The Economist - UK (2022-03-26)

(Antfer) #1

74 Finance&economics TheEconomistMarch26th 2022


Oil

A volatilemix


A


lmosta monthafterRussia’sinvasion
ofUkrainesenttheoilpricesurging,
turbulenceinoneoftheworld’smostcru­
cialcommoditiesmarketsshowslittlesign
ofcomingtoanend.Thepriceofa barrelof
Brentcrudeoilsurgedto $121onMarch
23rd,asstormdamagehaltedexportsfrom
a Russianpipeline.Overthepastfortnight
ithaswhipsawedfroma peakof$128toas
lowas$98.Thepandemic­relatedchaosof
2020 aside,theovxindexofoil­marketvo­
latilityhasrarelybeenhigherinthepast
decadethanit hasbeenthismonth.
The swings reflect the interplay be­
tweenthegeopoliticalandeconomicforc­
esbuffetingtheworldtoday,fromwarto
risinginterestratesandcovid­19.Evenbe­
yondtheoutcomeoftheconflictinUk­
raine,therearethreebigsourcesofuncer­
taintyfortheoilmarket.Thefirstiswhat
themembersoftheOrganisationofthePe­
troleumExportingCountries(opec) doas
theWest’ssanctionsbiteandRussianpro­
ductionisshunned.Americahasbanned
importsofRussianoil;evenincountries
thathavenottakenthatstep,prospective
buyersarestrugglingtotransactwiththe
Russianfinancialintermediariesthathave
beencutofffromtheplumbingofglobalfi­
nanceasa resultofsanctions,andmayfear
freshsanctionstocome.
OnMarch16ththeInternationalEnergy
Agency,anofficialforecaster,saidthatin­
ternationalmarketscouldfacea shortfall
of3mbarrelsofoilperdayfromAprilasa
consequence.(Theworldconsumedabout
98mbarrelsa daylastyear.)Thedisruption
inwhatwasoncea fluidglobalmarketis
best illustrated by thegap between the
pricesoftheBrentbenchmarkandUrals

oil.OnJanuary31stitstoodatabout 60
cents per barrel. By March 23rd it was
around$30.
Thisleavesa greatdealofpowerinthe
handsofthetwocountriesthataremost
abletooffseta chunkoftheRussianshort­
fall: Saudi Arabia and the United Arab
Emirates.Sofar,bothhaveresistedpleasto
raiseoutputsubstantially.Ata meetingin
earlyMarch,opecanditsallies(including
Russia)merelyconfirmedexistingplansto
raiseoveralloutputby400,000barrelsper
day.Theirnextgathering,attheendofthis
month,willbewatchedclosely.Evensmall
shiftsinpublicpronouncementshavethe
potentialtosetoffswingsintheoilprice.
Thesecondseamofuncertaintyrelates
tothecapacityofAmericanshale­oilpro­
ductiontomeetthesupplyshortfall.Dur­
ingthefirstfrackingboom,whichlasted
fromaround 2010 to2015,Americanoutput
surged,causingtheoilpricetoslumpand
weakeningopec‘shand.Butconditionsin
theAmericaneconomyhavechangeddra­
matically since,leavinganalystsandin­
dustryinsidersdoubtfulthatshalecanrise
tothechallenge.
Fora start,financingconditionsareless
encouraging than they were during the
boomin2010­15.TheFederalReserveisex­
pectedtoraiseinterestratesseveraltimes
this year and next: two­year Treasury
yieldsarejustabove2%,comparedwith
the sub­1% levels that persisted during
mostofthepastboom.Anotherconstraint
onproductioncomesfromAmerica’stight
labour market.Just over128,000 people
wereemployedinoil­and­gasextractionin
February,downfrommorethan200,000at
the heightofthe frackingboominlate


  1. With the headline unemployment
    rateat3.8%andemployersstrugglingtofill
    vacanciesalready,findingseveraltensof
    thousandsofworkerstomoveacrossthe
    countrywillbenomeanfeat.
    Theindustry’sattitudeshavealsoshift­
    ed.BothAmericanproducersandtheirpo­
    tentialcreditorsarenowfarmorecautious
    aboutborrowing.Banksandassetmanag­
    ers areboundby stricterenvironmental


standards.Thatisonefactordrivingcosts
higher.Inthefirstquarterof 2022 energy­
explorationandproductionfirmsreported
thesteepestincreaseinlease­operatingex­
penses(ie,therecurringcostsofoperating
wells)inatleastsixyears,accordingtoa
surveyby theDallasFed. Drillersthem­
selves,havingstruggledto makeconsis­
tentprofitsinthepast,arefarkeeneron
capitaldisciplinethistime,too.
Thethirdcomponentofthevolatilityin
theoilpriceistodowithdemand.China’s
“zero­covid”strategyisbeingtestedtoan
extremedegree.Thecountryhasrecorded
itshighestnumbersofcasessincethepan­
demicbegan,andbigcitiesarefacingroll­
inglockdownsagain(seenextstory).Platts
Analytics,a commodities­researchhouse,
suggeststhattherestrictionscouldcutoil
demand by 650,000 barrels per day in
March,roughlyequivalenttoVenezuela’s
oiloutput.
Evenbeforethelockdownsbegan,there
were signs of a deceleration in China’s
economy,particularlyinthepropertysec­
tor.Any sign thatthe slowdown inthe
world’sbiggestimporterofenergyisbe­
comingbroad­basedwouldmeanmoretu­
multforcommodities.
The machinations ofopec, the shale
calculusinAmerica,andthehealthofthe
Chineseeconomy:anyoneofthesesourc­
esofuncertaintywouldusuallybesuffi­
cienttogeneratepriceswings.Together,
theymakea flammablemix.n

H ONGKONG
Thethreebiguncertaintiesclouding
theoilmarket

Toingandfroing
Brentcrudeoilprice,$ perbarrel

Source: Refinitiv Datastream

1

140
120
100
80
60
40
20
0

202 2022

MFJDNOSAJJMAMFJ

Ural alone
Price difference between Brent crude and
Urals oil, $ per barrel

Source:RefinitivDatastream

2

↓ Urals cheaper than Brent

0

-10

-20

-30

202 2022

MFJDNOSAJJMAMFJ

InvestinginChina

Departing


thoughts


S


tate mediahave  not  tried  to  hide  the
fact that billions of dollars in global in­
vestors’ funds have drained away from Chi­
na  in  recent  weeks.  They  have  attributed
the  outflows—$11.5bn  since  the  start  of
March—to  volatility  in  global  markets,  a
hawkish Federal Reserve and the impact of
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine on global sup­
ply  chains.  One  government  publication
downplayed  the  seriousness  of  the  situa­
tion  and  speculated  that  foreign  money
will soon come pouring back in.
Indeed,  China’s  markets  have  experi­
enced  short  spells  of  outflows  in  recent
years  only  to  see  them  reverse  quickly,
usually within two months. Onshore mar­
kets have mainly been a sure bet since the
inclusion  of  many  mainland­traded  secu­
rities  in  several  global  indices,  such  as
msci’s  flagship  emerging­markets  index,
starting in 2018. Tens of billions of dollars’

Why foreign punters are feeling jittery
about China
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