Oslo, August 9 - Neftegaz.RU. Oil market is going from gloomy to gloomier, according to the report by the Norwegian energy intelligence firm, Rystad Energy.
“Economic recession risk and further escalation of the US-China trade war are key concerns in the near term. How long OPEC+ is willing to continue to manage production adds uncertainty,” says Bjørnar Tonhaugen, head of oil market analysis at Rystad Energy.
The short-term oil demand outlook continues to be weak over global economic uncertainty and a simmering trade war between the US and China. “Rystad Energy’s current base case scenario doesn’t assume an imminent recession, yet we observe troublesome indicators,” the firm said.
The Chinese economy continues to lag, most recently only posting a 6.2% growth rate, and the US is also showing signs of deceleration. The trade war between the US and China has ratcheted up after the latest US announcement to slap a 10% tariff on $300 billion worth of Chinese goods.
“This adds downside risk to already moderate growth numbers. Continued worsening of US-China trade relations could lower demand growth by 200,000 barrels per day (bpd) to 1.0 million bpd in 2020,” Tonhaugen observed.
Rystad said that its global field production forecast for 2019 is largely unchanged from last month’s Oil Market Update Report, but 2020 field production has been revised up by 0.5 million bpd to 97.6 million bpd in this latest update, again led by the US and followed by Norway, China and Canada.
OPEC production cuts have helped buoy oil prices so far this year, but there is plenty of production ticking up outside of OPEC nations. The growth forecast for 2020 is quite exceptional, climbing by 3 million bpd or more over a period of just nine months, if OPEC+ does not extend or deepen their production cuts next year.
Rystad Energy still believes demand growth globally will improve in the 2nd half of 2019, but the recent exchange of US-China trade tariffs and overall weak manufacturing, exports and trade indicators elsewhere in the world could cap demand growth recovery if we see no trade deal in the immediate future. Hence, the market may send oil prices downward before 2020. At present, only large unplanned outages to the tune of 1.0 million bpd would create a somewhat tight market outlook in the near term.




