The Winners And Losers Of The Perfect Storm Hitting Oil Prices

When it comes to commodities, you’ll usually find a set of countervailing forces that keep prices at an equilibrium. Yet when it comes to oil, all of the factors behind price swings are heading in the same direction. As oil prices head lower yet, investors will feel both pain and gain -- depending on the make-up of their portfolios.

A Perfect Storm
For much of the past year, a barrel of West Texas Intermediate Crude fetched around $100 a barrel on the spot market. Yet since late July, a series of factors have conspired to push prices lower:

-- A rally in the dollar, which tends to push all commodity prices lower.

-- A further slowing in the European, Japanese and Chinese economies, which crimps demand.

-- A surge in output in Libya to 800,000 barrels a day, up from 240,000 barrels a day in June amid civil war skirmishes near key oil installations.

-- An oil production surge in Russia, which is back at peak post-Soviet era levels.

-- A rapidly rising output in Kurdistan as new key oil installations come on line.

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-- OPEC’s recent inability to curtail production as much as the market had hoped, leading to talk that this cartel may be weakening as market share becomes more important than pricing discipline.

Of course, the elephant in the room is the United States, which is single-handedly disrupting the global supply and demand trends on a massive scale. U.S. oil production has already surged from five million barrels a day in 2008 to 8.5 million barrels a day in August 2014, according to the Energy Information Administration. The more we produce, the less oil we import. Analysts at Citigroup note that oil imports are now nine million barrels per day lower than they were in 2007. It’s important to note that some of the reduction is due to a drop in consumption as we now drive more fuel-efficient cars.

Foreign Affairs magazine was ahead of the curve, anticipating the current events in the oil market back in its May/June 2014 issue. The issue led off with a piece by Edward Morse, global head of commodities at Citigroup, who noted that “U.S. oil production could reach 12 million or more barrels per day or more in a few years and be sustained there for a very long time.” Morse thinks we’re headed for an era of $70-to-$90 oil over the long-term, a process which appears to have begun unfolding in recent weeks.

Before we focus on the winners in such a scenario, let’s look at the losers.

Falling oil prices begin to make major exploration projects economically infeasible. Domestically-produced oil in shale formations is fairly low cost. Citi’s Morse thinks most domestic wells will remain profitable as long as the spot market stays above $50. Some foreign producers, such as Saudi Arabia, also have low production costs and will simply see their oil revenues diminish, but not disappear.