Best in Energy – 13 May 2022

China’s industrial metals exports are rising

India tries to accelerate coal imports ($BBG)

U.S. truckers hit by rising diesel prices ($WSJ)

Office return stalls in tight job market ($BBG)

U.S. FINANCIAL CONDITIONS for households and businesses wanting to  borrow or raise capital tightened again last week and are the most restrictive since the first wave of the pandemic in 2020 and before that 2012:  

U.S. INFLATION is becoming more deeply embedded in the economy with service sector prices climbing at an annualised rate of almost 8% over the last three months, the fastest increase since 1990 and before that 1982.

Some commentators have dismissed the increase inflationary pressure as a problem of supply bottlenecks rather than too much demand. Separating the supply side and demand side this way is an analytical error. Insufficient supply is the same as excess demand and vice versa.

But the data also shows inflationary pressures have spread from the energy- and raw materials-intensive merchandise sector to the labour-heavy services sector. Rapid service sector price increases usually signal the imminent arrival of a recession:

BUSINESS CYCLE turning points and phase transitions are hard to spot in advance or in real time in the official statistics because most data is published with a lag of 1-3 months. Latency in the statistical system conceals the much more rapid change in business conditions. But it may be possible to detect mid-cycle slowdowns and end-of-cycle recessions much closer to real time by focusing on the behaviour of key companies.

In presidential address to the American Economic Association in 2017, economist Robert Shiller characterised a recession as “a time when many people have decided to spend less, to make do for now with that old furniture instead of buying new, or to postpone starting a new business, to postpone hiring new help in an existing business.”

Decisions to reduce spending, postpone expensive purchases, defer or freeze hiring are all indicators of a potential slowdown. Sometimes the reasons will be company or household specific. But if there are enough companies and households behaving in the way the likelihood of an imminent slowdown is much higher.

In that context, these recent news headlines are all indications economic momentum is slowing:

  • “Uber to cut back on spending, treat hiring as a privilege” (Wall Street Journal, May 9)
  • “Twitter freezes hiring as two senior executives leave the company” (Wall Street Journal, May 12)
  • “Amazon’s net loss prompts query: has it built too many warehouses?” (Reuters, April 29)

This is not conclusive proof the major economies are entering a slowdown, and it cannot show whether it will be a mid-cycle soft patch or something deeper that qualifies as a recession, but the headlines are strongly suggestive pattern.

Best in Energy – 11 May 2022

India’s railways struggle to transport enough coal

India relaxes coal mine environmental rules ($BBG)

Ukraine cuts Russian pipeline gas flows to Europe

Global mining is central to future energy system

BlackRock updates energy-climate investor principles

Germany plans for disruption of Russian gas supply

U.S. ammonia prices increase with global gas prices

Nigeria subsidises fuel to keep aircraft flying ($BBG)

China forecasts record rain along south coast (trans.)

China issues flood warnings along the Yangtze (trans.)

China hydro generation rises on heavy rains ($BBG)

U.K. threatens energy majors with windfall tax ($FT)

U.S. inflation – how prices are really measured ($WSJ)

CHINA generated a record 221 TWh of hydro electricity in the first three months of the year, up from 196 TWh in the same period in 2021, relieving pressure on coal and gas inventories and prices:

U.S. EQUITY PRICES signal investors expect an imminent business cyclical slowdown – either a mid-cycle soft patch or an end-of-cycle recession. The S&P 500 index is down by almost 5% compared with the end of May 2021 and down by more than 11% in real terms:

Best in Energy – 9 May 2022

China prioritises energy and food security (trans.)

California forecasts power shortages to 2025

U.S. grids warn of electricity shortfalls ($WSJ)

IEA sidelined by White House on oil release

India’s prolonged electricity blackouts

India’s fuel distributors trim volumes

Japan to phase out Russian oil imports

U.S. fuel prices rise faster than crude

Global refining margins widen ($BBG)

U.S. refiners run out of capacity ($FT)

CO2 removal becomes focus for policy

Pandemic results in 15 million deaths

U.S./Ukraine intelligence sharing ($WSJ)

INDIA’s temperatures have fallen over the last week and are closer to the seasonal average, reducing electricity consumption slightly and easing stress on the power grid. The grid’s frequency has moved closer to the 50 Hz target and periods of under-frequency have become shorter and less severe, showing a closer balance between generation and demand:

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Best in Energy – 6 May 2022

[MUST READ] Xi recommits to zero-covid strategy (trans.)

China’s transport problems caused by virus control (trans.)

EU power pricing under scrutiny ($EF)

EU softens planned Russian oil embargo

India to re-open marginal coal mines

U.S. SPR presents plan for partial refill

U.S. oil and gas firms boost expenditure

Russia/Ukraine war is spreading ($WSJ)

DISTILLATESHORTAGES are pulling up crude spot prices and calendar spreads as refiners maximise crude processing to meet demand for freight and manufacturing fuel:

U.S. FINANCIAL CONDITIONS are tightening rapidly as investors and intermediaries anticipate higher interest rates and a slowing economy. The Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago’s national financial conditions index – derived from 105 indicators covering risk, credit and leverage – shows conditions are the tightest since the first wave of the pandemic in 2020, and before that 2016 and 2012. The adjusted index, which attempts to isolate purely financial rather than real-economy factors, is the tightest since 2020 and before that 2011:

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Best in Energy – 5 May 2022

EU/Russia petroleum imports

EU economy has stalled ($BBG)

India’s power shortages ($BBG)

India’s coal transport challenge

BRENT spot prices and calendar spreads are climbing as traders anticipate an EU embargo will disrupt Russia’s oil production and reduce supplies available globally. Brent’s six-month calendar spread is trading in a backwardation of more than $10 per barrel again, notwithstanding the ongoing release of emergency stocks by the United States and other members of the IEA. Brent futures for deliveries in Dec 2022, when the release will have been completed, are trading at $102, not far below the peak of $104 in early March during the initial shock after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine:

U.S. PETROLEUM inventories including the strategic petroleum reserve fell by -0.5 million bbl to 1,696 million bbl last week. Distillate stocks fell -2 million bbl to 105 million bbl. Global consumption is running consistently faster than production causing inventory depletion and upward pressure on prices:

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Best in Energy – 4 May 2022

EU proposes full embargo on Russia oil by end of year

(see Von der Leyen’s speech to European Parliament)

U.S./Russia/China trilateral diplomacy and sanctions

Semiconductor shortage to be prolonged ($WSJ)

India raises coal production to record high ($FT)

China/Russia oil trade rises with discounts ($FT)

Russia/India oil trade rises with discounts ($BBG)

U.S. Northeast diesel inventories deplete ($BBG)

Multilateralism and symbolic walkouts ($WSJ)

U.S. GAS PRICES have climbed to $8 per million British thermal units, based on the front-month futures contract for deliveries at Henry Hub. In real terms, prices are the highest since November 2008, when the financial crisis had started to intensify and the economy was heading deeper into recession. The inflation-adjusted price is in the 82nd percentile for all months since 1990, creating an incentive for more gas drilling as well as maximum fuel-switching away from gas in power generation:

Best in Energy – 3 May 2022

India plans to accelerate coal imports

EU lacks effective minerals strategy

Germany warns of recession risk ($FT)

EU sanctions threaten recession ($BBG)

NATO’s war aims become bolder ($WSJ)

Carbon capture – where is it working?

India’s heatwave in third month ($BBG)

China’s epidemic and economy (trans.)

China becomes world’s top gas importer

U.S./Iran nuclear talks hit impasse

India’s cooking oil imports at risk

Arsenal of democracy’ (Roosevelt 1940)

INDIA’s temperatures have been consistently above the long-term seasonal average in the north and west of the country since March 13, driving record demand for refrigeration and air-conditioning. In New Delhi’s Palam suburb, cooling demand has been 43% higher than normal since the start of the year:

INDIA’s daily peak electricity consumption hit a new record of 207,000 megawatts last week as the heatwave boosted demand:

INDIA’s power generators held coal stocks equivalent to just 8 days worth of consumption at the end of April, compared with 12 days at the same point in 2021 and 18 days in 2019, as record power generation has made it hard to rebuild inventories after they were severely depleted in 2021:

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Best in Energy – 29 April 2022

EU regulators defend electricity market design

India explores purchase of Russian oil assets

EU LNG imports running at full capacity ($BBG)

China admits epidemic supply disruption (trans.)

EU struggles with payment for Russian gas

Austria’s payment for Russian gas ($BBG)

EU options for sanctioning Russian oil ($WSJ)

South Asia’s fuel-oil power generation ($BBG)

U.S. REAL FINAL SALES to private domestic purchasers (FSPDP) increased at an annualised rate of 3.7% in the first quarter, accelerating from 2.6% in the fourth quarter, according to advance estimates published on April 28.

Real FSPDP excludes the effect of foreign trade as well as the temporary impact of changes in government spending and inventory accumulation and depletion, so is the most useful measure of underlying spending by households and businesses. The economy exhibited strong momentum in the first three months of the year.

But headline real gross domestic product shrank at an annualised rate of 1.4% in the first quarter as a result of negative effects from foreign trade (-3.2 percentage points), inventory accumulation (-0.8 percentage points) and slower government spending (-0.5 percentage points):

U.S. S&P 500 equity index has risen just 2.5% over the last twelve months; the slow increase is consistent with an end-of-cycle recession or mid-cycle slowdown:

U.S. CONSUMERS were the most negative about the government’s economic policy in March for seven years – with levels of disapproval consistent with recessions and mid-cycle slowdowns in the past:

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Best in Energy – 28 April 2022

India cuts electricity to industrial users

EU importers to pay for gas in roubles ($FT)

China’s major problem with vaccines ($BBG)

Poland/Bulgaria alternatives to Russian gas

Automakers revert to vertical integration

China’s passenger rail traffic down (trans.)

U.S. gas production areas

INDIA’s electricity consumption climbed to a record of more than 201,000 megawatts at the peak on April 26. But grid stability is deteriorating with average frequency trending lower and prolonged under-frequency excursions pointing to insufficient generation. Frequency is now so low for so much of the day controllers no longer appear to be trying to maintain it close to 50.0 Hz and have instead accepted a lower frequency as normal. States have begun to restrict supplies to industrial users during peak hours to maintain stability and reduce the risk of a cascading failure:

U.S. PETROLEUM inventories fell by -2 million bbl to 1,697 million bbl last week and are now down by -421 million bbl since the start of July 2020:

U.S. DISTILLATE inventories fell -1 million bbl to just 107 million bbl last week, the lowest seasonal level since 2008:

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Best in Energy – 27 April 2022

Russia halts gas deliveries to Poland and Bulgaria

Germany says gas transit unaffected by dispute

Germany plans to seize Russian-owned refinery

Italy explores Russian-owned refinery seizure

EU remains reliant on Russian diesel imports

Britain plans to extend coal-fired generation

India plans to boost coal imports through 2025

China to boost infrastructure spending ($BBG)

China plans major infrastructure boost (trans.)*

Narratives about inflation and recession as epidemic

World Bank warns over energy and food prices shock

Indonesia needs Russian oil to keep prices down ($FT)

* The announcement was anodyne but significant the policy meeting was chaired by the president himself and the write up is the top item across all state-controlled media and government websites (Xinhua, NDRC and State Council) emphasising importance of the investment message and signal.  

BRITAIN plans to extend coal-fired power generation at Drax to cope with gas and electricity shortages, according to the operator:

EUROPE’s gas traders were sanguine about the ability to replenish storage over the next few months ahead of next winter’s heating season, at least before Gazprom announced it would cut deliveries to Poland and Bulgaria. Benchmark futures for summer 2022 and winter 2022/23 gas have been high but stable for more than a month and the backwardation has remained narrow and also stable, indicating that most traders expected a regular storage fill:

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