石油价格


尽管周四大幅下跌,但在供应紧张以及需求弹性可能令人惊讶的推动下,油价将再次实现每周上涨和月度上涨。

尽管回落,油价仍将本周再次上涨-oag360

资料来源:路透社

彭博社将周四的下跌归因于技术阻力,以及  如果油价上涨过高,沙特阿拉伯可能会开始取消减产的猜测。从理论上讲,这可能是真的。然而问题是,在供应有限的情况下,什么水平的价格会过高而无法维持。

人们还担心美联储进一步加息会抑制需求并对价格造成压力,尽管今年到目前为止,尽管经过了长时间的加息,但这种情况仍未发生。

与此同时,今天早些时候亚洲交易价格开始稳定,  截至撰写本文时,布伦特 原油价格约为 95 美元,  WTI价格为 91.66 美元。

路透社指出,受中国需求强劲和美国供应紧张的推动,油价本周可能上涨 2%,库欣极低的库存水平为油价上涨提供了额外动力。

Black Gold Investors 对冲基金经理加里·罗斯 (Gary Ross) 告诉彭博社,“石油即将耗尽,你可以看到库欣的储存量有多低。” “如果我们在库欣的库存耗尽,那么我们在欧洲的库存也将耗尽,因为它依赖于美国的出口。如果美国出口减少,那么欧洲将从哪里获得石油?”

事实上,欧洲可以从很多地方获得石油,只要支付更高的价格,因为所有基准都在上涨。正如 Kpler 的马特·史密斯 (Matt Smith) 所建议的那样,价格可能会持续走高到 11 月。

史密斯告诉彭博社,“10 月份的水运出口量仍可能接近每天 400 万桶”。“布伦特-WTI 价差收紧的滞后影响意味着我们可能要到 11 月份的装载量才能看到全面的影响。”

与此同时,美国产量增长速度不够快。EIA甚至发现本月页岩油领域的石油价格有所下降,尽管下降幅度不大,这意味着没有其他石油供应来源,而沙特和俄罗斯则对石油供应保持限制。

 

作者:Irina Slav for Oilprice.com


原文链接/oilandgas360

Oil Price


Despite a sharp drop on Thursday, oil prices are set for another weekly gain as well as a monthly one driven by tight supply coupled with perhaps surprisingly resilient demand.

Oil prices set for another weekly gain despite falling back-oag360

Source: Reuters

Bloomberg attributed the Thursday drop to technical resistance as well as speculation that Saudi Arabia may start rolling back the cuts if prices rose too high. Theoretically, that may be true. The question, however, is what level of prices would be too high to sustain with limited supply.

There was also concern about more rate hikes from the Fed that would dampen demand and pressure prices, although so far this year this has failed to happen despite a long string of rate hikes.

Meanwhile, prices began to stabilize earlier today in Asian trade, with Brent trading around $95 and WTI at $91.66 at the time of writing.

Reuters noted oil prices could end the week with a gain of 2%, driven by stronger demand from China and tighter supply in the United States, where the critically low level of inventories at Cushing have served as additional fuel for the price rally.

“We’re running out of oil – you can see how low storage is at Cushing,” Gary Ross, hedge fund manager at Black Gold Investors, told Bloomberg. “If we’re running out at Cushing, then we’re running out in Europe, because it relies on US exports. If the US exports less, then where is Europe going to get its oil from?”

In reality, there are plenty of places Europe can get oil from, as long as it pays the higher prices because all benchmarks are on the rise. And prices may continue higher into November, as suggested by Kpler’s Matt Smith.

“Waterborne exports in October are still likely to come in close to 4 million barrels a day,” Smith told Bloomberg. “The lagged impact of the tightening Brent-WTI spread means we may not see the full impact until November’s loadings.”

Meanwhile, U.S. production is not rising fast enough. The EIA even saw it falling in the shale patch this month, although by a modest rate, meaning there is no alternative source of oil supply while Saudi and Russia keep a lid on theirs.

 

By Irina Slav for Oilprice.com