Friday, June 24, 2011

Government Controlled Oil Stocks


Here is the recent history of government controlled oil stocks in the OECD (ie the developed countries).  The data comes from the EIA:


You can see that in total there's about 1500 million barrels held by western governments in strategic reserves.  The US holds about half, Europe about a quarter, and the rest of the OECD the other quarter (Japan, Korea, Canada, Australia, etc).  This next chart shows how long the total would last before running dry, as a function of the steady release rate:


The black lines indicate the level of yesterday's announcement, which called for a release of two million barrels/day, a rate that could be sustained for a little over two years.  Initially, the call is to do this for thirty days, however:
International Energy Agency (IEA) Executive Director Nobuo Tanaka announced today that the 28 IEA member countries have agreed to release 60 million barrels of oil in the coming month in response to the ongoing disruption of oil supplies from Libya. This supply disruption has been underway for some time and its effect has become more pronounced as it has continued. The normal seasonal increase in refiner demand expected for this summer will exacerbate the shortfall further. Greater tightness in the oil market threatens to undermine the fragile global economic recovery.

In deciding to take this collective action, IEA member countries agreed to make 2 million barrels of oil per day available from their emergency stocks over an initial period of 30 days. Leading up to this decision, the IEA has been in close consultation with major producing countries, as well as with key non-IEA importing countries.

The IEA estimates that the unrest in Libya had removed 132 mb of light, sweet crude oil from the market by the end of May. Although there are huge uncertainties, analysts generally agree that Libyan supplies will largely remain off the market for the rest of 2011. Given this loss and the seasonal increase in demand, the IEA warmly welcomes the announced intentions to increase production by major oil producing countries. As these production increases will inevitably take time and world economies are still recovering, the threat of a serious market tightening, particularly for some grades of oil, poses an immediate requirement for additional oil or products to be made available to the market.  The IEA collective action is intended to complement expected increases in output by these producing countries, to help bridge the gap until sufficient additional oil from them reaches global markets.
Emphasis mine.  This is a rather interesting line or reasoning, to say the least.  First of all, Libyan oil went off the market at the end of February, and it was instantly apparent (at least to me) that this would have economic consequences unless Saudi Arabia made up the difference (which it didn't).  In fact it cut production slightly, and, at least on available statistics, has yet to make it back to the February production level:


So, now, here we are in late June, four months later, after a lot of the negative economic consequences have occurred, and the IEA has now decided to release 30 days worth of extra oil, until certain unnamed oil producers, presumably mainly Saudi Arabia, can increase production.

But why will this "inevitably take time"?  According to the very same IEA just last week, "Effective spare capacity stands at 4.01 mb/d."  Why can't this spare capacity be used right away?  Or even three or four months ago, when the need first arose?  And if it can't be used right away, how are we sure that it can be used in thirty days?

I don't know - maybe Saudi production will indeed increase, and this release from the SPR is a bridge to somewhere. It's going to be very interesting to watch the next few months of statistics. But there are sure a lot of strange loose ends here that don't seem easy to unravel.  If it turns out to be a bridge to nowhere, then there are going to be hard choices between stopping the flow of oil (thus sharply raising prices again), or continuing to drain the strategic reserves for an indefinite length of time.

It is of course politically very attractive to release oil from the SPR and lower oil prices.  According to the FT:
Indeed, the release is likely to have a far-reaching impact on the market in coming weeks and months. The market was already anticipating weaker prices due to the faltering economic recovery in the US and the arrival of extra production from Saudi Arabia. The release is well timed to add to any downward pressure on prices.

Bullish hedge fund traders were on Thursday reviewing their oil price projections. As David Kirsch, head of market intelligence at consultants PFC Energy, puts it, the release has changed the “oil market psychology” for now.

Until recently, the talk among traders was about the risk of prices moving back to $120 a barrel. Now, it is about whether Brent crude, the North Sea benchmark, will drop below $100.

David Greely, energy analyst at Goldman Sachs, immediately cut $10-$12 off his 3-month forecast, lowering it to $105-$107, while Hussein Allidina, head of commodities research at Morgan Stanley, said the release created a $10 a barrel downside risk to his $120 a barrel oil price forecast for 2011.
The challenge I see is this: if governments are not going to let their strategic reserves just permanently shrink, then at some point they are going to have to buy this oil back. Presumably that should be done when prices are lower than now (since the purpose of this sale is to lower them because they are too high). Unless the Saudi's really do show up with quite a bit more oil, that would seem to be a potentially challenging feat.

8 comments:

  1. Stuart, according to wikipedia total strategic reserves (including private stock) is more than 4 billion barrels. That would probably be enough to keep oil prices in check for a few years even if we enter the period of non-reversible decline (though i think that the curve will probably be a bumpy plateau due to Iraq, Canada and pre-salt slowly coming into production in the following years).

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  2. Kostas - the private stocks are not considered strategic reserves but are just inventories that private actors maintain in the normal course of business. Those cannot go down to anywhere close to zero before there would be serious shortages.

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  3. Looks to me like a bridge to increased odds of re-election. We crossed Prof. Hamilton's 6% of consumer spending threshold back in March; oil prices, along with poor housing sales and lack of stimulus, were pushing the economy back toward recession. The President can't do anything about housing prices or lack of stimulus. He can do something to lower oil prices, at least temporarily. Eventually a slowdown will reduce demand, and eventually the Libya problem will be resolved.

    Conveniently, the rest of the OECD could be convinced to make it a joint release, so it doesn't look quite as much like the political pandering that it is. It's a bad precedent, but it will be popular.

    If the gamble pays off, we stay out of recession and the President has a shot at re-election. Otherwise, we were head to at least a slowdown that the public would have perceived as a recession. A weak economy greatly reduces his chances of a second term.

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  4. kjm - yeah, I was planning on writing about what that option looks like. Thing is, to decently juice the economy from now until Nov 2012 you'd need to blow most of the SPR on the project. 30 days in June/Jul 2011 just won't do much. If you keep up 2-3mbd all the way till next November, that would have a big impact on gas prices and consumer confidence, but obviously lead to a ton of (truthful) protests that the entire SPR was being blown imprudently.

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  5. I don't think they're thinking of it that way. Qaddafi can't hold out forever, the Saudis *supposedly* will *eventually* pony up more oil, and even if they don't the economy should slow enough to not need to do the release more than a few months.
    There's a Time article out that says they think Qaddafi's running out of time:
    "In a conference call last week with reporters, deputy National Security Adviser Ben Rhodes said that he believes the conflict in Libya is winding down as Qaddafi's resources dwindle."
    (http://beta.news.yahoo.com/libya-conundrum-congress-hold-two-votes-conflict-090419838.html)

    If nothing else, just reducing oil prices for a month would give the economy a boost. They don't necessarily need to *hold* prices down, just to get them down long enough for the lag to result in a small economic boost that appears in late summer of next year. Getting the lag time right is tricky, but they're probably thinking now would be good enough.

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  6. Humm, may I ? Shrinking the SPR to zero seems very unlikely to me, the Pentagon will have it's say way, way before that. Well that's my 2 ct. anyway. Me thinks they are very much on edge right now...

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  7. Isn't it funny how the start of the release is the same as the end of QE2?

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  8. Look what the cat brought in: a case of Pat ?

    http://www.zerohedge.com/article/iea-opec-nash-equilibrium-collapses-1973-style-opec-embargo-next

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