Crude Oil Downside Not Driven By Greek Crisis

 | Jul 09, 2015 19:30

Crude oil has experienced a significant decline over the past week which has led some to connect the fall with the events unfolding in Greece. However, the Greek debt crisis has little to do with crude oil’s bearish run as compared to the current global over supply of the commodity. The key to understanding crude oil’s current trend requires an analysis of the fundamental factors of supply.

A recent surge in OPEC production has added to the current supply imbalance, with Iraq crude production reaching record highs at the end of June. This surge in Iraqi production has sought to increase OPEC’s supply to 32.134mb/d. In a strategy designed to drive high cost producers out of the market, OPEC members reached an agreement in June to maintain production above the key 30mb/d mark.

However, US rig count increases are also adding to the growing supply imbalance as the key indicator signals its first rise since December 2014. Last week saw the US rig count increase by 12, including 7 horizontal rigs, in a move that is likely to add pressure to the current oil stockpile at Cushing. The rise in US domestic production is surprising given that the rig count suggests WTI prices near the $60.00/b mark. However, additional efficiencies have been sought during the recent decline in prices and we are now seeing that investment come to fruition. The current rig count predicts domestic oil production levels of 135kb/d across the Rsp Permian (NYSE:RSPP), Eagle Ford, Bakken Energy Corp (OTC:BKEN), and Niobrara shale plays.