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Oil seen at $80 next year by Raymond James

Pubdate:2016-06-21 10:51 Source:zhangmeng Click:
ST. PETERSBURG, Florida (Bloomberg) -- Rebounding after a two-year collapse, it's only this month that oil prices have pushed up past $50/bbl, but Raymond James & Associates says this is just the beginning for higher prices.
 
In a note to clients, analysts led by J. Marshall Adkins say West Texas Intermediate will average $80/bbl by the end of next year—that's higher than all but one of the 31 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg. 
 
"Over the past few months, we've gained even more confidence that tightening global oil supply/demand dynamics will support a much higher level of oil prices in 2017," the team says. "We continue to believe that 2017 WTI oil prices will average about $30/bbl higher than current futures strip prices would indicate."
 
The team went on to lay out three reasons for their bullish call, all of which are tied to global supply—the primary factor that precipitated crude's massive decline.
 
Here's how the rebalancing of the global oil market will be expedited from the supply side, according to the analysts:
 
First, the analysts see production outside the U.S. being curbed by more than they had previously anticipated, which constitutes 400,000 fewer barrels of oil per day being produced in 2017 relative to their January estimate. In particular, they cite organic declines in China, Columbia, Angola and Mexico as prompting this downward revision.
 
Adkins and his fellow analysts also note that the unusually large slew of unplanned supply outages will, in some cases, persist throughout 2017, taking a further 300,000 bopd out of global supply.
 
Finally, U.S. shale producers won't be able to get their DUCs in a row to respond to higher prices by ramping up output, the team reasons, citing bottlenecks that include a limited available pool of labor and equipment.
 
Combine this supply curtailment with firmer than expected global demand tied to gasoline consumption, and Adkins has a recipe for $80 crude in relatively short order.
 
"These newer oil supply/demand estimates are meaningfully more bullish than at the beginning of the year," he writes. "Our previous price forecast was considerably more bullish than current Street consensus, and our new forecast is even more so."
 
The only analyst with a higher price forecast for 2017, among those surveyed by Bloomberg, is Incrementum AG Partner Ronald Stoeferle. He sees West Texas Intermediate at $82/bbl next year. The consensus estimate is for this grade of crude to average $54/bbl in 2017.
 
Over the long haul, however, Raymond James' team sees WTI prices moderating to about $70/bbl.