Indeed, part of the reason oil prices went lower rather than higher last week despite the OPEC+ announcement was the suspicion that some of the cuts will remain so only on paper. The suspicion emerged after reports that OPEC members had internal disagreements about the production level they should be free to pursue.

The total cuts for the first half of 2024 are set at 2.2 million barrels daily, equal to about 2% of global supply. A few years ago, this would have been reason enough for traders to pile into oil futures. Now, this is not the case.

Some, such as Reuters’ Clyde Russell, argue that this indicates that oil demand is not as strong as OPEC says it is. Others, such as energy analyst Paul Sankey, suggest OPEC could do a U-turn and sink prices to neutralize the rising output of U.S. drillers. Physical oil demand and its relation to the oil futures market are at the heart of it all.

OPEC has been upbeat about that, just as the International Energy Agency has been increasingly pessimistic about it, recently forecasting peak demand growth before 2030. At the same time, there has been a multitude of reports and forecasts projecting weak economic growth for the world in the immediate future.

With such projections, it is easy to understand why traders are turning bearish after the initial shock of the latest war in the Middle East wears out. It’s even easier to understand after Bloomberg reported that as much as a fifth of what we collectively think of as traders are actually computer algorithms.

Commodity trading advisors use algorithms to track the market and place bets on various commodities. In oil, the trading volume of these algorithm-driven trades constitutes 70% of the total daily average volume on a given day, per data from JP Morgan and TD Bank, cited by Bloomberg.

This means that the futures market has got even more divorced from the physical market for oil than before. And that, in turn, means that OPEC could be driven to desperation as algo traders, which Bloomberg notes are trend followers and trend exaggerators, ignore any attempt by the cartel to control oil supply, and, as a result, prices.

This would prove a dangerous situation, especially for U.S. producers that have set another production record this year even though growth has been slower and more moderate than in previous growth years. Indeed, this is what Paul Sankey suggested to CNBC last week: that Saudi Arabia may simply decide to reverse course and open the taps to flood markets with oil. The question is whether it can afford to do so with all its expensive energy transition plans.

On the other hand, OPEC in general, and Saudi Arabia specifically, can simply cut even deeper if the price of oil in the first quarter of 2024 comes across as unsatisfactory. It would be a risky move, given the market reaction to this latest cut. But it could be the less risky move compared to the above alternative.

According to Reuters’ Russell, a big part of the market’s skeptical reaction to the cuts was the news about internal disagreements in OPEC. Apparently, these suggest that not all members of the group would actually follow through with their cuts. On the other hand, many OPEC members have been underproducing even with their original quotas—and prices have still declined.

It is certainly a complicated situation for OPEC. The more often it cuts production, the more traders would question the outlook on oil demand, as suggested by the latest cuts. On the other hand, there is a divide between the physical market and the futures market.

The physical market looks quite healthy based on seaborne oil volumes, which are up by 1.86 million bpd so far this year, per Kpler data cited by Russell. The futures market appears to be dominated by automatic trading, which affects prices in a major way. In any case, next year will be interesting to watch on the OPEC front.

 

By Irina Slav for Oilprice.com