Oil: Recovery or Relegation – Where Will the Price Go from Here?
February 15 2021 - 5:03AM
Finscreener.org
Last week oil
prices recovered to pre-Covid19 pandemic levels, with Brent oil
futures trading well over $60 per barrel. Additionally, oil prices
are trading at the top end of their 5-year range (2016-2020) and
are $7 per barrel over the 5-year average price. The recovery in
oil prices prompted RussiaU+02019s Deputy Premier Novak to declare
that oil markets are now balanced.
Analysts are divided on the future of the market. For example,
in their
latest oil market report, the IEA says that world oil demand
will grow by 5.4 million barrels per day (mb/d) in 2021 to reach
96.4 mb/d. The demand recovery represents around 60% of the volume
lost to the pandemic in 2020 as a more favorable economic outlook
underpins more robust demand in the second half of the year. They
also note that global implied stock draws accelerated from 1.56
mb/d in 3Q20 to 2.24 mb/d in 4Q20. In December, OECD industry
stocks fell for the fifth consecutive month.
Is $100 per Barrel Oil Possible by 2022?
Amrita Sen, the chief oil analyst at Energy Aspects, told
Bloomberg in an interview that loose global monetary policy could
impact her call for oil above $80 per barrel in 2022, and maybe
even $100 given how much liquidity there is in the system now. In
the meantime, JPMorgan Chase says they have been bullish on oil
since early 2020 on expectations that demand could outstrip supply
by up to 2.0 million barrels per day in August 2021. Several Wall
Street firms now see global commodities, in general, entering a new
super-cycle that could last for years.
A World Without Oil?
Not everyone agrees that oil has a bright future.
Reuters reports that some of the worldU+02019s largest
state-owned national oil companies are at risk of wasting up to
$400 billion on expensive oil and gas projects over the next ten
years just as the transition to alternative energy picks up. For
example, the Biden administration has committed to putting the US
back into the Paris climate accords, and large automakers are
increasingly turning to electric vehicle production. (For more,
see:
Ford vs. GM – Who Comes Out on Top?)
Transportation Stocks the Big Winner
If investors agree that oil is poised to continue toward $100
per barrel, one way to play it would be an investment in the
transportation sector. The SPDR S&P Transportation ETF
(AMEX:
XTN) is a multi-cap, blended, North American
transportation-focused ETF that is up over 16% in the last
12-months. The fund is weighted to consumersU+02019 transportation
rather than goods with holdings like Lyft Inc, Uber Technologies,
and Avis Budget Group. However, it could still be an excellent way
to capitalize on a post-pandemic economic recovery. (For more, see:
Is Now the Time to Buy "Activity Stocks?")
SPDR S&P Transportation (AMEX:XTN)
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