CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 69% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading CFDs with this provider. You should consider whether you understand how CFDs work and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money.
CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 69% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading CFDs with this provider. You should consider whether you understand how CFDs work and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money.

What to Watch in Oil Week of 14 October 2019

Article By: ,  Head of Market Research

As of writing, the US and China are on the verge of signing a limited trade deal that avert the next escalation of tariffs (currently scheduled for next week). Guessing and second-guessing of potential political outcomes aside, Chinese import and export data on Monday will shed some light into how much damage has been done to trade over the last few months.

US imports have been increasingly slipping in importance for Beijing as Russia and Saudi Arabia wrestle for the top two positions, and China has been cutting back on its dependence on US oil ever since trade frictions first started. However, this went a step further at the beginning of September when China started imposing a 5% tariff on US crude imports, and it remains to be seen how this has translated into the number of barrels making it across the Chinese border.

KEY OIL MARKET DATA NEXT WEEK:

When

What

Why it is important

Mon 03.30

China Sept Imports, Exports

It will show the impact of increased trade tariffs, likely to worsen from August numbers   

Tue

New set of US tariffs on China takes effect

Tariffs that are already in place on $250 bn of Chinese imports will rise from 25% to 30%

Tue 10.00

German ZEW data

A good indicator of the state of German economy

Wed 07.00

September car registration data for UK, Germany, Italy, France

A good indicator of forthcoming transport related petrol demand in Europe

Wed 15.30

US crude oil inventories

Last week at 2.927m

Wed 15.30

EIA weekly refinery utilization

Last week down week-on-week 0.7%

Thu  13.30

US September housing starts

An indicator of demand from US construction industry, previously at 1.364m

Thu 14.15

US September industrial production, manufacturing

A gauge for industrial oil demand. Industrial production previously up 0.6% MoM, manufacturing -0.5% MoM 

Fri 03.00

China  Q3 GDP

Last at 6.2% but widely expected to show a decline

Fri 03.00

China Sept Industrial Production

Industrial Production rose in August 4.4% YoY

Fri 20.30

CFTC Oil Speculative Net Positions 

Last at 389.300

In August China’s exports declined -1% on the year and there is very little reason to expect that the trend did not continue into September. Last month’s data is likely to show a worse decline as the US started collecting an additional 15% in tariffs on $125 billion of Chinese goods from the beginning of the month.

More worryingly, many analysts are now downgrading expectations for Chinese economic growth from 6.2% this year to 5.5% in 2020 which would not bode well for oil bulls.

OPEC BRIEF:

OPEC ministers are beginning to prep for the cartel’s next meeting at the beginning of December in Vienna, and early comments show that they are becoming increasingly concerned about which way global demand is heading. Among the top concerns on their list is the slow but persistent erosion of the Chinese economy –the country’s GDP data due on Friday will shed some light on that – but the oil cartel have recently warned that an overall slowdown in global demand may cause them to opt for bigger cuts in December. OPEC’s World Oil Outlook for next year due to be published on 3 November will show in black and white how much erosion there has been this year in global oil demand.

COUNTRY CORNER: RUSSIA

Although technically not a part of OPEC, Russia has been key to coordinating output cuts with other OPEC countries in order to keep prices up. However, there is mixed motivation for Russia to restrain its oil exports. The country is still under partial sanctions from the US and the bulk of its revenue depends on natural resources. For every $1 increase in the price of oil Russia pockets $7.5 million in daily export revenues of which 75% makes it into the state budget. Russia has a moderate record in sticking to production cuts it has committed to, so while it may agree on paper on future output restrictions this will not necessarily translate into reduced outflows.

As frictions between China and the US escalate, Russia is filling that space with increased exports to China. For the last three to four years it has overtaken Saudi Arabia as the main oil exporter to China and last year it upped its China exports by 40% to 1.658 million barrels a day.


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