The oil price is heading into bear market territory again.
Both key benchmarks – WTI (West Texas Intermediate – the US benchmark) and Brent crude – are down by nearly 20% from the highs they set in June.
Now, you won’t catch me complaining about falling oil prices. I prefer petrol prices to go down or at least stay flat, rather than rise.
But it’s worth noting that the market as a whole has seemed rather more comfortable with stable, rather than falling oil prices.
So it’s worth asking what sort of knock-on effect a fresh oil crash might have…
The oil recovery sputters out
Oil (as measured by WTI) reached a high for the year of just under $52 a barrel last month. Now it’s back down to below $42 a barrel.
Just when oil companies thought they were out of the woods, some might be starting to feel jittery again.
For example, BP just reported its second quarter results. It missed analysts’ expectations, although it was an improvement on last quarter. The company also added on debt – it’s more in debt than it has been in at least 16 years, one Banco Santander analyst told Bloomberg.
Basically, BP is borrowing more money and cutting investment to fund its dividend payout. In the long run, the company says, it needs oil to average $60 a barrel to fund investment and to sustain the dividend.
Meanwhile, Shell took a real battering this morning, with its second-quarter profits missing analysts’ expectations by more than $1bn. Problems included production shutdowns in Canada and Nigeria, plus weakening refining margins.
Refineries have been buying up cheap oil to take advantage of falling prices. But demand for petrol hasn’t kept pace. Indeed, US stockpiles of petrol for the week ending July 15 went up – analysts had expected a sharp decline, given that this is the “annual driving season”, where Americans hop in their cars and trek off on holiday.
As a result, reports the Wall Street Journal, stockpiles are “near record levels”, which has pushed down petrol prices (in the US at least). So the margin between the cost of the oil, and the money refineries can make by turning it into other products, has shrunk.
With all that petrol stockpiled, there’s less need for refiners to buy oil. That could hit demand and send prices down again.
That doesn’t necessarily mean that crude prices will retest the lows around the $30 level – although it might. But as Allen Brooks of PPHB notes in his Musings from the Oil Patch research note, even if the bottom of the cycle has been reached, the question is, “what will be the shape of the industry recovery”: a robust bounce-back or a damp squib?
How falling oil prices could keep US interest rates from rising until 2017
Here’s what I’m wondering about: what the fresh slide in oil could mean for US monetary policy.
Yesterday, the Federal Reserve gave one of its middle-of-the-road assessments of the world. While the Fed will continue to “closely monitor” global developments, “near-term risks to the economic outlook have diminished”, suggesting that the Fed isn’t quite as stressed about the state of China’s economy or the knock-on impact of Brexit as it had been earlier in the year.
One of the FOMC (the Fed’s rate-setting committee) even decided to vote for an immediate rate rise. But as we’ve seen in the UK, during the good months, there’s usually one token “hawk” who’s willing to vote against everyone else.
In short, the Fed said nothing. It’s fairly happy about the way the US economy is going, and there are no obvious market juggernauts set to derail the global economy. But if any come up, you can be sure that the Fed will be ready to take action (or inaction).
After all, as Paul Ashworth of Capital Economics notes (with perhaps a touch of understatement), “in recent years, the Fed has shown itself to be unusually sensitive to any dips in the stockmarket”.
The thing is, the Fed is probably already running the risk of “falling behind the curve”, and that’s very much what it wants to do. The US economy – with rising wages and ongoing job gains – is doing OK. Certainly better than a 0.5% base rate would suggest. Ashworth reckons that second quarter consumption growth hit 4.5% on an annualised basis – “the biggest quarterly gain in a decade”.
But if oil prices keep sliding, that could have a knock-on effect as fears over rising defaults in the high-yield bond market grip investors again. And that does make me wonder – the Fed’s best option for keeping oil prices stable or rising is to weaken the US dollar.
If Japan in particular launches a big stimulus package very soon, then that will make it easier for the Fed to adopt a dovish tone – perhaps at Janet Yellen’s appearance at the big central bank shindig in Jackson Hole next month.
And if nothing else, the Fed can point to the looming US election as a source of instability. So on balance, I reckon we can forget about a US rate rise until after either President Trump or President Clinton are sitting at the helm.
Apart from anything else, that argues for holding on to gold. As for oil – as I said earlier this week, taking profits on the more speculative plays is or was probably a good idea. But there might be some fresh buying opportunities further down the line if the market gets sufficiently scared of another big crash – so line up a watchlist.