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Analysts sharply cut oil price forecasts for 2025

  • Market: Crude oil
  • 16/09/24

Concerns over sluggish demand at a time of rising supply have prompted analysts to sharply lower their oil price forecasts for next year.

Atlantic basin benchmark North Sea Dated will average $78.27/bl in the first quarter of next year, an average of analysts' forecasts shows, $7.20/bl lower than forecasts in July (see table). The projection for 2025 of $76.88/bl is more than $6.30/bl below the previous average. US marker WTI prices will average $73.81/bl in the first quarter, roughly $6.80/bl below the previous survey. WTI is expected to average $72.13/bl next year, $6/bl down on the July average.

BofA Securities revised its Brent price forecast $5/bl lower for 2025. It expects Chinese oil demand to grow by only 180,000 b/d this year and by 210,000 b/d in 2025, down from record growth of 1.45mn b/d last year. "Several factors dramatically reduced China's appetite for oil this year and could soon cause consumption to peak," the bank notes, citing a rapid adoption of electric vehicles and as LNG-fuelled trucks make inroads against diesel. The bank expects the market to tip into a 730,000 b/d surplus in 2025. This is similar to forecasts of a 700,000 b/d surplus for next year by Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley.

Higher supply is driven by a ramp-up in output in the Americas, analysts say. Brazil, Guyana, Canada and the US together represent 1.17mn b/d of total growth next year, according to BofA.

Holding position

On Opec+ supply, eight members of the group — Saudi Arabia, Russia, Iraq, the UAE, Kuwait, Kazakhstan, Algeria and Oman — agreed on 6 September to start unwinding 2.2mn b/d of voluntary output cuts from December, instead of October, over 12 months. Goldman Sachs says "additional delays are plausible" but expects that Opec+ "will go ahead with gradual production increases at some point in the next few quarters because disciplining non-Opec+ supply and supporting internal cohesion and global oil demand is likely the optimal long-run strategy". But BofA says "the market has limited appetite for additional volumes" and suggests that "some of the recent price weakness may be the market attempting to force Opec+ to hold off on any output increases". Ice front-month Brent fell below $70/bl for the first time since December 2021 on 10 September.

Concerns about demand look to be offsetting disruption to Libyan supplies and elevated tensions in the Middle East. Over 850,000 b/d of largely light sweet production from Libya is off line. But BofA says the dispute in Libya is "reportedly nearing a resolution that we think will lead to the restoration of output by the end of the quarter". Talks took place on 3 September and 11 September but an end to the impasse in the country has yet to be reached.

Crude price forecasts$/bl
BrentWTI
1Q25±*2Q25±*2025±*1Q25±*2Q25±*2025±*
ABN Amro75.00-15.0075.00na75.00-13.0070.00-15.0070.00na70.00-13.00
BofA Securities74.00-12.0076.00na75.00-5.0070.00-9.0072.00na71.00-4.00
Goldman Sachs77.00-6.0076.00na77.00-5.0073.00-5.0072.00na71.00-5.00
Morgan Stanley75.00na75.00na75.00na70.00na70.00na70.00na
UBS87.000.0087.00nanana82.000.0082.00nanana
Argus Consulting†81.61-1.7283.00na82.39-0.3577.84-2.6079.24na78.630.13
Average78.27-7.2078.67na76.88-6.3173.81-6.8174.21na72.13-6.00
*change from previous survey in Jul 2024 †Argus Consulting is a division of Argus Media

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Guyana hires floating generators to avert outages


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14/11/24

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Cop: EU ETS volatility problem for corporate CCS case


14/11/24
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14/11/24

Cop: EU ETS volatility problem for corporate CCS case

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IEA sees wider oil market surplus next year


14/11/24
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14/11/24

IEA sees wider oil market surplus next year

London, 14 November (Argus) — The IEA is predicting a global oil supply surplus of over 1mn b/d next year, which it says will provide "much-needed stability" to the market. The Paris-based agency's latest Oil Market Report (OMR) shows a 1.15mn b/d supply surplus next year, the highest since it first started projecting supply and demand levels for 2025 in April this year. It is 40,000 b/d higher than its estimate last month. "With supply risks omnipresent, a looser balance would provide some much-needed stability to a market upended by the Covid pandemic, Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine and, most recently, heightened unrest in the Middle East," the IEA said. The IEA's projected supply surplus could be much higher if Opec+ members push ahead with a plan to start unwinding 2.2mn b/d of "voluntary" production cuts from January over a 12-month period. But this is not guaranteed. Weaker-than-expected demand has already forced the Opec+ members to delay their plan to start increasing output by three months. Opec+ ministers are set to decide on their output policy for 2025 and beyond in a meeting on 1 December. The IEA's oil demand growth forecasts for this year and next remain below 1mn b/d — a steep drop compared with 2mn b/d last year and 2.5mn b/d in 2022. For this year, the IEA has raised its oil demand growth projection by 60,000 b/d to 920,000 b/d, mostly because of higher-than-expected consumption in Europe. Its forecast for next year has been nudged down by 10,000 b/d to 990,000 b/d compared with last month's OMR. Much of the slowdown in global consumption centres on China, where the economy is not growing as fast as it once did. The IEA has kept its oil demand growth for China unchanged at 150,000 b/d for this year, but this is far below the 710,000 b/d it was forecasting in January. The agency said Chinese oil demand contracted for a sixth straight month in September, pushing consumption in the third quarter 270,000 b/d below year-earlier levels. For next year, the IEA has lowered its Chinese demand growth forecast by 30,000 b/d to 190,000 b/d. China's slowing oil demand is also due to an increased uptake of electric vehicles, LNG-powered trucks and high-speed rail, the IEA said. On global supply, the IEA has trimmed its growth estimate for this year by 20,000 b/d to 640,000 b/d. But for next year, it sees supply growth accelerating to more than 2mn b/d, led by the US, Canada, Guyana, Brazil and Argentina. The agency said global observed oil stocks declined by 47.5mn bl in September to their lowest level since January. It also said preliminary data show stocks fell further in October. By Aydin Calik Supply and demand balance Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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Cop: Argentina pulls delegation from Baku


13/11/24
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13/11/24

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