FU: Oil plunge has gone too far, Morgan Stanley says
The global oil market is healthier than it looks, signaling that crudeâs plunge to six-year lows has probably gone too far.
While futures tumbled below $45 a barrel in London for the first time since 2009, Morgan Stanley and Standard Chartered Plc say other measures suggest physical markets for crude have stabilized or even strengthened in recent weeks. China, the worldâs second-biggest oil consumer, will keep buying extra barrels to fill its strategic reserve this year, according to Goldman Sachs Group Inc.
âWhile oil fundamentals arenât strong, physical markets do not corroborate the substantial weakness in flat price,â New York-based Morgan Stanley analyst Adam Longson said in a report Monday. The âlatest oil pricing pressure appears more financial than physical.â
A measure of returns from commodities sank to its lowest since 1999 Monday on concern that a slowing economy in China, the worldâs largest consumer of energy and raw materials, will exacerbate supply gluts. Brent crude, the international benchmark, has dropped more than 30 percent since May on the ICE Futures Europe exchange in London. Prices rebounded 3.1 percent to $43.98 a barrel at 11:10 a.m. in London.
Financial Flows
The stabilization of the price gap between monthly crude contracts and changes in the relationships between regional benchmarks suggests financial flows are behind the renewed slump, rather than a change in the physical oil market, Morgan Stanley said.
âThis is very, very macro drivenâ with the focus on the outlook for Chinaâs economy, said Paul Horsnell, head of commodities research at Standard Chartered in London. âItâs not based on any kind of oil supply-demand fundamentals.â
The gap between the price of the first-month Brent contract, October, and futures for settlement 12 months forward hasnât widened enough over the past few weeks to suggest the world is running out of space to store crude, according to Longson. The spread was more than $11 a barrel in January, compared with about $6 on Tuesday, ICE data show. This suggests the supply surplus is smaller today than it was at the start of the year, said Horsnell.
The spread between Brent and Dubai, the grade used as Asiaâs regional crude benchmark, is at its narrowest for this time of year in several years, according to Morgan Stanley. This signals continued strength in demand from Asia for Middle Eastern crude, Longson said. Prices for West African crude grades relative to Brent have strengthened in recent weeks, he said.
Chinese Demand
âDespite poor headline macro data, most China oil demand data points remain resilient,â Longson said. The nationâs apparent demand for gasoline rose 17 percent last month, the highest growth rate all year, he said.
The filling of emergency crude reserves in China âgives the market a lifelineâ that distinguishes the current situation from the Asian crash of 1998, Jeff Currie, head of commodities research at Goldman Sachs, said in an interview on Bloomberg Television Aug. 21. Brent crude dropped to as low as $9.55 a barrel in December 1998, according to ICE data.
China will add crude to two additional sites with a combined capacity of 50 million barrels in the second half, according to the International Energy Agency. The nation bought more than500,000 barrels a day of oil that was surplus to its daily requirements between January and July, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. China National United Oil Co., the trading unit of the nationâs biggest energy company, is on course for its largest-ever haul of Middle Eastern crude purchases in Singapore.
âThe irony is if you just take the oil market data on China, itâs good â itâs really, really good,â said Horsnell. âIf we were running it purely by the micro data, people would be saying: âHey, this isnât too badâ.â
Another weight lifted from the oil market is the conclusion of Mexicoâs annual hedging program, Morgan Stanleyâs Longson said. The Latin American producer locked in 2016 prices for 212 million barrels, its Finance Ministry said on Aug. 20. The biggest hedge undertaken by any national government, the program was an âunder-appreciated negativeâ for prices and its completion âremoves a bearish overhang for oil,â he said.