Olieprisen er faldet dramatisk – til det laveste niveau i 20 år. WTI-kontrakterne ligger langt under Brent-prisen. ABN Amro venter, at økonomien forbedres i andet halvår, og først da er der udsigt til stigende oliepriser.
Uddrag fra ABN Amro:
Global Daily – Oil falls to lowest since 1999
Oil View: June contract more reflective of real market dynamics – WTI oil prices dropped to the lowest level since early 1999 yesterday. Just before the expiration of the May contract, prices dropped by 40% to below USD 11/bbl. High inventories in combination with the oil demand shock caused by the coronavirus measures have triggered a steep contango for oil prices.
Although many investors and market participants already shifted their outstanding positions from the May contract to the June contract in the days before, the final trading before physical delivery triggered high pressure on this contract. The Brent and WTI June contracts also declined, albeit to a much smaller degree, and the Brent/WTI spread on this contract remained roughly USD 4/bbl.
The fact that WTI is trading below the Brent price is a consequence of the OPEC+-production cut agreement. Brent crude mainly reflects the floor which is the result of the active production cut by OPEC and its partners, led by Russia.
In the US, production is also expected to decline, but this will be the result of market dynamics. In other words, oil prices need to trade lower for longer to trigger these production declines. The first signs of this are already apparent, with the number of active drilling rigs falling (from 683 to 438), and US crude production down from 13 mb/d to 12.3 mb/d in just a few weeks time.
Looking ahead, our macro economists expect a recovery in the second half of the year, which we expect to drive a recovery in oil prices. However, we still think the upside potential will be capped due to high inventories and the delayed effects on US shale production. This also reflects a wider Brent/WTI-spread. For more on our oil market view, see our latest Energy Monitor.