石油价格


过去一周,油价波动剧烈,受全球最大经济体利空消息影响,布伦特原油价格在 6.75 美元/桶的区间内波动,并在 8 月 5 日盘中跌至 7 个月来的最低点 75.05 美元/桶。最新 的美国就业报告 显示,7 月份美国新增就业岗位 11.4 万个,远低于华尔街预期的 17.6 万个。失业率从上个月的 4.1% 上升至 4.3%,打破了此前数十年来最长的 4% 以下失业率趋势。利空的就业和通胀数据 导致市场陷入崩溃,全球市场纷纷下跌。

周三盘中油价反弹,布伦特原油上涨 2.8% 至每桶 78.62 美元,而 WTI 原油上涨 3.1% 至每桶 75.48 美元,这要归功于 中东局势的紧张 。荷兰国际集团 (ING) 表示,中东冲突是阻止油价下跌的最大利好催化剂,市场正在等待伊朗对上周以色列暗杀哈马斯政治领导人的回应。现在,渣打银行的商品分析师透露,最近的下跌是由于多头仓位的快速平仓,而不是新的空头仓位。渣打银行表示,过去两周,基金经理在四个主要布伦特原油和 WTI 原油市场上平仓了 1.352 亿桶多头仓位

合约。据分析师称,多头平仓数量是新空头平仓数量的五倍,基金经理的空头仓位在过去两周内增加了 2740 万桶。大宗商品专家指出,两周内唯一一次出现更多多头平仓是在 2020 年 2 月,当时正值新冠疫情和 OPEC+ 价格战爆发之初。两周内多头平仓量仅有四次超过 1.3 亿桶,其中两次发生在过去三个月内。

上调预期

渣打银行表示,从纯基本面来看,鉴于需求强劲及第三季度全球库存大幅下降,布伦特原油价格有回升至 80 美元/桶上方的空间。早在 5 月份,渣打银行就表示,美国能源信息署 (EIA) 系统性地低估了运输燃料需求,并预测我们可能会看到大幅上调。现在,渣打银行的说法被证明是正确的,EIA 将 5 月份汽油需求上调 34.4 万桶/日至 939.6 万桶/日,同比增长 3.5% 。 航空燃料需求同比增长 5.9%,而总石油需求上调 81.1 万桶/日至 2080 万桶/日,增长 2.3%。修订后的数据中只有馏分油需求仍然疲软,尽管同比下降 3.6% 明显低于 EIA 预测的下降 7.1%。

渣打银行指出,过去 24 个月中,美国汽油需求有 20 个月被上调,平均上调幅度为 +146 kb/d,占需求的 1.6%。5 月份的上调幅度是同期第二大上调幅度,仅次于对 2023 年 9 月需求的 478 kb/d 上调。

与此同时,美国石油产量增长依然低迷。报告季已接近尾声,一些大型生产商尚未报告,27 家上市石油和天然气公司(包括国际主要石油公司)的数据显示,美国第二季度石油液总产量为 734.7 万桶/天,比第一季度高出 18.1 万桶/天(2.5%)。然而,渣打银行指出,这一改善在很大程度上可以归因于 1 月份极端寒冷导致的生产停工恢复,石油液产量相对于 2023 年第四季度的增长仅为 1.5 万桶/天(0.2%)。

幸运的是,对于多头来说,油价目前可能不会有太大的下跌空间。渣打银行的机器学习工具 SCORPIO 预测,8 月 12 日的布伦特原油价格将为每桶 76.19 美元,比当前价格低不到 1 美元/桶。渣打银行指出,SCORPIO 可以提供有用的预警系统,其预测 8 月 5 日 10 月布伦特原油结算价为每桶 76.19 美元,接近实际结算价 76.30 美元/桶。值得注意的是,SCORPIO 的预测是在利空美国经济数据公布前一周做出的。

贝莱德在最近的全球市场暴跌中发表乐观言论,称对美国 经济衰退的担忧有些过度。这家资产管理公司认为,7 月份美国就业报告更符合经济放缓而非衰退的趋势。贝莱德指出,就业岗位增加正在放缓,但过去三个月平均新增 17 万个就业岗位;消费支出虽然有所降温,但仍相对健康,第二季度企业盈利迄今超出预期,标准普尔 500 指数成分股公司盈利增长预计约为 13%,高于本季度初预期的 9%。贝莱德是全球最大的资产管理公司,资产管理规模 (AUM) 达 9.1 万亿美元。

作者:Alex Kimani,Oilprice.com

 


原文链接/OilandGas360

Oil Price


Oil prices have been highly volatile over the past week, with Brent trading across a $6.75 per barrel (bbl) range to hit a seven-month low of $75.05/bbl intra-day on 5 August thanks to bearish news coming from the world’s largest economy. The latest U.S. jobs report revealed that the economy added 114,000 jobs in July, way lower than the Wall Street consensus at 176,000 jobs. The unemployment rate increased to 4.3% from 4.1% the previous month, breaking a previous trend where it remained under 4% for the longest stretch in decades. The bearish jobs and inflation data sent markets into meltdown mode, with markets across the globe tanking.

Oil prices rebounded in Wednesday’s intraday session, with Brent gaining 2.8% to trade at $78.62 per barrel while WTI climbed 3.1% to $75.48 per barrel thanks to growing tensions in the Middle East. According to ING, the Middle East conflict is the biggest bullish catalyst that has halted the oil price selloff, with markets waiting to see Iran’s response to the assassination of Hamas’ political leader by Israel last week. And now commodity analysts at Standard Chartered have revealed that the latest drive lower has been due to a rapid closing out of long positions, not new shorts. StanChart says there have been 135.2 million barrels of long liquidation by money managers over the past two weeks across the four main Brent and WTI

contracts. According to the analysts, closing of longs has outnumbered new shorts by roughly five-to-one with money-manager shorts increasing by 27.4 mb over the past two weeks. The commodity experts have noted that the only time there was more long liquidation over two weeks was in February 2020 at the beginning of the Covid-19 pandemic and the OPEC+ price war. Closing out of long bets has only exceeded 130 mb over two weeks four times, two of which have been in the past three months.

Upward Revisions

According to StanChart, on a purely fundamental basis, there’s scope for Brent prices to rally above $80/bbl given robust demand and a significant Q3 global stock draw. Back in May, Standard Chartered argued that the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) systematically underestimated transport fuel demand and predicted that we were likely to see significant upward revisions. Well, StanChart has been vindicated, with the EIA revising May gasoline demand 344 kb/d higher to 9.396 mb/d, good for a 3.5% Y/Y increaseJet fuel demand rose 5.9%Y/Y while total oil demand was revised higher by 811 kb/d to 20.8 mb/d, good for a 2.3% increase. Only distillate demand remained weak in the revised data, although the -3.6% Y/Y fall is significantly lower than EIA’s prediction of a -7.1% decline.

StanChart notes that U.S. gasoline demand has been revised higher in 20 of the last 24 months, with an average revision of +146 kb/d, which is 1.6% of demand. The May revision was the second largest during that period, topped only by the 478 kb/d upward revision made to September 2023 demand.

Meanwhile, U.S. oil production growth remains muted. With the reporting season at the tail-end and some large producers yet to report, data from 27 publicly-listed Oil & Gas companies (including the international major oil companies) shows that the combined U.S. oil liquids output in Q2 was 7.347 mb/d, 181 kb/d (2.5%) higher than Q1. However, StanChart notes that this improvement can be largely attributed to a recovery from January’s extreme cold-related production shut-ins, with growth in oil liquids output relative to Q4-2023 coming in at just 15 kb/d (0.2%).

Luckily for the bulls, there might not be much downside to oil prices at this juncture. StanChart’s machine learning tool, SCORPIO, has predicted a Brent price of $76.19 per barrel (bbl) on August 12, less than $1/bbl lower than the current price. StanChart notes that SCORPIO can provide a useful early-warning system, with its forecast of October Brent settlement on 5 August at $76.19 per barrel (bbl) close to the actual settlement at $76.30/bbl. It’s interesting to note that the SCORPIO prediction was made a week before the bearish U.S. economic data came out.

BlackRock has weighed in on the latest global markets rout with a bullish note, saying the U.S. recession fears are overdone. The asset manager has argued that the July U.S. jobs report is more in line with a slowdown than a recession. BlackRock notes that job creation is slowing, but averaged a robust 170,000 over the past three months; consumer spending, while cooling, remains relatively healthy and Q2 corporate earnings have so far topped expectations, with S&P 500 earnings growth projected at about 13%, above the 9% expected at the start of the season. BlackRock is the largest money manager in the world with $9.1 trillion in Assets Under Management (AUM).

By Alex Kimani for Oilprice.com