Oil Resumes Its Recovery

 | Aug 08, 2016 03:11PM ET

This Great Graphic from Bloomberg shows the September light sweet crude-oil futures contract since peaking in early June near $52.75. It reached a low last week of about $39.20.

The turn last week came on news that although oil inventories rose, gasoline inventories fell dramatically. The recovery seemed to have stalled at the end of last week near $42.40 but was given a new lease on life by reports of an OPEC meeting next week. OPEC President Al-Sada (Qatar) seemed to try to make the most of the informal meeting.

Speculation that it may reach an agreement to freeze output or re-introduce quotas seems a stretch, though of course the usual advocates, like Venezuela and Ecuador, are still pushing their case. Saudi Arabia has argued that it is willing to freeze output if others do so too.

This puts the onus on Iran. Iran's output has risen by about 180k barrels since April and about 600k barrels since the embargo was lifted. Its production is near 3.6 mln barrels a day. Before the sanctions, it was producing 4.0-4.2 mln barrels a day. Assuming rational-actor model, it seems unreasonably optimistic that Iran would participate in an agreement that would not allow it to return to the status-quo ante.

That means an agreement at the year-end OPEC meeting may be a more likely time frame, but even then it may be a stretch. Lingering US sanctions, companies wanting to avoid the situation entirely and the existence of alternatives have slowed Iran's efforts to boost output quicker.

The chart below shows that September light sweet crude oil is nearing its 20-day moving average (~$44.20). It has not closed above this moving average since June 29. Above, there's the 200-day moving average (~$44.20) and the 38.2% retracement of the two-month decline (~$44.35).