Energy & Precious Metals - Weekly Review and Calendar Ahead

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By Barani Krishnan

Investing.com -- The oil bull is unhinged, as much as the crude bear was 15 months ago.

Back then, it was to drive the market down as much as possible, and that did happen, taking it to minus $40 per barrel for U.S. crude. Now, of course, it is to take it the other way - and that has happened too, with the market rising more than 50% on the year to just shy of $75 a barrel on Friday.

That said, neither super-low nor super-high oil prices are good for the world.

Dirt-cheap oil prices can destroy economies that depend almost entirely on the so-called black gold commodity. Think not just of Saudi Arabia and Russia here or the combined forces of the 23 nations under OPEC+. Think also of the United States, which has always been an oil producer while being the No. 1 consumer as well. The U.S. was never a part of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries cartel led by the Saudis. But until last year’s coronavirus outbreak, it was also the world’s top producer, thanks to the shale oil and fracking boom.

The pandemic devastated the coffers of countries that produced oil. It also severely disrupted the finances of companies involved in almost every aspect of upstream and downstream work in the industry. Most importantly, it brought to a complete halt investments in E&P, or exploration and production, that’s vital to the security of future oil and gas supplies.

The freeze on E&P can have untold ramifications for the world once the low-demand period for oil ends and high, or even regular, consumption kicks in. For one, production cannot be ramped up overnight, given the gestation period between exploration and when first oil is struck.

Also, the “hangover” from low oil prices can slow the transition to “Drill Baby, Drill!” This is what is happening now in the Permian, the largest U.S. shale oil basin. Shale drillers, burnt again and again from overproduction, refuse to go back to their old ways. Even if they wished, their shareholders would not allow it, punishing them with severe share price corrections each time they utter higher output plans. Thus, U.S. production is stuck at 11 million barrels daily, unable to rise meaningfully, let alone return to the pre-pandemic world record of 13 million. Finally, the Biden administration’s goal of expanding green renewable energies over fossil fuels has contributed to the perfect storm against higher oil and gas production.

While output cannot grow quickly enough, demand is just starting to explode. With the U.S. national vaccination rate against the Covid-19 nearing 50%, and social distancing and other pandemic protocols discarded in almost every of its 50 states, Americans are rediscovering their wanderlust — and boosting gasoline consumption in the process. U.S. airport security is clearing up to 2 million people a day, the first time since March 2020 - meaning flights and demand for jet fuel are spiking too.