Skip to navigationSkip to contentSkip to footerHelp using this website - Accessibility statement
Advertisement

Surging oil market brings $US100 crude back in sight

Alex Longley and Sharon Cho

As crude futures leap higher, traders and analysts are increasingly talking about when – not if – prices return to $US100 a barrel.

Across the world, premiums for physical barrels are surging. Supplies from the Middle East, Azerbaijan and even Russia are commanding premiums as refiners clamber to make enough diesel ahead of a seasonal ramp up in demand.

Chevron CEO Mike Wirth is bullish on the oil price. Bloomberg

Bullish analysts argue that even with crude now in the mid-$US90s, many funds remain underinvested in oil, creating the potential for higher prices yet to come. Chevron chief executive Mike Wirth said in an interview that he saw oil reaching $US100 a barrel.

Benchmark Brent has risen more than 30 per cent since its nadir in March. Production cuts by Saudi Arabia and Russia have steadily tightened supplies at a time when consumption has surged to a record. That was eating into stockpiles and forcing refiners to snap up barrels to make enough of the right type of fuels.

“Fundamentals are very, very strong right now,” said Amrita Sen, head of research at consultant Energy Aspects. “At this point it’s a short-term thing. I’m not saying it’s going to average above $US100, but could it go to $US100 for a bit? Absolutely yes.”

Advertisement

The strength is being led by the physical markets. One of the clearest examples is Azerbaijan’s flagship Azeri Light crude, which was trading close to $US100 a barrel Friday, as strong profits for turning crude into diesel meant processors were paying bumper premiums for grades that produce a lot of the fuel.

Those same margins also pushed once-maligned Russian barrels to trade above their benchmark in Asia again, traders said. They were at a discount for much of the time after the country’s invasion of Ukraine.

The strength shows up in the shape of the oil futures curve, too. On Monday, the nearest Brent futures contract was at a premium of more than $US1 a barrel to the next month. The structure, known as backwardation and indicating scarce supply, was the biggest since November, excluding expiry days.

It is against that backdrop that even some of the market’s most bearish analysts are starting to concede that $US100 looks more likely, particularly given longstanding political risks in producer nations such as Libya and Nigeria.

Geopolitics, alongside technical trading, “could push oil over $US100 for a short while,” Citigroup analysts, including Ed Morse, wrote Monday. “However, we continue to see progressive loosening on the horizon.”

Part of that decline, Citi argues, will be driven by a growth in supply from outside the OPEC+ alliance. It cites countries including the US, Guyana and Brazil that can all add barrels to the market in coming months and derail the current tightness.

Advertisement

For now, though, revenue in producing nations is surging. On Friday, Murban oil from the United Arab Emirates was trading at the strongest level since February and rose further on Monday. Barrels from Qatar to West Africa are also surging, and Saudi Arabia’s flagship grade is near $US100.

Those spikes are shifting the focus to demand and the impact on consuming nations. The Reserve Bank of India said Monday that crude oil above $US90 a barrel posed a new risk to global financial stability.

While Brent is yet to hit triple digits this year, refined fuels such as petrol and diesel have been trading above that level for months.

“We are highly likely to see Dated Brent moving above $US100 a barrel,” said Bjarne Schieldrop, chief commodities analyst at SEB AB. “But oil product demand is likely to hurt more if Brent crude rises to $US110 to $US120 a barrel, and such a price level looks excessive.”

Overnight, oil climbed to a 10-month high. West Texas Intermediate rose above $US92 a barrel after closing 0.8 per cent higher on Monday.

Bloomberg

Bloomberg

Read More

Latest In Commodities

Fetching latest articles

Most Viewed In Markets