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efta-efta01385323DOJ Data Set 10CorrespondenceEFTA Document EFTA01385323
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3 January 2018
HY Corporate Credit
HY Multi Sector.Media. Cable & Satellite
Oil Macro: Recovery gains stronger
footing
Excerpted from 201$ Outlook: Cash jaws sot to open published on December 4
2017
OPEC's US light Oil Round 3>
•
Falling US tight oil breakevens have not ruined
OPEC's game plan. So far, it has been remarkably
successful in managing the difficult task of both
holding on to market share gains since 2014 and
also establishing a floor under prices, all while
facing a tight oil industry which is becoming ever
more efficient. We expect that the abiding interest
in maintaining market share will make OPEC's Dec-
18 extension the last.
•
One theory holds that Saudi Arabia's difficulty in
further lowering its fiscal breakeven (USD 77/bbl,
down from USD 107/bbl in 2014) means that it
would prefer overshooting on the oil price.
However, we believe the fear of re-incentivising
another wave of strong supply growth in the US
must factor equally into the calculus, especially
since well productivity growth shows no signs of
leveling off yet. Additionally, the risk of denting
demand and driving consumers to purchase more
fuel-efficient vehicles should also reduce the
interest in deliberately sparking an overshoot.
•
Visibility on US supply growth remains poor.
Analysts were asked to present on US tight oil to
OPEC on 24 Nov and offered tight oil growth
outlooks ranging from +500kb/d to +1.7mb/d in
2018.
Our view on US supply growth tends
towards the lower end of the range at +773kb/d
tight oil and +940kb/d total liquids, although we
have raised this by 100kb/d on expectation of a
recovery in rig productivity. Sensitivities to the WTI
price range from +539kb/d tight oil in the case of
WTI averaging USD 45/bbl, and +1.113kb/d tight
oil at USD 65/bbl.
•
Tight oil breakevens are likely to rise as long as the
rate of completions is held back by insufficient
capacity.
We expect that
the completion
bottleneck will show signs of being loosened by
the end of 01-18 as newly commissioned frac
capacity begins to be employed, and an orderbook
Page 48
of 0.5-1.0 million hydraulic hp begins to be
delivered over the course of the first quarter. This
risks lifting productivity as the completion rate rises
toward the drilling rate, reversing the move
initiated in September 2016. Cost inflation is likely
to be modest as US frac pricing remains subdued
at -60% of the 2011 level.
•
The economics of non-OPEC pre-FID projects
shows a decline in full-cycle costs from USD 53/bbl
to USD 46/bbl over the last twelve months.
Deepwater reserves still contribute the most
reserves by resource theme, and we see USD
65/bbl as the marginal cost of new supply from oil
sands projects.
Sit-month rally beginning to look mature
•
The six-month rally in the crude oil price is now in
danger of being overextended if prices were to rise
beyond USD 65/bbl in our view, a level reflecting
the cost of new oil sands projects. A key driver has
been falling US supply growth forecasts, a trend
which we believe is now poised to turn around. In
addition we see a modest global oversupply in the
first quarter, slowing the pace of inventory
declines.
Although Saudi Aramco CEO Amin
Nasser states oil prices are in "continuous
improvement" we believe the road will be more
rocky.
We see US supply growth as the next
(unquantified) bump in the road in 2018, followed
by OPEC expansion in 2019. before we come on to
the first substantial deficit of roughly -750kb/d in
2020. Only then do we see potential for prices
rising above the equilibrium defined by marginal
full-cycle project breakevens.
In the next sections we describe (i) the reasons
behind the next wave of optimism in US supply
growth, (ii) how we might expect US supply to
respond to various oil price levels in 2018, and (iii)
how the economics of pre-FID projects have fallen
since 2016.
Deutsche Bank Securities Inc.
CONFIDENTIAL - PURSUANT TO FED. R. CRIM. P. 6(e)
CONFIDENTIAL
DB-SDNY-0086607
SDNY_GM_00232791
EFTA01385323
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