Sunday, 15 January 2023

Oil prices to hover around US$90 over next five years

Conflict in Ukraine, sanctions on Russia, intensifying rivalry between the United States and China, lingering pandemic disruptions, and the slowdown in the business cycle all seem to be combining to make forecasts more uncertain.

Brent oil prices are expected to hover around US$90/barrel over the next five years, according to eighth annual survey of energy market professionals by John Kemp a senior market analyst at Reuters specializing in oil and energy systems.

Forecasts range from US$4 to US$10 per barrel above predictions at the time of the 2022 survey, conducted before Russia's invasion of Ukraine, and up by around US$20 compared with the 2020 survey, before the coronavirus pandemic.

In this year's survey, prices are forecast to average US$87 in 2023, down from US$99 realized in 2022, when prices surged following Russia's invasion and sanctions imposed in response by the United States and European Union.

Forecasts for 2023 are tightly clustered, with half of respondents expecting the average price to hover between US$80 and US$95, and more than 90% expecting the average to range between US$70 and US$105.

Prices are expected to continue averaging around US$90 from 2024 to 2027, with a slight downward skew in forecasts later in the period.

Forecast prices are from US$15 to US$20 per barrel above where the futures strip was trading at the time of the survey, a similar premium to the one revealed in last year's survey, but up from a premium of around US$10 before the pandemic.

Understandably, there is more dispersion in forecasts for later years, reflecting greater uncertainty about the evolution of the business cycle and structural changes affecting the industry.

But uncertainty over all time horizons has jumped significantly following the pandemic and continued to increase in the most recent survey.

Both short-term forecasts for 2023-2024 and longer-term forecasts for 2025-2027 are characterized by much higher standard deviations than comparable forecasting horizons before the pandemic.


Saturday, 14 January 2023

Israel: Demonstrations against Netanyahu’s legal reforms

According to Reuters, tens of thousands of Israelis demonstrated in three major cities on Saturday against Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's judicial reform plans. Organizers were accusing him of undermining democratic rule weeks after his reelection.

Bestriding a religious-nationalist coalition with a solid parliamentary majority, Netanyahu, now in his sixth term, wants to rein in the Supreme Court in what he has described as a restoration of the balance of the three branches of government.

Critics say the proposed reforms would cripple judicial independence, foster corruption, set back minority rights and deprive Israel's courts system of credibility that helps fend off war-crimes allegations abroad. Among those opposed are the Supreme Court chief justice and the country's attorney-general.

After President Isaac Herzog appealed to polarized politicians to lower the temperatures of the debates, organizers of the demonstrations - held under chilly winter rain - sought to strike a note of national unity.

"Take an Israeli flag in one hand, an umbrella in the other, and come out to protect democracy and law in the State of Israel," said centrist ex-defence minister Benny Gantz, who attended the Tel Aviv rally but, like other opposition figures, was not due to address it.

"We Are Preserving Our Shared Home," read one demonstrator's placard. Netanyahu was guilty of a legal putsch, said another.

Israeli media put the number in attendance at some 80,000, with thousands more at protests in Jerusalem and Haifa.

Social media footage showed a small number of Palestinian flags on display, in defiance of Netanyahu's far-right allies. One of these, National Security Ministry Itamar Ben-Gvir, told Kan TV he wanted such flags removed but was awaiting the opinion of the attorney-general before ordering any crackdown by police.

The 73-year-old Netanyahu on Friday signalled flexibility on the reform plan, saying it would be implemented with careful consideration while hearing all of the positions.

Polls have diverged on public views of the reforms. Channel 13 TV last week found 53% of Israelis were opposed to changing the court appointments' structure while 35% were in support. But Channel 14 TV on Thursday found 61% in favour and 35% opposed.

Critics of the Supreme Court say it is overreaching and unrepresentative of the electorate. Its proponents call the court a means of bringing equilibrium to a fractious society.

"Tens of thousands of people were at tonight's demonstrations. In the election held here two and a half months ago, millions turned out," tweeted Miki Zohar a senior lawmaker in Netanyahu's conservative Likud party.

"We promised the people change, we promised governance, we promised reforms - and we will make good on that."

 

Iran and Britain: History of strained relations

British-Iranian relations have been strained for decades, were back in the spotlight after Iranian authorities executed British-Iranian national Alireza Akbari for spying, charges he had denied.

Here is a timeline of main developments since the 1950s:

1953 - Britain and the United States help orchestrate the overthrow of popular Prime Minister Mohammed Mossadegh and restore Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi to power.

1979 - Islamic Revolution overthrows the US-backed Shah.

1980 - Britain closes its embassy in Tehran.

1988 - Britain restores full diplomatic relations with Iran.

1989 - Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini calls on Muslims to kill British author Salman Rushdie for blasphemy against Islam in his book "The Satanic Verses", prompting Britain to break diplomatic relations in March.

1990 - Partial diplomatic relations restored.

1994 - Britain accuses Iran of contacts with the outlawed Irish Republican Army, a charge Iran denies but relations worsen. Iran and Britain expel each others' diplomats over the IRA issue.

1998 - Iran formally dissociates itself from the call to kill Rushdie.

1999 - Iran says relations between Tehran and Britain have been upgraded to ambassadorial level.

2001 - British Foreign Minister Jack Straw visits Iran to strengthen an international "anti-terror" coalition after the September 11, 2001 attacks on the United States.

2004 - Iran arrests eight British military personnel for straying into its waters from Iraq. They are later freed.

2005 - Britain says there is evidence Iran or the Iran-backed Lebanese militia Hezbollah was the source of technology used in roadside bombs against British soldiers in Iraq, a charge Tehran Iran denied. The same year, Iran accuses Britain of being behind bombings that killed six people in Iran. London denies it.

2007 - Iranian forces seize eight Royal Navy sailors and seven marines from their patrol boat in the Shatt al-Arab waterway separating Iran and Iraq. They are freed in April.

2007 - Iran's Foreign Ministry summons the British ambassador to protest against the award of a British knighthood to Salman Rushdie.

2009 - Britain freezes Iranian assets under Western sanctions imposed over Iran's disputed nuclear program. The same month, Britain protests to Iran after Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei calls Britain the most treacherous of Iran's enemies. London and Tehran each expel two of the other's diplomats.

2009 - Iran releases on bail the last of nine Iranians who worked at the British embassy and who had been detained in June for alleged involvement in unrest following an Iranian election.

2011 - Britain imposes financial sanctions on Iran, ordering all UK financial institutions to stop doing business with Iranian counterparts and Iran's central bank. Iran's Guardian Council approves a parliamentary bill reducing ties with Britain.

2011 - Britain shuts Iran's embassy in London and expels its staff, saying the storming of the British mission in Tehran that month could not have taken place without consent from Iran's authorities.

2015 - Iran reaches a nuclear deal with the United States, Britain, France, Germany, Russia and China. Under the agreement Iran accepted curbs on its nuclear program in return for a lifting of many foreign sanctions. Iran reopens its embassy in London hours after Britain restores diplomatic ties.

2016 - Iran detains British-Iranian aid worker Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe, who was employed by the Thomson Reuters Foundation, a charity operating independently of Thomson Reuters and its news subsidiary Reuters. She was later convicted of seeking to overthrow the clerical rulers, a charge she denied.

2019 - Twitter suspended Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei's account over a tweet that said Khomeini's fatwa against Rushdie was solid and irrevocable.

March 2022 - Zaghari-Ratcliffe and another British-Iranian dual national, Anoosheh Ashoori, return to Britain from Iran.

August 2022 - Salman Rushdie is stabbed on stage at a literary event in New York. Iran's Foreign Ministry says no one has the right to level accusations against Tehran. Several Iranian hardliner newspapers praise Rushdie's attacker.

October 2022 - Britain imposes sanctions on three Iranian military figures and a defence manufacturer for supplying Russia with drones used to attack targets in Ukraine.

November 2022 - The head of Britain's domestic spy agency says Iran's intelligence services have made at least 10 attempts to kidnap or kill British nationals or individuals in Britain.

December 2023 - Iran's Revolutionary Guards arrest seven people with links to Britain over anti-government protests.

January 2023 - Iran sentences to death and executes British-Iranian national Alireza Akbari, a former Iranian Defence Ministry official, on charges of spying for Britain. State media say he was involved in the 2020 assassination in Iran of a top nuclear scientist. Akbari denied the charges.

Courtesy: Reuters

Friday, 13 January 2023

Alireza Akbari sentenced to death on spying for Britain

Alireza Akbari, who served as Iran’s Deputy Defense Minister, has been sentenced to death on spying for Britain.

In a televised-interview, he touched upon how he was deceived and recruited by the MI6 to launch UK-orchestrated plans and ploys to infiltrate Iranian high-profile figures to obtain sensitive information.

He confessed that from the outset he was identified by the intelligence agent working in the British embassy in Tehran, saying, “In a diplomatic session, the UK ambassador along with another person approached me for an informal chitchat and then they gave me a card. After a while, I received a phone call from a person who told me the UK ambassador wanted to meet you.”

Akbari furthered, “They offered me a long-term visa in case of having close contacts with the UK embassy.” He added, “I accepted the offer and paid a visit to embassy to hold talks with the UK ambassador along with another person who I finally found out he was working for the MI6.”

“During the meeting, the MI6 agent got closer to me and said the whole story about the espionage by informing me about how to provide sensitive information to him. I was given a laptop, telling me if you open a page, we can trace you. In other words, they did this because of having a safe kind of communication,” he added.

He also mentioned that during his time spying for the UK, several intelligence agents had changed but all of them had one thing in common, infiltration. To put it more clearly, the MI6 agents tried to get sensitive information by asking him invariably about the recent events and happenings in Iran. For example, they sought for all kinds of information regarding the JCPOA, the official name for the 2015 nuclear deal.

“What they strived to get from me was pieces of information regarding Iran’s top nuclear scientist, Mohsen Fakhrizadeh who was assassinated when his car was ambushed on a highway outside Tehran in November 2020,” Akbari added.

In other words, he said, the MI6 agents wanted to get aware of events surrounding all Iranian key figures.

Akbari was once arrested by the Intelligence Ministry in 2008 on espionage charges but, afterwards, was released on bail and then left Tehran to London on medical grounds.

MI6 was in fear of his detention in Iran, and then did its best to orchestrate a plan of fake stroke for him to steer clear of any potential arrest.  

He confessed that MI6 agents suggested him to pretend a fake stroke to stay more in London for the fear of his life. “They told me you will have a fake stroke, being carried to hospital and then you will be unable to fly back. Therefore, the time of your stay in London will linger. After a while, your family will travel to Britain on the excuse of visiting you.”

What is really interesting is that Akbari revealed some momentous points about UK intelligence agents, saying they comported themselves with great respect while knowing all details concerning his case.

He also underlined that all of those agents were aware of his personal beliefs, interests, and characteristics, respecting his religious beliefs.

Akbari concluded that he was swindled by MI6 agents and failed to comply with revolutionary slogans which were inscribed on his working place walls, saying, “One moment of negligence brought him misery.”

In a reaction to the death sentence against Akbari, British Foreign Secretary James Cleverly requested his immediate release.

The British Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office, meanwhile, repeated requests for consular access to Akbari.

Akbari has been sentenced to death over disrupting Iran’s internal and external security through the transmission of information to the UK which was confirmed by the Supreme Court.

In a statement issued by the Ministry of Intelligence on Wednesday, it was emphasized that Akbari was considered as a leading agent working for the British spy service (MI6), collecting sensitive information from Iran in a bid to provide it to the service.  

Akbari had worked in various positions since 1980s, including the Deputy Minister of Defense under the presidency of Mohammad Khatami.

During the process of obtaining a visa from the British embassy in Tehran, he was flagged by the intelligence agents stationed there and then became a full-fledged employee for the British spy agency.

 

Ukraine-Russia Grain Deal: Success or Failure

On October 29, 2022 Russia announced it had quit the grain deal brokered by the UN and Turkey in July 2022 to allow Ukraine to export grain by the Black Sea. Moscow’s move was in response to an attack by Ukraine on the Russian fleet around Sevastopol city. Despite Russia’s warnings, a group of ships loaded with grain nonetheless exited through the safe corridor, exporting grain that had been loaded in Ukrainian ports.

Shortly thereafter, Russia made a U-turn and announced it would return to the agreement after negotiations with Turkey. Moscow cited written guarantees from Ukraine that Kyiv would not use this corridor for military purposes or attacks against Russia.

This brief spat over the deal, which to that point had worked for all parties, left a mixed impression. On the one hand, Russia’s actions underscored that the agreement was vulnerable and weak, and made clear Moscow’s readiness to abandon it at any moment it saw fit. On the other hand, Turkey’s intervention, which secured the continuation of the deal and convinced the Kremlin to rejoin it, illustrated the significant influence Ankara wields in the Black Sea, both as a key interlocutor between parties and as a counteracting player to Russia.

Russia’s move was inevitable. From the very beginning Moscow has seen the grain deal as affording it leverage over Ukraine and the West. Grain exports are one of the few sources of hard-currency income for the Ukrainian economy. What is more, being a security guarantor of the agreement allows Russia to raise the stakes with minimal effort every time it wants to pressure the West by destabilizing world food prices, which in turn has an impact on inflation worldwide. Indeed, Russia’s brief suspension of its participation in the grain deal caused a spike in wheat prices across the globe.

The most obvious goal of the deal was to ensure food security. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine caused a surge in global food prices, dealing a heavy blow to countries already at risk of food insecurity. Ukraine has been one of the world’s largest exporters of grain, contributing 42% of the global share of sunflower oil, 16% of maize, and almost 10% of wheat. Not only are Ukraine’s exports essential for the stability of world markets, but Ukraine’s grain exports have also contributed greatly to the World Food Program’s humanitarian stocks, shipped regularly to such war-ridden countries as Yemen, Ethiopia, Somalia, and South Sudan.

The July agreement between Russia and Ukraine allowing grain and fertilizers to return to the market probably averted a humanitarian catastrophe and economic meltdown. Since the signing of the deal, around 9.5 million tons of grain products have left Ukraine by sea. More than 100 ships have sailed from Ukraine, with 47% of the grain cargoes going to Turkey and Asian countries, 36% going to the EU, and 17% to Africa. Immediately after the agreement went into effect, food prices fell by 7.90 percent since March 2022. After hitting an all-time high immediately after Russia’s invasion in February 2022, world wheat prices dropped by 14.5% and cereal prices dropped by 11.5%. Prices for those grains are still higher than they were in 2021, but the deal certainly eased pressure on the market. In terms of stabilizing markets, the deal has proved to be effective.

However, the agreement was not designed to save conflict-affected communities around the world, which for the most part continue to suffer critical food shortages. Particularly, Russia has constantly criticized the agreement, alleging that the grain is not reaching countries that need it the most.

Indeed, contrary to popular perception, the majority of grain exports that were shipped out of Ukrainian Black Sea ports didn`t go to the poorest and most needed countries but rather to Europe and Turkey. Over the past five months, more than 12.3 tons of grain was shipped from Ukraine, with 44% of it being corn rather than wheat. The main destinations of the cargoes were Spain, China, Turkey, Italy, and the Netherlands.

Most of the grain that had been held up in Ukrainian silos after February 24 was corn, contracted by international companies, not necessarily to feed people but, for example, to use as biofuel or animal food. Therefore, the agreement wasn’t designed to immediately avert famine in countries like Yemen or Somalia but rather to stabilize the market and contain prices, which in turn hurt countries’ ability to purchase food.

From the Ukrainian perspective the agreement has positive implications. It allowed Ukraine to return to almost prewar amounts of exports, increasing its share from 1–1.5 million tons to almost 4 million tons.

In addition, the deal freed up some space for Ukraine to store the next harvest, which is expected to amount to 53 million tons, far exceeding domestic needs. The deal allows Ukrainian farmers to start planting crops for next year.

The deal also ensures that Ukraine’s farming sector is not totally destroyed. Because of the war, Ukraine’s farming industry has lost 50% of its 2021 gross output, which has led to serious liquidity problems for farmers. The grain had to be moved out of storage silos to avert a storage crisis, and if the whole goal of the deal was to move grain out of Ukraine, then the treaty made it possible.

Any hope that the grain deal might serve as a basis for the slow build-up of a potential compromise between Russia and Ukraine/the West has been dashed.

Ukraine and Russia don’t trust each other and are not ready to negotiate. Russia’s attempt to abandon the deal demonstrated that Moscow doesn’t see it as a trust-building measure but rather is trying to instrumentalize it as part of its war effort. Nor does Ukraine see the agreement as part of a potential peace process. President Zelensky insists that Russia should leave all Ukrainian territory occupied since 2014, including Crimea, no matter whether there is a grain agreement in place or not.

If the agreement is thought of as a means of stabilizing the Black Sea situation and localizing the war in Ukraine, then one could argue it has partially succeeded. Although Russia didn’t stop its indiscriminate attacks against energy, military, and civilian infrastructure in Ukraine’s South, it did show restraint toward foreign ships, which started shipping grain out of Ukraine through the Turkey-supervised safe corridor. In some way, the agreement has contributed to the creation of certain rules.

Finally, if the agreement was about strengthening Turkey’s geopolitical leadership in the region, then it has definitely succeeded. Ankara boosted its diplomatic image by presenting the agreement as an achievement aiding food-dependent African and Asian countries. Moreover, Turkey cemented its role as a key mediator in the Russia-Ukraine war, capable of talking to both sides. President ErdoÄŸan in particular has been able to capitalize on the deal by placing Turkey at the heart of any potential follow-up agreements between Kyiv and Moscow.

 

Pakistan Stock Exchange benchmark index dips 1.67%WoW

The benchmark index of Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) lost 684 points during the week ended on January 13, 2023, registering a 1.67%WoW drop to close at 40,323 points. Overall, participation improved with average trading volumes rising to 183 million shares, from 176 million shares traded in the earlier week, posting an increase of 4%WoW.

The index witnessed an overall volatile week, as news flows of reserves falling below US$4.5 billion dampened overall sentiment, alongside the obvious political noise.

Some respite was witnessed on the back of pledges obtained in the Climate conference in Geneva, as Pakistan succeeded in soliciting commitments of over US$10 billion from the friendly nations and multilateral donors.

Volume leaders of the week were: PPL, WTL, PRL, CNERGY and KEL.

On the currency front, the PKR weakened further, depicting a depreciation of 0.44% with the interbank quote ending at PKR228.15/US$ on Friday.

Other major news flows during the week included: 1) foreign exchange reserves held by State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) sinking to three weeks’ worth of import cover, 2) UAE committing to lend US$1 billion and rolling over an existing US$2 billion loan, 3) Signing of deal signed with SFD to finance oil derivatives worth US$1 billion, 4) CM Punjab sending a dissolution summary of Punjab Assembly to Governor and PTI also announcing to dissolve KPK Assembly on Saturday, and 5) Finance Minister, Ishaq Dar reiterating the country’s commitment to complete the IMF program.

Sector-wise Vanaspati & Allied Industries, Close-End Mutual Fund and Miscellaneous were amongst the top performers, while Leather & Tanneries, Leasing Companies and Pharmaceuticals were amongst the worst performers.

Flow wise, major net selling was recorded by Mutual Funds (US$4.7 million). Individuals absorbed most of the selling with a net buy of US$6.5 million.

Company-wise, top performers during the week were: MTL, PSEL, LOTCHEM, JVDC, and NESTLE, while laggards included: INIL, SRVI, ABOT, NRL, and TRG.

The market is expected to remain under pressure in the near future due to the concerns regarding the country’s external position and uncertainties stemming from the political situation brewing in Pakistan.

Furthermore, the upcoming Monetary Policy Committee meeting scheduled for January 23, 2023 would remain in the limelight.

Any news regarding foreign exchange inflows, whether from the IMF or other bilateral and multilateral sources, would support the market trajectory.

Additionally, clarity on the political landscape in the country would alleviate investor concerns.

Analysts expect the market to remain range-bound until there is further clarity on the economic and political fronts. They continue to advise a cautious approach while building positions in the market.

Peeping into the commodities market

After starting the year on weakness, crude oil prices have rebounded, driven by fears regarding China’s subdued demand easing off.

Brent futures rebounded by 7% on China announcing enhanced import quotas for 2023. This signaled that the country would continue to ramp up its demand, whether for inventory replenishment or heightened demand for petroleum products.

The second round of quotas enhancing allowed imports to 108.78 million tons of crude oil for 2023, corresponding to 60.6% of the ceiling, as compared to the earlier quota of 58.4%.

The developments out of China were enough to overshadow the inventory data from the US, where crude oil stocks in the country increased by a mammoth 19 million barrels during the week ended January 06, 2023.

Additionally, the latest CPI reading from the US led to expectations of the pace of rate hikes in the US to slow down. As a knee-jerk reaction, the US$ showed weakness, with the US Dollar Spot Index dropping by 0.9% on Thursday, making the dollar-denominated crude oil futures more attractive for investors trading in other currencies.

Moreover, a slowdown in the rate hike has led to expectations of demand not dropping by as much as earlier anticipated.

Global refining margins have continued to tick upwards amidst drop in refinery utilization due to snow storms in Texas, offsetting demand lows from holiday season resulting in larger than anticipated fuel inventory declines. Overall, snow storm in Texas has halted nearly 2.4 million bpd of refining capacity.

On the European front, shortage of natural gas exacerbated by the conflict in Ukraine, and western sanctions on Russian fuel supplies has resulted in overall power/heating demand turning towards diesel/fuel oil, exacerbating heating oil prices further. On the flipside, stronger-than expected economic data from China may result in refined-product exports from the Asian powerhouse to begin rolling out soon, weighing on margins/cracking spreads in the near term.

Overall, EIA’s January outlook expects combined gasoline, diesel and jet inventories to rise 9% in 2023, led by a 2.8% jump in refining throughput, with weaker economic activity pressuring diesel and gasoline consumption going forward. To note, gasoline/gasoil spreads currently stand at US$12.4/30.5 per barrel.

Richard’s Bay coal prices have continued to decline, currently hovering at US$167/ton compared to December 022/2QFY23 average of US$231/239/ton.

 Lower than anticipated heating demand due to milder winters in Europe and buildup of coal stockpiles in anticipation of winters has resulted in laggard demand for coal, leading to a decline in prices, particularly since mid-December 2022.

Coal prices had risen significantly during the past year amidst the global commodity super-cycle, peaking at US$460/ton in March 2022. Going forward, analysts expect coal prices to trend downwards to hover around US$160/ton in the near term. In the long run, coal prices are expected to settle around US$120/ton, although still higher as compared to pre-COVID averages of US$80/ton.

This may be attributed to delays in green energy conversion plans by developed countries, with several EU countries extending the life of coal plants which previously were scheduled for closure and reopening previously shut plants last year to address the shortage of Russian gas.

 

Even with the winter season beginning to settle (seasonal construction slowdown), scrap has rallied 22% from lows of US$340/ton in November 2022, to currently hovering around US$418/ton as compared to FYTD/ CYTD average of US$377- US$402/ton.

The said rise is majorly attributable to Chinese lockdown pullbacks, evident by 4.3% increase in purchase managers index (PMI) in December 2022 as compared to November 2022 (although still in a contractionary phase below 50).

The decision to move away from restrictions include a reduction in the overall mandatory quarantine period, which has been causing a myriad of problems for the world’s second largest economy. The said rally was not only driven by easing of restrictions but also by the abandoning of zero-COVID policy entirely, as protests against lockdowns have been running rampant in the country’s capital.

Although, the said bull-run may be short lived as routine virus controls, the ongoing property crisis, and the winter pollution curbs are expected to keep the construction/ engineering on the back foot in the near term. On the flipside, demand may pick up from a stimulus package (aimed at the housing sector) to be announced soon by the Chinese government targeting domestic industries and consumer spending.

Overall, Asian scrap demand is unlikely to be on a firm footing in the near term, as rising energy costs and a depressed outlook in Asia/ Europe are expected to dictate the production and procurement decisions of steel companies going forward.