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IEA Doesn’t See Oil Markets Balancing Out In 2016

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Posted on Tue, 19 January 2016 16:15 | 0

It is national popcorn day, so plonk yourself down in a chair with a bucket of the stuff and prepare to be entertained; it is a frenetic day in financial markets, which is making for enthralling viewing.

First up, the IEA has completed the trinity of monthly reports on the oil market (OPEC and EIA have already delivered). It makes for fairly grim reading, pointing to ‘persistent oversupply, bloated inventories and a slew of negative economic news‘ as a reason for the recent price drop, while its choice adjective to describe the potential oil market this year is ‘drowning’. The agency projects demand growth of 1.2 million barrels per day in 2016; this matches up against OPEC’s view of +1.26 million bpd, and EIA’s +1.4 million bpd.

The agency also expects supply to outpace demand this year by 1 million bpd, putting a strain on the global system to absorb it. The IEA’s estimate for non-OPEC production (read: North America) aligns with the EIA, expecting it to drop by 0.6 million bpd this year (OPEC sees -0.66 million bpd). Finally, the IEA projects that Iranian production will rise by 0.3 million bpd by the end of the current quarter, and by 0.6 million bpd by mid-year.

Related: Saudi Arabia: A Weak Kingdom On Its Knees?

Onto the economic data front, and we had three key releases out of China overnight, and all three were below consensus. (Eeek). Chinese Q4 GDP came in 1.6 percent higher than the prior quarter; this was less than consensus of 1.7 percent, and lower than Q3’s +1.8 percent. Year-on-year, this equated to a 6.8 percent increase, meaning that the Chinese economy grew by 6.9 percent in 2015, the slowest pace in 25 years (<—-hence all the headlines).

Industrial production was also below par, coming in at +5.9 percent versus consensus of 6.0 percent. This is close to the slowest pace of growth in seven years. Retail sales edged lower to 11.1 percent, also below consensus (of 11.3 percent).

China Industrial production, percent YoY (source: investing.com)

Chinese consumers have more to worry about than just a weakening economy. The National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) controls fuel prices in China, and has decided that it won’t be cutting fuel prices in line with the recent drop in oil. This is an attempt to curb consumption, as it tries to both cut pollution and secure supply.

Related: The World Just Lost One Of Its Biggest Oil Plays To Low Prices

 

(Click to enlarge)

A side effect of this – and of rampant gasoline demand in China – is record refining…and product exports. Refining increased by 3.8 percent to 10.48 million bpd in 2015, according to the National Bureau of Statistics. As refining margins are strong, and as slowing growth in both industrial output and in the economy as a whole dampen diesel demand, product exports continue to make new highs:

Related: The Condensate Con: How Real Is The Oil Glut?

 

(Click to enlarge)

Taking a look outside the realm of the IEA and China, we’ve had a bunch of numbers out of Europe today. Eurozone inflation came in line with consensus at a whopping +0.2 percent (YoY); this was matched by UK inflation, which was expected to be just a smidge lower at +0.1 percent YoY. Sentiment data (ZEW) out of Germany was better than expected for both current conditions and the forward six-month outlook, while countering this, broader Eurozone sentiment for the six-month outlook came in at its worst level in just over a year.

Finally, on the heels of the World Bank revising global economic growth down to 2.9 percent this year, the IMF has cut its own forecast for 2016 to 3.4 percent in its latest quarterly update. Both highlight deeper-than-expected contraction from countries such as Brazil, and the headwinds to the U.S. economy provided by a stronger dollar. Worrying indeed.

By Matt Smith

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