Why Oil Keeps Falling off the Chart
After having been through the greatest two-year loss on record, the price
of oil plunged 9.6% on Wednesday and in evening trading. As I’m writing this,
WTI hit $32.62 a barrel, a new low since the desperate depth of the
Financial Crisis, when it very briefly kissed $30.28 a barrel on December 23,
2008, before bouncing off sharply.
This time, it’s serious. Brent, the global benchmark, has crashed to
$32.75, an 11-year low. This isn’t a quick scare that happens during a
Financial Crisis. It’s the result of a persistently growing glut.
Since the oil price plunge began in July 2014, every rally, every
“opportunity of a lifetime” to buy oil “for cents on the dollar” has turned
out to be a falling knife.
This is what the three trading-day, 15% crash of WTI looks like:

The contagion of the oil price plunge has been drifting into other sectors
of the US economy, housing and office space in Houston, the state budget in
Alaska, jobs, manufacturing…. Investments have gone up in smoke. Loans have
gone bad. Defaults, restructurings, and bankruptcies are now a routine
occurrence. Banks are looking over their shoulder. PE firms are licking their
wounds from their mega-bets on fracking made in prior years, and they’re
licking their new wounds from having tried to catch many falling knives.
This isn’t going to be an easy bust to get through. It’s a US problem. And
it’s a global problem.
In the US, crude oil production started declining on a monthly basis in mid-2015, according to EIA estimates. But despite those monthly declines, production averaged 9.3 million barrels per day in 2015, the highest rate since 1972, and a 7% increase over 2014.
On Wednesday, the EIA reported that US crude oil stocks dropped 5.1 million barrels during the week to 482.3 million barrels. Drawdowns at this time of the year are common. So it left stock levels a monstrous 100 million barrels above the already high stock levels at the same time last year.
The chart shows the hair-raising stock levels. I added the two red lines to juxtapose the already high stocks at this time last year (above the 5-year range, gray area) with the current level:

Note how declines are common this time of the year, but how last year at this time inventories began to skyrocket. It is unlikely that inventories will skyrocket to the same extent this year. If they do, it’s going to get ugly beyond comprehension. It’s more likely that inventories will rise at a pace closer to normal seasonal increases. Even those increases will inflate inventories – if there’s even enough storage capacity available – to dizzying heights by the time driving season begins.
However, the spooky thing in Wednesday’s report was the buildup of 10.6 million barrels in gasoline stocks, the largest weekly buildup since 1993. Without it, there wouldn’t have been a crude oil drawdown!
And all this comes on top of the kerfuffle between OPEC members Saudi Arabia and Iran. It will make any kind of OPEC deal for production cuts unlikely. Iran is itching to ship its production into the global markets when the sanctions are lifted. And Saudi Arabia has its own reasons to maximize production. So unlike prior flare-ups in the Middle East, this time, they all appear to work against oil prices.
Whatever the daily hopes and fiascos that dominate the oil trade, two things remain fundamental: global production and consumption. And there, things are becoming uncomfortable.
In the fourth quarter, global production of crude oil and other liquids actually dropped, but so did global consumption.
The slowdown in China? Today, Chinese stocks crashed as trading got going, and after the Shanghai Composite plunged 7.2%, trading was halted. Now everything is stuck. Over the past four trading days, the index is down 12%! Something is seriously wrong in China, whether or not the government wants to admit it. And some of it is hitting global oil consumption.
The slowdown in India doesn’t help…. Whatever the reasons, despite a drop in production, the oil glut just got worse.
In the chilling chart below, the top half shows to what extent global production has exceeded consumption quarter after quarter for the last two years. Note how in the last quarter, both production and consumption declined.

Note how declines are common this time of the year, but how last year at
this time inventories began to skyrocket. It is unlikely that inventories
will skyrocket to the same extent this year. If they do, it’s going to get
ugly beyond comprehension. It’s more likely that inventories will rise
at a pace closer to normal seasonal increases. Even those increases will
inflate inventories – if there’s even enough storage capacity available – to
dizzying heights by the time driving season begins.
However, the spooky thing in Wednesday’s report was the buildup of 10.6
million barrels in gasoline stocks, the largest weekly buildup since 1993.
Without it, there wouldn’t have been a crude oil drawdown!
And all this comes on top of the kerfuffle between OPEC members Saudi
Arabia and Iran. It will make any kind of OPEC deal for production cuts
unlikely. Iran is itching to ship its production into the global markets when
the sanctions are lifted. And Saudi Arabia has its own reasons to maximize
production. So unlike prior flare-ups in the Middle East, this time, they all
appear to work against oil prices.
Whatever the daily hopes and fiascos that dominate the oil trade, two
things remain fundamental: global production and consumption. And there,
things are becoming uncomfortable.
In the fourth quarter, global production of crude oil and other liquids
actually dropped, but so did global consumption.
The slowdown in China? Today, Chinese stocks crashed as trading got going,
and after the Shanghai Composite plunged 7.2%, trading was halted. Now
everything is stuck. Over the past four trading days, the index is down 12%!
Something is seriously wrong in China, whether or not the government wants to
admit it. And some of it is hitting global oil consumption.
The slowdown in India doesn’t help…. Whatever the reasons, despite a drop
in production, the oil glut just got worse.
In the chilling chart below, the top half shows to what extent global
production has exceeded consumption quarter after quarter for the last two
years. Note how in the last quarter, both production and consumption
declined.

This overproduction, and now declining consumption, resulted in a
stupendous increase in global inventories (bottom half of the chart), a trend
that started in earnest in Q4 2014. The EIA estimated that 2015 experienced a
“net inventory build of 1.72 million barrels per day, the highest rate since
at least 1996.”
The global decline in oil consumption in Q4, and the whiff of mayhem so
far this year in the financial markets is worrying beyond oil. Though
sporadic quarterly declines in oil consumption are not that unusual, this one
comes at the worst possible time.
Already global corporate defaults hit the highest level since 2009, with
the US leading the way, while the US Distress Ratio has soared. Read… Global
Corporate Debt is Coming Unglued