Wednesday, February 06, 2019 09.21AM / By Tom
Kool, News Editor, Oilprice.com / Image: Video Blocks
We will take a quick look at some of the critical
figures and data in the energy markets this week.
We will then look at some of the key market movers early this week before
providing you with the latest analysis of the top news events taking place in
the global energy complex over the past few days. We hope you enjoy.



Chart
of the Week

- The International Maritime Organization has new regulations taking effect on January 1, 2020 that will slash the concentration of sulfur in marine fuels from 3.5 percent down to 0.5 percent.
- Marine vessels consume about 4 million barrels per day of oil, or about 4 percent of total oil demand.
- The shipping industry will need to replace high-sulfur fuel oil (the dark red section in the chart) will either low-sulfur fuel oil, higher priced distillate fuels, or LNG.
- All have pros and cons, and there will likely be a mix of responses from the industry.
Market
Movers
- BP (NYSE: BP) beat consensus
estimates for its fourth quarter revenue and earnings. The company reporting
earnings per share of $1.04, and its share price rose by 2.9 percent in early
trading on Tuesday.
- Anadarko Petroleum’s (NYSE: APC)
Mozambique LNG project agreed to sell 2.6 metric tons of LNG per year to UK’s
Centrica and Tokyo Gas. The project is Mozambique’s first, and it is expected
to run well into the 2040s.
- Pembina Pipeline (NYSE: PBA) and
joint venture partner Kuwait Petrochemical Industries announced the final
investment decision on a C$4.5 billion petrochemical facility in Alberta. The
project will turn propane into plastic.
Tuesday February 5, 2019
Oil prices have been choppy in recent days, although WTI and Brent are
holding onto their gains near multi-month highs. Outages in Venezuela is
pushing crude higher, but some profit-taking, along with a few weak economic indicators on U.S. factory orders, kept prices in check.
Venezuelan oil backed up with no place to go. Press
reports suggest that Venezuela is having difficulty finding buyers for its oil,
with U.S. sanctions encircling the country. Satellite imagery shows several
tankers idling off the coast of Maracaibo, the country’s second largest city.
Meanwhile, Reuters reports that a “flotilla loaded with about 7 million barrels of
Venezuelan oil has formed in the Gulf of Mexico, some holding cargoes bought
ahead of the latest U.S. sanctions on Venezuela and others whose buyers are
weighing who to pay.” U.S. sanctions are biting much harder than first
expected, and a sizable chunk of Venezuela’s oil exports could be in jeopardy.
Saudi crown prince faces internal resistance to Aramco IPO. The
Wall Street Journal reports that Saudi crown prince Mohammed bin Salman has faced
internal resistance to his idea of launching a public offering of state-owned
Saudi Aramco. The Saudi bureaucracy slow-walked the IPO plans, and ultimately
convinced MbS to delay the offering until 2021 at the earliest, the WSJ
reports. Moreover, many officials are intent on preventing the IPO from ever
happening because they feel it will expose the company’s internal workings, open
up the company to legal blowback abroad, and also cost the country
economically.
Oil majors post strong profits. The oil majors
posted impressive earnings for the fourth quarter and full-year in 2018,
despite the collapse of oil prices. The five largest oil companies posted a
combined $84 billion in profits last year, up from just $10 billion four years
ago, according to the Wall Street Journal. The majors, by and large, are focusing on increasing
returns to shareholders. Chevron (NYSE: CVX), for
instance, announced a $25 billion share repurchasing program.
Bank of America: Oil demand peaks in 2030. Bank of
America Merrill Lynch sees oil demand growing slowly over the coming decade
before peaking in 2030. Demand growth slows from 1.2 mb/d in 2019 to just 0.6
mb/d by 2024. By 2030, annual growth falls to zero.
Fed stakes out dovish position. The U.S. Federal
Reserve has reversed course on rate hikes, announcing last week that it would
essentially hold off until further notice. The policy change seems to be a
recognition of the threats to global economic growth. The oil market welcomed
the news, rising strongly last week. But the downside threat of slower growth
leaves the oil price rally vulnerable.
Tesla to buy Maxwell Technologies for $218 million. Tesla
(NASDAQ: TSLA) agreed to buy Maxwell Technologies (NASDAQ: MXWL) for $218
million in an all-stock deal. The acquisition will give Elon Musk capacitors
that could assist with fast charging capabilities.
Green New Deal to be introduced. Within the next
few days, U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) and Senator Ed Markey
(D-MA) are expected to introduce the first draft of the “Green New Deal,” with the goal of
eliminating U.S. greenhouse gas emissions by 2030. The legislation has no
chance of passage with the current Congressional makeup or with President Trump
in the White House, but it offers a blueprint that is increasingly being taken
up by aspiring candidates for president on the Democratic side. If a Democrat
wins the 2020 race, the Green New Deal could be a high priority.
Trump administration appealing ruling on Keystone XL.
The Trump administration is appealing a court ruling that blocked TransCanada’s
(NYSE: TRP) Keystone XL pipeline. The November ruling
invalidated a construction permit for the project. The judge said the federal
government had not fully assessed the impact of oil spills and that further
review was needed.
China sees $50 billion in loans at risk in Venezuela.
China loaned more than $50 billion to Venezuela over the past 12 years, but
Chinese officials are now worried that their investments in the country are at
risk with the regime change effort underway. Chinese oil companies also have
stakes in Venezuela’s oil sector. The Wall Street Journal reports on China’s efforts to salvage something in Venezuela.
Petrobras starts production at Lula North. Petrobras
(NYSE: PBR) started production at the Lula North pre-salt area in Brazil’s Santos
basin.
Biofuels group sues EPA. A biofuels trade group,
Growth Energy, is suing the U.S. EPA for failing to address past waivers grants to
oil refiners that allowed them to get out of their blending requirements under
U.S. law, which mandates certain volumes of biofuels.
Ford: Automakers could invest in cobalt. A Ford (NYSE:
F) executive said that automakers may soon begin investing directly in cobalt mines in
order to secure supply for batteries.
Purge of Pemex raises fear of brain drain. Mexican
President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador has made sweeping changes to government,
cutting salaries and purging Pemex of technocrats. Critics argue the company is
going to be starved of talent and expertise.
Guyana could surpass Venezuela in 5 years. Guyana
is expected to see its oil production go from zero to 750,000 bpd by
2025. Meanwhile, Venezuela’s output is heading in the other direction.
Venezuela has been a major oil producer for decades, but tiny Guyana could
surpass Venezuela in terms of oil production in just a few years.
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