Register

Peak Oil is You


Donate Bitcoins ;-) or Paypal :-)


Page added on December 7, 2013

Bookmark and Share

Goldman tells oil market U.S. is the new China as cycle reverses

Business

* Analyst Currie says oil cycle is reversing

* U.S. oil demand growth surges as China’s slows

* U.S. oil prices to remain cheap vs global markets

The oil market is on the cusp of a new cycle, Goldman Sachs said on Friday, with demand in the United States growing at a faster pace than in emerging economies such as China and India for the first time in a decade.

That’s likely to have profound implications for how oil markets operate, Jeffrey Currie, Goldman’s influential chief commodity analyst wrote in a note, which says there will be a “new oil order”.

Currie was one of the first oil analysts to predict that crude prices would surge last decade, driven by growing Chinese demand and tightening supplies. Now as U.S. shale production drives down prices for American consumers, the market may shift, he says.

“As oil demand leadership transitions to developed markets from emerging markets, this not only represents a significant fundamental shift, but combined with significant developed market-led production, this turns the previous commodity cycle upside down,” Currie said.

The immediate impact may be subtle at first – Goldman is maintaining its price forecasts for next year for both North Sea Brent crude and U.S. benchmark West Texas Intermediate at $106 and $98, respectively.

THREE DEVELOPMENTS

In the long run, Currie expects three inter-related developments to flip the market on its head.

First, he writes, the boom in U.S. shale oil output should keep oil prices in the United States low and lead to a “substantial acceleration” in its economic activity.

Second, stronger U.S. growth will lead the Federal Reserve to scale back its monetary support, which is likely to strengthen the dollar. That should put pressure on emerging market demand by making oil and other commodities priced in the greenback more expensive for users of other currencies.

Third, weaker oil demand growth in countries including China and India should help keep markets well supplied, limiting inflation in developed countries.

“This new emerging commodity cycle is the exact opposite of the ‘super cycle’ where weak U.S. economic growth, exacerbated by a lack of domestic energy supplies and conflicts in key commodity-producing regions, helped facilitate more accommodative monetary policy,” Currie said.

“U.S. policy reinforced emerging market demand growth and a weaker U.S. dollar, which largely offset the higher oil and commodity prices to emerging market countries,” in the last decade.

Ultimately, the reversed trend will lead emerging market economies to “shift from being consumers to producers”, Currie said forcing countries such as China to follow the U.S. path in tapping unconventional resources.

Since hitting a record of almost 21 million barrels per day (bpd) in 2005, U.S. oil demand has fallen by more than 10 percent to 18.5 million bpd last year, data from the U.S. Energy Information shows.

But in September, U.S. demand was up by 1 million bpd on the same month in 2012 – the biggest year-on-year leap since 2001 – while Chinese demand growth has been muted in the second half of this year.

Currie estimates total Chinese demand growth at just 230,000 bpd throughout 2013. Growth was as low as 70,000 bpd in October year-on-year.

U.S. demand has been boosted in part by the fact that gasoline prices are 15 percent lower in Chicago than in Singapore, Currie said.

Retail prices in the United States were at the lowest level in three years at the end of November, the EIA said.

Reuters



9 Comments on "Goldman tells oil market U.S. is the new China as cycle reverses"

  1. James on Sat, 7th Dec 2013 4:47 am 

    Oil Cheap, where?????????

  2. Stilgar on Sat, 7th Dec 2013 5:39 am 

    Hey, what happened to peak demand?

  3. Plantagenet on Sat, 7th Dec 2013 7:16 am 

    Drill baby drill is working

  4. BillT on Sat, 7th Dec 2013 12:31 pm 

    Goldman Sachs … a plague that needs killing.

    Reuters … one of the plague carriers.

  5. J-Gav on Sat, 7th Dec 2013 2:36 pm 

    You’re right Plant, it is. It’s working to put off the day of reckoning a little bit longer while piling more greenhouse gasses into the atmosphere. Is that really the best option we have?

  6. rockman on Sat, 7th Dec 2013 3:09 pm 

    P – “Drill baby drill is working”. Actually what’s working is $95+/bbl oil. One more foolish report that offers increased shale production if oil prices fall significantly. This is an insult even to folks that have only gotten thru Econ 101.

  7. shortonoil on Sat, 7th Dec 2013 4:02 pm 

    “First, he writes, the boom in U.S. shale oil output should keep oil prices in the United States low and lead to a “substantial acceleration” in its economic activity.”

    The last time I looked, the only known way to produce energy from petroleum was through a combustion process (growing algae on it doesn’t count). More than half of the shale oil produced is used as a diluent for bitumen, extra-heavy oil, and as a chemical feed stock. Paint thinner is one of those products, and you don’t get much energy out of paint thinner unless you accidentally burn your house down with it.

    Shale oil is a net “zero” energy source, and since all economic activity requires energy to be performed, shale does nothing for the general economy. “substantial acceleration” is a little bit of an exaggeration!
    Of course, we are dealing with the “vampire squid”, who is likely just talking their book.

  8. AWB on Sat, 7th Dec 2013 9:39 pm 

    Goldman can always be counted on to say stuff that is exclusively in their own self interest. They’re a negative barometer.

  9. hankster on Sun, 8th Dec 2013 12:27 am 

    With the reversal of the pipeline from Cushing, OK to Port Arthur, TX, refined oil products are no longer flowing north to the center of the country, where there is currently a glut from Bakken and other shalesand from Canada. Instead we can hear Ross Perot’s “giant sucking sound” as American and Canadian oil bothpass through the funnel on the way to the Gulf to be refined and shipped to Europe, where the price is better. With the coming loss of this oil to Americans,the price of WTI has jumped about $7 or $8 per barrel, and the cost of gasoline has jumped. The cost of fuel for consumers has jumped in the US and will fall in Europe, while the US will have to replace the oil products shipped offshore with new crude from the Middle East and elsewhere. The oil companies gain and the US consumer loses. And, the ratio of imported crude to domestic will switch back, against the foreign and economic policies of the US.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *