Thursday, 9 February 2023

Fall in natural gas prices new headache for United States

A 46% drop in natural gas prices this year is rippling across the US shale patch, threatening to slow drilling and chill deal-making in a move unthinkable six months ago as global demand soared.

Analysts are chopping their outlook for gas prices this year, and for production and earnings. The drop has also put a cloud over merger and acquisition activity, analysts said.

Such moves were unfathomable six months ago as Russia reduced its gas flows to Europe and US gas became a hot commodity. The number of active gas-drilling rigs jumped about 48% to 157 in the first six months of 2022, according to data from oilfield services firm Baker Hughes.

Analysts expect gas drilling rigs to fall beginning this month. Two services firms - Liberty Energy and Helmerich & Payne - recently warned they may need to relocate equipment as operators pull back in gassy areas.

US gas futures were trading on Wednesday at US$2.42 per million British thermal units (mmBtu) amid warmer weather and a prolonged LNG export plant outage, down from over US$9 per mmBtu in August 2022. They averaged US$5.46 per mmBtu last year, the highest price in over a decade.

The outlook is for more of the same. Prices will remain around US$2.50 per mmBtu this summer, down from an earlier US$3.50 per mmBtu outlook, predicts energy technology firm Enverus. It also sees exit-to-exit 2023 production growing by 1.7 billion cubic feet per day (bcfd), from 3 bcfd in 2022.

The company says well completions activity in the Haynesville gas region will need to fall by about 8% to prevent storage from exceeding a limit of 4.3 trillion cubic feet (tcf).

"If we don't see a decline in activity in the Haynesville, we'll blow through" the US storage maximum of 4.3 tcf, said Jonathan Snyder, an Enverus vice president.

The gas-price drop has slowed deal-making and threatens some proposed acquisitions that have not closed, said Andrew Dittmar, who tracks mergers and acquisitions for Enverus.

Prices further out should stave off any collapse in drilling and deal-making. Gas delivered in January and February 2024 is trading above US$4 per mmBtu, well above where those contracts traded in recent years.

"Is someone buying the assets for more than the next 10 months? If it is more than for the next 10 months, current pricing shouldn't drive the deal value," said Thomas McNulty, who advises on mergers and acquisitions and runs his own firm.

 

 

Wednesday, 8 February 2023

Russia demands United States to clarify its position in Nord Stream explosions

According to Retures, Russian foreign ministry said on Wednesday the United States had questions to answer over its role in explosions on the undersea Nord Stream gas pipelines last year.

Commenting on a report published earlier on Wednesday that said the United States was involved in the explosions, Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova called on the White House to comment on the facts that had been presented.

Reuters was unable to verify the report, published by US investigative journalist Seymour Hersh on his blog, alleging US involvement in the explosions.

The White House said on Wednesday that Hersh's account was utterly false and complete fiction.

Moscow, without providing evidence, has repeatedly said the West was behind the explosions affecting the Nord Stream 1 and 2 pipelines last September - multibillion-dollar infrastructure projects that carried Russian gas to Germany under the Baltic Sea.

Western officials have denied those accusations.

"The White House must now comment on all these facts," Zakharova said in a post on her Telegram page where she summarised Hersh's main claims regarding the alleged US involvement.

Investigators from Sweden and Denmark - in whose exclusive economic zones the explosions occurred - have said the ruptures were a result of sabotage, but have not said who they believe was responsible.

Russia said the countries have something to hide and are purposefully blocking Russia out from the investigation.

Construction of Nord Stream 2, designed to double the amount of gas Russia could send directly to Germany under the sea, was completed in September 2021, but was never put into operation after Berlin shelved certification just days before Moscow sent its troops into Ukraine in February.

(This story has been corrected to say that blasts were inside exclusive economic zones of Sweden and Denmark, not in their territorial waters.)

 

India: DP World to develop container terminal at Deendayal Port

DP World has won a major concession to develop, operate and maintain a container terminal at Deendayal port in Gujarat, on the western coast of India.

The project involves the construction of a mega-container terminal at Tuna-Tekra through a Public-Private Partnership (PPP).

Once complete, the terminal will include a 1,100-metre berth, and will be capable of handling vessels carrying more than 18,000 teu. Total capacity will be 2.19 million teu.

The contract was awarded by the Deendayal Port Authority under on a Build-Operate-Transfer (BOT) basis.

The future terminal will help unlock future container traffic growth in India, catering to exports and imports from Northern, Western and Central India, reducing logistics cost and enhancing efficiencies across supply chains.

"India represents a significant landscape for opportunity. As the value chain becomes more integrated, significant growth opportunities exist across the entire Indian ports and logistics space,” said Sultan Ahmed Bin Sulayem, Group Chairman and CEO of DP World.

“With the development of Tuna Tekra mega-container terminal in Gujarat, DP World will be well placed to capture these opportunities, further connecting Northern, Western and Central India with global trade and driving value for all our stakeholders.

This is yet another step in our collective efforts with the National Investment and Infrastructure Fund to leverage our expertise in logistics infrastructure and local knowledge to further strengthen India’s supply chain," he added.

DP World already operates five terminals – two in Mumbai, one each in Mundra, Cochin and Chennai – with a combined capacity of approximately 6 million teu and with the addition of Tuna Tekra Container Terminal DP World will have a capacity of 8.19 million teu.

This is along with seven multimodal inland terminals connected to DP World’s rail network, cold storage facilities and container freight stations. It is also developing three economic zones across the country in Mumbai, Cochin and Chennai.

The new terminal will be constructed and equipped with most modern facilities and equipment over an area of approximately 63 hectares. The terminal will be well connected to the hinterland through the network of roads, highways, railways and the Dedicated Freight Corridors.

Tuesday, 7 February 2023

Russia: Lost oil revenue bonanza for shippers and refiners

Western sanctions on Russia have significantly reduced state oil revenues and diverted tens of billions of dollars towards shipping and refining firms, some with Russian connections.

Most of the winners from the sanctions are based in China, India, Greece and the United Arab Emirates, a handful are partly owned by Russian companies.

None of the firms is breaching sanctions, but they have benefited from measures designed by the European Union and the United States to reduce the revenues of what they call Russian President Vladimir Putin's war machine.

As the Ukraine conflict heads into a second year, the calculations show that Russia's income has dropped but the volume of exports has remained relatively stable despite sanctions.

Putin told the West that sanctions would trigger an energy price rally. Instead, international benchmark Brent oil prices have fallen to US$80 per barrel from a near-all-time high of US$139 in March 2022, weeks after the start of the war. Before Moscow's invasion of Ukraine began on February 24 last year, Brent traded at around US$65 to US$85 per barrel.

After the Group of Seven (G7) industrialized nations imposed a price cap on Russian oil in December 2022, Moscow's oil export revenues fell by 40%YoY in January this year, Russia's finance ministry said.

"Low official oil price meant that the Russian state budget has suffered in recent weeks," Sergey Vakulenko, non-resident fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, said.

Vakulenko was a former head of strategy at Russian energy major Gazprom Neft. He left the firm and Russia days after the start of the war.

"Judging by the customs statistics, some of the benefit was captured by refiners in India and China, but the main beneficiaries must be oil shippers, intermediaries and the Russian oil companies," he added.

Sanctions on Russia - probably the harshest imposed on an individual state - include outright bans on purchases of Russian energy by the United States and the EU, as well as bans on the shipping of Russian crude anywhere in the world unless it is sold at or below US$60 per barrel.

Russia has diverted most crude and refined products to Asia by offering steep discounts to buyers in China and India versus competing grades from the Middle East, for instance.

The ban on shipping and the price cap have made buyers wary and forced Russia to pay for transportation of crude as it does not have enough tankers to carry all of its exports.

As of late January, Russian oil firms were offering discounts of up to US$20 per barrel for crude to buyers in India and China.

In addition, Russian sellers have also paid up to US$20 per barrel to shipping companies to take crude from Russia to China or India.

As a result, Russian companies received only less than US50 per barrel of Urals at Russian ports in January, down 42%YoY and just 60% of the European Brent benchmark price, according to the Russian Finance Ministry.

By comparison, a US exporter of Mars crude - a grade similar to Urals - would pay about US$5 to US$7 per barrel for shipping a cargo to India. Given a discount of US$1.6 per barrel versus the US benchmark WTI, a US exporter would collect some US$66 per barrel at a US port, or 90% of the benchmark price.

With output of 10.7 million barrels per day (bpd) in 2022 and exports of crude and refined products of 7.0 million bpd, the discount and additional costs would see Russian producers' revenues falling by tens of billions of dollars in 2023.

The head of the International Energy Agency (IEA), Fatih Birol, said on Sunday the price cap reduced Moscow's revenue by $8 billion in January alone.

However, because some lost revenues are captured by Russian firms, the exact hit to earnings of producers and the state is difficult to quantify.

As a further complication, some Russian oil grades, including Pacific grade ESPO, are also worth more than Urals.

 

Pakistan: Petroleum sales down 20%YoY

Sales of petroleum, oil and lubricants (POL) products were reported at 1.44 million tons for January 2023, up 8%MoM but down 20%YoY, as compared to 1.34 million tons for December 2022 and 1.8 million tons for January 2022. This marks the second consecutive month with petroleum sales reported below 1.5 million tons.

There was a slight increase of 8%MoM) due to rumors of a potential price hike, which may have prompted some hoarding. Overall, total POL sales remained down by 19%YoY during 7MFY23, reported at 10.5 million tons as compared to 12.9 million tons for the same period last year.

The decline is largely due to a drop in organic demand, as petroleum sales tend to be closely tied to the overall health of the economy. This is evident by a 3.6% decline in LSM activity during June-November 2022, a 8%YoY drop in power generation during the 1HFY23, and a 41%YoY decrease in auto sales during the same period. The ongoing wave of inflationary pressures has also gripped the economy and contributed to the overall reduction in purchasing power for the spending public. Furthermore, the volumetric downturn may also be due to suspended travelling along the motorways due to fog, reducing heavy transport mobility during the month, as depicted by fall in HSD offtakes, down 21%YoY during January 2023).

Also, lower FO based generation during the recent months, down 89%YoY during January 2023, keeping fuel oil offtakes down by 45% during January 2023.

On the retail front, MS volumes shrunk noticeably as well, by 13%YoY during January 2023, as increased fuel prices and reduced mobility during winters dampened the overall demand. It is worth mentioning that the prices of both MS and HSD were raised by PKR35/liter each during the latest price notification, bringing them to PKR250 and PKR263 per liter, respectively. These prices represent an increase of 69% and 84% as compared to February 2022; in line with the current government's plan to pass on the full cost of supply and levies to consumers (PDL was PKR50/PKR40 per liter for MS/HSD)

Company wise, major players in the sector reporting sales at PSO (704,000), APL (140,000), SHEL (115,000 and GOPL (85,000), taking total market share to stand at 49%/9.7%/8.0%/5.9% for January 2023, respectively. More specifically, APL’s offtakes witnessed the strongest recovery on a MoM basis (up 16% as against industry average of 8% during January 2023) majorly due to a big spike in RFO offtakes, up 84%MoM.

This may be due to increased offtakes from the power plants the company sells to in Punjab (Attock-Gen, NPL, NCPL etc.), as depicted by recent upticks in RFO based generation during December 2023 (up 267%MoM), amidst recent RLNG scarcity in the country. On the retail front, PSO and APL ended the 7MFY23 period with market shares of 49.0% and 8.4% as against 46.9% and 8.3% during the same period last year.

AKD Securities conclude that for the first month of 2HFY23 the demand for petroleum products hasn't looked this bad in years as compared to the last two fiscal years. Overall, increasing fuel prices continue to haunt the sustainability of the sector as risen prices and dampened macros have kept offtakes under pressure. Furthermore, recent news flows suggesting oil/petroleum shortage amidst stringent LC/exchange rate volatility may add further fuel to the fire to the declining health and sustainability of the OMC sector.

 

Monday, 6 February 2023

Indonesia to suspend palm oil export permits

Indonesia will suspend some palm oil export permits to secure domestic supply amid rising cooking oil prices ahead of upcoming Ramadan, senior cabinet minister Luhut Pandjaitan said on his official Instagram account on Monday.

Palm oil exporters had accumulated large shipment quotas last year and they now had little incentive to supply the domestic market, he said.

Indonesia issues export permits for palm oil companies that have already sold a proportion of their products to the domestic market, under a policy known as Domestic Market Obligation (DMO).

The DMO currently allows export volumes that are six times what companies have sold at home.

"Exporters can use those export rights after the situation has calmed," said Luhut, Coordinating Minister for Maritime Affairs and Investment.

Firman Hidayat, an official at the same ministry, said about a third of existing export quotas could be used now, while the rest could be used after May 01, 2023.

He added exporters were holding around 5.9 million tons worth of export permits at end of January.

Exporters could increase their quota when they raised supplies to the domestic market, he said.

Retailers have complained that cooking oil packages at lower prices have been hard to procure and they have been forced to sell them above the regulated price of 14,000 rupiah (US$0.93) per litre.

The Trade Ministry last month said palm oil companies had been ordered to increase domestic supply to 450,000 tons per month until April, up from roughly 300,000 tons per month previously.

Food prices typically rise ahead of the Islamic month of Ramadan and the Eid al-Fitr celebration which falls in April this year.

Sahat Sinaga, chair of the Indonesia Palm Oil Board, said companies have been holding back exports, due to lower global market prices and high export levies. With little urgency for exports, companies were also not encouraged to meet their DMO.

Malaysian benchmark palm oil prices have fallen more than 40% since reaching a peak last year. Meanwhile, Indonesia resumed imposing export levies in November.

Sahat blamed distributors for the tight supply in the domestic market.

"This is a difficult situation, but everybody must work together. Distributors should not take advantage of the situation," he said.

Rattling global edible oil markets, Indonesia last year banned exports of palm oil used in everything from margarine to cosmetics and fuel for three weeks due to soaring cooking oil prices.

But palm oil prices have since fallen back sharply to stabilize at lower levels as the outlook is now less certain with energy prices off their highs and fears over a global recession.

Malaysia's palm oil futures market was closed on Monday for a public holiday.

Pakistan’s Meltdown

I am delighted to share an article by Dr. Kamran Bokhari. While many Pakistanis, particularly the establishment may not agree with many points, Pakistanis must read and try to understand the narrative.

Dr. Bokhari is the Director of Analytical Development at the New Lines Institute for Strategy & Policy in Washington, DC. He is also a national security and foreign policy specialist at the University of Ottawa’s Professional Development Institute. He has served as the Coordinator for Central Asia Studies at the US Department of State’s Foreign Service Institute.

Decades-old political economic problems in Pakistan are coming to a head. The South Asian nation needs billions of dollars in financial assistance to avoid a default at a time when its usual patrons are disinclined to bail it out.

 The International Monetary Fund is insisting on tough reforms that the fragile coalition government cannot institute without taking a major political hit in an election year.

Even if Islamabad dodges this particular bullet, it will have to massively overhaul the way it has managed the world’s fifth-most populous country.

If it cannot, then it will further push Pakistan toward a systemic breakdown, which has major consequences for security in the world’s most densely populated region.

An IMF team is visiting Pakistan from January 31 to February 09 to continue discussions on the release of US$1.18 billion in assistance, part of a $6 billion aid program that was agreed on in 2019 (and increased to US$7 billion in 2022) but that has since stalled.

Pakistan’s foreign exchange reserves have slumped to about US$3.68 billion, barely enough to cover three weeks of imports. Inflation was already at 25% when the government announced on January 29 a 16% hike in gasoline and diesel prices that will likely rise much further.

A few days earlier, the Pakistani rupee fell 9.6% against the US dollar, the biggest one-day drop in over two decades, after the government removed unofficial caps and allowed the currency to move toward a market-based exchange rate.

Earlier in the month, the country’s civil and military leadership traveled to Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates to secure the funds needed to avert a financial meltdown. Reports surfaced that Riyadh and Abu Dhabi would provide several billion dollars. In sharp contrast with their past behavior, they aren’t willing to write a blank check; the Saudi finance minister said January 18 that the kingdom was no longer providing direct grants and deposits to debtor nations without seeing reforms.

The Saudis, the Emiratis and others who could provide the cash want to first see the Pakistanis accept an IMF program. Besides, the beleaguered South Asian nation’s financial needs far outstrip the global appetite to assist.

Islamabad, has been struggling to finalize what would be the country’s 23rd IMF arrangement since it first knocked on the lender’s doors in 1958.

The Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) party, which heads the fragile and increasingly unpopular coalition government, has a lot to lose by agreeing to IMF terms that are bound to exacerbate harsh economic conditions. As it is, the PML-N and its allies are facing an uphill electoral battle against the populist opposition Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) party of former Prime Minister Imran Khan.

Still, Pakistan’s political instability is the result of a much deeper malaise. Since the end of Pakistan’s fourth military dictatorship in 2008, the country nominally has experienced its longest stretch of civilian governance. 2013 marked the first time one democratically elected government transferred power to another. But the army continued to encumber both governments, and in 2018 it engineered the rise to power of Khan’s PTI in hopes that it would finally have a pliant civilian actor. That experiment was a colossal failure. It has weakened the military politically and has thus plunged the country into uncharted territory.

A similar situation has emerged on the economic front. Pakistan has always had financial problems, which over the decades continued to worsen. The country got by only because of a periodic influx of US assistance, made possible by the broader global geopolitics of the time. There have been three such long periods – 1958-69, 1977-88 and 1999-2008 – each under a different military regime and coming at the height of the Cold War, the Soviet military intervention in Afghanistan, and the post-9/11 war on terror, respectively.

In today’s changed circumstances, Pakistan is facing an unprecedented financial crisis because it never developed a viable economy and is without external bailout options.

Without a major reform process – which is unlikely given the acute state of social and political divisions – Pakistan’s situation is likely to worsen. Its annual population growth rate is 1.9%, which is 237 times that of the global rate, and its fertility rate exceeds the global rate by 157%. At this pace, in another 10 years the country will have added 50 million people, increasing its population to 275 million. There is already a massive youth population.

Sixty percent of Pakistanis are under the age of 23. As many as 44% of all Pakistani children between the ages of 5 and 16 do not attend school. Females make up almost half the population, and literacy among them is at 48 percent.

Dealing with the multiplicity of crises plaguing the country requires a political consensus. This is extremely difficult in the current highly polarized political climate, which is unlikely to abate anytime soon. Pakistan’s powerful military establishment, which has intervened in politics for much of the country’s history, is in an unprecedented dilemma.

After the failure of its latest attempt to shape the country’s political economy, which ended with the April 2022 ouster of Khan, the top brass publicly committed to keeping the army out of politics. Rationalizing the economy, however, will take a long time – assuming the country’s tumultuous politics can be brought under control.

In moments like these, when normal politics produces only more chaos, the pressure (or temptation) for the army to hit pause or reset on the constitutional process is high. However, the general staff has been down that road many times, only to end up exacerbating the problems it aimed to solve. When problems are such that degradation is happening much more quickly than is the realistic efforts to fix them, stalling the political process could be akin to an out of the frying pan and into the fire type situation.

The only other option is to continue the slow path toward recovery, which is fraught with perils. As large swathes of the population suffer under the weight of debilitating economic conditions, intra-elite political struggles intensify. These are precisely the conditions that Islamist militants – both Taliban rebels and Islamic State militants ensconced in the neighboring emirate in Afghanistan – hope to exploit. A resurgent jihadist insurgency will likely force an already weakened Pakistani state into a new major military campaign – one that has serious potential to spill over across the border.

It is this nightmare scenario – a cash-strapped Pakistani state whose security is compromised on its western flank – that will eventually result in Arab Gulf states, China and the United States gaining greater influence in the country. Washington cannot allow Pakistan to descend into chaos, especially with Afghanistan under a Taliban regime. Likewise, China, which has pumped tens of billions of dollars’ worth of Belt and Road funds into the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor, is not going to sit by and watch its investment sink.

Pakistan is thus going to become an even bigger arena for the US-Chinese competition.

Meanwhile, the Saudis and the Emiratis, who have long played a major role in periodically mediating intra-elite power struggles in Pakistan, will likely have greater influence over Pakistan’s internal workings.

In India, which only months ago surpassed the UK to become the world’s fifth largest economy, there is immense concern over how a financially collapsing Pakistan could affect New Delhi’s upward trajectory.

While it is too early to speak with any specificity on how external powers will behave, Pakistan can’t continue to chug along as it has. It may not always appear this way, especially in chronically fragile states, but long-term dysfunction adds up. Major fissures have emerged that outstrip Pakistan’s available resources, disrupting the status quo in which it was able to get by for so long.