OIL & ENERGY INSIDER

 

Oil Prices Continue To Climb On Supply Disruptions

 
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Oil prices are heading for another weekly gain as supply disruptions led to tighter supply. The risk of traders taking profits, however, could push prices lower.
  















Friday, September 24, 2021 

Oil prices are heading for a third straight week of gains despite a slight downward correction on Friday, buoyed by ongoing supply disruptions in the United States and several OPEC+ countries (such as Nigeria and Angola) failing to increase production according to their production targets. The anticipated Chinese SPR sale turned out to be a marginal blip on the screen, with most of the discussion now focusing on countries’ capabilities and willingness to meet robust demand across the globe. As of Friday, global benchmark Brent traded around $77 per barrel, whilst WTI was most recently assessed at $73 per barrel. Barring the Hurricane Ida period, the Brent-WTI spread is at its widest since late March 2021. 

Chinese SPR Sale Fails to Impress. Of the 7.3 MMbbls of crude on offer, only 4.4 MMbbls were 
allocated amongst two bidders, state-owned Petrochina (SHA:601857) and private refiner Hengli (SHA:600346). Despite them paying a relatively low price of $65 per barrel on all crudes except Upper Zakum, the desired effect of sending a strong signal to markets didn’t materialize. 

World’s Largest Floating Wind Farm Comes Online. The 50MW Kincardine floating offshore wind park, located 15km off the coast from Aberdeen, Scotland, has been brought 
online this week, with Norway’s Statkraft purchasing all electrical output under a guaranteed feed-in price until 2029. 

US Majors Not Reporting Payments Abroad. US oil majors Exxon Mobil (NYSE:XOM) and Chevron (NYSE:CVX) reportedly 
failed to publicly disclose their taxes and other payments to foreign governments that are not members of the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI), such as Angola, Pakistan, or Qatar, Reuters reports. 

JPMorgan Under Brazilian Scrutiny. Leading US investment bank JP Morgan & Chase (NYSE:JPM) is being 
investigated by Brazilian authorities for participating in a bribery and money laundering scheme that reportedly existed all the way back in 2011, with the bank seemingly getting fuel oil deliveries from Petrobras with artificially low prices. 

Tin Prices Keep the Metals Heat On. Tin prices 
reached record highs this Friday, with the Shanghai Futures Exchange contract jumping to 288,000 yuan per metric tonne ($44,500 per mt), as inventories in both LME and ShFE were nearing all-time lows of 1180 and 1700 metric tonnes respectively. 

Vitol Moves into EV Infrastructure. Oil trading major Vitol has 
formed a partnership with China’s BYD (SHE:002594), pledging an initial $250 million to expand electric vehicle infrastructure and charging grids, having already invested into EV charging infrastructure in Colombia. 

Brazil LNG Imports Set Record in September. Overall LNG imports into Brazil are 
heading for an all-time high this month (at 1 million tons LNG) with Petrobras (NYSE:PBR) and others continuing to buy US cargoes. 

UK Sees a Nuclear Way Forward. The government of Great Britain 
initiated nuclear talks with US nuclear firm Westinghouse to build a new atomic plant in Wylfa, Northern Wales on the back of the ongoing energy crunch, reviving an erstwhile Hitachi project that ran aground last year. 

BASF Boosts Battery Recycling Segment. Germany’s leading chemicals firm BASF (ETR:BAS) has been 
developing a global network for the reuse of cathode materials in a bid to recycle metals used in EV batteries such as cobalt and nickel as their supply becomes harder to come by.  

ConocoPhillips Sells Secondary US Acreage. Following its $9.5 billion mega-deal to buy Shell’s Permian assets, US major ConocoPhillips (NYSE:COP) 
decided to sell some of its conventional acreage in west Texas and New Mexico worth roughly $0.5 billion, in a bid to partially offset the effect on its balance sheet. 

US Arrests Senior Manager of Russia’s LNG Champion. Mark Gyetvay, deputy head of Russia’s leading LNG producer NOVATEK (MCX:NVTK) who holds both US and Russian passports, has been 
arrested in the United States on tax charges related to $93 million hidden in offshore accounts in Switzerland.  

Energy Crunch Prolongs Coal Plants’ Life. UK-based utility company Drax Group (LON:DRX) announced it could 
keep its coal-fired plants operating beyond their planned closure deadline in 2022, on the back of exorbitantly high gas prices pushing power prices to all-time highs. 

US Natural Gas Firm Up for Sale. US natural gas upstream-focused company Gulfport Energy (NYSE:GPOR) is reportedly 
considering a possible sale, only months after control of the company was transferred to creditors on the back of its completing a Chapter 11 bankruptcy process. Gulfport’s current market value hovers around $1.6 billion. 

Citi Admits Blocking PDVSA Payments. In a US court hearing this week, executives from Citigroup 
acknowledged they blocked an attempt by Venezuela’s national oil company PDVSA to pay its debt to an oilfield equipment provider, boosting the former’s argument that its debt repayment efforts were stymied by banks. 

Russia Prepares Its Own Carbon Tax. Wary of being subject to the European Union’s carbon border mechanism tax that is supposed to come into effect in the mid-2020s, Russia is 
reportedly drafting its own carbon tax to avoid cross-border taxes. The Russian government expects to have draft legislature ready in 12-18 months

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