TheEconomistJune11th 2022 Finance&economics 71
Petrolprices
Squeezeinthe
middle
A
merica’sdrivingseasonhasofficially
begun.Despiterisinginflationandthe
lingeringthreatofthepandemic,motor
istshitthehighwayswithgustooverthe
recentMemorialDaylongweekend.Some
40mAmericanstravelledbyroad,anin
creaseof8.3%onthesameweekenda year
earlier.Thatwanderlustcameevenaspric
esatthepumpwereabout50%abovelast
year’slevels,drivenby anintensesqueeze
onglobalrefining.
Innormaltimes,therefiningbusiness
isa lowmargin,lowdramaadjuncttothe
geopoliticallychargedupstreambusiness
of oil production and the politically
charged downstream business of retail
sales.Refinerstypicallymakeprofitmar
ginsof$510a barrelandoftengothrough
painfulspellsofunprofitability.Thistime,
however, refining is playing a starring
role—themachinationsoftheoilproduc
ingcountries,warinUkraine andsanc
tionsonRussianoilexportsnotwithstand
ing.Marginsformanyrefinershaverock
eted, andbottlenecksinthesectorarepro
pellingglobalpetrolpricesupwards.
Threefactorsexplainwhyrefiningisin
thelimelight.Thefirstisa longtermde
clineininvestment inadvancedecono
mies.Withoildemandintherichworld
forecasttoplungeoverthenexttwode
cades, investorsare unwillingto spend
manybillionsofdollarsonfacilitiesthat
couldbecomestrandedassets.Addingto
thisisenvironmentalpressureonrefining,
whichisseenasespeciallydirty,andregu
lationsinCaliforniaandEuropethatfa
vourgreenerfuels.OutsideChinaandthe
MiddleEast,wherecapacityisexpanding,
refiningcapacityhasplungedbysome3m
barrelsperday(bpd)sincethestartofthe
pandemic,reckonsAlanGelderofWood
Mackenzie,anenergyconsultancy.
Thesecondfactorthathasroiledthere
finingbusinessisChinesepolicymaking.
Chinahashistoricallybeena netexporter
ofrefinedproducts,sendinglargevolumes
tootherAsiancountries.Inanattemptto
fightlocalpollutionandhelpmeetclimate
targets,however,officialshavecutexport
quotasforbigrefinersofgasoline,jetfuel
andotherproductsbymorethan50%this
year.Onofficialplans,Chinaissettostop
exporting mostcarbonintensiverefined
productsaltogetherby2025.Theperverse
resultisthatitissittingonroughly7%of
globalsparecapacityevenastherestofthe
worldthirstsfortransportfuels.
The third big disruptive force is, of
course,Russia’swarinUkraineandthere
sultingsanctionsimposedonitsexportsof
hydrocarbons.America andBritainhave
bannedpurchasesofRussianoil;theeu
hasannounceda partialembargooncrude
imports, including one on refined pro
ductslaterthisyear.Theeffectofallthisis
notclearcut.Bywidespreadaccounts(in
cluding from tankertracking experts),
Russia isnowexportingmore crude oil
thanitdidbeforethewar.It issellinglots
of cutratecrude to India in particular,
whichisimportingover700,000barrelsa
daymorethanit didbeforetheinvasion.
When it comes to refined products,
though,bothofficialsanctionsandthevo
luntary“selfsanctions”embracedbyWest
ernfirmsseemtobebiting.Accordingto
Natasha Kaneva of JPMorgan Chase, a
bank, Russiais sellingroughly 500,000
fewerbarrelsofrefinedproducta daythan
itwasbeforethewar,andmayhavebeen
forcedtoshutdownasmuchas1.4mbpdof
refiningcapacityinMay.Theresultisan
unprecedentedshift,arguesRichardJos
wickofs&pGlobal,a researchfirm:“The
worldhasplentyofrefiningcapacity,but
thesparecapacityismovingintoRussia
andChina.”Asaresult,hereckonsthat
utilisationratesforrefinersintherestof
theworldwillbemuchhigherthanprevi
ouslyenvisioned.
Therefiningcrunchcouldcontinuefor
a whileyet.ThecomingAtlantichurricane
season,whichisforecast tobe stronger
thannormal,mayshutdownrefineriesin
theGulfofMexico.Anotherfactoristhe
precisetimingandintensityofEurope’s
latestroundofsanctionsonRussianoilex
ports.Ifimplementedaggressively,these
couldfurthersqueezethesector.
Marketforcescouldyetsavetheday.
The painful price spikes seen at petrol
pumpswilleventuallycooldemanda lit
tle,andcouldleadtoimprovementsinen
ergyefficiency,bothofwhichwillhelpbal
ancemarkets.
A shiftintradeflowscouldalsocometo
Europe’said.India’sworldclassrefiners,
forinstance,areturningglobalcrisisinto
localopportunity.rbcCapitalMarkets,an
investmentfirm,reckonsthatthecountry
“isbecomingthedefactorefininghubfor
Europe”.Bignewrefineriesarescheduled
tocomeonlinesooninKuwaitandSaudi
Arabia,whichshouldhelpeasetheshort
agestoo.AsMrJoswickobserves, “With
marginsthislarge,everybodyhasanin
centivetorunrefineriesflatout.”n
N EWYORK
Refinersprovidea freshsourceof
dramaforoilmarkets
Thesky’sthelimit
Rocket fuel
Europe, oil-refining margins, $ per barrel
Source:ArgusMedia
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
DNOSAJJMAMFJ
201-21 average
2022
Theeuroarea
Danger zone
F
or thebest part of a decade, rockbot
tom interest rates seemed like a fact of
life in the euro zone—as did low inflation.
Now consumer prices are rising at an an
nual rate exceeding 8%, well above the
European Central Bank’s target of 2%.
Members of the bank’s governing council
have signalled their intent to raise rates
soon, a message they were expected to re
affirm at a monetarypolicy meeting on
June 9th, as we went to press. But the ecb
finds itself in a tricky position: of contend
ing not only with surging prices, which
might warrant rapid rate rises, but also
gloomier growth prospects, which might
warrant patience.
The root cause of both developments is
a severe energyprice crunch. Prices of oil
and natural gas had already been rising be
fore Russia’s invasion of Ukraine; the war
sent them soaring higher still. These price
rises have played a much bigger role in
pushing up consumerprice inflation in
Europe than in America, where stimulus
B ERLIN
Europe’s economy grapples with an
acute energy shock