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Energy markets - All latest updates

Oil spill

As the oil price plunges, gloom and ill-will, oddly, abound

Dec 15th 2014

BE CAREFUL what you wish for. After years of grumbles about a historically high

oil price, the cost of crude has tumbled. But cries of woe are outnumbering the

shouts of joy. Exporters, oil-company shareholders and industry suppliers are

all contemplating a future of oil at $60 a barrel or below. So too are all the

people who lent money to them. Markets are pricing in the pain and pessimism

immediately, while seeming to discount the future gains to energy users.

Russia s currency is at a record low, falling below 60 roubles to the dollar on

December 15th. Indonesia s rupiah is at its weakest for six years. The FTSE

100, a London-based stock market index dominated by extractive-industry shares,

had its worst week since August 2011, with a 6.3% fall. European equities

across the continent suffered their biggest weekly loss in more than three

years. Emerging market stocks are also down to a nine-month low.

Over the weekend Abdallah Salem el-Badri, secretary general of the Organisation

of Oil Exporting Countries, (OPEC), a cartel which produces 40% of the world s

oil, said he saw no grounds for production cuts. "The decision has been made.

Things will be left as is," he said. That was the first official comment from

OPEC since its meeting in Vienna at the start of this month, at which it

decided not to try to curb production in order to support prices.

That will be little comfort to those squeezed by the 50% fall in the price of

oil from its peak three years ago. Mr el-Badri says he believes that the drop

is excessive. "The fundamentals should not lead to this dramatic reduction [in

price]," he said. OPEC was "assessing the situation" to determine the real

reasons behind the decrease.

That assessment should not take too long. Increased efficiency, weak economic

growth and the use of alternative energy sources are all dampening demand. The

International Energy Agency (IEA), an intergovernmental body which represents

the industrialised economies that consume oil and gas, has cut its forecast. It

believes that demand will grow only by 0.9 million barrels a day (mb/d) in 2015

to 93.3 mb/d.

Weak demand is only a minor factor, though. The biggest cause of the falling

price is rising supply from non-OPEC countries, particularly from America. The

IEA believes that American supply will raise total non-OPEC production by a

record 1.9 mb/d in 2015. In theory, lower oil prices will curb that. Spending

on new projects is falling, chilling the prospects for jobs and profits.

But such effects come with a lag. Once wells are drilled, it makes sense to

pump them. As the IEA notes "Today s oil spending cuts will dent supply just

not right now." The short-term outlook for American shale oil production, known

as "light tight oil", remains unchanged it reckons, so long as the producers do

not actually go bust (and perhaps not even then--someone else will buy the

well). The only place where oil production is likely to fall immediately, it

reckons, is Russia, where the combination of sanctions and a collapsing

currency may trim production.

So news that fighting has closed two oil-export terminals in Libya something

that would normally have spooked markets has cheered them instead. Libya is a

small oil producer, with about 900,000 barrels a day (b/d), around half its

peacetime production. But the belief that geopolitical risk is not dead has put

a little resilience back into prices.

The burning question for those hit by falling prices is what if anything OPEC

and other producers are going to do. The answer so far seems to be "not much".

Russia (a non-member), Venezuela and other hard-pressed countries want an

emergency meeting of OPEC. But the Saudis and their Gulf allies the biggest

force in the cartel are not interested. They prefer to keep market share. Only

a real commitment from the non-OPEC countries to make production cuts

themselves would spur the Saudis to turn off the pumps. There seems little

chance of that right now.

In theory, lower prices should boost demand. That is the assumption of research

by the International Monetary Fund (IMF), which suggests that a 25% drop in oil

prices boosts oil demand by around 0.4 mb/d. But the IEA disputes that. It

thinks that some of the falling demand is structural, not cyclical. And

governments may respond to the falling prices to cut subsidies. China,

Indonesia, Kuwait, India, Thailand, Egypt and Malaysia have all taken this

step. Kuwait has announced plans to triple diesel and kerosene prices (though

not gasoline) in 2015. That will help keep demand weak.

So long as the era of excess supply and declining profits continues, rivets are

popping. European refining margins are coming under pressure, because American

competitors, stoked by cheap crude oil which cannot be exported, are sending

what some call a "diesel tsunami" across the Atlantic. In Britain, thousands of

jobs in the offshore oil and gas industry are at risk. Total full-year output

for the entire North Sea is expected to decline to 840,000 b/d, its lowest

level since 1977.

Hundreds of billions of dollars of investment are needed to extract the

remaining reserves. Wood Mackenzie, a consultancy, says 32 potential European

oilfield developments that could produce 4.9 billion barrels of oil may be

mothballed if prices fall below $60 per barrel. BP, a London-based energy

company, has already cut $1 billion from its capital expenditure plans. Other

oil majors are following suit.

But such ructions are mild compared with Russia, where Rosneft, the partly

state-owned oil giant, has been bailed out with cheap central bank cash to

prevent it defaulting on its debts. But at least Russia has the

foreign-currency reserves to do this: countries such as Venezuela may not be so

lucky. However much oilmen may hope that the price will eventually recover, for

now their woes are mounting.