Chartbook: Brent prices and spreads
That does not imply the cuts had no impact; without them, prices and spreads would likely have fallen further as traders focused on the weakening industrial cycle. But in the overall picture the unexpected cuts totalling more than 1 million barrels per day have been readily absorbed and had only a modest impact on the actual price level. Volatility briefly spiked following the announcement, but has since retreated near to its long-term average, showing most of the financial impact has been absorbed. There has been more of a lasting impact in the physical market, given the significant withdrawal of barrels from the market in the near term. The five-week dated Brent spread is still in a backwardation of $1.18 (86th percentile) up from a contango of 60 cents (20th percentile) on March 17.
ROUTING THE BEARS If one of the objectives for Saudi Arabia and its OPEC+ allies was to drive bearish hedge funds out of the oil market, it seems to have succeeded. Even before the cut was announced, the total number of hedge fund and other money manager short positions in Brent and WTI had fallen from a high of 204 million barrels on March 21 to 159 million by March 28. Following the cut, however, the number of short positions was reduced further to just 78 million barrels by April 11, near to its post-2010 low of just 65 million. The rout of bearish funds has driven the ratio of bullish long positions to bearish short ones in crude up to 6.62:1 (82nd percentile for all weeks since 2013) from 2.11:1 (8th percentile) on March 21. In the past, Saudi Arabia's oil minister has described surprise production cuts intended to discourage hedge fund short selling as "ouching". It is also in effect an "OPEC+ put" option that is intended to protect producers from sharp price falls, similar to the "Greenspan put" that characterised U.S. central bank monetary policy under former Federal Reserve Chair Alan Greenspan. But the cut has, so far, drawn many new bulls into the market, with fund long positions up by a relatively modest 90 million barrels in the same four-week period. For now, bullishness in the hedge fund community is restrained by concerns about the relatively poor macroeconomic outlook.
Related columns: - Oil prices stall as short-covering rally is completed (April 17, 2023) - Surprise, squeezing the shorts, and revealed preferences (April 3, 2023) - Oil market has fully absorbed impact of Russia's invasion of Ukraine (March 9, 2023)
John Kemp is a Reuters market analyst. The views expressed are his own (Editing by Paul Simao)