By John Kemp
LONDON, Feb 21 (Reuters) - Oil and gas prices are in
another mini-slump, nearly three years after they were hit by
the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic in North America and
Western Europe.
But the latest downturn is part of a cycle in manufacturing
activity and energy prices that has repeated with an average
duration of three to four years since the early 1990s.
After adjusting for core consumer prices, the price of Brent
crude has fallen by 34% from the peak in May 2022 and U.S. Henry
Hub natural gas is down by 73% from the peak in August 2022.
In real terms, oil prices are in the 67th percentile for all
months since 1990, down from the 86th percentile in May, while
U.S. gas prices have slumped to only the 3rd percentile, down
from the 86th percentile in August.
Prices have fallen in response to a combination of factors,
including the impact of sanctions on Russian exports, a
milder-than-normal winter, the explosion at Freeport LNG, and a
slowdown in manufacturing and freight transport.
CYCLICAL RESEARCH
In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries,
researchers identified several cycles in business activity,
prices and interest rates:
* Kitchin cycles lasting 3 to 4 four years, attributed to
the
accumulation and liquidation of excess inventories (“Cycles and
trends in economic factors”, Kitchin, 1923).
* Juglar cycles lasting 7 to 11 years, attributed to
investment in
longer-lived fixed assets such as machinery (“Commercial crises
and their return in France, United Kingdom and United States”,
Juglar, 1862).
* Kuznets cycles with a duration of 15-25 years, attributed
to
construction, demographics and migration (“Secular movements in
production and prices”, Kuznets, 1930).
* Kondratieff waves lasting 45-60 years, attributed to the
diffusion of major new technologies such as the internal
combustion engine and electricity (“Long waves in economic
life”, Kondratieff, 1926).
Researchers hypothesised cycles of differing durations could
be nested, for example each 7-11 Juglar cycle could be
decomposed into two or three separate 3-4 year Kitchin cycles.
In practice, both the magnitude and duration of short and
long-term cycles proved too variable to be much use in
forecasting (“Approaches to the business cycle, Zarnowitz,
1988).
And the expansion of the service sector, which is more
stable than manufacturing, contributed to the marginalisation of
business cycle research.
As a result, research on business cycles moved in other
directions, and policymakers increasingly aimed to eliminate
cyclical instability altogether.
REGULAR VARIATIONS
Notwithstanding problems identifying, classifying and
explaining cycles in output, employment, prices and interest
rates, the time series for manufacturing activity continues to
show a strong cyclical component.
Since 1995, there have been eight cycles in U.S.
manufacturing activity, based on the Institute for Supply
Management’s purchasing managers’ index, averaged over 12 months
to smooth some of the short-term volatility.
Troughs around October 1995, September 1998, May 2001,
February 2007, January 2009, November 2012, December 2015,
November 2019 and tentatively January 2023 have occurred on
average every 41 months, with a range from 23 to 69 months.¹
Chartbook: Manufacturing and energy price cycles
Since 1995, there have also been eight cycles in oil and gas
prices, based on the change in real prices compared with the
prior year and averaged over 12 months.
Oil and gas cycles have been closely correlated with each
other and with U.S. manufacturing activity.
On average, troughs in oil prices occur within ±3 months of
a turning point in U.S. manufacturing activity, while troughs in
gas prices occur within ±4 months.
LOSING MOMENTUM
U.S. manufacturing activity appears to be forming a trough
at present, with the ISM index falling below the 50-point
threshold dividing expansion from a contraction every month
between November 2022 and January 2023.
The current manufacturing cycle is 34 months or 39 months
long (depending on whether the trough is dated to April 2020 or
November 2019), approaching the average duration of 41 months
for cycles since 1995.
Some softness in manufacturing activity as well as oil and
gas prices should therefore be expected at this point.
Not every cyclical slowdown in manufacturing turns into a
full-blown recession; there have been eight manufacturing cycles
since 1995 but only three were declared recessions by the U.S.
National Bureau of Economic Research.
The others were mid-cycle slowdowns, often termed a “soft
patch” by policymakers, followed by a re-acceleration of
activity and an extension of the business cycle.
There is no way to determine in advance whether the current
manufacturing slowdown will turn out to be a mid-cycle one or a
cycle-ending recession. But the type matters enormously.
WHAT NEXT?
If the current slowdown proves to be a mid-cycle soft patch,
gas and especially oil prices are likely to rise strongly later
in 2023.
Global inventories of petroleum, especially the most
cyclically sensitive components such as distillates, are still
below the long-term average.
In the event the economy re-accelerates, inventories will
deplete quickly, and there is little spare capacity to rebuild
them in the short term.
Gas inventories are currently more comfortable after a mild
winter in 2022/23 but could also deplete quickly if the economy
accelerates and winter 2023/24 reverts to more average weather.
By contrast, if the current slowdown turns into a
cycle-ending recession, both gas and oil stocks will accumulate
and prices will come under more pressure in the near term.
The resulting accumulation of inventories and spare
production capacity would create some cyclical slack and defer
the onset of the next upswing in prices until 2024.
¹ In reality, the trough identified in November 2019
occurred around April 2022 during the first wave of the
pandemic, but the rebound was so strong it has moved the
calculated trough in the 12-month average earlier.
Related columns:
- Recession now or later? Unenviable alternatives for 2023
(Reuters, January 26, 2023)
- Recession by any other name will still reset economy
(Reuters, November 2, 2022)
- Recession will be necessary to rebalance the oil market
(Reuters, September 22, 2022)
- Global business cycle starts to turn down (Reuters, June
30, 2022)
John Kemp is a Reuters market analyst. The views expressed
are his own
(Editing by Alexander Smith)
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