Commodities Week Ahead: ECB, OPEC On Radar As Shale Efficiency Threatens Oil Bulls

 | Sep 09, 2019 06:11

Blockbuster U.S. draws have helped crude prices go strong late into the summer. But production is also up stealthily year-on-year, despite a sheer drop in the U.S. oil rig count—a less scrutinized development that could get more attention if shale drillers make a vigorous comeback.

As oil bulls look eagerly for another U.S. crude inventory decline to add to the near 15 million barrels in draws over the past two weeks, which would show ramping demand, the fact remains that crude’s fundamentals would be in much better shape if production was falling just as steeply.

U.S. Oil Output Startlingly High Despite Rigs Collapse/h3

Industry firm Baker Hughes’ survey of the U.S. oil drilling landscape last week showed the number of actively-deployed rigs fell by 4 to reach 738, the lowest since early January 2018.

Strikingly, U.S. crude production remains in an overall uptrend, setting new records on a weekly basis. Total output is about 12.7% above where it stood the same week a year ago. The U.S. Energy Information Administration latest weekly dataset shows production at 12.4 million bpd, just inches away from its all-time record high.

Bulls Should Be Mindful Of Shale’s Efficiency/h3

For a greater perspective, the U.S. upstream sector has 54% fewer drilling rigs than the 1,609 deployed during the highs of October 2014, but the country is producing 3,525,000 bpd (39.7%) more oil than it was five years ago.

In October 2014, 5,515.85 bpd were being produced for each rig deployed. In contrast, as of Friday, 16,802 bpd per rig were being produced.

It’s a tale that once again highlights the incredible technology behind hydraulic fracturing, or ‘fracking’—the prime mover behind shale.

Given that the decline in the rig count might be plateauing, it would serve OPEC and the bull camp well to keep this efficiency in perspective, even as they try to talk down the threat to high prices from shale.

OPEC, ECB On The Radar /h3

This week, OPEC’s Joint Ministerial Monitoring Committee meets in Abu Dhabi to review the supply cuts of 1.2 million barrels per day that the cartel and its key ally Russia have carried out since December.

After the review, the committee will also recommend to OPEC’s top leadership what else needs to be done to bolster oil prices. This can mean more market swings as traders try to interpret its words.