Home Author's Blog James Norman

James Norman



2008.09.10 10:00:00

Wednesday, September 10, 2008 

OPEC cuts, and oil prices drop

Oil prices were trading DOWN again today, despite OPEC's decision Tuesday to cut production by some 525,000 barrels a day (about 1.7%).  NYMEX front-month futures were below $103/bbl in pre-market trading.  This is consistent with yesterday's post, arguing the US is now behind a downward movement in crude prices aimed at punishing the Russians for their belligerent posture toward Georgia and possible political threats to Ukraine and Europe in general.

The Wall Street Journal noted Saudi Arabia, the main arbiter of oil prices, apparently opposed the production cut and is likely to go its own way in adding supply to the market.  This can be viewed as a US-driven posture.  Many of those OPEC producers who have lobbied hardest for the production cuts (such as Iran and Venezuela) are actually having great difficulty in maintaining their current allotments of output.  By voting for quota cuts, they are merely giving fellow producers the sleeves from their vests, as it were.  

Also out today is a new monthly IEA forecast  saying global oil demand this year will average just 86.8 million b/d this year and 87.6 million in 2009.  That is down from IEA's prior forecast by 100,000 b/d this year and 140,000 b/d next.  OECD demand is now expected to fall 1.6% from 2007 to 48.4 million b/d and US demand for refined product is seen dropping 4% to under 20 million b/d.  IEA's prior prediction was for 2.3% US demand growth.  This fits with the case made in “The Oil Card” that much of US petroleum demand is discretionary and can be reduced without harming the economy.  Meanwhile, the IEA revised UPWARD (again) its forecast of Chinese (and Indian) petroleum demand, raising its non-OECD 2008 consumption forecast by 50,000 b/d to 38.3 million b/d.

IEA cut its non-OPEC production estimate  by 180,000 b/d to 49.9 million this year.  But my hunch is output will come in higher than that as the US moves to encourage increased output by the majors.  To desperately try to prop up prices, you may see the Russians further reducing output, however.   Crude markets will nevertheless remain well supplied.  Nobody will be wanting for crude, albeit still pricey stuff at more than $100/bbl.  Look for it to move down further and fund outflows continue from commodity index players.  

Meanwhile, China continues to show severe economic strains from the nose-bleed run-up in crude and other commodity price in the first half of this year.  In a stunning reversal, sales of new cars in China fell more than 6% in August for the first monthly decline in many, many years. Inflation remains a worsening problem as China's producer price index climbed to 10.1% above a year ago, from 10% last month.  Food costs have eased, but consumer prices for fuel and electricity remain below world market prices.  Analysts expect China to embark on a major economic stimulus program to try and maintain the double-digit GDP growth needed to avoid rising unemployment and social unrest there.

Even with a 30% drop in crude prices in the past two months, China ain't out of the woods.  Price controls have caused continuing shortages of fuel and power.  Other key industrial input costs have continued to climb.  Brazilian iron ore producer Vale confirmed yesterday it is now negotiating a second price hike this year with the Chinese.  In copper, where China has been hellbent to be the world's largest producer and exporter, prices of the finished metal are falling while (imported) ore costs still rise. 

  
Comments 0 Hits: 777  

2008.09.09 10:00:00

 

Saturday, August 30, 2008 

Russia and the falling price of crude

Crude oil fell below $104/bbl today, despite continuing and worsening tensions between the US and Russia over Georgia.  Judged by the supply-scare hysteria which drove crude up from under $60 in early 2007, such worries should be sending crude soaring.  Instead, all told, NYMEX front-month crude futures have fallen almost 30% from their mid-July peak of more than $145/bbl, while fundamental considerations of physical supply and demand factors in that time have hardly budged.  What's going on?

My hunch is we are seeing at least a temporary sea change in US national security oil pricing strategy.  Instead of relentlessly driving up the price of crude to nose-bleed levels to crimp Chinese economic (and military) growth, the game plan has reverted, for now at least, to a downward pricing strategy aimed at reminding the Russians just how vulnerable they are to falling oil revenues.

Readers of “The Oil Card” will recognize that sharply lower oil pricing was the single most critical element in the Reagan Administration's successful effort in the 1980s to break the back of the Soviet Union.  It is a tried, tested and proven means to impact the oil-export-dependent Moscow regime, and it appears to be the weapon of choice again in responding to Russian uppityness in Georgia and elsewhere.

At a crude export rate of about 5 million barrels per day, a $50/bbl price drop equates to a daily revenue loss of some $250 million, or about $7.5 billion a month. With an accompanying drop in the price of Russian refined-product exports, the revenue decline could be well over $10 billion a month.   That has to have gotten the attention of Mr. Putin and his entourage.

It is interesting to note the precipitous turning point in oil pricing, in early July, actually presaged the movement of Russian troops into Georgia, as well as the provocative moves by US- and Israeli-trained Georgian troops to assault the breakaway province of Ossetia.  Satellite and other intelligence would have already been indicating the build-up of Russian forces across the border, however.  Who really started the Georgia conflict can be hotly debated.  Was Georgia the cause of current US-Russian tensions, or more the result of deeper animosities that have been building? What will it take to resolve US-Russian tensions?

Judging by news reports that Russia plans to garrison some 7,600 troops in Georgia, and  that the US plans a naval base in Georgia, it appears there is no resolution near at hand and the rift goes deep.  If so, be prepared for a much deeper dive in the price of crude oil,  and probably natural gas as well.  As the book notes, absent concerted efforts to prop up prices, global and fungible commodities like crude oil tend to sag to their marginal cost of production. That could be in the range of about $15/bbl for the international majors and under $10 for the Saudis.  If crude were to revert to its late-1990s level of about $10/bbl, adjusted for inflation, the price could fall back to around $20 or $25/bbl.

A more likely down-side price target, however, would be the price level at which Russian state finances, cash flows, credit ratings and stock market values come under severe pressure.  The DJ stock index of “Russian titans” is already off some 40% since  early June. Anything under $40/bbl now would probably give the Kremlin severe heartburn.  If Russian policies and rhetoric go uncorrected, you could see crude prices heading rapidly in that direction.

What does it take to quickly move prices down by such a large amount?  The same thing that drove them up: cash flows into and out of the commodity futures market.  Since mid-July, there has been a marked exit of cash from commodity index funds, which the book notes have been the main vehicle for channeling pension and other managed money into the relatively small oil futures market.  For a tally of those recent fund flows, check economic Phil Verleger's web site at http://www.pkverlegerllc.com/NAM-INDEX-TRADER-PAGE.PDF.


That shift to outflows comes after more than a year of huge inflows, which invariably went into the “long” (buy) side of crude futures contracts and overwhelmed the appetite of the “shorts.”   We now have seen the rapid deflation of that bubble, which had doubled the price of crude in less than a year.   Barring prompt and significant Russian actions to move back in line with US interests, look for the deflation to continue, perhaps in an incremental step-down manner with occasional pauses to the the Russians rethink their behavior.

Among the tell-tale signs that the US is managing crude prices lower:

1.)Release of SPR barrels after Hurricane Hanna to Citgo, despite minimal storm impacts to Gulf Coast refining or logistics.
2.)OPEC indications it will not cut output at its upcoming meeting, despite the price slide.
3.)Proposed US accounting changes that will let upstream companies report previously banned “probable and possible” reserves, thus inflating perceived oil resources.
4.)Likely resumption of drilling activity in restricted US coastal waters and Alaska.
         
Does this signal an end to the high-price oil strategy which I argue has been aimed at restraining Chinese economic growth since the later 1990s?   Probably not.  But some recent Chinese moves may have served to lessen the intensity of that effort.   Note that since last spring China has made nice with Japan in largely settling a long-vexing East China Sea boundary dispute which threatened to flare into military conflict.   It has also made nice with Taiwan.  And, perhaps most importantly, Beijing has apparently made good on assurances made to US Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson to speed up appreciation of the yuan.   There has also been some moderation in the outsized Chinese trade surplus with the US, and China has moved to pass through sizeable increases in its controlled fuel and power prices.  This could have bought China some easing in crude costs. 

Of course, lower crude and gasoline prices also benefit the US consumer and serve to damp Congressional outrage as we move into the fall election campaign.

Bottom line:  Lower crude prices, as with the severe run-up in recent years, are not an accident.   Nor are they simply the result of physical supply and demand fundamentals. They can and have been managed for geopolitical purposes.   That is really the only way to understand and anticipate these wild gyrations. 

  
Comments 0 Hits: 735  

2008.08.30 10:00:00

Tuesday, September 9, 2008 

China's Iraq Oil Deal

Press reports Aug. 29 declared China and Iraq have finally agreed on a long-pending deal to let Chinese interests develop the fallow al-Ahdab oil field in southeastern Iraq. It would be the first such major oil field redevelopment deal granted to foreign interests by the new Iraqi government and on the surface appears to be a coup for the People's Republic of China.

Readers of "The Oil Card" will note a key assertion of the book is that the main reason behind the US-led invasion and occupation of Iraq in early 2003 was to prevent China's CNPC, partnered with PRC armsmaker Norinco, from moving in to effectively garrison Ahdab and possibly other Iraq fields upon the expected lifting of UN sanctions at the end of 2003. That could have created an Iraq-China client state relationship around oil dwarfing in strategic significance the Chinese presence in The Sudan. 

Does this deal undo the hard efforts of the past five years by the US and its allies to block foreign control of strategic Middle-East oil reserves, under the aegis of the 1980 Carter Doctrine? Probably not. Here's why:

1.) The deal is only a service contract, spanning 22 years but possibly having to be renewed yearly. There is no equity ownership of the Ahdab reserves granted to CNPC. The Chinese will get merely a fee for their services with no share of the oil profits and no claim on the oil in the ground.

2.) Norinco is not in the deal. Instead, CNPC will be partnered 75:25 with Iraq's Northern Oil Co., and will apparently have to fund all the investment. Norinco (China North Industries Group) had been sanctioned by the Bush Administration in May 2003 for providing possible dual-use high-strength steel to Iran for that country's missile program. Norinco is also a major arms supplier to the PRC's Peoples Liberation Army.

3.) CNPC is reportedly committing to invest a whopping $3 billion to develop Ahdab, which is more than double the $1.3 billion CNPC and Norinco had agreed to invest over 23 years at al-Ahdab in their 1997 deal with the Saddam Hussein regime.

4.) In the 1997 deal, CNPC and Norinco (forming what was called the al-Waha venture), were to have a 50% equity stake in what was expected to be an eventual 100,000 barrels/day from what was then considered to be 1.4 billion barrels of recoverable reserves underlying a 250 sq km field area. Now the reserves there are estimated at 1.2 billion barrels, according to press reports, and initial production from al-Ahdab would be only about 25,000 b/d starting in 2011. It is expected to eventually rise to 110,000 b/d.

5.) Of that production, much will initially go to fuel Iraqi power generation, which is a rather low-value use of liquid hydrocarbons. Little of the oil would make its way to the world market where it might have some impact on lowering still sky-high crude prices paid by the PRC.

6.) CNPC can bring some of its own security staff, but security at the field will be provided mainly by the Iraqi army.

7.) The deal still has to be approved by the Iraqi parliament: no small hurdle. Given the tortured history of the al-Ahdab transaction, there is no telling what other deal-killer provisions could yet be inserted. 

8.) All the Western oil majors so far have rejected similar service contract deals with Iraq, finding them to be unattractive in relation to the costs and risks involved. 

In short, Iraq and China appear to have reached a face-saving but only marginally attractive resolution to a vexing contractual problem over al-Ahdab. China can claim it retained its pre-war contract rights to al-Ahdab, albethey only in the form of a low-margin service contract. Iraq can avoid the major headaches it would get from China if it failed to honor the former al-Ahdab deal at least in some form. (Beijing had threatened to thwart any other development of al-Ahdab if its claim was not honored.)


  
Comments 0 Hits: 834