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The Silver Lining in the Market Crash

Gold Silver Reports – The Silver Lining in the Market Crash — Thanks to the fall in the stock markets, could the most painful headwind for the Indian economyโ€”crude oil pricesโ€”turn into a tailwind?

Brent crude oil prices recorded a new one-month low of $62.79 a barrel last week.

Whatโ€™s the reason?ย ย 

Ritesh Jain, chief investment officer at BNP Paribas Asset Management India Pvt. Ltd, said, โ€œThe more crude oil prices went up, the more speculative positions were created. The same guys played each and every asset class.โ€

He added, โ€œProblem is once you start losing money in something bigโ€”say for example equity, which is by default the biggest asset classโ€”the leveraged positions in other assets have to be brought down as well and crude is no exception to that.โ€

There are signs and portents that the high crude prices are bringing forth more supply. The US energy information administration estimates US crude oil output averaged at a high of 10.2 million barrels a day in January. That would have added to the downward pressure on prices.

Silver Lining in the Market Crash

Lower crude prices bring plenty of benefits to India, which imports most of its oil requirements. They lower inflationary pressures and have a positive effect on the current account. If oil goes below $60 a barrel then Indiaโ€™s fiscal situation will dramatically improve, said Sandeep Chordia, executive vice-president, Kotak Securities, adding, โ€œThis will bode well for equity markets.โ€

The million dollar question, then, is whether oil prices will drop further.

They could, to an extent, but prices are unlikely to remain lower on a sustained basis. Kotak Securities doesnโ€™t expect oil prices to drop below $60/barrel in the medium term citing that Opec (Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries) is known to manage output levels.

For one, Opec can totally rely on the deep crisis in Venezuelaโ€™s oil industry to help Opecโ€™s output cut plan.

โ€œIn December, OPEC supply edged down to 32.23 mb/d, as a sharp decline in Venezuela offset higher flows from elsewhere,โ€ said the International Energy Agency last month.

The plunge in Venezuelan output raised Opec compliance in December to 129%, the highest so far, pointed out the Agency.

The mess in Venezuela is expected to persist.

Mexico has production issues too. โ€œItโ€™s worth remembering that there have been no new oil discoveries in the last few years,โ€ said BNP Paribasโ€™ Jain.

Further, the improving global economic growth outlook should support higher oil prices. Global growth forecasts for 2018 and 2019 have been revised upward by 0.2 percentage point to 3.9%, said the International Monetary Fund recently.

Read More :ย Watch Gold Silver Moon Shot Rally โ€“ I Told You Gold Silver Seller Trap Game

According to Chordia, โ€œOil should settle between $60-65 per barrel.โ€

When Brent crude oil went up about $10/barrel in such a short time some selling had to come and that is what is happening now, pointed out Jain. โ€œOnce this clears out, there is no doubt in my mind that crude is on a strong wicket,โ€ he added.

And what about shale oil productionโ€”which was expected to permanently put downward pressure on oil prices?

Lenders to shale producers are much more circumspect than before following the financial problems of many shale producers following oilโ€™s collapse to a low of $27 a barrel in January 2016, said Christopher Wood of CLSA in a report on 8 February.

Perhaps most interestingly, we have begun to read that some of the best shale drilling areas are showing the first signs of โ€œfield exhaustion,โ€ elaborated CLSA.

โ€œOur tentative conclusion is that investors should be prepared for a much higher oil price than we had previously supposed, even assuming no Middle East conflict. This is clearly a risk for India and its budget,โ€ reckons CLSA.

Perhaps all we can say of the silver lining of falling oil prices is: This too shall pass.ย  – Goldman Neal Bhai Reports

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