United States
Highlights US dry gas production – the gas traded on futures exchanges and consumed by firms and households – is expected to fall ~ 2.5% this year to 89.7 bcf/d. Consumption will be down ~ 4% to 74.3 bcf/d. High carryout stocks from a warmer-than-normal winter mean US natgas storage will be at a record 4 TCF by November. This is close to demonstrated peak capacity of 4.3 TCF. We expect US benchmark Henry Hub futures prices to average $2.00/MMBtu in 2H20, assuming a normal winter (Chart of the Week). This is slightly lower than current futures’ levels. A deeper round of demand destruction from a second wave of COVID-19 remains a risk to commodities generally. Our base case assumes accommodative policy globally will spur a recovery in gas demand next year. This will push benchmark US prices into the $2.25-$2.50/MMBtu range, which also is below the level futures currently are trading. Weather-related risk is peaking right now. The early start to the hurricane season will keep demand for storage gas elevated into October. Local-distribution companies will be planning for normal winter temperatures, which would be colder than last year. Feature Our modeling, shown in the Chart of the Week, leads us to expect natgas futures to average $1.92/MMBtu and $2.22/MMBtu this year and next, respectively. US natgas prices will recover slowly in 2H20 and pick up steam in 2021 as demand recovers and LNG export growth resumes. However, we do not expect prices to rally to the extent futures currently are pricing in, nor as much as the US EIA expects. The NYMEX benchmark natgas futures, which call for delivery of pipeline quality dry gas at Henry Hub, LA, were on track to average close to $2.00/MMBtu this year and $2.64/MMBtu next year earlier this week.1 The EIA, for its part, is forecasting $2.04/MMBtu and $3.08/MMBtu for 2020 and 2021, respectively. Our modeling, shown in the Chart of the Week, leads us to expect natgas futures to average $1.92/MMBtu and $2.22/MMBtu this year and next, respectively. Our natgas price models use the EIA’s fundamental inputs – supply, demand and working gas storage levels – and temperature and financial variables to explain and forecast prices, including 10-year average heating-degree days, and US Treasury rates. Chart of the WeekUS Natgas Prices Recover Slowly On the supply side, the rate of growth in US natgas production started rolling over in 4Q19, well before COVID-19 was even an issue for the market. A warmer-than-normal winter last year weakened prices sufficiently to cause natgas production in the US shales to roll over from a high of 86 billion cubic feet per day (bcf/d) in 4Q19, to 84 bcf/d in the first five months of 2020. Shales account for ~ 90% of total US gas production. In and of itself, this is a relatively small impact, reflecting more the unintended inventory accumulation following last winter. Shale-Gas Production Rolls Over The decade-long shale-gas production surge led by the Marcellus formation in the US Appalachian Mountain region and, more recently, the Permian basin in Texas, which together account for ~ 60% of US gas production, ended – for the time being – in 4Q19 (Chart 2). Total natgas production in the Lower 48 states rose 11% in 2019 to 95.6 bcf/d, and is expected to fall ~ 2% this year to 93.7 bcf/d. Chart 2Shale-Gas Production Rolled Over Following A Warm 2019-20 Winter Natgas production is sensitive to the level of US short-term rates. The financial variables in our model indicate natgas production is sensitive to the level of US short-term rates, which the Fed has been maintaining at low levels since the Global Financial Crisis (GFC) to battle disinflation. Natgas is a derived demand – it is used to heat buildings and generate electricity, e.g. – so anything that lifts demand will benefit supply (Chart 3). In our modeling, we find natgas production is an explanatory variable for natgas consumption, but not vice versa, suggesting that the supply side is aggressively pricing to meet demand, and increase market share at the expense of coal-fired generation (Chart 4). Chart 3US Natgas Production, Consumption Are Sensitive to US Treasurys Chart 4Low Rates Accelerate Coal's Market Share Loss To Natgas Shale-gas production also is being weakened in the US by the collapse in oil prices, particularly in the Permian basin, where associated natural gas output has been surging (Chart 5).2 Close to 500 Bcf of natural gas was flared in the Bakken and Permian plays.3 This means the collapse in crude-oil prices on net is lowering CO2 emissions associated with flaring in Texas and North Dakota.4 Chart 5Associated Gas Production Falls As Crude Oil Prices Weaken Chart 6Warm Winter Destroys Natgas Demand Gas Consumption Growth Slows The US EIA expects working gas in storage to reach 4 TCF, a record, by the start of the heating season in November. Gas consumption was hammered by a much warmer-than-average winter last year (Chart 6). This left the level of working gas in storage at ~ 2 TCF by the end of March 2020, when the heating season ended (Chart 7). Natgas working storage has continued to increase every month since, and now stands just below 3 TCF, according to the EIA’s latest estimate. The US EIA expects working gas in storage to reach 4 TCF, a record, by the start of the heating season in November. The latest estimate of demonstrated peak storage capacity is 4.26 TCF, which raises the possibility a warm winter this year could lead to a full-storage event.5 Should this happen, markets would begin pricing the probability – not the possibility – of negative natural gas prices in more than just local markets lacking pipeline takeaway capacity or sufficient storage to accommodate local supply and demand imbalances. Chart 7US Working Gas In Storage Continues To Build Toward 4 TCF Negative natgas prices would further exacerbate the risk of more sharp curtailments in oil and gas capex – in addition to the $400 billion projected by the International Energy Agency (IEA) last month, which would cut shale-oil and -gas capex by 50%.6 This could set up a huge rally in hydrocarbons generally, oil and gas in particular, should it occur. Beware Disorderly Gas Markets As US natgas working storage fills going into the winter heating season, markets will once again be watching to see if the CFTC and CME are capable of maintaining orderly terminations of trading under physical-market stress, which a full-storage event certainly qualifies as. At the end of April, we noted the disorderly termination of trading in WTI futures delivering in May to Cushing, OK, was among the proximate causes of futures falling to -$40.32/bbl – that’s $40.32/bbl below $0.00/bbl – prior to the contract going off the board. Partly, we contend, this was the result of a failure of the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) and the CME Group, which operates WTI crude oil and Henry Hub natgas futures markets, to ensure only bona fide hedgers with the capacity to make or take delivery of the physical commodity being traded via futures contracts were left in the market as these contracts went to delivery. As US natgas working storage fills going into the winter heating season, markets will once again be watching to see if the CFTC and CME are capable of maintaining orderly terminations of trading under physical-market stress, which a full-storage event certainly qualifies as. Another failure to ensure an orderly termination of trading would add another impediment to sourcing capital for oil and gas producers – many producers chose to or are forced to hedge – which would exacerbate a tightening of supply in the medium term (2 to 3 years hence). Bottom Line: We expect natgas futures delivering to Henry Hub, LA, to average $1.92/MMBtu and $2.22/MMBtu this year and next, respectively, based on our proprietary models using fundamental and financial explanatory variables. Upside risks to the forecast are a stronger-than-expected demand recovery, which sees residential, commercial, industrial and electric-generation demand reviving sharply. A global pick-up that increased demand for LNG also would rally US gas prices sharply. To the downside, another round of demand destruction from a second wave of the COVID-19 pandemic would press prices lower. As US working gas in storage increases, the risks of a full-storage event rises. This will force market participants to price in a higher probability of negative prices, which also would have a deleterious impact on capex and, thus, future supplies. Robert P. Ryan Chief Commodity & Energy Strategist rryan@bcaresearch.com Hugo Bélanger Associate Editor Commodity & Energy Strategy HugoB@bcaresearch.com Fernando Crupi Research Associate Commodity & Energy Strategy FernandoC@bcaresearch.com Commodities Round-Up Energy: Overweight US shale E&P companies are bringing back some of their shut-in production as WTI prices remain above $35/bbl. According to Rystad Energy, more than 300k b/d of previously shut-in production is already coming back online as of June. Nonetheless, rig count remains at its lowest level since 2009 and prices are not high enough to incentivize additional drilling. Our estimates suggest the return of shut-in production will pale compared to the drop in production from natural decline rates over the coming months. Base Metals: Neutral In its June Global Economic Prospects, the World Bank revised its emerging market and developing economies real GDP growth estimates for 2020 to -2.5%, a 6.6pp downward revision from its January 2020 projections. On the other hand, China’s credit numbers continue to move up, reaching 30% of nominal GDP in May (Chart 8). Going forward, the recovery in base metals hinges on the speed at which the stimulus reaches the real economy. On average, it takes somewhere between 4 to 9 months for metals to react to surges in China’s TSF. Precious Metals: Neutral Gold prices traded between $1,675/oz and $1,760/oz since April. Our fair-value model suggests prices could trade slightly below this range (Chart 9). However, risks of renewed US-China tensions are rising rapidly, which could keep gold well-bid. BCA Research’s China Investment strategists believe these risks will reach new height over the summer as pressure on Trump’s election campaign intensifies.7 Mounting geopolitical risks could hurt risk assets and benefit gold as a hedge against equity volatility. Ags/Softs: Underweight July Ethanol futures have shown substantial strength in the past two months, but the outlook remains gloomy. With over 30% of US fuel ethanol plants being idled during the pandemic, as prices and margins increase, an increase in supply is likely. Gasoline demand might have less room to grow as most individuals keep working from home. Supporting this is EIA’s STEO outlook which sees the ethanol market oversupplied in 2020, with consumption expected to average 800k b/d in 2020 and production to average 880k b/d. Chart 8Chinese Credit Growth To Rise Chart 9Gold Slightly Above Fair Value Footnotes 1 Pipeline-quality dry natural gas has had all impurities (metals, sulfur compounds, etc.) and non-methane liquids removed so that its heat content is ~ 1,010 BTUs per cubic foot. The NYMEX futures taken to delivery at Henry Hub, LA, require physical gas to meet the specifications “set forth in the FERC-approved tariff of Sabine Pipe Line Company.” 2 TThe correlation between US natgas and oil prices declined substantially since 2009. Our model, based on WTI prices and 10-year US treasury yields only, suggests Henry Hub prices’ elasticity to changes in oil prices dropped by more than 50% post-GFC. On the other hand, US yields are now much closely related to natural gas prices. The disconnection between Henry Hub and WTI prices is largely a result of the large increase in shale gas and associated gas production. Strong oil prices –which are determined globally – incentivized higher output by US E&Ps. This led to a surge in the volume of associated gas in an already saturated domestic gas market. 3 Please see Lingering Oil-Demand Weakness Will Fade, which we published November 21, 2019, and discusses flaring in the Permian and Bakken basins. 4 Please see "U.S. oil fields flared and vented more natural gas again in 2019: data" published by reuters.com February 3, 2020. 5 Please see Underground Natural Gas Working Storage Capacity published by the EIA May 29, 2020, for additional detail. 6 Please see The Covid-19 crisis is causing the biggest fall in global energy investment in history, published by the IEA May 27, 2020. The Agency notes, “… after the Covid-19 crisis brought large swathes of the world economy to a standstill in a matter of months, global investment is now expected to plummet by 20%, or almost $400 billion, compared with last year.” Oil and gas investment is projected to fall more than 30%. 7 Please see BCA Research's China Investment Strategy Report entitled Watch Out For A Second Wave (Of US-China Frictions) published June 10, 2010, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. Investment Views and Themes Recommendations Strategic Recommendations Tactical Trades Trade Recommendation Performance In 2020 Q1 Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table Trades Closed In 2020 Summary of Closed Trades
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