Saturday, February 26, 2011

Middle East Uprisings Highlight the Importance of Supply Margin

Crude and its refined products, like any commodity, are ultimately priced on supply and demand. Sounds simple enough. The one complication added to these pricing inputs; expectation of future supply and demand. The sharp run up in crude prices the past few weeks shows how big a role expected supply and demand plays. The one buffer that will temper or exasperate expectations is spare production capacity.

No one really knows for sure how the problems in North Africa and Middle Eastern countries will resolve. We could experience a swift and peaceful change of these governments to stable democracies, continued prolonged unrest, or a combination of the two. What is known is the world is consuming 88 million bbls per day, up 2.7 million bbls per day from last year and expected to grow an additional 1.7 million bbls per day this year. At current crude production rates there are 4 to 5 millions bbls per day of spare capacity.

Even without turmoil in the Arab countries, the rising world demand for crude will cut into spare production margin bringing it down to 3 million bbls per day. Factor in potential production disruptions and the world could easily find itself with fuel supply shortages.

The narrowing of marginal crude production capacity is what is driving crude to multi year highs. Until more crude production capacity is added, or world economies collapse under the weight of higher crude prices, expectations will remain for supply not being able to outpace demand.

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