But a full comeback won’t happen overnight, despite the unbridled enthusiasm of traders. US benchmark West Texas Intermediate (WTI) closed in on $50 a barrel lat week for the first time since February as vials of Pfizer’s new vaccine began arriving at hospitals.
There is also a sea of oil in storage waiting for market conditions to improve. Global oil inventories are at near an all-time high at almost 3 billion barrels, and the expanded OPEC alliance led by Saudi Arabia and Russia has huge production capacity.
Forcing those bears back into hibernation will take time — as will inoculating the entire country against coronavirus. But the potential for oil consumption to snap back to traditional levels before supply is ready to meet it is a looming threat or opportunity, depending on your perspective.
Exploration and production executives have been reluctant to make major investments after being twice bitten by price downturns in the past five years. That boardroom skittishness won’t disappear immediately.
But the market clearly expects the industry to bounce back in the near term. Exploration and production companies have seen a flood of investment in the past six weeks that has pushed up stock values by 50%.
All of this adds up to a supply-demand picture that’s bullish for US producers in 2021 and 2022. These factors will merely determine the magnitude of the supply shortfall. But avoiding one altogether looks impossible.
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