Hurricane season is back, and oil markets are on edge as the earliest
category 5 hurricane to form at this time of the year moves toward
Jamaica.
- As commodity markets started to talk
politics following last week’s Biden-Trump debate, analysts seek to gauge
the impact of US gasoline prices on voter satisfaction.
- Nationwide gasoline prices are 3-4% lower year-on-year, with US gasoline
consumption trending lower this year, gasoline cracks being a hefty $10
per barrel lower than in 2023 and inventories some 12 million barrels
higher.
- However, swing states such as Arizona, Georgia or Nevada saw lower
gasoline
consumption
than the US average, at 551 gallons per year compared to the federal
average of 576 gallons, whilst also tending to pay more since Biden took
office ($1.12/USG vs $1.06/USG nationally).
- Given that Trump-voting states tend to be more exposed to pump price
volatility, due to them being more rural or having a lower average
disposable income, even lower gasoline prices might be a problem for
President Biden.
Market Movers
- Oilfield services giant SLB (NYSE:SLB) is winding down
operations in Libya from July 1 as more than a dozen oil companies owe it
some $240 million in unpaid dues.
- Spanish oil major Repsol (BME:REP) is
considering
selling up to a 49% interest in its assets in the Eagle Ford play in
Texas, currently producing over 50,000 boe/d, hoping to garner at least $1
billion from the sale.
- Italy’s energy giant ENI (BIT:ENI) is
planning to
divest more than $4 billion in upstream assets, with projects in Indonesia
and Cyprus amongst the most likely candidates following its recent asset
sale in Alaska.
Tuesday, July 02, 2024
Oil traders have all become professional meteorologists in July, with the
market following the rapid start to this year’s Atlantic hurricane season.
Hurricane Beryl is threatening Jamaica as it moves towards the US-Mexican
coast, the earliest category 5 hurricane to form at this time of the year.
Meanwhile, Israel-Lebanon tensions keep the geopolitical risk premium
priced in as well, lifting ICE Brent to $87 per barrel.
Saudi Arabia Bets on Natural Gas. Saudi Arabia’s
national oil firm Saudi Aramco (TADAWUL:2222) has
signed
contracts worth more than $25 billion for the 2nd phase of its giant 229
TCf Jafurah gas field and the 3rd phase of expanding its main gas grid,
seeking to use more gas in power generation.
US Walks Back SPR Replenishment Vow. The Biden
administration has not awarded any contracts in its recent solicitation to
buy an additional 6 million barrels of sour crude to the US SPR by the end
of 2024, with seemingly no bids coming in below the cut-off level of
$79.99 per barrel.
Russia Extends Gasoline Export Ban Waiver. The
Russian government has waived its ban on gasoline exports for another
month until July 31, saying that fuel stockpiles are sufficient despite
repeated Ukrainian drone strikes on refineries, bringing some 150,000 b/d
of the fuel to the markets.
China Creates New Driller for Tight Oil. Beijing
is
setting up a
new state-controlled entity that would group current producers, combining
CNPC, Sinopec, and also steel and industrial equipment firms, to search
for ultra-deep productive reservoirs and tackle tight oil deposits.
Biden’s LNG Pause Challenged in Court. A federal
judge in Lake Charles, Louisiana ruled that the Biden administration’s
pausing of approval for LNG terminals contravened the US Natural Gas Act
and was thus
unconstitutional,
with the Energy Department evaluating its next steps.
Total Clinches Major Deal in Africa. French
energy major TotalEnergies (NYSE:TTE) has
signed an
agreement to acquire a 60% interest in Block STP02 of Sao Tome and
Principe, bolstering its offshore position in West Africa even as
investment into neighboring Nigeria is stalling.
Beijing Stops Publishing Solar Data. Attesting
to the dire situation in China’s solar sector, straining from
overcapacity, Chinese authorities have
stopped
publishing data that show the extent to which power from solar and wind
plants is being wasted amidst constrained grids.
US Air Travel Still Has Room to Grow. According
to TSA statistics, US passenger air travel rose to 19.75 million
passengers in the week ending 29 June, marking the highest-ever weekly
reading and the second time this year already that an all-time high is
set.
Hedge Funds Hoard Cobalt as Prices Plunge. Hedge
funds such as Anchorage Capital and Squarepoint Capital have been
building
physical positions in cobalt by buying up material, eyeing the wide
contango, and the ensuing opportunity for “cash-and-carry” trades into
2025.
Rio Tinto Seeks to Avoid Mongolian Collapse.
Global mining giant Rio Tinto (ASX:RIO) is in
negotiations
with workers at its Oyu Tolgoi mine in Mongolia, one of the largest copper
deposits worldwide, after the company cut wages there by as much as 80%.
South Africa Braces for Major Exodus. France’s
oil giant TotalEnergies (NYSE:TTE) is considering
relinquishing
its acreage in offshore South Africa, having discovered 4.5 TCf of gas
assets with the Luiperd and Brulpadda discoveries, however hindered by
government red-tape and regulations.
AngloAmerican Is Having a Tumultuous 2024.
Shares of mining major AngloAmerican (LON:AAL)
dropped almost
6% this week after a methane explosion caused a fire at the Grosvenor
metallurgical coal mine, accounting for about 30% of the company’s annual
coking output.
Chinese Manufacturing Paints a Bleak Outlook.
China’s factory activity
contracted for
a second straight month in June, with the PMI index coming in unchanged at
49.5, with trade tensions vis-à-vis the United States and Europe weighing
on new export orders.
Tom Kool
Editor, Oilprice.com
Green Play Ammonia™, Yielder® NFuel Energy.
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