Oil bulls distressed that last week’s rally fizzled can find some comfort in forecasts for a bigger and longer rebound by the end of the year.
Analysts are projecting prices will climb more than $15 by the end of 2016. New York crude will reach $46 a barrel during the fourth quarter, while Brent in London will trade at $48 in the same period, the median of 17 estimates compiled by Bloomberg this year show. A global surplus that fuelled oil’s decline to a 12-year low will shift to deficit as US shale output falls, according to Goldman Sachs Group Inc.
US production will drop by 620,000 bpd, or about 7%, from the first quarter to the fourth, according to the Energy Information Administration. Meanwhile, the International Energy Agency forecasts total non-Opec supply will fall by 600,000 bpd this year. That may pave the way for a rebound as lower prices have stimulated global demand. Oil is the “trade of the year,” according to Citigroup Inc, which is among banks from UBS Group to Societe Generale that predict a gain in the second half.
“US shale should take the hit, that’s where you will see cuts and supply should start to taper off,” Daniel Ang, an investment analyst at Phillip Futures, said by phone from Singapore. “On top of that, there are bullish demand forecasts for the second half.”
West Texas Intermediate and Brent both closed at the lowest level since 2003 on January 20. WTI for March delivery ended the session at $29.88 a barrel on Tuesday and would need to gain 54% to reach the median estimate of $46 a barrel. The London contract for April delivery settled at $32.72 and needs a 47% boost to hit $48. The median price was taken from estimates provided this year by 17 analysts who gave forecasts for both oil grades.
WTI and Brent added 4.4% and 8% last week, respectively, amid speculation Russia and Opec will meet to discuss trimming crude output. They have since given up most of those gains.
The oil price rout will shut sufficient production to erode the global glut and crude will turn into a new bull market before the year is out, analysts including Goldman Sachs’ Jeff Currie said in a January 15 report. US production hit a record high of 9.61mn bpd in June, according to weekly data from the EIA, and is forecast to average 9.11mn bpd in the first three months of the year. It may fall to average 8.49mn bpd during the fourth quarter, according to the agency.
“We’ll see higher oil prices” with “supply and demand tightening in the second half of the year,” Bob Dudley, chief executive officer of BP, said in a Bloomberg Television interview on Tuesday. The market will remain “tough and choppy” in the first half as it contends with a surplus of 1mn barrels a day, he said. A worldwide oversupply contributed to a 30% slump in WTI and 35% decline in Brent last year. US crude supplies have swelled to a record and the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries have effectively abandoned output targets as they seek to defend market share.
“We need to see supply giving up and I think that all falls to the US,” Dominic Schnider, the head of commodities and Asia-Pacific foreign exchange at UBS’s wealth-management unit in Hong Kong, said last Friday in a Bloomberg Television interview. Schnider at the beginning of this year correctly predicted Brent would drop near $30 a barrel. “We’re still oversupplied.”
Natixis lowered its forecasts for 2016 and 2017 over concerns that Iran will boost exports after sanctions were lifted and on the possibility a more stable Libyan government will increase production. The Paris-based bank projects WTI will average $38 a barrel in the fourth-quarter, the lowest of 17 estimates compiled by Bloomberg. And while the IEA sees supply outside Opec sliding, it warned last month that “the oil market could drown in oversupply.”
The price slump prompted Exxon Mobil Corp to cut its drilling budget to the lowest in 10 years, while Standard & Poor’s reduced Chevron Corp’s credit rating for the first time in almost three decades. The agency also cut Royal Dutch Shell’s debt rating to the lowest since S&P began coverage in 1990.
There are signs supply and demand will start to come back into balance this year, Opec secretary-general Abdalla El-Badri said on January 25 at a conference in London. Global demand is forecast to increase by about 1.3mn bpd, while supply from outside the producer group is expected to contract by about 660,000 a day, he said.
Output from Russia, which vies with Saudi Arabia and the US as the world’s top producer, may fall this year by as much as 150,000 bpd, or about 1.3%, according to analysts including Neil Beveridge, at Sanford C Bernstein & Co. The country’s production set a post-Soviet high in January as output of crude and a light oil called condensate climbed 1.5% from a year earlier to 10.878mn bpd, according to the Energy Ministry’s CDU-TEK unit.
Iraq, the second-biggest producer in Opec, and Pierre Andurand, the founder of the $615mn Andurand Capital Management, predict oil may rise to $50 a barrel, while the UAE sees the glut shrinking, even after Iran boosts exports.
While prices continue to fluctuate, buy the December 2016 WTI contract below $40 a barrel because prices are forecast to average $48 by the end of the year, according to Mark Keenan, the head of commodities research for Asia at Societe Generale in Singapore. There may be “meaningful signs” of shale production balancing in the second half, Keenan predicts.
“The combination of continued demand growth and falling US production will eventually help create a floor in the market from where it will be able to rally back towards the $40 to $50 range by year-end,” Ole Hansen, head of commodity strategy at Saxo Bank, said by e-mail.

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