​​​​Crude Inventory Drops Again, Brent Stays Around $60

By Jim McCaul
Wednesday, December 12, 2018

U.S. crude inventory declined again last week, reducing fear of a repeat 2014/16 oil glut occurring. The latest weekly survey by the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) indicates a small inventory fall of 1.2 million barrels in the week ended December 7. This follows a 7.3 million barrel decline in the previous week. The decrease over the past two weeks follows 10 straight weeks of U.S. crude inventory build.

While EIA data include only U.S. inventory, the survey results are considered more reliable than international figures and are often used a surrogate for global inventory status.

Despite the inventory reversal – and OPEC+ agreement to cut production in H1 2019 – crude prices remain 30 percent down from beginning October. Brent is trading around $60 as of December 12.

Oil prices regularly overshoot the level needed to balance demand and supply. Current prices are below the balancing level needed to attract investment to meet growing demand and replace depleting reserves. Assuming OPEC+ production cuts are implemented as planned – and no major demand disruption occurs – we should be back in the $65 to $75 price range in Q2 2019. Our 2019/23 production floater forecast is based on oil trading in this price range over the next five years.

But the second half of 2019 is going to see a big jump in U.S. oil production as logistic bottlenecks in the U.S. shale sector are removed. U.S. oil production is expected to grow 11 percent in 2019, and OPEC+ will need to continue to meter supply to prevent a price collapse.

Meanwhile, the recent drop in crude prices has impacted a few marginal offshore projects that were set to move forward. But there has not been any major impact on investment plans of the big offshore producers. Chevron and Hess, for example, have indicated higher spending plans for next year. Petrobras has budgeted $68.8 billion for E&P spending between 2019/23 – a figure 14 percent higher than the 2018/22 plan.

(Source: IMA)

Categories: Energy Renewable Energy Activity Oil Production North America

Related Stories

From Fixtures to Values: Where the Jackup Recovery Is Already Being Priced

Oil Surges 3% on Renewed US-Iran Strikes

Ruwais LNG Commitments Top 90% Capacity with New INPEX Deal

Oil Climbs on US-Iran Deal Uncertainty

ADNOC Launches Global LNG Trading Powerhouse

MODEC Advances Construction of Brazil-Bound Gato do Mato FPSO

Sunda Reviews Timor-Leste Appraisal Plans as New Zealand Deal Advances

Markets: Oil Majors Reload Exploration Hoppers Across Sub-Saharan Africa

ADNOC Looks to Canada for Upstream and LNG Growth Through XRG

Aramco Picks McDermott for Energy Projects in Saudi Arabia

Current News

From Fixtures to Values: Where the Jackup Recovery Is Already Being Priced

Eni and Petronas JV Extend Ventura Offshore’s Drilling Job in Indonesia

Dolphin Drilling’s Blackford Dolphin Secures More Work for Oil India

Oil Surges 3% on Renewed US-Iran Strikes

Offshore Vessel Pair Ordered from Grandweld Shipyard

ADNOC, XRG and Mitsui Broaden Energy Cooperation

Ruwais LNG Commitments Top 90% Capacity with New INPEX Deal

Saipem Lands $2B FPSO Deal for Offshore Gas Field in Indonesia

Oil Climbs on US-Iran Deal Uncertainty

Saudi Arabia Eyes Oil Pipeline Expansion to Red Sea

Subscribe for AOG Digital E‑News

AOG Digital E-News is the subsea industry's largest circulation and most authoritative ENews Service, delivered to your Email three times per week

https://accounts.newwavemedia.com