Market mood brightens after torrid week

Markets appeared to find their feet again this week after stomach-churning falls in the first five trading days of 2016. Bears including RBS and former US Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers continued to fret over the world economy’s prospects, but by mid-week, US shares were on the rise for a third successive day, while emerging-market shares had posted their biggest jump in three weeks.

Oil was again the biggest talking point as it plunged to a new 12-year low around $30 a barrel before recovering slightly. It has lost almost a fifth this year, and 70% in 18 months.

What the commentators said

“It is almost as if there is a bidding war among oil analysts” to forecast the lowest price, said Alex Brummer in the Daily Mail. Standard Chartered is out in front, claiming that oil could go as low as $10 a barrel. An “exceptionally warm” start to the winter has exacerbated the supply glut, analysts at consultancy Energy Aspects told the FT, while the slump in Chinese stocks and the attendant
concern over global growth “is adding fuel to the fire”.

“It would take an unusual series of supply disruptions to change the course of this price behaviour,” said Citigroup’s Ed Morse. Demand remains sluggish, Iranian oil is set to re-enter markets, and Saudi Arabia shows no sign of ditching its strategy of trying to drown US shale producers. Stockpiles continue to grow after a year in which inventories probably expanded by 1.4 million barrels.

Here’s the most important thing for investors, said Nils Pratley in The Guardian: according to an industry insider, if the price averages sub-$40 this year, “dividends are toast at all major producers”. And if this scenario stretches into 2017, “there will be budget crises in Russia and a fair number of Gulf states”.


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