The oil market experienced heightened volatility in October triggered by
the increasing geopolitical risks in the Middle East over the past month.
The increased volatility was driven by concerns related to potential supply
disruptions, rather than actual changes in supply. So far, the Israel –
Hamas conflict has not impacted oil supply from the region, as Israel is a
minor oil producer with minimal influence on the market.
All in all, not much risk premium has been seen so far. Nonetheless, a
significant risk for the market arises if the situation escalates and leads
to supply disruptions from key regional producers, with Iran presenting the
most obvious one.
Although U.S. sanctions against Iran are still in place, their enforcement
has been relatively relaxed this year. As a result, Iranian oil supply has
increased from approximately 2.5 million barrels per day at the beginning
of the year to over 3 million barrels per day currently.
Throughout October WTI crude oil lost 15% as a lack of escalation in the
Middle East removed worries about disruptions to supply in the oil-rich
region, while demand outlook from the world’s top crude importer China
remained uncertain.
Crude has mostly given up its war premium as the Middle East conflict
hasn’t endangered supplies from the region, which is a source of about a
third of the world’s oil. That has brought the attention back to demand
concerns. Factory activity in China moved back into contraction last month,
according to data released this week, while U.S. fuel demand remains low
and crude stockpiles are rising. There are also signs of weakening diesel
demand in some European countries such as Spain, the UK, Italy, and France.
Source: TradingView
Oil prices staged a small rebound on Thursday on the back of improved risk
environment, as markets are building up hopes that the Fed is likely done
with its rate hikes. Nonetheless, there are still some reservations around
oil demand outlook this week as China’s PMI did not provide much conviction
of a revival of the demand.
China’s manufacturing activity unexpectedly contracted in October. The
official purchasing managers’ index (PMI) fell to 49.5 in October from
50.2, dropping back below the 50-point level which separates contraction
from expansion. On the supply side, top oil exporter Saudi Arabia is
expected to reconfirm an extension of its voluntary oil-output cut of 1
million barrels per day through December.
While at this stage there is no sign the latest pull back is reversing
course, the weakening U.S. dollar along with the broader improvement in
risk sentiment over the past few days is likely to help oil prices
stabilise.