From February to mid-March, oil prices receded rapidly. WTI dropped by 22 per cent in six weeks. Brent crude was down about 15 per cent. Then, in the past four weeks, the oil inched back up to the price levels at the start of February.
Late January, Baker Hughes data showed US rig counts had fallen significantly in the preceding six months. This was expected to help curtail supply, and lead to an increase in prices. Along with this, the impact of weather in Iraq and violence in Libya curtailed production and lead to a rally in prices in January. Even though the rig count had reduced from a peak of about 1,600 to 900 in March, during the same time oil production went up from about 9 million barrels a day (mbpd) to 9.37 mbpd, the highest level in the US since 1982. This was because the producers were focusing on their most productive wells and increasing output from them. In April, Barker Hughes reported the rig count had further reduced to 760. Now, production trend seems to changing as well. EIA estimates that output from two big shale plays in the US, Eagle Ford and Bakken, are expected to decline in May while output from Permian will continue to grow. Deutsche Bank, in a report, suggested that US production will hit an inflection point in
May. People are arguing that the rig count reduction (factored in for productivity gains) will finally start showing its impact on reduced US production in later half of this year. This along with the risk premium caused by tension in middle east over Saudi-led attacks on Yemen is adding a premium to prices. Yemen itself is not a significant producer of oil but next to it passes the fourth busiest oil shipping bottleneck of the world.
Also Read
Till now, we have not really seen production ramping down because OPEC is not backing down and shale producers are producing more to meet their cash flow obligations. Long-term supply will be impacted by 35-40 per cent cut in capital expenditure by oil companies in 2015. Shell, for instance, said it would cut spending by $15 billion. Chevron announced a cut of $5 billion. As the refinery maintenance season ends in the US, the demand should go back up, and high stockpiles should start reducing. In the medium term, the reduction in rig counts should start resulting in less supply from new fields, and in the long term the reduction in capital expenditure should taper off supply growth. However, in the short term, the inventories will prevent an immediate and sharp price rise even after production falls. Crude may see modest gains in price through end of this year, however, it will take a while before oil scales $100 again.
The writer is director, Sapient Global Markets (India)