In a recent research piece from Jefferies, the firm’s crack top energy analyst Tom Marchetti makes the case that on a probability-adjusted basis the skew too pricing has shifted materially higher. With oil demand surging in 2015, and expected to continue for the next five years in large part due to the lower pricing, something has to give.
Here are Jefferies six top reasons that oil should start to move higher in 2016.
1. The rig count in the United States continues to plunge as production drops and capital expenditures for drilling at all firms large and small are drastically cut. The bottom line, as hedges roll off in 2016, at current prices many companies plain and simple can’t make money.
2. The analysts also note that currently there is a very tight supply for U.S. light crudes. Obviously, a tight supply and consistent demand can drive the pricing levels higher.
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3. According to the Jefferies team, the lack of demand from China is way overblown, and the huge economy there should continue forward, albeit at a slower pace than in recent years.
4. Russia and OPEC, which the analysts define as Saudi Arabia, are closer to an understanding, which could tamper output. Rumors were rampant last week that a 5% cut could be in the cards.
5. Institutional investors are 3% to 4% underweight stocks in the energy sector. A positive move to the upside that looks sustained could force them to buy stocks with their vast amount of investor cash.
6. This may be one of the biggest reasons for the rapid decline and huge volatility that results in 5% to 8% swings seemingly every other day. Hedge funds and credit funds are short, and short big-time. Any sign of strength or headlines that look positive and they madly cover their positions, and if that strength looks like a head-fake, they immediately put them back on. This is so synthetic and not reflecting true supply and demand, that some analysts we have spoken to at 24/7 Wall St. feel that the price of oil could jump back into the $40 plus range fast, if an OPEC production cut did indeed happen.
As one can tell, the short-selling trade in the sector may be close to over. It’s also important to note that many of the oil-producing nations in OPEC, especially in the Middle East, have no other big revenue base. With budget deficits starting to spiral out of control as a result of the price weakness, they can’t continue to just pump more to make up the difference. In other words, something has got to give, and it could be sooner rather than later.
An excerpt from an article from 24/7 wall st. I found interesting.
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