Crude futures and opposing forces: quantitative easing and SPR
release
New York (Platts)--12Sep2012/444 pm EDT/2044 GMT
A crude oil market turbulent in part over talk of possible
quantitative easing could come to a head Thursday, when the US Federal
Reserve Bank releases a much-anticipated statement on its monetary
policy.
Another variable remains in the back of traders' minds: rumors of a
possible release from the US Strategic Petroleum Reserve continues to
stir.
Crude futures have been volatile but remain tucked into tight ranges
with NYMEX front-month crude confined to $94-$98/b, and Brent between
$111-$116/b.
The "bad is good" scenario behind economic data has stoked optimism
that the US, UK or even China will launch some level of monetary easing
to quell the litany of poor economic data that has recently included
China's lowest crude imports since October 2010, a downward revision to
Italian GDP and the weak September 7 report on the US job market.
A possible third round of quantitative easing, or QE3, has been
seesawing with talk of another SPR release, leaving crude futures
rangebound and tense.
The US Fed began a two-day meeting of its Federal Open Market Committee
on Wednesday and by midday Thursday, the futures market, as well as the
world, might know more about the Fed's plans going forward.
At the end of August in a meeting at the Jackson Hole symposium, US Fed
Chairman Ben Bernanke stopped short of signaling that extra monetary
easing was imminent during his much anticipated speech, but he kept the
door open for action if needed.
KNEE-JERK REACTION TO QE3
Some analysts believe a knee-jerk bullish reaction to QE3 is likely for
crude futures. But a move to inject more liquidity into the US economy
by flooding the market with excess currency would not necessarily bring
on an increase in energy demand.
Yes, QE3 could send the US dollar lower, which in turn will boost oil
futures, purely based on their correlation, but what does that mean for
actual demand?
"For energy demand per say, QE3 will not do much of anything," said
Olivier Jakob of Petromatrix. "If QE3 revives the economy and results in
major economic growth, we could see an impact, but that is unlikely."
The reason, Jakob said, is the possibility that a rise in oil prices
from a bullish reaction to a QE3 will actually hurt demand. Key levels
for NYMEX crude above $100/b and ICE Brent above $120/b are seen as the
psychological markers for demand destruction and could give the Obama
Administration, during an election year, the drive it needs to make a
release from SPR.
An SPR release would certainly negate some, it not all, of the potential
increase in price linked to QE3, Jakob said. "What the world needs is
lower oil prices and as long as OPEC doesn't counter a release, SPR
would diminish the bullish impact from QE3," he said.
But how sustainable are either of these forces, given neither would have
made direct changes to oil fundamentals?
Miswin Mahesh, commodity analyst at Barclays, contends that any moves,
bullish or bearish, in reaction to QE3 or SPR would be simply
sentiment-driven and are likely to only last for one to two weeks.
"The physical picture [for crude] is fairly balanced, there is no real
tightness," Mahesh said, adding that despite some thoughts, some Iranian
crude is still making its way into the marketplace.
A lot of market participants want to add to long positions in crude but
have stayed neutral because of the potential of an SPR release, Mahesh
said.
The talk of an SPR release, if not announced sooner, is not likely to
clear out of the marketplace until US elections are over.
But investors are still keen to key levels that would spark an SPR
release, which Mahesh said includes US gasoline or RBOB futures over
$4/gal. And Brent is not out of the realm of an impact from an SPR
release either, Mahesh said, even if it is considered to be more of a
global benchmark than its US land-locked counterpart, WTI.
"We would see a reaction in Brent but more sentiment driven," he said.
MIDDLE EAST TENSION
"In the US, gasoline prices have risen not due to a lack of lack of
crude but from refinery outages and lower demand," Mahesh said. "It is a
tightness in the product market because refiners are not running crude,
not because there is a scarcity of it."
The previous SPR release, in June 2011, led to lower crude prices for
only four to five days, but that was also during a time when Libyan
production was still off the market.
But this time around, Mahesh said, there is Iran, whose barrels remain
off the market, and geopolitical tensions are high in the Middle East,
including Syrian violence and remaining turmoil in Yemen.
Up first for the market could be some insight into QE3, which purely
based on sentiment, could rally crude futures and in turn, gasoline
prices. But with no immediate impact on consumption, prices could ease
quickly.
Analysts said that if QE3 does happen, from a physical feedback effect,
the impact is not likely to be seen in term of consumption for some four
to five months after an announcement.
"And that also depends on how QE3 will play out. The last time it was
done in installments and the feedback effect wasn't felt until the first
half of this year," Mahesh said. "We have seen a good first half in
terms of consumption, and although you cannot directly link that to QE,
if it had an economic impact, it is on a lag."
--Alison Ciaccio,
alison_ciaccio@platts.com
--Edited by Richard Rubin,
richard_rubin@platts.com
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