Vitol: Oil Prices Don’t Reflect Risk of Disruptions to Russian Exports

Brent surged to almost $140 a barrel soon after Russia’s attack on Ukraine in late February. It sunk 13% last week to around $104. (Reuters)
Brent surged to almost $140 a barrel soon after Russia’s attack on Ukraine in late February. It sunk 13% last week to around $104. (Reuters)
TT

Vitol: Oil Prices Don’t Reflect Risk of Disruptions to Russian Exports

Brent surged to almost $140 a barrel soon after Russia’s attack on Ukraine in late February. It sunk 13% last week to around $104. (Reuters)
Brent surged to almost $140 a barrel soon after Russia’s attack on Ukraine in late February. It sunk 13% last week to around $104. (Reuters)

Oil prices have fallen to levels that don’t reflect the risk of disruptions to Russian exports or the ability of China to keep the coronavirus pandemic under control, according to the world’s biggest independent crude trader.

While Brent surged to almost $140 a barrel soon after Russia’s attack on Ukraine in late February, it sunk 13% last week to around $104.

That was due to the United States announcing an unprecedented release of strategic reserves to tame fuel prices and virus cases rising in China.

“Oil feels cheaper than most would’ve predicted,” Mike Muller, Vitol Group’s head of Asia, said Sunday.

“Oil prices could be higher given the risk of disruption of supplies from Russia. But people are still lost figuring out those numbers.”

Muller noted that flows of Russian crude and oil products may be down by between one and three million barrels a day through the third quarter. The country normally exports around 7.5 million barrels every day.

In this context, the International Energy Agency followed suit and agreed on April 1 to a second emergency release of oil reserves in response to “market turmoil” caused by Russia's invasion of Ukraine, without specifying volumes.

The announcement showed IEA member states’ “strong and unified commitment to stabilizing global energy markets,” the Paris-based group of 31 industrialized nations but not Russia said in a statement following an emergency meeting.

The agreement follows the previous action taken by IEA member states, announced last month, to which they pledged a total of 62.7 million barrels. They hold emergency stockpiles of 1.5 billion barrels.

The prospect of large-scale disruptions to Russian oil production is threatening to create a global oil supply shock, the agency warned.

It pointed out that Russia’s war in Ukraine continues to put significant strains on global oil markets, resulting in heightened price volatility.

Its governing board recommended that governments and consumers maintain and intensify conservation efforts and energy savings.

Russia’s oil and gas condensate production fell to 11.01 million barrels per day (bpd) in March, from an average output of 11.08 bpd in February, two industry sources familiar with the data told Reuters on Friday.

On March 31, the output was down to 10.6 million bpd, the lowest daily level since September 2021, the sources said and Refinitiv Eikon data showed.

Fall in Russia’s oil output happens along with disruptions with the state’s oil and product exports as European costumers turned cautious of trading with the state due to Western sanctions.

Russian oil output is falling in time when OPEC+ deal offers the state to rise its output monthly.

Urals oil loading from Russia’s Baltic ports fell five percent behind the schedule for March due to cargoes cancellations.

India stepped up as one of major buyers of Russian oil after Western sanctions were imposed.



Trump Win Ignites Crypto Frenzy that Sends Bitcoin to Record High

Trump Win Ignites Crypto Frenzy that Sends Bitcoin to Record High
TT

Trump Win Ignites Crypto Frenzy that Sends Bitcoin to Record High

Trump Win Ignites Crypto Frenzy that Sends Bitcoin to Record High

The price of bitcoin hit a new high Wednesday and crypto-related shares rallied as investors bet that former President Donald Trump's victory in the US presidential election will be a boon for cryptocurrencies.

Bitcoin jumped nearly 8% in early trading, climbing above $75,000 and smashing its previous record set in March. Other cryptocurrencies also soared, including ether, the world's second most popular cryptocurrency after bitcoin, which rallied 8%.

Another token, dogecoin, rocketed as much as 18%. It's the favorite cryptocurrency of billionaire Elon Musk, one of Trump's most prominent supporters, The AP reported.

Crypto-related shares outran the rest of the stock market. Coinbase, one of the biggest cryptocurrency exchanges, leaped 17%. Online brokerage Robinhood Markets, which offers crypto trading, soared 12% and MicroStrategy, which says it is the “largest corporate holder of bitcoin,” jumped 10%.

Trump was previously a crypto skeptic but changed his mind and embraced cryptocurrencies ahead of the election.

He has pledged to make America "the crypto capital of the planet" and create a “strategic reserve” of bitcoin. His campaign accepted donations in cryptocurrency and he courted crypto fans at a bitcoin conference in July. He also launched World Liberty Financial, a new venture with family members to trade cryptocurrencies.

Bitcoin is up 77% this year.

“Bitcoin is the one asset that was always going to soar if Trump returned to the White House," said Russ Mould, investment director at AJ Bell, a British online investment platform. After touching its new high, the market is now speculating about “when, not if, it will smash through $100,000," he said.

“Trump has already declared his love of the digital currency and crypto traders now have a new narrative by which to get even more excited about where the price could go,” Mould said.

But other experts warned of the risks.

“Investors should only dabble in crypto with money that they can be prepared to lose,” said Susannah Streeter, head of money and markets at Hargreaves Lansdown. “Because we’ve seen these wild swings in the past.”

Crypto industry players welcomed Trump's victory, in hopes that he would be able to push through legislative and regulatory changes that they've long lobbied for.

Trump had already promised that, if elected, he would remove the chair of the Securities and Exchange Commission, Gary Gensler, who has been leading the US government’s crackdown on the crypto industry.

“Tonight the crypto voter has spoken decisively — across party lines and in key races across the country,” said Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong . “Americans disproportionately care about crypto and want clear rules of the road for digital assets. We look forward to working with the new Congress to deliver it,” Armstrong posted on X.

Streeter said Trump's administration would most likely pursue “light touch regulation” for the crypto industry.

“Certainly that’s what crypto fans would want," she said. “They want the sheen of legitimacy to be brought to crypto, but they don’t want regulations to be too onerous to stop opportunities and innovation.”