US diesel demand poised for boost from freight recovery: Kemp

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Federal Reserve appears poised to embark on first tightening of monetary policy since 2004-2006

By John Kemp

Freight movements across the United States are showing signs of sustained growth, which should help push domestic diesel consumption higher this year.

Freight was hit hard in 2015/16 by the switch from coal to gas-fired power generation, the slump in oil and gas drilling, and more generally by an unplanned build up in business inventories.

The seasonally adjusted volume of freight moved by road, rail, pipeline, barge and air declined by 3.4 percent between December 2014 and March 2016, according to the U.S. Bureau of Transportation Statistics.

Nearly all freight transport is powered by diesel so the freight recession caused a corresponding drop in distillate fuel oil consumption.

Lower freight demand was exacerbated by the record warm winter in 2015/16, since distillate is also used to heat homes, offices, and other buildings.

Distillate consumption declined by 4.7 percent between 2014 and 2016, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration (“Short-Term Energy Outlook”, EIA, Feb. 2017).

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U.S. refineries have coped by switching to gasoline production as far as possible and ramping up diesel exports to the rest of the western hemisphere.

U.S. refineries have exported surplus distillate to Central and South America, where local refineries have proved unable to meet strongly growing demand.

U.S. diesel demand has remained depressed even as gasoline consumption has passed the previous peak set back in 2007.

But the improvement in the freight outlook should ensure domestic diesel consumption returns to growth in 2017.

FREIGHT MOVING AGAIN

Coal deliveries should rise significantly in 2017 now power producers have run down excess stocks that accumulated during 2014/2015.

Power producers are also expected to run coal-fired units for more hours in 2017 and burn more coal thanks to the rise in gas prices, which will give an extra boost to rail movements.

In the first six weeks of 2017, the number of rail cars loaded with coal increased by 15 percent compared with the same period in 2016, according to the Association of American Railroads.

The sustained recovery in oil and gas drilling evident since the middle of 2016 will also drive an increase in diesel demand in 2017.

Most drilling rigs an pressure pumping systems use diesel-electric motors and rely on diesel generators for all their auxiliary power needs.

And the movement of equipment and supplies to drill sites, including deliveries of fracking sand and water, is a significant source of freight demand.

The number of rigs drilling for oil and gas across the United States has risen by more than 330 (80 percent) since the end of May 2016.

The active rig count is currently increasing at an average rate of around 20 per week and is expected to continue rising through the remainder of the year.

Finally, U.S. manufacturers, distributors and retailers have at last arrested and begun to reverse the unplanned increase in stocks of raw materials, work-in-progress and unsold products that built up in 2014/15.

The economy-wide ratio of business inventories to sales surged from 1.30:1 in July 2014 to peak at 1.41:1 between January and March 2016, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

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As a result, freight fell during 2014/15 as manufacturers, distributors and retailers all cut new orders in an effort to reduce the stock overhang.

But the inventory-sales ratio has dropped consistently since April 2016 and by the end of the year had fallen to just 1.35:1.

Freight deliveries are currently running below the level needed to replace sales, resulting in the biggest decline in the inventory ratio for more than five years.

Inventories remain somewhat elevated but the current draw down is unsustainable in the medium and long term.

At some point, manufacturers, distributors and retailers will have to increase orders and deliveries to stabilise stock levels.

REMAINING RISKS

Rising coal deliveries, increased oil and gas production, and the end of the destocking cycle should all combine to produce a significant increase in diesel consumption in 2017/18.

The U.S. Energy Information Administration currently projects distillate consumption will rise by around 80,000 bpd in 2017 and another 110,000 bpd in 2018.

The main uncertainties surrounding the freight outlook come from the macroeconomic side, where the economic policies of the Trump administration remain unknown.

The White House has hinted at an ambitious agenda of tax cuts, increased government spending and deregulation, which should provide a strong economic stimulus in the medium term.

But it remains unclear how much of this agenda will actually be enacted and the possible introduction of a border-adjusted tax or targeted tariff protection could all have a negative impact on freight.

The Federal Reserve system also appears poised to embark on the first tightening of monetary policy since 2004-2006.

The political-economic cycle will remain a source of significant uncertainty for some time but the underlying freight outlook is stronger than it has been for over two years, which is a positive for distillate demand.

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