Friday, February 12, 2010

IEA - Oil Market Report


Highlights of the latest OMR dated February 11th 2010.....

Benchmark crude oil prices fell to six week lows by early February, after warmer weather in the Northern Hemisphere, negative macroeconomic news and sudden strength in the dollar set in motion a $12/bbl slide. Prices regained some of their losses in recent days, with WTI last trading at $73.80/bbl and Brent at $72/bbl.

Forecast global oil demand is revised up 170 kb/d for 2010 as more robust IMF GDP projections are partly offset by a higher price assumption and persistently weak OECD oil demand. Global oil demand is estimated at 84.9 mb/d in 2009 (-1.5% or -1.3 mb/d year-on-year) and 86.5 mb/d in 2010 (+1.8% or +1.6 mb/d versus 2009), with growth entirely in non-OECD countries.

Global oil supply fell 45 kb/d to 85.8 mb/d in January, with higher total OPEC output (mostly NGLs) offset by lower non-OPEC production. Average 2009 non-OPEC production is revised 70 kb/d higher at 51.4 mb/d while 2010 supply is revised up by 120 kb/d to 51.6 mb/d on slightly improved US and North Sea crude prospects.

OPEC crude output was up 105 kb/d at 29.1 mb/d in January. OPEC NGL production is forecast to rise 0.8 mb/d to 5.5 mb/d in 2010, with just over half of the increase related to ramp up from 2009 project start-ups. The call on OPEC crude and stock change for 2010 is revised up 300 kb/d to 29.4 mb/d.

OECD industry stocks fell 67.8 mb in December to 2 678 mb, around 0.8% below 2008’s level, on lower crude and middle distillate inventories. End-December forward demand cover fell to 58.1 days, now only 0.1 day higher than a year ago. Preliminary data point to a January OECD stockbuild of 11.4 mb, but with lower floating storage.

Global 4Q09 and 1Q10 refinery crude throughput forecasts remain unchanged at 72.3 mb/d and 72.6 mb/d respectively, though in the latter’s case, higher Canadian, Mexican and OECD Pacific runs offset lower non-OECD throughputs. Despite some signs of improvement for the refining industry, the sector’s short-term outlook remains fundamentally bearish.

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