Huge oil stocks overhang threatens price recovery – IEA

oil stocks
IEA: “Although market balance is upon us, the existence of very high oil stocks is a threat to the recent stability of oil prices.” Sanjo photo.

Oil demand robust, but not enough to ease oil stocks glut

By Dmitry Zhdannikov

LONDON, July 13 (Reuters) – The global glut in oil is refusing to ease and acts as a major dampener on crude prices despite robust demand growth and steep declines in non-OPEC production, the International Energy Agency said on Wednesday.

The IEA, which coordinates the energy policies of industrial nations, said it had revised up its forecasts of 2016 and 2017 global oil demand growth by 0.1 million barrels per day from last month to 1.4 million and 1.3 million b/d respectively.

It said demand was growing thanks to good consumption in India, China and, surprisingly, Europe.

“This (European demand growth) is unlikely to last, though, with the ongoing precariousness of the European economies now dealing with added uncertainty following the result of the UK referendum on membership of the European Union,” it added.

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Oil prices slumped to their lowest in over a decade at $27 a barrel earlier this year from as high as $115 in 2014 after OPEC raised production to fight for market share against higher-cost producers such as the United States.

The slump forced many producers outside the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries to curb output and prices recovered to around $50 in recent months, also supported by production outages in countries such as Nigeria and Canada.

But it was not enough to reduce the glut that had accumulated over the past two years. Commercial inventories in industrialised nations rose by 13.5 million barrels in May to a record high of 3.074 billion, the Paris-based IEA said.

Inventories kept building in June, pushing oil in floating storage – one of the most expensive methods of stockpiling – to its highest levels since 2009, the IEA said.

“Although market balance is upon us, the existence of very high oil stocks is a threat to the recent stability of oil prices,” the IEA said.

“Although stocks are close to topping out, they are at such elevated levels, especially for products for which demand growth is slackening, that they remain a major dampener on oil prices”.

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The IEA also said recent data suggested growth could be slowing in some key consuming nations.

In China, data for May suggested that year-on-year demand growth was only 130,000 b/d. In the United States, estimated gasoline deliveries in April were up just 75,000 b/d year-on-year, some 410,000 b/d below the IEA’s expectations.

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On the supply side, after a steep drop by 0.9 million b/d in non-OPEC production in 2016 to 56.5 million b/d, output is expected to recover modestly by 0.2 million b/d in 2017.

Meanwhile, OPEC crude output stood in June at an eight-year high of 33.21 million b/d with Saudi Arabia pumping at near-record rates of 10.45 million b/d and Nigerian flows partially recovering from rebel attacks.

Iranian output rose to 3.66 million b/d in June, up 50,000 b/d on May and 750,000 b/d since the easing of Western sanctions at the start of the year.

“As such, the Middle East’s market share of global oil supplies rose to 35 percent, the highest since the late 1970s and an eloquent reminder that even when U.S. shale production does resume its growth, older producers will remain essential for oil markets,” the IEA said.

(Reporting by Dmitry Zhdannikov; Editing by Dale Hudson)