5 Oil Market Factors To Watch In 2021

 | Dec 31, 2020 04:04PM ET

As 2020 ends and 2021 begins, it's customary to make predictions. However, predictions are at least as likely to be wrong as right. (See Daniel Kahneman’s work or just consider if anyone could have predicted 2020 accurately).

Rather than rely on forecasts, judicious traders will keep track of what is happening in the industry and adjust their perception as events unfold. Here are five factors that traders and oil market watchers should follow particularly carefully in 2021:

h2 1. U.S. Government restrictions on oil and gas exploration, production and exports/h2

During the presidential election season, a popular refrain among Democratic candidates was that in order to combat global climate change they would hamper the ability of the oil and gas industry to produce, transport and sell fossil fuels. Then-candidates Joe Biden and Kamala Harris both said they would support measures to curb fracking, which provides a great deal of the oil and gas produced in the U.S.

Biden was inconsistent in his statements. At one point during the campaign, he promised he lack of clarity over what energy policies a Biden/Harris administration will support.

One issue to keep an eye on is a ban on new leases for oil and gas production on new leasing and new permitting , which could include drilling plans on current leases. This could impact both future production and current production but could also prompt legal fights that might last for years. Some E&P firms have tried to prepare for this prospect by preemptively securing federal leases or focusing their production on privately owned land.

For those watching the market, it is unlikely that new policies would have a significant immediate impact on oil and gas production, but they could alter market perception. Moreover, we could see the effect of such policies on production in the not-so-distant future, depending on the type of regulations.

h2 2. OPEC+ power struggle/h2

The end of 2020 saw an interesting power struggle develop within the OPEC+ group—the UAE and Russia sided together against Saudi Arabia in favor of increasing production. The struggle ended in a compromise favoring Russia and the UAE, whereby OPEC+ will consider gradual increases in production on a monthly basis. The first such meeting will take place on Jan. 4.