Oil Demand Has Fallen, but It’s Not All Doom and Gloom

 | Dec 07, 2023 01:52AM ET

  • For all the talk of recession, oil demand has held up relatively well.
  • Although falling demand played a role in the recent oil rout, upside surprises in US and OPEC+ production in addition to speculators selling oil futures en masse are to blame.
  • While Chinese demand growth has failed to meet expectations, US demand in particular remains robust. Both should continue to improve as we enter 2024.
  • Given that speculators are nearly as bearish as they have been in years and oil sentiment overall is as bad as it gets, means we could be setting up for another move into the low $90’s at some point in the months ahead.
  • For now, short-term indicators remain neutral to bearish, so a little more patience is likely required as the oil market healing process continues.
  • h2 Energy Demand Is Holding Up Relatively Well/h2

    Speculative selling within the oil market based on recession fears has been a mainstay within energy markets for nigh on two years now. And, while oil demand has softened of late and this softening did play some role in the recent rout in oil prices, the recent sell-off has been much more a consequence of hedge funds and CTA’s selling crude left, right and center, along with US and OPEC+ production exceeding expectations.

    Although oil demand isn’t shooting the lights out, it isn’t falling off a cliff either. And again, even though Chinese demand growth from their reopening has disappointed to a certain extent and remains below pre-COVID levels, we have seen significant improvements from China throughout the year.

    As we can see below, according to Morgan Stanley, the biggest drivers of crude demand this year have come from China, while jet fuel is the petroleum product whose demand continues to benefit most from the world's slow return to pre-COVID norms. Unsurprisingly, the same cannot be said of European demand as the region continues to struggle with an obvious economic downturn.