评论:银行业“传染”影响全球石油市场

随着银行倒闭和美联储力求稳定,油价和勘探与生产股票暴跌,一位专家表示,“人们感到害怕”。

哈特能源,Shutterstock.com

整个行业对少数倒闭的银行有什么恐惧?自2017年股东起义要求放缓以来,许多贷款机构一直与石油和天然气生产商保持一定距离,甚至进一步保持距离。

然而,银行业危机和担忧影响了消费者信心,进而影响支出和与需求相关的所有事情。

这就是问题所在。

3 月上旬美国两家地区性银行倒闭,第三家银行濒临倒闭。随着不确定性在华尔街蔓延,商品期货与许多金融机构和其他行业一起暴跌。

巴克莱一周前将布伦特原油价格预测下调至 92 美元/桶,WTI 原油价格为 87 美元/桶。3 月 17 日,布伦特原油收盘价为 72.58 美元/桶,WTI 收盘价为 66.37 美元/桶。

这是 WTI 自 2021 年 12 月以来的最低点。

第三次——魅力何在?

当美国两家地区性银行于三月中旬倒闭时,第三家金融机构也面临倒闭。 

评论:银行业“传染”影响全球石油市场
来源:雅虎财经

首先,总部位于加州的硅谷银行的内爆震惊了华尔街。然后纽约的 Signature 银行就破产了。

美国财政部誓言要通过“系统性风险例外”来保护在这两个已解散机构中拥有现金的人,财政部长珍妮特·耶伦告诉国会,此举将通过增强公众对美国银行体系的信心来保护美国经济。

然后第一共和银行开始震动。

耶伦宣布采取紧急干预措施,协调注入 300 亿美元现金存款,以避免进一步的恐慌。

这次的重点是?“再次”发出美国金融体系一切正常的信号。

穆迪分析公司的经济学家马克·赞迪告诉《华盛顿邮报》 , “他们 试图建立一道防火墙,以保护自己免受对银行系统和持续银行挤兑的进一步担忧。”支撑银行体系中最薄弱的环节,并通过这样做,使自己免受火灾的影响。”

“人们很害怕。”

银行业的蔓延正值混乱的时机成熟。

尽管世界摆脱了大流行病的昏迷状态,但一些潜在的弱点引发了人们对经济放缓的担忧。

Stratus Advisors 总裁 John Paise 告诉 Hart Energy,就业情况似乎并不像美国劳工部调查显示的那么强劲。回归的工作岗位通常都是低薪的,尤其是在大部分增长发生的服务业。工资增长依然乏力。消费者债务随着利率的上升而上升。房屋价值正在下降。然后,还有通货膨胀。

“人们很害怕,”佩斯说。

世界大型企业联合会的无党派、非营利性分析师团队今年每月发布的指数均报告消费者信心下滑。委员会的预期指数(衡量消费者对收入、商业和劳动条件的短期前景的衡量标准)从 1 月份的 76 降至 2 月份的 69.7。

根据该委员会的数据,任何低于 80 的值通常都预示着 12 个月内经济衰退。但同样值得注意的是,过去 12 个月中有 11 个月该水平低于该阈值。

恐惧因素并不仅限于美国边境。欧洲继续与能源价格和俄罗斯乌克兰战争的连锁反应作斗争。各国央行正在收紧货币政策。破产数量正在增加。

所有这些——实际上,在当前的污秽事件范围内,还有更多的因素在起作用——放大了影响消费者对商品、服务和能源需求的恐惧因素。

美国国内的石油需求仍然很低,远低于 2019 年的水平。大多数专家认为中国的石油需求将会激增,但目前却步履蹒跚。同时,货源充足。

“我们现在有充足的库存,”佩斯说。“人们正在平仓,这确实在全球范围内造成了压力。WTI 价格触及 65 美元,并出现一些变化。所以,是的,现在有一种紧张感。”

事实上,原油暴跌的深度似乎受到宏观经济的影响。

大多数美国生产商都可以在 WTI 价格低于 65 美元的情况下获利——事实上,与节俭成为行业主导趋势之前相比,许多生产商现在处于更有利的地位。尽管如此,今年的资本计划已经到位,股东和投资者对业绩也有自己的期望。

“他们可以继续下去,但 [WTI 价格持续保持在 65 美元] 肯定会产生负面影响,”佩斯说。

原文链接/hartenergy

Commentary: Banking ‘Contagion’ Infects Global Oil Markets

Oil prices and E&P stocks plummet as banks fail and the Fed grasps for stability, with one expert saying, "people are afraid."

(Hart Energy, Shutterstock.com)

What does the industry at large have to fear from a few failing banks? Many lending institutions have kept oil and gas producers at arms’ length – or further – since the shareholder uprising of 2017 demanded a slowdown.

Nevertheless, banking crises and concerns weigh on consumer confidence, which in turn impacts spending and all things related to demand.

And therein lies the rub.

Inside the first half of March, two regional U.S. banks failed and a third one got perilously close. As the uncertainty spread around Wall Street, commodity futures took a dive along with that of many financial institutions and other sectors.

Barclay’s revised oil price forecasts downward a week ago to $92/bbl Brent and $87/bbl WTI — on March 17, Brent closed out trading at $72.58/bbl and WTI ended the day at $66.37/bbl.

It was WTI’s lowest point since December 2021.

Third time’s the charm?

By the time two regional U.S. banks collapsed mid-March, a third financial institution’s existence was poised for collapse. 

Commentary: Banking ‘Contagion’ Infects Global Oil Markets
(Source: Yahoo Finance)

First, the implosion of California-based Silicon Valley Bank shook Wall Street. Then Signature Bank in New York went belly-up.

The Treasury Department has vowed to shield those with cash in both defunct institutions with a “systemic risk exception,” an effort that Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen told Congress will protect the U.S. economy by strengthening public confidence in the nation’s banking system.

Then the tremors started at First Republic Bank.

Yellen announced an emergency intervention designed to stave off additional panic with a coordinated $30 billion infusion of cash deposits.

The point this time? To send the signal – again – that all is fine in the U.S. financial system.

 “They’re trying to create a firewall to protect themselves from further angst about the banking systems and continued bank runs,” Mark Zandi, an economist at Moody’s Analytics, told The Washington Post. “It’s about shoring up the weakest links in the banking system and, in so doing, inoculating themselves from the fire getting to them.”

‘People are afraid.’

The banking contagion comes at a point ripe for something like chaos.

Several underlying weaknesses have raised concern about an economic slowdown even as the world emerged from its pandemic lethargy.

Employment doesn’t seem as strong as U.S. Labor Department surveys would suggest, John Paise, president at Stratus Advisors, told Hart Energy. The jobs that are coming back are generally low-paying, especially in the services sector where most of the growth is occurring. Wage growth remains anemic. Consumer debt is on the rise, along with interest rates. Housing values are declining. And then, there’s inflation.

“People are afraid,” Paise said.

The non-partisan, non-profit team of analysts at The Conference Board reported slippage in consumer confidence with each monthly release of its index this year. The board's expectations index – a measurement of consumers' short-term outlook on income, business and labor conditions, fell to 69.7 in February from 76 in January.

Anything less than 80 often signals a recession within 12 months, according to the board’s data. But it’s also worth noting that the level has registered below that threshold for 11 of the last 12 months.

The fear factor doesn’t stop at the U.S. border. Europe continues to struggle with energy prices and the ripple effects of Russia’s war on Ukraine. Central banks are tightening. Bankruptcy is on the rise.

All of this – and really, there’s much more at play within the realm of current scatological events – amplify the fear factors that influence consumer demand for goods, services and the energy.

Demand for oil within the U.S. remains low, well below that of 2019. And demand from China, which most experts said would surge, is limping along. Meanwhile, supply is abundant.

“We have plenty of inventory right now,” Paise said. “People are closing out their positions, and it's really creating pressure worldwide. We’ve hit $65 and some change on WTI. So yes, there's a nervousness of that at this point.”

Indeed, it appears the depth of crude’s plunge is at the mercy of the macro.

Most U.S. producers can turn a profit a profit at WTI prices lower than $65 – and indeed, many are much better-positioned to do so now than before thrift became the industry’s dominant trend. Still, capital plans for the year are in place and shareholders and investors have their own expectations for performance.

“They can keep going, but [persisting $65 WTI prices] will definitely have a negative effect,” Paise said.