Oil Above $100 a Barrel ‘Extraordinarily High’ Odds: Jeff Currie | The Pulse Commodities Special

    Now, energy and commodity markets have
    been volatile over the past few years.
    Against the backdrop of higher for
    longer rates.
    The economic slowdown in China and two
    wars on the global stage.
    Well, in just a moment, we’ll be joined
    by commodities veteran Jeff Crew for a
    deep dive look at what’s happening in
    the sector and what’s coming next.
    And then a little bit later in the show.
    We’ll also look at commodities and
    inflationary pressures.
    But let’s begin with a focus on the oil
    markets now.
    Prices have rallied since late last year
    on escalating tensions in the Middle
    East.
    Some analysts say that $100 a barrel is
    back on the cards.
    Well, joining us now I’m delighted is
    Jeff Curry, chief strategy officer,
    energy of Energy Pathways at Carlisle, a
    former head of commodities research at
    Goldman Sachs.
    I mean, you understand.
    Welcome to the program.
    Great.
    Jeff, you understand this component is
    really like no one else.
    I want to get your thoughts on oil off
    the highs.
    Does that reflect the fact that traders
    are less worried about the Middle East
    and as the escalating conflict?
    Or is it supply and demand issues?
    Well, obviously, if you look at the
    pullback recently, we’re back to levels
    before the events of what happened
    between Iran and Israel a week and a
    half ago.
    But more importantly, everything’s off.
    Commodities are going through a
    consolidation period.
    You know, we were beginning to price in
    equities, everything this idea of rates
    being higher for longer.
    But let me remind everybody, we’re
    talking about rates being higher for
    longer because growth is so good.
    I mean, just the things you just went
    over just now, private sector activity
    in Europe, the highest level in a year,
    We’re seeing a reacceleration of growth
    across the board.
    And so when I think about what’s going
    on oil specifically in commodities and
    the I’ll put Bitcoin in there and all
    the physical assets is they’re going
    through a consolidation period.
    These assets, these physical assets are
    tied to underlying growth and
    inflationary pressures in the bottom
    line.
    Retail sales smashing that we saw, you
    know, last week.
    You have unemployment still at very low
    levels.
    CPI surprise to the upside.
    Chinese manufacturing beginning to
    accelerate.
    Europe, Germany accelerate.
    And the list goes on.
    This is classic late cycle expansion
    that you and I were talking about three
    months ago.
    So what you’re telling me is that
    there’s a shift basically in the supply
    demand equation.
    Is that right?
    Well, I would I wouldn’t say it’s so
    much a shift today as it was when we
    were talking three months ago.
    What we went through in 2022 and 2023 is
    your classic mid-cycle pause.
    The economy adjusts to the higher rates
    and the higher energy and commodity
    prices.
    It went through that adjustment.
    Manufacturing slowed down.
    Now we’re coming out of it.
    And is this thing any different than the
    previous cycles now?
    But Jeff, if you look at the rates,
    expectations for the Fed rate higher for
    longer.
    And I know this is because growth is
    wrong, but does it have a harmful effect
    on commodities at all?
    Look, my point that this is why why am I
    always why you want to own commodities
    in this environment?
    Because if the rate if you don’t have a
    situation in which you’re you’re raising
    rates because of strong underlying
    growth means commodities are going
    higher.
    And that’s what’s going to force their
    hand to raise rates.
    And if they do cut rates, you’re adding
    more liquidity into the system, which
    means higher commodities.
    So commodities are a win win in this
    situation.
    That’s why they nearly always outperform
    all other asset classes in this
    environment.
    But I’m looking at the IEA.
    They’re predicting further slowdown in
    oil demand growth next year.
    It’s just 1.1 million barrels a day,
    right as we get closer to peak demand.
    Do you agree with that assessment?
    By the way, when we look at late cycle
    commodities, here’s a really important
    point.
    It’s not the growth that matters.
    It’s the level that matters.
    And why do I say that?
    Because as the level of commodity demand
    goes up, it stresses the underlying
    supply level.
    So, yes, the growth rates are going to
    slow.
    Right.
    And that’s what you have in a late.
    But the level continue to grow stresses
    the system puts upward pressure on
    prices.
    So that and by the way, the equities
    which are tied to growth rates, they
    begin to come down.
    So this is what I always argue over and
    over with commodities, they are tied to
    the level of activity while financial
    markets are tied to the growth rates of
    activity, which is why you get the
    outperformance.
    OPEC plus has kept supply tight.
    Yes.
    Is this about to backfire?
    No.
    When we look at where you know, well,
    first of all, everybody’s talking about
    all the spare capacity in the system.
    It sits in Saudi Arabia and UAE.
    That’s it.
    And they have more market power today
    than they’ve ever had because of a lack
    of investment in many of the different
    non-OPEC countries.
    And yes, you’re trying to respond back
    that, you know, rapid growth in the US,
    but that then compare to what’s going on
    more broadly.
    It’s relatively small.
    And then I think the other issue that
    gives them market power is that you have
    inelastic demand because we’ve taken out
    all the low hanging fruit.
    So that so that group that sits on that
    spare cap.
    Our city has more market power today
    than they have had since the existence
    of OPEC.
    So does oil.
    You know, is it $80 or 100 next?
    We’re far closer to 100.
    I’m not in the forecasting business any
    more because what are we going to hit
    100?
    By the way, the one thing I learned in
    all my time of looking at these
    commodities trade, the wings, this
    thing’s going to when it goes, it goes.
    And when it drops, it drops.
    And I know you’ve been doing this as
    long as I have, you know.
    So the odds of this thing going over 100
    or extraordinarily high.
    The question is, how high can you get
    before you start to see OPEC begin to
    adjust the system?
    By the way, I want to say this and this
    is just history.
    In the 40 years of OPEC history and
    where we are in the cycle.
    Never has OPEC ever been able to bring
    on supply as we go into the final
    stretches of a economic expansion and
    tame the oil price.
    What happens is go back.
    Were they able to do it in 2018?
    No, we got up to $88 a barrel and then
    we had the waivers on Iran.
    We could talk about that later.
    That’s a very similar risk here.
    But I think it works to the upside this
    time around.
    0708 And then you can go back to oh one,
    2000.
    I can keep going back all the way back
    to the existence.
    They never because here’s the point.
    If the rise in production misses by just
    five days, what are you going to do?
    You’re going to get backwardation.
    You have to get that pinpoint that
    accuracy, which is obvious.
    By the way, if there was a group in OPEC
    that could actually get this right this
    time around, you know, I would say this,
    that this leadership can get it right.
    But again, I’m going to say you missed
    by five days because think about what
    happens.
    We know that tankers out there in the
    Gulf, wherever it is, it’s coming in to
    the refinery.
    I don’t have crew today.
    I’m short buy well, let’s say my
    inventories are five days.
    It’s going to be six days late.
    I got a problem.
    I’m buying crude and the backwardation
    goes up.
    Also on the backwardation.
    Another point I want to emphasize,
    everybody is talking about backwardation
    is an indication of a political risk,
    geopolitical risk premium.
    It can’t be.
    I always say time spreads don’t lie.
    I tell you, this market is tight.
    And another point, the market went off
    the board in backwardation.
    That means there’s no investors in it.
    It’s all physical.
    You really have a tight market here,
    just tight market plus geopolitical
    risk.
    So let’s talk about Iran.
    I mean, could this actually fly through
    the roof if something happens?
    Oh, absolutely.
    Because, I mean, the market unprepared,
    priced in The market is unprepared.
    But we look at more broadly, I don’t
    care if it’s energy, equities, energy,
    commodities or more like it, there’s not
    a large investor participation.
    And also money today chases trends.
    They don’t make bets, they don’t trade.
    And so there’s no real trend here.
    By the way, when it started trading,
    look at look at copper, copper over shot
    the fundamentals near-term, they’ll
    trade that trend.
    But when we look at more broadly, most
    of the discretionary money can’t sit
    there and hold the position of
    geopolitical risk premium betting for
    the thing that said, there is activity
    and out of the money options, you know,
    you go up to that 150 $200 range.
    People are buying it because they’re
    hedging geopolitical risk, inflation
    risk and equity risk type premiums.
    So there is that activity, but it’s
    relatively small and it’s located in the
    in the options markets.
    Jeff, I think J.P.
    Morgan saying that it’s time for a
    reality check on the energy transition.
    It’s slow, costly and not rewarding for
    investors.
    I mean, is that how we should see it?
    Well, I think we’re going through that
    reality check right now and people are
    making reassessing it.
    Yeah, but when we look at the returns in
    the green sector, there’s two things
    that are driving it.
    One is there’s a hangover from the big
    spike we had in 2022.
    Let’s remember that when everything
    exploded in 2022, coal production went
    up the size of Saudi Arabia.
    By the way.
    That’s how much coal we added in that
    environment.
    Gas prices went negative in Europe and
    you know, us and WiMAX, natural gas and
    power prices reached an all time low,
    what, six weeks ago.
    That’s creating a headwind to the
    sector.
    And by the way, cause because we ramped
    up coal production.
    The second factor that’s had a big
    impact on this is China.
    What is China doing about their property
    market problem?
    They’re rotating growth into
    manufacturing of green CapEx goods and
    they’re pushing them on to the global
    market.
    And by the way, the returns aren’t that
    great, which is the problem that the
    equity market has had in China.
    But I think the key key message here is
    there’s two drivers of that weakness.
    One, a hangover from that spike in 2022.
    And what China is currently doing.
    Both of these are temporary.
    Now, longer term, there is a story here
    and temporary, a couple of years or
    temporary five, ten years.
    By the way, it’s been temporary for two
    and a half years.
    If you look at the peak, you know, in
    fact, by the way, that report, Kristian,
    that I thought was was phenomenal.
    But yeah, you know, he has a chart in
    there.
    Yeah, this has been going on for two and
    a half years.
    It’s not something that just cropped up
    in the last couple of days.
    So you know that we’re going through
    that rough patch.
    But I think the longer term outlook is
    still very positive for the sector.
    Okay.
    We’ll talk about that longer term
    outlook.
    Jeff, thank you so much.
    Jeff Currie from Carlisle stays with us
    for a look at some of the broader
    commodity themes and sectors, including
    also the rally in gold and metals.
    This is Bloomberg.
    Welcome back to our deep dive on the
    energy and commodity sector.
    We’ve looked at oil.
    Let’s now talk about the gold and
    metals.
    Now the index of all six base metals on
    the LME has gained more than 13% this
    month.
    On a better global manufacturing
    outlook, investors remain cautious on
    future moves by the Fed.
    Meanwhile, gold extended losses after
    its biggest daily decline in almost two
    years following a stunning rally in the
    Haven asset.
    Now let’s bring back Jeff Currie from
    Carlyle.
    Jeff, I want to talk to you about
    copper.
    What is gold right now, by the way?
    Gold is a mystery.
    I’m not going to say I got to, you know,
    and understand it, because if you look
    at the drivers, fundamentally, usually
    what drives higher gold are lower real
    rates or a weaker dollar.
    What are we actually seeing?
    We’re seeing higher real rates and a
    stronger dollar.
    And typically gold goes down that when
    we look at it, clearly there is a
    mysterious buyer out there.
    You can see it in the physical premia.
    It’s most likely coming through Dubai.
    You see it in the OTC market.
    Historically, when we see that and you
    get the data three or four months down
    the road, you find out it was an
    emerging market, you know, probably
    unlikely.
    Russia, if they just dig up their gold,
    put it into the central bank because it
    got so much underneath the ground.
    But, you know, you know, is it China, Is
    it India or somebody like that who does
    what is this, a play against treasuries
    or trying not to buy Treasury?
    Or could it be implied?
    I would argue that it’s probably an
    inflationary hedge.
    I want to emphasize gold traded like
    this in the 1970s.
    So what we’re seeing here in this
    dynamic is not completely unfamiliar
    territory.
    You just got to go back for decades to
    see a period similar to this.
    So I would argue, you know, you and you
    and you look at Bitcoin, too, both of
    them are, you know, the strongest
    performers out there.
    You know, I argue they’re pricing in
    inflation risk.
    But the other thing both are pricing in
    is liquidity problems.
    Liquidity risk, particularly in the
    financial markets which which have come
    to fruition or it’s something that
    they’re just to get back to.
    You know, what they like to say is
    bitcoin’s a measure of liquidity out
    there.
    And, you know, part of the reason, the
    volatility you’ve seen across the space,
    not only in commodities but in financial
    markets, you know, liquidity still
    remains low.
    Dave talked about about copper.
    So it’s had quite a strong run.
    I think it’s right on the cusp of
    $10,000 a tonne.
    We talked about the energy transition.
    I mean, is this a signal that we could
    be there?
    I know you said, you know, we’ve been
    waiting for two years and a half.
    Yeah, yeah.
    Hadn’t time it.
    You know, I by the way, I want to point
    out we got bullish on corn in 2006 off
    of the biofuel story.
    Coyne didn’t perform until 2012, but it
    went straight up, by the way.
    But copper typically trades like a stair
    step, and we just went through one of
    the stair steps.
    So now the difference between copper and
    oil, oil has backwardation.
    That’s telling you it’s fundamentally
    tight on the front end.
    And again, I’m going to emphasize it
    went off the board in backwardation.
    There’s no investors going off the board
    in backwardation in copper.
    Well, a little bit of contango on the
    front end, which is telling you it’s
    pricing medium to longer term stories.
    So, yes, you’ve had the upward draft of
    everything under this higher for longer,
    you know, gross surprise that we’re
    dealing with.
    I’m not going to call it a surprise.
    It’s your typical late what you called
    it.
    Yeah, but not others.
    But but in terms of thinking about what
    copper in the metals are, pricing is
    pricing a more medium, longer term
    story?
    Which brings us back to the whole
    question around energy transition,
    because now we’ve all been making the
    argument in going back copper is the new
    oil.
    I stand by that that that view because
    we’re going to electrify everything.
    You’re going to need the copper to do
    it.
    And so most likely it’s price in that
    end.
    But even they’re like oil that’s going
    through a consolidation period because
    the price got ahead of the fundamentals.
    But longer term, absolutely believer in
    that.
    And by the way, underlying demand for
    copper, despite the weakness in the
    property market in China, is still
    healthy.
    Because think about what we were just
    talking about, all of those cap green
    CapEx goods in China that are being
    subsidized.
    And then you have all the investment
    that’s occurring in the West and it
    really starts to accelerate in 26 and 27
    if you have the energy transition and
    you have.
    So as we use AI, our mobile phones get
    more complicated.
    We’re also going to be, you know, using
    some of the rare earths or even some of
    the things that you you follow very
    close some of these metals, like how do
    you see that complex.
    Oh, I is chips in copper and what are
    the chips.
    Gallium and germanium.
    So it is basically critical metals and
    copper.
    So you know, you know in the that is the
    bottleneck to really be able to make the
    investment in in in I in fact you know
    if it goes well I and energy are the two
    most investable themes.
    Well energy’s more investable than I
    because you need the energy to get to
    the I in here’s a stat for you one GPU
    one of the Nvidia GPUs consumes as much
    electricity as the average American
    household.
    Now that’s going to start building
    enormous data centers.
    You could be up to 100 megawatts off of,
    you know, the demand out there.
    So, you know, this is significant.
    And, you know, I really believe when we
    think about the forward demand or the
    structural story, it’s more bullish
    today post this AI boom that we’ve seen
    over the last 12 months than it was 18
    months ago.
    But after decades of underinvestment, is
    there now danger that they’re
    overinvesting and actually we’ll have
    too much of it?
    Absolutely not.
    And by the way, here’s a point is, you
    know, people say to me, oh, look at all
    the investment in in green energy and
    I’m going to cite a number, I think it
    was 2.3 trillion in the numbers that,
    Christine, you know, in that report he
    did.
    You know, when you look at the need, you
    know, like I know Goldman put out a
    number somewhere around between 15 and
    $20 trillion this decade alone.
    You’re not even scratching the surface
    of how much investment we actually need
    to be able to achieve this.
    So I stand by the underinvestment
    thesis.
    And also, remember, Green represents
    somewhere around 18% of the overall
    energy.
    Brown represents 82%.
    And we have not been investing that.
    We’re underinvested.
    And that’s really the core of the
    supercycle story or the revenge of the
    old economy is that lack of investment.
    Finally, I mean, I could speak to you
    for another 3 hours, but I know you do
    have business to do gasoline prices in
    the U.S.
    I mean, are they critical in the US
    election year?
    Absolutely, yes.
    And, you know, when you look at what are
    the most important issues facing voters,
    particularly in the US, the dominant one
    is the economy and inflation.
    And by the way, the one thing nobody’s
    been talking about that is in that aid
    bill, that $95 billion aid bill, more
    sanctions on Iran around vessels
    refining and how they handle the Iranian
    crude.
    I would say the one way out waivers and
    remember, we started this 2018 with the
    Trump deal.
    So waivers will be able to manage it as
    you go into that election.
    So interesting.
    Jeff, thank you so much as always for
    giving us a little bit of your time.
    Jeff Curry there, chief strategy officer
    of Energy Pathways at Carlyle.

    A deep dive on the energy and commodity markets with Carlyle’s Jeff Currie. We explore what’s driving the recent volatility, and what’s coming next. Currie tells The Pulse’s Francine Lacqua that commodities are a “win-win” for investors even if interest rates remain high, and that oil markets are “genuinely tight.”
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    25 Comments

    1. Oil market needs stabilize first then we can see in which direction it will head to, if it goes lower there are chances that OPEC+ might cut another 2 million barrels per day. It all depends on price stability.

    2. Biden still pumping from Strategic Oil Reserve despite his Press Secretary claiming Biden wasn't ever responsible. Bloomberg found this clown rather than consider regulations or facts. 😂

    3. Conspiracy gold Nut Guest? 😅 Secret buyers? Costco selling >$200M month and can't find enough, China under 30 Yr old foregoing vacation, neals out to buy gold… 😅

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