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Energy Price Outlook

Oil prices could trade in a mixed direction this week, with a small pullback toward $91.50 possible in WTI. Pressure may be offered by a developing bearish divergence on the stochastics oscillator in both WTI and Brent, as well as by weakness in oil demand, and Tuesday’s monthly EIA report which showed 2014 supply growth outpacing demand by 0.35 mb/d. The market has performed well in the last few weeks on improvements in economic data. Housing and the Philadelphia Fed surveys are reported on Thursday and may provide the next potential for bullish enthusiasm. Other support will come from weakness in the dollar and increased appetite for risk. We’d look for a rebound in WTI after a test of $91.50 as well as a narrowing in the Brent-WTI spread. We favor holding our June WTI-Brent trade entered on Jan 4th at -$14.25 with a target at -$8.00.

 

Continuation WRI Crude Oil

 

WTI finished 26 cents lower on Friday while Brent ended down $1.25. The markets traded in negative territory for most of the session as pressure came from Chinese inflation data, which was 0.2% above expectations at 2.5%. Inflation bottomed at 1.7% in October, which now suggests that the Chinese gov’t may have less reason to add stimulus going forward. Pressure also came from a lack of upside follow-through in the U.S. stocks market following Thursday’s push to new five-year highs in the S&P 500. There was an update on the Seaway pipeline whereby Genscape said that it detected increased power consumption at pump stations along the line beginning late on Thursday. That added pressure to an already weak Brent market and narrowed its spread with WTI.

 

Most other news was positive not only on Friday but during the week as well, and could keep energy prices buoyed in the near-term. A sense of excitement began to build about the global economy, as U.S. data showed the lowest level of continuing jobless claims in 4 1/2 years. The ECB left rates unchanged on Thursday in a decision that was unanimous. That compared to the previous meeting where several members wanted to cut rates. The press conference that followed mentioned that stabilization and confidence are returning to financial markets, and that positive contagion may soon take place in Europe. Japan unveiled a huge $117B stimulus plan on Friday, which was the second largest since WWII. The election of Abe several weeks ago foretold the new accommodative actions, which may also include the BOJ adopting a 2.0% inflation target at its Jan 22nd meeting. Such measures show that liquidity remains in place globally, which should help commodity prices. Investors believe in the improvement, as a debt auction by Spain was oversubscribed. Spanish 10-year yields fell below 5% for the first time since March ’12. Inflows to U.S. stocks and ETFs in the first week of the year were the biggest since June 2008 at $18B and surpassed the largest increase of 2012 of $11.4B. The dollar fell to a 10- month low against the euro.

 

Fundamental news was generally positive too, as Syncrude Canada cut its January production forecast by 600,000 bbls to 10.0 mln from 10.6 mln previously. Additionally, Saudi Arabia cut its oil output by 5% in December to a 19-month low of 9.025 mb/d. Tuesday’s monthly report by the EIA showed that 2013 demand was revised up by 110 kb/d and there were upward adjustments to price forecasts. Brent goes to $105/bbl in 2013 from $104/bbl, while WTI was lifted to $90/bbl from $88/bbl. Negatives on the fundamental side came from a large expected increase in 2014 oil production which outpaced the gain in oil demand. Pressure also came from weak total demand in the weekly Wednesday report. Overall, it appears as though sentiment is putting more weight on economic improvements than the mixed fundamental condition.

 

Natural Gas

Friday’s trade settled 13.4 cents higher as the focus remained on the possibility that recent cold temperatures may result in an inventory change this week that is larger than the -144 bcf of the five-year average. Our first impression is that it could show something on the order of -175 bcf, but we’ll adjust that on Monday when we get more complete weather data. Earthsat predicted colder weather in the Northeast and Great Lakes from Jan 21st-25th which helped boost Friday’s trade. However, NOAA’s latest 8-14 day map removed the area of below-normal temperatures in western portions of the country. Friday’s COT report showed that managed money accounts subtracted 5,060 contracts from their net short, while non-commercials subtracted 7,468 contracts. That may help to explain the rally at the end of the week, but wasn’t large enough to suggest that large funds are exiting their bearish strategies.

 

Despite the strength of the last two sessions, key resistance between $3.32 and $3.53 could hold the market in the near- term. We’d look for potential bearish action close to the $3.53 resistance level this week to think about a possible short position. NOAA’s warmer maps on Friday afternoon are one point of potential pressure, as is Tuesday’s monthly EIA report which showed a wider surplus in the supply/demand balance for 2013. Demand was revised up 0.26 bcf/day while supply was increased 0.50 bcf/day. Thus, the supply/demand balance moved to a surplus of 1.36 bcf/day from 1.12 bcf/day previously. Things get better in 2014, with demand falling 0.24 bcf/day over 2013 levels and supply falling by 1.15 bcf/day. The balance went to a surplus of 0.45 bcf/day from 2013’s 1.36 bcf/day. However, the market will still have to contend with another peak storage issue at the end of the injection season sometime in November. That may cause more weight to be put on the bearish 2013 numbers than the bullish ones of 2014.

 

Weather Charts

Global Economic & Dollar News

  • Japan’s Gov’t Unveiled a new ¥2.2T ($117B) stimulus plan which it expects to boost economic growth by 2%. It was the second largest stimulus since WWII. Expectations are growing that the BOJ will adopt a 2.0% inflation target at its Jan 22nd policy meeting.
  • Chinese CPI was +2.5% vs. +2.3% expected and +2.0% previously. Inflation bottomed at 1.7% in October.
  • Fed’s Kocherlakota said that monetary policy may be too tight. Said that inflation will run below the Fed’s target of 2.0% over the next two years and the unemployment rate will remain elevated.
  • U.S. Trade Deficit increased to $48.73B from $42.06B previously. Imports were $231.28B vs. $222.87B while exports were $182.55B vs. $180.81B.
  • Fed’s Plosser said that Fed easing may backfire while fueling inflation. The benefits of QE don’t exceed the costs.  Said that the U.S. needs to solve its fiscal problems.
  • Inflows to stock funds and ETFs totaled $18B in the week ending Wednesday Jan 9th. It was the biggest inflow since June 2008 and compared to 2012’s net inflow of $3B. The biggest one-week inflow in 2012 was 11.4B.

 

Energy News

  • The IEA said that oil demand in OECD Europe will drop 190 kb/d in 2013 after falling 510 kb/d in 2012, with consumption the lowest since at least the early 1990’s. It said that the decline is due to improved energy efficiency, the rise of alternative energy, and the slumping economy. Demand in non-OECD Asia, Middle East, and Latin America are expected to grow.
  • Genscape said that it detected increased power consumption at pump stations along the Seaway pipeline late on Thursday. On Friday morning, it said that the pipeline had operated at reduced rates for a period of four  hours.
  • Crude Oil Rig Counts were +5 last week while natural gas rigs were -5. Horizontals were +7 while verticals were -20.

 

Weekly Oil Rigs

 

Upcoming Events

Tue - API Inventories (4:30pm EST) Wed - Iran-IAEA Meeting

Wed - EIA Weekly Oil Inventories (10:30am EST) Thu - IEA’s Monthly Report

Thu - Natural Gas Inventories (10:30am EST) Jan 20th - German Local Election

Jan 29-30 - FOMC Meeting

Feb 12th - EIA’s Short-Term Outlook

Feb 24-25 - Italian election Mar 1st - Sequester Begins May 31st - OPEC Meeting

 

Analysis

EIA Inventory Preview

The oil stocks number this week may reflect a more decisive change in direction from recent weeks where oil stocks fell sharply and products witnessed strong increases. Oil stocks typically gain throughout the first five months of the year after liquidations take place in December. If that’s indeed the case again this year, oil stocks could witness a larger increase than that suggested by the five-year average as late-2012 conditions unwind. An 11.1 MB drawdown was reported in the last week of December and reflected refineries’ intentions to convert raw crude into products. A slowdown in utilization coupled with high levels of imports should create an above-average increase this week. Cushing stocks could increase again this week, as the Seaway pipeline was closed for part of the week in front of Friday’s ramp-up. Cushing should level off or begin to fall with next week’s data.

 

Gasoline inventories have gained 10.0 MB in the last two weeks while distillates increased 11.4 MB. High levels of utilization have been partly to blame and should begin to pull back a bit this week, in our view. Lower levels of production should add pressure to stocks, but demand has been weak as well and may prevent a drawdown. Distillate stocks have benefitted from higher production and weak demand but may receive pressure this week from lower production and continued exports.

 

Our early view of natural gas inventories is a draw of 175 bcf.

 

EIA Inventory

 

Editor’s Note: Daily Energy Report readers who are equity investors/traders only can gain access to the energy space through the following exchange traded funds (ETFs).
WTI Crude OIL

United States Oil (USO, quote)

Power Shares DB Oil Fund (DBO, quote)

Brent Crude Oil

United States Brent Oil Fund (BNO, quote)

Natural Gas

United States Natural Gas Fund (UNG, quote)

United States 12 Month Natural Gas Fund (UNL, quote)

First Trust ISE-Revere Natural Gas Index Fund (FCG, quote)

Coal

Market Vectors Global Coal Index (KOL, quote)

Power Shares Global Coal Portfolio (PKOL, quote)

 

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Formed in 2007, OTC Global Holdings is headquartered in Houston and New York, with additional offices in Chicago, Jersey City, London and Louisville. It is a leading independent interdealer broker in over the counter commodities and the largest liquidity provider to CME ClearPort and ICE Clear U.S. Through its subsidiaries the company holds a dominant market share in the U.S. and Canadian natural gas markets, the U.S. power markets, crude oil and crude oil options, crude oil products and crude oil product options, agricultural and soft commodities, as well as structured weather and emission derivatives. The company serves more than 250 institutional clients, including 45 members of the Fortune 500, and transacts at over 150 different commodity delivery points. To learn more about the company, please visit http://www.otcgh.com or go to http://bit.ly/OTCYouTube.

 

IMPORTANT NOTICE:  Trading of commodities and commodity futures and options, and other commodity derivatives has substantial risk of loss, and is not suitable or appropriate for all persons.  Past results are not necessarily indicative of future results.  The information in this piece is based on sources that are believed to be reliable, but it is not warranted to be accurate or complete, and no performance or results from use of the information are warranted.  This piece is not a solicitation or offer to purchase or sell commodities or commodity derivatives. Opinions expressed herein are subject to change without notice.

 

 

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