June 14, 2019 | 12:30 am
SINGAPORE/HOUSTON — World oil
markets have undergone a U-turn, switching from supply-side risks like OPEC’s
production cuts or US sanctions against producers Iran and Venezuela, analysts
said, to concerns of slowing consumption amid fears of a global recession.
As a result, crude oil prices have
turned a 45% price rally in the first four months of the year into a slump of
more than 15% since late April.
US investment bank Goldman Sachs
said on Wednesday that weakening economic growth and lower oil demand expectations
were “the largest driver of the move lower over the past month” in crude oil
prices.
And with the outlook dim amid trade
disputes — especially the one that has led to an expanding exchange of tariffs
between China and the United States — analysts have revised down their oil
demand growth forecasts.
Fereidun Fesharaki, chairman of
energy consultancy FGE, said the demand slowdown came amid a “general fear of
an economic downturn,” and warning that if the US-China trade dispute
continues, “real signs of economic recession will be seen.”
Due to the economic jitters, FGE
this week revised down its global oil demand growth forecast to 1 million
barrels per day (bpd) from 1.3 million bpd, in line with other recent downward
corrections.
Barclays bank said this week it had
revised down its economic growth outlooks for the United States, China, India
and Brazil, countries that account for more than three-quarters of global oil
demand growth.
The British bank also cut its oil
demand growth forecast by 300,000 bpd to 1 million bpd.
“There is potential for further
downside to demand, which means this will likely be the worst year for oil
demand growth since 2011,” it said.
Bank of America Merrill Lynch said
“global oil demand growth is running at the weakest rate since 2012,” although
it still estimates growth to be around 1.2 million bpd for 2019.
Analysts participating in a May
Reuters oil survey had their most optimistic growth forecasts at around 1.4
million bpd, as against 1.7 million bpd in a January poll.
POTENTIAL RECESSION
The heart of the stuttering demand is an economic slowdown.
The heart of the stuttering demand is an economic slowdown.
Research firm TS Lombard said this
week “export dependent economies in the Pacific Rim and Europe are badly hit
and close to recession,” with the United States also “heading towards slower
growth.”
TS Lombard warned an unresolved
Sino-American trade war “has the potential to trigger a recession in 2020, if
not before.”
The trade war between the United
States and China, the world’s two biggest economies, has already hit global trade
volumes and is starting to show in slowing fuel consumption.
China’s May crude oil imports fell
by 8% from April to 40.23 million tonnes (9.47 million bpd), a chunk bitten out
by the economic slowdown and US sanctions against Iran, one of China’s main oil
suppliers.
China’s car sales fell in May to
1.91 million, down 16.4% from a year earlier, the China Association of
Automobile Manufacturers said on Wednesday, marking an 11th consecutive month
of decline in the world’s largest vehicle market.
Slower demand growth is colliding
with surging production from the United States, which the US Energy Information
Administration expects to average 13.5 million bpd by the end of next year.
The United States is already the
world’s biggest oil producer at 12.4 million bpd, ahead of Russia and Saudi
Arabia.
NOT ALL DOOM & GLOOM
Not all analysts subscribe to a doomsday scenario.
Not all analysts subscribe to a doomsday scenario.
“The ‘death of demand growth’ is
greatly exaggerated, despite the challenges in the global economy,” said Phil
Flynn, analyst at Price Futures Group in Chicago.
Measures by central banks to
stimulate growth, coupled with the recent slide in oil prices, could all
trigger a rebound in demand, he said.
“While economic activity has
recently come in below our economists’ expectations, it remains resilient, and
they (the economists) don’t expect that a sharp further deceleration is
likely,” said Goldman Sachs. — Reuters
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