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Oil Prices Rally On IEA Report

Three hundred and eighty-six years after popcorn was first introduced at Thanksgiving dinner, and the crude complex is popping higher to start the week. Here are seven things to consider as this week kicks off:


1) The IEA is kick-starting this morning's rally, saying the market 'will gradually rebalance by 2017' in its medium-term oil outlook. This view is predicated on the expectation that U.S. shale oil production drops 600,000 bpd this year, and by 200,000 bpd in 2017. The IEA projects that global oversupply will be wiped out by 2018, with global inventories starting to be drawn down in 2018 after a minor build next year. Related: OPEC Has Never Had As Much Power As People Think

2) The IEA does, however, project that U.S. production will charge higher over the next half a decade or so, increasing by 1.2 million bpd from 2015 to 2021, driven by efficiency gains. Global oil supply is expected to rise by 4.1 million bpd over the same period.

3) We have had the latest bout of preliminary PMI numbers out of Europe, which on the whole were considerably mixed. In an odd twist, French manufacturing came in much better than expected, while Germany's was well below expectations. The reverse was the case for services data, however, with German services outperforming, French services showing weakness. On the aggregate, Eurozone PMIs were below consensus.

4) According to the latest CFTC data, speculative long positions in WTI dropped by 5.3 percent, the biggest drop in seven months; this bearish sentiment was endorsed by a rise in speculative short positions. The latest ICE data, however, showed bullish bets increasing for Brent.

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5) Exxon Mobil has announced that it has failed to replace production for the first time in 22 years. On Friday it confirmed its reserve-replacement ratio fell to 67 percent in 2015, under 100 percent for the first time since 1993. It announced it holds reserves equivalent to 24.8 billion barrels, enough to continue production at current rates for 16 years. This is down from 17.4 years of reserves at the end of 2014, but still better than that of its peers. Related: Iraq On The Brink Of Chaos As Oil Revenues Fall

6) Whiting Petroleum Corp has announced it is canceling plans to drill 20 wells at Bakken and Three Forks as low oil prices kill profitability in the region. Whiting owns 667,000 acres in the Williston Basin, but is in cost-cutting mode after already slashing capex by 46 percent in Q3 of last year. It has also shelved plans for a pipeline in the region.

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7) An LNG tanker has docked at the Sabine Pass terminal in Louisiana, meaning the first cargo of LNG exports is set to leave the U.S. any day now.

By Matt Smith

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Matt Smith

Taking a voyage across the world of energy with ClipperData’s Director of Commodity Research. Follow on Twitter @ClipperData, @mattvsmith01 More