Energy & Precious Metals - Weekly Review and Calendar Ahead

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By Barani Krishnan

Investing.com - Oil’s ‘choo-choo’ rally is chugging along, the velocity of its gains aided by a stunning drop in U.S. rigs. But some see another derailment in the market’s way, as demand for crude from an America reopening from seven weeks of lockdown isn’t quite enough to support prices near or above $30 a barrel.

“What we're seeing right now is the head fake before another surge in CV (crude volume) that pushes storage to maximum capacity & oil prices to new lows,” said a weekend tweet from Art Berman, who has nearly 22,000 followers on Twitter, made up mostly of oil and gas professionals.

A petroleum geologist-turned-investment analyst with over 35 years in the business, Berman specializes in the study of comparative crude inventory. In his words, the current rebound is “reminiscent of the March-June 2015 false oil-price rally, before markets accepted that things weren't going back to the way they were before”.

Berman lists five oil rallies from mid-2018 to this year that have failed: i. Iran export waivers in Oct 2018; ii. Attacks on ships in the Gulf in April 2019; iii. OPEC+ cuts extension in July 2019; iv. Saudi refinery attack in September 2019; v. OPEC+ extension, China-U.S. trade deal and Qassem Soleimani assasination.

“What are the odds for Rally #6?” he asks, predicting that U.S. crude’s potential run to mid $30 levels will be “followed by sub-$20”.

This isn’t to say that crude prices won’t experience another surge after the death of the current rally. The sheer collapse in U.S. oil rigs and anticipated well shut-ins mean the greatest mismatch in supply/demand will probably be behind us at some point, as Morgan Stanley suggests. But that’s for the future. The oil market’s problem, however, is the “now”. Supply builds are still too large compared to the trajectory of production losses, and that will eventually max out storage capacity. And that will kill the present rally before too long.

Rigs actively drilling for oil have fallen to lows not seen since the financial crisis, reaching 292 this week - a precipitous 57% drop from the 683 reading eight weeks ago. The trajectory of well shut-ins suggests that tight oil production may fall below 3 million barrels per day by June. Yet, crude builds have averaged 12.8 million barrels per week over the past six weeks - about four times above the norm for this time of year. While builds have slowed in Cushing, Oklahoma - the delivery point for expiring U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude contracts - the hub itself is just about 11 million barrels to hitting capacity. And most of the space in Cushing has been leased out already, according to those in the know.