As Nigerians hope for a reversal in the falling oil price, they may
have to wait a little longer for the good news as new forecast suggest
tougher economic times.
This is as Bloomberg’s Gary Shilling has painted a gloomy picture for the global price of oil soon.
According to him, “the price could slope to just between $10 and $20
per barrel. So how prepared are countries whose major incomes are
derived from oil to meet this challenge should it happen?
In June
2014 the price of oil scaled up to $107. Months later it fell to as low
as $50 per barrel and further fell below that price”.
Part of his
analysis to arrive at this fearful position is that the U.S. economic
growth has averaged 2.3 percent a year since the recovery started in
mid-2009.
“That’s about half the rate you might expect in a
rebound from the deepest recession since the 1930s. Meanwhile, growth in
China is slowing, is minimal in the euro zone and is negative in Japan.
Throw in the large increase in U.S. vehicle gas mileage and other
conservation measures and it’s clear why global oil demand is weak and
might even decline,” the analysis stated.
The analysis reads further:
“At the same time, output is climbing, thanks in large part to
increased U.S. production from hydraulic fracking and horizontal
drilling. U.S. output rose by 15 percent in the 12 months through
November from a year earlier, based on the latest data, while imports
declined 4 percent.
“Something else figures in the mix: The
eroding power of the OPEC cartel. Like all cartels, the Organization of
Petroleum Exporting Countries is designed to ensure stable and
above-market crude prices. But those high prices encourage cheating, as
cartel members exceed their quotas. For the cartel to function, its
leader — in this case, Saudi Arabia — must accommodate the cheaters by
cutting its own output to keep prices from falling. But the Saudis have
seen their past cutbacks result in market-share losses.
“So, the
Saudis, backed by other Persian Gulf oil producers with sizable
financial resources — Kuwait, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates —
embarked on a game of chicken with the cheaters. On Nov. 27, OPEC said
that it wouldn’t cut output, sending oil prices off a cliff. The Saudis
figure they can withstand low prices for longer than their financially
weaker competitors, who will have to cut production first as pumping
becomes uneconomical.
“What is the price at which major producers
chicken out and slash output? Whatever that price is, it is much lower
than the $125 a barrel Venezuela needs to support its mismanaged
economy. The same goes for Ecuador, Algeria, Nigeria, Iraq, Iran and
Angola.
“Saudi Arabia requires a price of more than $90 to fund
its budget. But it has $726 billion in foreign currency reserves and is
betting it can survive for two years with prices of less than $40 a
barrel.
“Furthermore, the price when producers chicken out isn’t
necessarily the average cost of production, which for 80 percent of new
U.S. shale oil production this year will be $50 to $69 a barrel,
according to Daniel Yergin of energy consultant IHS Cambridge Energy
Research Associates. Instead, the chicken-out point is the marginal cost
of production, or the additional costs after the wells are drilled and
the pipes are laid. Another way to think of it: It’s the price at which
cash flow for an additional barrel falls to zero.
“Last month,
Wood Mackenzie, an energy research organization, found that of 2,222 oil
fields surveyed worldwide, only 1.6 percent would have negative cash
flow at $40 a barrel. That suggests there won’t be a lot of chickening
out at $40. Keep in mind that the marginal cost for efficient U.S.
shale-oil producers is about $10 to $20 a barrel in the Permian Basin in
Texas and about the same for oil produced in the Persian Gulf.
“Also, consider the conundrum financially troubled countries such as
Russia and Venezuela find themselves in: They desperately need the
revenue from oil exports to service foreign debts and fund imports. Yet,
the lower the price, the more oil they need to produce and export to
earn the same number of dollars, the currency used to price and trade
oil.
“With new discoveries, stability in parts of the Middle East
and increasing drilling efficiency, global oil output will no doubt
rise in the next several years, adding to pressure on prices. U.S. crude
oil production is forecast to rise by 300,000 barrels a day during the
next year from 9.1 million now. Sure, the drilling rig count is falling,
but it’s the inefficient rigs that are being idled, not the horizontal
rigs that are the backbone of the fracking industry. Consider also
Iraq’s recent deal with the Kurds, meaning that another 550,000 barrels a
day will enter the market.
“While supply climbs, demand is
weakening. OPEC forecasts demand for its oil at a 14-year low of 28.2
million barrels a day in 2017, 600,000 less than its forecast a year ago
and down from current output of 30.7 million. It also cut its 2015
demand forecast to a 12-year low of 29.12 million barrels.
“Meanwhile, the International Energy Agency reduced its 2015 global
demand forecast for the fourth time in 12 months by 230,000 barrels a
day to 93.3 million and sees supply exceeding demand this year by
400,000 barrels a day.
“Although the 40 percent decline in U.S.
gasoline prices since April 2014 has led consumers to buy more
gas-guzzling SUVs and pick-up trucks, consumers during the past few
years have bought the most efficient blend of cars and trucks ever. At
the same time, slowing growth in China and the shift away from
energy-intensive manufactured exports and infrastructure to consumer
services is depressing oil demand. China accounted for two-thirds of the
growth in demand for oil in the past decade.
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