Morgan Stanley slashes oil price forecasts

Morgan Stanley slashes oil price forecasts

Morgan Stanley oil analyst Martijn Rats has cut his oil price forecasts

“Over the last year we have argued that oil supply would be tight-enough-for-long-enough that some demand erosion needed to take place. In June, prices reached levels that achieved just that, and demand appears to be softening in response. As a result, we lower our near-term price forecasts … Prices reached levels that are hard to absorb: Add to this tightness in the refining system and this explains why diesel and gasoline prices reached ~$187 and ~$180/bbl respectively in June. In response to the commodity-induced inflation surge, central banks are now hiking rates in-sync. Of the 38 central banks globally, 29 (or 77%) have hiked rates in the last 6 months. That percentage is at a 40-year high, making this the most-synchronized cycle of rate hikes since the early 1980s … This combination of factors continues to drive rapid downgrades to GDP expectations in all main regions. Our oil demand forecasts were not stretched, but equally, they were not designed for the breadth of rate hikes and magnitude of GDP slowdown that now appears to be unfolding. With actual oil demand data also starting to come in softer than expected, we lower our 2022e growth estimate from 2.2 to 2.0 mb/d, and our 2023e estimate from 2.7 to 1.8 mb/d”

Mr. Rats has reduced his fourth quarter WTI forecast by US$20 to US$107.50 and his second quarter of 2023 estimate from US$107.50 to US$97.50.

“MS cuts oil price forecast” – (research excerpt) Twitter

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