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What Was Behind Last Week’s Stunning Drop in Oil, Where Does Crude Go Next and Why Oil Could Spike Above $150 Due to the Israeli War

Oil prices have been on a veritable rollercoaster in just the past 10 days.

After soaring more than 36% from its June lows to a 1-year high just above $97 at the end of September, Brent tumbled $14 in just six sessions, including last Wednesday’s brutal plunge, which was the biggest one-day drop since the UK’s Mini-Budget fiasco of September 2022, when funds were literally blowing up and liquidating commodities to avoid collapse, and which ended up with another BOE bailout.

What was behind the furious plunge? While there wasn’t one single catalyst, Goldman’s commodities strategist Callum Bruce views the tumble in oil as driven by three reasons:

  1. Overvaluation: Goldman’s inventory-based modelling suggests oil timespreads and flat prices were already elevated versus the bank’s forecasted inventory draws. Discretionary positioning was the longest since the Russia-Ukraine war, and the market was very much overbought.
  2. Recession fears: Renewed fears in a rates-led recession saw significant sell-offs in the more deferred timespreads, implying concerns regarding next year’s demand; this was exacerbated by the strategically timed very weak US EIA weekly gasoline demand print, which, as many have observed (and speculated about the EIA’s political mandates), was implausibly low. In response, Goldman maintains its relatively serene macro-economic outlook, with FCIs not overtightening and real incomes still rising. Retail prices, similarly, are not yet at demand-destructive levels, and demand is still tracking robustly.
  3. CTA unwinds: Mechanical selling of oil as prices hit sell-stop triggers for short-term momentum flows. Admittedly, much length likely remains here.

Goldman commodity products trader Madhav Janakiraman chimes in and writes that while “not a lot has actually changed fundamentally… the market created a bit of downside momentum because of government shutdown risk/chatter about Kurdish crude coming back to market/Russian diesel returning, etc. Once that little push occurred, the positioning did the rest, particularly because a decent chunk of the length was CTA-style momentum following strategies, and they were quite close on some of their signals turning. At the same time, index and commodity ETFs saw decent outflows into the month-end and earlier this week. So retail and pension fund-type long-term investors were also exiting the space. Discretionary playxers simply didn’t have the ability to stem the tide.”

So while it is tempting to think this is a silly CTA-led washout and a huge buying opportunity, Janakiraman says that the path risks are still significant. China being out this week for Golden Week hasn’t helped either in terms of liquidity. They also tend to be pretty aggressive buyers of physical molecules when they see a flat price get to cheap levels. One could also argue that, at the current price set, Saudi Arabia is unlikely to bring back the crude they have held out from the market, “and so it is cheap.”

Whatever the reason for the drop, Goldman has stuck to its view of steep deficits into next year, driven by (1) robust demand and (2) significant OPEC+ discipline and pricing power, allowing inventories to draw down to critically low levels once again. The bank also expects prices to reach $100/bbl by mid-24, driven by deferred timespans, while the back-end of the curve is kept anchored by plentiful spare capacity and cost deflation in US shale. Meanwhile, the sudden breakout of the Hamas-Israeli war in the Middle East will likely push oil prices higher and faster (for more, see “Oil Could Spike Well North Of $150″: Here Are The Main Implications For Oil From The Israeli War”).

In retrospect, last week’s oil tumble now seems like ancient history, and after Saturday’s unprecedented events in Israel, oil has moved sharply higher after the weekend attack by Hamas against Israel, with Brent topping $88 a barrel to repair some of last week’s heavy losses and, according to some, set to continue rising until it tops $150.

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Zero Hedge

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