Category Archives: Energy

Energy

Commodities Update

Now Ukraine is making a real impact on commodities. UK gas is up 4.2% MTD. Europe has three months of gas demand covered in case of disruption and 65 days of demand in oil inventories, according to ENI CEO.

Brent is up 0.6% MTD at $107.28/bbl, while WTI is up 2.75% at $103.48/bbl. The geopolitcal risk has cranked up with the Kiev government giving Russian separatists until this morning to disarm & leave public offices while there continue to be reports of a large Russian troop presence on the Ukraine border. Libya’s western export terminal Zawiya has re-opened after being vacated by protesters. CFTC data released on Friday saw money manager long positions in futures & options for the week to 8 April rise by 24,310 to 380,000 contracts. North Dakota oil production averaged 951k b/d in February, +16k b/d from Jan & +170k b/d y/y.

Coal is up 49bps at $81.30/mt. Indonesian thermal coal exports dropped to 32mt in January, the lowest level in 5 months and down 9% YoY, according to official customs data. Steel inventory continues to be drawn down rapidly in China, with reported stocks held by traders falling 3.9% over the last week. Trader stocks are now 15% lower than a year ago. Inventory of rebar on the Shanghai Futures exchange also dropped sharply, falling by nearly 240kt to 2.5mt, the lowest level since the rebar contract started trading in June 2009.

CO2 is up 15% at €5.39/mt driven by higher coal and gas utilization in Europe on security of supply measures and expectations of EU backloading to withdraw 9m tonnes of oversupply.

US gas is up 5% at $4.65/mmbtu as the weather trade slowly unwinds after inventories rose 4 Bcf, below consensus expectations of a 15 Bcf injection. However, strength is derived from the fact that inventories are now 826 Bcf, widening the deficit vs the 5-yr avg to 994 Bcf.

UK gas opens is up 4.2% at 53.20p/th driven by the Ukraine dispute and Gazprom threatening to cut supplies to Ukraine. Inventories are still above 4,000 mcm.

Power prices reacted positively to gas spike. UK power is up 40bps at 50.40£/mwh, German power is up 58bps at €34.55/mwh and Nordpool up 0.16% at €29.65/mwh.

The Chinese Slowdown Impact On Commodities

China slowdown 1

29/03/14 Confidential

“China’s economic restructuring has made pre-2008 paradigms out of date and off the mark” Hanfeng Wang

I have had the pleasure of giving a masters degree on commodities at UNED, and talking to my students I was always surprised at how easily they assumed as unquestionable the expected consumption figures from China. And there is a lot to question.

When we talk about the slowdown in China some assume a total collapse. And it is not. But it’s the end of a model of aggressive debt and building “anything” to “grow”. Excessive and unproductive debt. According to Morgan Stanley the country today needs four times more debt to create an additional unit of gross domestic product compared to only five years ago.

Changing the model to a more sustainable and consumer-oriented one is not bad.

– 41% of Chinese investments flow to the consumer sector and services, compared to less than 30% a few years ago.

– The economy is being modernized: Imports of high-tech products have been reduced from 85% of the total to 71%.

– Exports of high added value goods grew 50% from five years ago to 85.4%. Incidentally, this is something that terrifies the Japanese and their “monetary imperialism” as some Asian commentators call it (https://www.dlacalle.com/abenomics-failure-in-six-charts/).

The Chinese economy is increasingly less industry and more services. Because the model was not sustainable. Gone are the steel mills that manufactured and then re-melted end product, the ghost towns and 28 million unsold homes … and the rows of windmills and solar panels without connection to the grid. Anyone who’s ever seen them never forgets them.

No one can consider the change as negative. South Korea and Taiwan held that transition without a problem, they just had to adapt to GDP growths of +2 – +4%. However, since Chinese excess debt is huge, especially in SOEs, the process is not so simple. Because the economy saves less (falling three percentage points since 2010) and borrows more.

The fact that much of this debt is financed internally by local banks does not mitigate the risk. A pyramid scheme doesn’t stop being one just because participants lend to each other.

A 200% debt to GDP when 48% of companies in the Hang Seng, especially semi-state owned do not generate returns above cost of capital is a huge problem. It has a large impact on the financing capacity of the productive sectors, as mentioned in the CICC report “A Tale of Two Economies”.

However, the slowdown of the “old Chinese economy” is not cyclical. It is structural. And it has a huge impact on the commodities market. We are seeing a very significant impact on the demand for coal, copper, iron ore and oil, creating an overcapacity that depresses prices in the medium and long term. Something that benefits other importing countries.

Producers of commodities had become accustomed to an ever increasing demand driven by China and now face the excess supply. Those producers, especially in iron ore, coal and copper, always try to replace lost revenues by producing more, thinking that in a not-too-distant future the demand slowdown will reverse. A serious mistake.

The impact of the “Chinese slowdown” in oil, copper, coal and iron ore is a much more reliable indicator of growth in industrial activity than GDP.

Let’s start with something crucial. We should not ignore the “inventory” effect. A huge amount of Chinese purchases  are not consumed, just stored. Unadjusted estimates of demand have been lethal for many producers. Inventories of iron ore for example, have risen by 57% between 2013 and 2014. And for coal and petroleum products inventories are at peak levels of 2010.

– In oil, OPEC members are already considering to reducing exports by one million barrels a day. China consumes nearly 10% of the world’s oil and means almost one third of oil exports. However, Chinese demand in January and February fell 1.9%. In the early months of 2014, adjusted for inventories (ie, removing what you buy to store) demand fell by 4.6% over the same period in 2013. Chinese demand expectations are wrongly based on the country reaching a per capita consumption similar to the U.S. or the OECD and, as always, they forget efficiency and substitution. Believe what you believe, but distrust those optimistic estimates that are reduced by 30-35% each year.

– In iron ore, China represents 63% of global exports. Analysts from UBS to Standard Chartered, warn of the difficulty for the country to meet its demand growth estimates of 3% annually, leading to an oversupply in 2014 reaching 136 million tons, 170 million in 2015. As an example of the “Chinese slowdown”, in 2012 there was a shortfall of iron ore of 70 million tonnes. In a few months it turnmed to a similar level of surplus. Chinese steel consumption has stagnated below 60 million tonnes per month since December 2012 ( https://www.dlacalle.com/iron-ore-more-oversupply-more-china-worries/ ).

– In coal, China accounts for almost 50% of world coal consumption. With a government program seeking to reduce pollution, growth expectations of Chinese demand do not exceed 1.6% per annum. That is, it is very likely that imports will not exceed 220 million tons. With growth of global production and exports from Australia, South Africa and Colombia, the world faces another year of excess supply of more than 20% ( http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/05/09/ energy-coal-idUSL6N0DQ0UU20130509 ).

– In copper, the problem is the same. Increasing supply, decreasing demand from the main consumer, China, which accounts for 39% of the global market. The estimated surplus of refined copper was revised up from 327,000 in 2014 to 369,000 metric tons, and in 2015 is expected to exceed 400,000 .

We should be very careful to ignore the effects of overcapacity when exporting countries are looking to offset lost revenues with more production, and let us not forget the depressing effect of excess storage. Because it’s a lethal combination in the world of commodities.

Ignoring the elephant in the room is one of the biggest mistakes we make when making estimates for the future. We take exceptional periods, access to credit, liquidity, consumption or growth, as new paradigms that will perpetuate forever. We do not question whether it is sustainable or not. Or worse, when it is perceived as excessive, we tend to justify it.

In the analysis of commodities the mistake is even greater because it is applied to the largest consumer in the world: China. And when economists make a mistake up to 40% in their estimates for three consecutive years but 2020 expectations remain unchanged, the problem is magnified.

Bulls already know the arguments … “Chinese demand will be multiplied by two in the next twenty years” etc.. In 2012 a friend at Exxon said to me about the Chinese growth. “I do not believe it. And those who plan using the official estimates of growth in China as a reference can only be disappointed. ”

For the commodities market, and for all, the change in the Chinese model is a positive because it was unsustainable. But let’s not ignore the wave effects it can have on a world hooked to China’s perennial growth.

Of course, many will say that everything I say is irrelevant, because China, as any good communist dictatorship, grows and consumes whatever the Communist Party decides. Yep, but the argument works both ways. If the Party decides to change the model, it will change it.

In any case, an economic model is no less unsustainable because the ruling party dictates it. It falls under its own weight sooner or later. And with a little luck, it takes the ruling party down with it.

– See more at: https://www.dlacalle.com/el-frenazo-chino-ataca-a-las-materias-primas/#sthash.yEd2qI6B.dpuf

CO2 collapses 41% MTD

CO2 2014

CO2 continues to collapse (-41.8% MTD, -16% YTD) after the EU intervention has failed to address the massive oversupply of free credits  and demand continues to fall.  CO2 trades at €4.5/mt (31st March 2014). It traded as high as €35/mt in 2008. -87.7% from the peak, or a massive -30.7% per annum for a “politically designed” commodity created to desincentivize CO2 emissions.

Same story over and over: Oversupply meets falling demand:

–  Oversupply: The market reserve mechanism was introduced by the EU because even once CO2 backloading is applied, the oversupply of CO2 in the EU ETS will trough at around 1.5bn credits. The reserve mechanism will be used when the total number of allowances in circulation, defined for a single year as all the allowances and international credits issued from 2008 to that year, less the total emissions produced and any already in the reserve (basically the oversupply of the system) is above a certain level. This means that oversupply of emission rights in any given year will continue to be around 2bn tons of CO2 to 2020 in the most optimistic scenario. The supply of CO2 (EUAs) has exceeded demand by at least 20m Mtons almost every month since 2010. 

– Demand down: In the EU, 2013 verified emissions for the EU-ETS will be 3.8% lower yoy, and will reach 1.79bn tCO2, while ETS demand for 2014 is expected to fall another 3%. 

According to SocGen, CO2 emissions for the largest four sectors in the EU-ETS comprise nearly 95% of all emissions, historically. Combustion installations are by far the largest contributor, emitting over 70% of all CO2 in Europe. Verified emissions for combustion installations in 2012 were 11% lower than their 2007 peak, mirroring similar decreases in electricity consumption across Europe. Emissions from energy-intensive industries, like mineral oil refineries, pig iron/steel, and cement clinker/lime production have essentially stagnated since 2009, after a material drop coinciding with the beginning of the recession.

The European Union is 30% of the emissions of the world, but (hold on) 100% of the cost as no other country has adhered to emission trading schemes. Therefore, a slowdown in industrial production and a debt crisis that could delay the extremely aggressive and optimistic plans for a low carbon economy announced for 2030, added to the slow but sure slowdown in power demand is proving that a system that was artificially created is causing the demise of a government-forced scheme that ultimately was only a tax.

CO2 (as I mentioned in 2009) is a “fake commodity” artificially invented, where demand and supply are imposed by political entities… and it still does not work. Neither the Copenhagen, or Cancun summits, or the efforts of several investment banks and environmentalists have helped to raise the price. Interventionists were rubbing their hands at the prospect of increasing the price of CO2 through more than questionable environmental policies, and now they need to find inflation through imposition.

Unless we see a much more drastic approach from the EU to address the oversupply of EUAs the picture is not positive. But at the same time, a drastic approach attacks the economic recovery and adds a burden to industries all over Europe, so I would not count on it. According to Citi it would require a 14% increase in power and industrial demand to start to address the oversupply of EUAs.

In summary, lower industrial demand is driving emissions lower, and a miscalculated free rights scheme continues to show a massive oversupply.

See more at: https://www.dlacalle.com/why-co2-collapsed-20-in-two-days/

Further read: https://www.dlacalle.com/co2-collapses-to-all-time-low/

 

Energy Commodities see No Price Inflation from Ukraine-Crimea

Crisis? What Crisis? The Ukraine-Crimea conflict has to be the most uneventful geopolitical event solely judging by commodities price impact. Energy commodities are showing no price inflation from the Ukraine conflict as China slowdown is more relevant

Brent continues to shrug off any Crimea-Libya concerns and is down 0.8% MTD as the Chinese slowdown is vastly more important.

Russia is going to ship 88 cargoes of Urals crude from Primorsk, UST-Luga and Novorossiysk, highlighting there is no disruption to oil moves.

Spain could replace 10% of Russian gas exports to EU according to Platts. It would be achieved by boosting pipeline gas from Morocco and Algeria, fully utilizing its six regasification terminals to bring LNG and developing its own shale gas resources. However, the EU would pay 50% more if it replaced Russian gas with LNG, Norwegian gas and coal, and 80% more if it did so with renewables, according to Bloomberg and CERA.

China apparent oil demand in January-February fell 1.9% y-o-y, as the Chinese economy weakened. As a result of the shift of Chinese New Year from January in 2013 to February in 2014, apparent oil product demand fell -6.5% in January and rose 3.1% in February. In 2M14, inventory-adjusted demand slid 4.6% y-o-y.

According to Reuters, Libya’s national oil company said on Thursday that protesters had blocked the condensate pipeline linking the al-Wafa field to the Mellitah export complex. The gas pipeline is believed to be still operating. The protesters are reportedly threatening to stop exports from the Mellitah complex which is operated by ENI and NOC.

Coal is flat (-25bps MTD) at $80.50/mt. China announced a new plan to cut coal’s share of energy use to 65.0% in 20141, down from 65.7% in 2013, in a bid to improve air quality in major cities. With total energy consumption growth targeted at 3.2%, coal consumption would rise by just 1.6% this year while supply is expect to grow 3%.

CO2 is seeing another leg down, -28% MTD and moving close to flat on the year (+4.6% YTD), losing almost all the gains seen in the first months from backloading messages from the EU that do not address the chronic oversupply of more than 9 bn mt.

US gas is flat MTD at 4.6/mmbtu after Natural gas storage withdrawal was 57 Bcf. Natural gas storage is now at 896 Bcf, the lowest level since 2003. I expect there to be at least one more storage withdrawal (next week) before the injection season starts. Storage set to peak around 3,625 Bcf, which is approximately 225 Bcf below the 5-year average.

According to LNG World News, the Canadian government has authorised four proposed terminals on the country’s west coast to export LNG. The ministry of natural resources awarded the licences to Pacific Northwest LNG, Prince Rupert LNG, WCC LNG and Woodfibre LNG. Shipments from Canada’s British Columbia province can arrive in Asian ports in just 11 days, or nearly a month sooner than those from the US Gulf coast. All told, these long-term licences allow the four terminals to export up to 73.38m tonnes of LNG per year.

UK gas (NBP) continues to slide, down 8.8% MTD proving Ukraine is no real concern. European gas prices have not moved either, as inventories continue to be well above the 5 year average.

Power prices in Europe decline further: UK at 51.40£/mwh (-2% MTD), Germany at €34.55/mwh (-4% MTD) and Nordpool at €30/mwh (-2.9% MTD).