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Oil set for US$150 on supply shock, says trader
2022-03-24 00:00:00.0     星报-商业     原网页

       

       SYDNEY: Brent oil will likely hit US$150 (RM631.95) a barrel this year, as the supply shock from the war in Europe coincides with resilient demand from people keen to travel after the virus, according to veteran commodities trader Doug King.

       The world has few options to pump more crude, and there’s little sign that consumption is under threat, said King, who runs the US$425mil (RM1.79bil) Merchant Commodity Fund, which returned 28% in the first two months of this year.

       “Jet fuel demand is going to come back, travel is going to come back,” he said in an interview.

       “I think people have money. They’re going to go spend it, so I don’t see the demand destruction at these prices.”

       Oil was already elevated before Russia invaded Ukraine as supply struggled to keep up with the demand rebound from the pandemic.

       The ensuing financial penalties on the country, one of the biggest crude producers, and self-sanctioning by much of the industry saw Brent – the global benchmark – flirt with US$140 (RM589.82) a barrel in early March, although it’s now eased back to near US$115 (RM484.50).

       Supply losses due to the war in Europe are likely to dwarf any demand destruction, as people want to start traveling more as soon as they get the opportunity, according to King.

       The floor for Brent is now about US$100 (RM421.30), he said.

       The Merchant Fund returned 74% in 2021, placing King among a group of hedge fund managers, including Pierre Andurand, who made large profits from the boom in raw materials last year.

       The Bloomberg Commodity Spot Index is already up 26% this year, with King seeing a lot more opportunity in raw materials, which he says are skewed hard to the upside as supply chains in general are still “absolutely stressed”.

       The huge ramifications from last year’s global gas crunch on other fuel sources and industries such as fertiliser and manufacturing are only likely to filter down over the next six to 12 months, with the war making the situation “far more explosive,” he said.

       Exploration for new oil resources is also constrained.

       “It isn’t like in 2007-08, where you saw explorers everywhere, you saw the multinationals going for fields and developing this and developing that,” he said, adding that the environmental, social and governance mandates had changed things.

       “Commodity markets that don’t react to price signals mean it’s pretty precarious.” — Bloomberg

       


标签:综合
关键词: Commodity     Brent oil     resilient demand     more crude     supply    
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