WTI crude found resistance at $81 per barrel
this morning,
countering a sell-off as traders discount geopolitical risk.
Despite Strong Production
Momentum, US Oil Majors Fail to Impress
- ExxonMobil and Chevron reported
a combined net profit of $13.7 billion in their Q1 2024 earnings,
$8.2 and $5.5 billion respectively, as oil majors saw squeezed
natural gas prices and lower refinery margins, marginally offset by
higher oil production.
- ExxonMobil’s Q1 results have disappointed the market, prompting
the largest intraday decline since the announcement of its $60
billion Pioneer takeover, after lower-than-expected refining
results.
- Chevron, on the other hand, posted better-than-anticipated results
with adjusted Q1 profits of $2.93 per share, producing more than 2
million b/d of crude despite a stagnant Permian basin output.
- Overperforming their European peers, Exxon and Chevron manage to
fight over the future of Guyana’s Stabroek block in a soon-to-start
arbitration, following Chevron’s takeover of Hess Energy and its 30%
stake in the project.
Market Movers
- Brazil’s national oil company Petrobras (NYSE:PBR)
is
looking
for four drilling rigs to be used in onshore exploration wells
planned for 2025, marking a U-turn from its previous divestment of
onshore assets.
- US oil major Chevron (NYSE:CVX)
signed a
development deal with Namibia’s state-owned NAMCOR, taking a 80%
working interest in the offshore block 82 in the Walvis Basin,
seeking to join TotalEnergies and Shell in the country.
- US activist investor Elliott Management has
reportedly
bought a minority stake in Japanese trading house Sumitomo
(TYO:8053) worth several hundred million dollars, joining Warren
Buffett whose Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE:BRK) owns 9%
by now.
Tuesday, April 30,
2024
The de-escalation of the Israel-Iran conflict and ongoing ceasefire
talks in the Egyptian capital city of Cairo that could potentially
halt hostilities in Gaza have lowered the geopolitical risk priced
into oil prices, dragging Brent back to the $88 per barrel mark.
Higher crude supply thanks to Mexico’s U-turn on its export cuts and
hotter-than-expected US inflation data have added some bearish
sentiment into the markets, with no real macroeconomic or
geopolitical upside on the horizon now.
Houthis Strike Ships Again. Yemen’s Houthi
militias have
targeted
four ships in a string of missile attacks this week, including the
MSC Orion container ship partly owned by Israeli businessman Eyal
Ofer, the Greek-operated Cyclades commercial tanker and two US
destroyers passing through the Indian Ocean.
G7 Agrees on 2035 Deadline for Coal.
Energy ministers from G7 countries
reached
an agreement to shut down their coal-fired power plants by 2035,
with Germany and Japan expected to do most of the heavy lifting with
coal currently accounting for more than 25% of their electricity
generation.
Doubts Emerge on TMX May 1 Start. As
shippers have expressed their concerns regarding the readiness of
the TMX pipeline to start commercial operations on May 1, Canada’s
CER said there are still six leave-to-open
applications
left to consider for pump stations and pipeline spreads.
Mexico Reverses Crude Export Cuts.
Mexico’s state-controlled oil company Pemex has
walked back
its crude export cuts for May after both the Salina Cruz and
Veracruz refineries suffered fires over the past two weeks,
eliminating the necessity to lower May exports by the planned
330,000 b/d.
India Goes for Canadian Crude. Reliance
Industries, India’s largest refiner,
bought a
VLCC cargo of Canadian crude from Shell (LON:SHEL)
for July delivery, marking the first ever purchase of TMX volumes by
an Indian buyer, with reports suggesting the price was set at a $6
per barrel discount to ICE Brent.
Saudi Arabia on the Hunt for Lithium. As
Riyadh builds up its muscle in the metals industry, Saudi Arabia is
looking to lock in supply deals to source lithium into its nascent
EV battery industry, with media reports
suggesting
Chile might be the preferred country for future investments.
ExxonMobil Eyes Turkish LNG Opportunities.
Turkey is
negotiating
with US oil major ExxonMobil (NYSE:XOM) to derisk
its LNG supply from the usual sellers (Algeria, Qatar, US) and
create a “new supply portfolio”, aiming for a 2.5 mtpa LNG term deal
should they agree on commercial terms.
Fading Middle East Risks Lower Oil Appetite.
Hedge funds and other money managers sold the equivalent of 95
million barrels in the six key crude options and futures in the week
ending
April 23, the largest weekly drop since October 2023 as lower
Israel-Iran war risks led to weaker risk appetite.
Drought Risks Loom Large Over Copper.
According
to a PWC report, more than half of the world’s copper mines in
Chile, Zambia and elsewhere are in areas exposed to drought risks
over the next decades, stoking fears that climate-related
disruptions could add to the already bullish case on copper prices.
Argentina Could be The Next Oil Frontier.
A consortium led by Norway’s Equinor (NYSE:EQNR)
will drill
a deepwater exploration well off Argentina’s northern coast, with
the Argerich wildcat becoming the first ever deepwater well in the
country, potentially opening up an untapped frontier.
Southeast Asia Struggles with Scorching Heat.
Record temperatures across Thailand, the Phillippines, Vietnam
and other Southeast Asian countries have
brought
regional power grids to their limits, with PTT and PetroVietnam
looking to procure prompt LNG cargoes to alleviate the pressure.
Australia Tightens Mining Investment Rules.
In a thinly veiled rebuke to China, Australia’s government is
set to
tighten
scrutiny of foreign investment into the mining and refining of
critical minerals, having already blocked such a stake purchase into
Northern Minerals last year.
Cocoa Prices Continue Their Wild Ride. The
best-performing commodity of 2024 so far, cocoa futures saw their
largest intraday drop in 65 years this week, dropping 17% on Monday
to $8,930 per metric tonne, after ICE increased margin requirements
for market participants.
Tom Kool
Editor, Oilprice.com
Green Play Ammonia™, Yielder® NFuel Energy.
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