The Oil Market Is Balanced

 | Oct 14, 2018 03:36AM ET

While oil prices are reaching a 4-year high, continued US output growth and the new Russia-Saudi Arabia oil deal are posing a question to whether the market is entering a new era. Our analysis delves into the demand and supply factors of the oil market, concluding with an outlook for next year.

A modest excess demand should continue over the next months before additional supply capacity is expected to come on-stream. The market is expected to reach a broad balance by the end of this year.

So far in 2018, Brent prices have averaged USD 73/b, up from USD55/b in 2017 and USD44/b in 2016.Prices are up 27% year-to-date, fluctuating around the USD85/b mark in early October.A number of factors have been pushing oil prices more than expected in 2018 from a demand and supply side perspective.

On the demand side, global GDP is on course for its strongest growth since 2011,and spurs robust petroleum consumption. According to the US Department of Energy (DOE), global demand for crude oil is expected to average 100 million barrels per day (mb/d) in 2018.

The outlook for demand growth in 2019 is set to stand on a firm footing. Activity in the US is expected to soften a touch, but this should be offset by sturdy growth in global manufacturing and in most emerging market economies. Overall, the DOE is expecting demand to average 102mb/d in 2019.

On the supply side, there are two different key factors playing out in 2018. First, the US oil output boom associated with the so-called ‘shale revolution’ is set for a temporary slowdown due to infrastructure bottlenecks.While a total of 1mb/d has been added to US output so far this year, limited pipeline capacity in the key shale oil producing region of the Permian Basin in west Texas threatens to restrain supply growth to lower rates than previously anticipated.A jump in ‘drilled but uncompleted wells’ in the Permian (a key gauge of delayed output for shale producers) points to slowing supply growth in the short-term as producers delay output until takeaway capacity is boosted.

Second,major stakeholders of the OPEC+ agreement, including GCC exporters and Russia, have been compliant to the output cuts allocated to them over 2016 and 2017.

Additionally, idiosyncratic supply disruptions are affecting important producers, including OPEC members such as Venezuela and Iran. A deepening economic crisis has pushed Venezuela’s production down in 2018. The US announcement to re-introduce sanctions on Iran is already affecting the Iranian oil industry and Bloomberg estimates that production plummeted between May and September 2018. Such developments are requiring an extra effort from core OPEC+ countries to compensate the losses and balance the markets. Russia and Saudi Arabia emphasized their willingness to balance this fallout in production. Both countries, ahead of the recent meeting in Algiers, agreed to raise their production levels further with Saudi Arabia’s output expected to reach a record high of 11m b/d by end-2018.

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OECD Commercial Oil Inventories (billion barrels)