PEP Library
Commentaries

August 2024 - Commentary from Dan Pickering

Full Post
Sentiment on oil markets weakened during August. Price will either be decent (WTI in the $70’s to low $80’s) or poor ($60’s or worse) with OPEC being the key swing variable.

Not necessarily the dog days of summer given the S&P500’s 9% intramonth swing, but overall the S&P500 gained +2.4% during August, while the Nasdaq Composite added +0.7%. Energy indices lagged with Diversified Energy -2.2% (S&P 1500 Energy, S15ENRS) and subsector performance as follows: Midstream +0.3% (AMZ), Upstream -4.7% (XOP) Oilfield Services -11.5% (OIH) and Clean Energy gaining +1.0% (ICLN).  During August, front month WTI fell -5.6% (~$73.55/bbl), while front month NYMEX natural gas rallied +4.5% (~$2.15/mmbtu).(1) 

Sentiment on oil markets weakened during August. Several big Wall Street firms lowered their 2025 oil price forecasts on the combination of tepid demand (primarily China), recession risk (an ever-present threat for the past several years) and the return of OPEC supply (scheduled to start October 2024). These concerns are valid, resulting in an oil market that is somewhat binary over the next 18 months. Price will either be decent (WTI in the $70’s to low $80’s) or poor ($60’s or worse) with OPEC being the key swing variable.

We believe OPEC’s near-term plan is challenged. The world does not need the 300-500kbbls/day OPEC+ indicates it will return in the short term, much less the 3+mmbopd of overall spare capacity. If OPEC+ insists on raising its output, the market is likely to respond by taking WTI into the high $60’s as a signal of displeasure and the low $60’s (or worse) as the physical volumes actually return. A conundrum we think results in OPEC postponing or dramatically reducing the magnitude of returning barrels. With US capital spending restrained and production growth at modest levels, OPEC+ must accept either a demand-side waiting game or lower prices. We lean toward the former, but admit to paying much closer attention to all OPEC+ nuances.

Natural gas prices remain in the doldrums, where they could easily stay for the next year. Influencing factors include ample wellhead supply, the overhang of shut-in volumes and delayed well completions, LNG project timelines slipping to the right and new demand sources (AI data centers, etc) that will not be meaningful until 2026+. Permian gas at the Waha hub has intermittently traded at negative prices for many months given significant volumes of associated gas (gas produced from oil wells). The startup of the 2.5bcf/day Matterhorn Express pipeline from Waha to Katy, TX in Q3 should help Permian prices, but is likely to weaken prices at other Gulf Coast hubs. The secular story for natural gas as a global bridge fuel remains strong, but so does the ability of producers to supply that story.

The most notable energy deal of August occurred in the Midstream sector, as ONEOK purchased the General Partner and ~40% of the MLP units of EnLink Midstream from behemoth infrastructure private equity firm Global Infrastructure Partners. The deal represented a +13% premium to the prior closing price and will be followed by a buy-in of the remaining 60% of EnLink. The first rationale mentioned in the press release? “Establishes fully integrated Permian Basin platform at scale”. Twenty years into the shale era, the US shale business is making the transition from growth to steady-state exploitation. As we’ve said for the past two years….this will continue.

Energy stocks lagged the broader market in August (+2.4% S&P500 vs. -2.2%energy) as the economic scare early in the month (three-day S&P500 retrenchment of -6%) was quickly replaced by more bullish economic datapoints. From an investing perspective, energy must thread two needles. First, the economic outlook must be supportive enough to provide decent demand and therefore decent commodity prices and decent financial results for energy companies. Secondly, energy must compete for investor attention/allocation against the juggernaut of technology’s profits and secular growth story. With YTD performance of +10.5 % vs. the S&P 500’s+19.5%, energy’s needle-threading has been profitable but relatively unimpressive. Following Q2 earnings, the tech sector has not relinquished its stranglehold on investor attention. As such, while waiting for the sector’s day in the sun, energy investors must continue to search for differentiated, unique or compellingly cheap companies/stocks.

(1) Bloomberg

August 2024 - Commentary from Dan Pickering

Timeframe

Add to calendar

Location

No items found.

Connect

No items found.

Sponsored

PEP Library

Explore Our Latest Insights

Visit page
Visit Library post
Crude oil prices, maybe surprisingly, dipped modestly on Monday after spiking at the end of last week, even as Iran and Israel continue firing
Visit page
Visit Library post
Energy Aspects’ Richard Bronze and Pickering Energy Partners’ Dan Pickering, join ‘The Exchange’ to discuss the Israel-Iran conflict and how it may impact the oil sector.
Visit page
Visit Library post
Dan Pickering, Founder & CIO from Pickering Energy Partners, joins CNBC’s Dan Murphy to talk oil prices, and he says OPEC will win the market share war.
Visit page
Visit Library post
Rebound Month. The market turned up hard and energy followed
Visit page
Visit Library post
What if our path to energy decarbonization and global energy dominance didn’t rely on more rules, more penalties, and more government overreach, but instead on competition, transparency, and financial reward?
Visit page
Visit Library post
The feud has chilled the relationship between their CEOs. It comes to a head when arbitration starts Monday.
Visit page
Visit Library post
OPEC is pumping, and shale producers are pulling up rigs. Our experts see plenty of opportunities in the sector’s upheaval.
Visit page
Visit Library post
Dan Pickering joins stateside with CNBC Asia
Visit page
Visit Library post
BP’s falling share price has sparked takeover interest from global rivals eyeing its undervalued assets, risking the end of its 116-year independence.
Visit page
Visit Library post
The talented individuals who make up Hart Energy’s 2025 Forty Under 40 honorees represent a diverse set of disciplines.
Visit page
Visit Library post
Why BEV market share—not sales volume—matters most for EU CO₂ targets amid stricter rules, stalled growth, and industry-wide compliance challenges.
Visit page
Visit Library post
A rough month. Energy was the worst subsector in an incredibly choppy market.
Visit page
Visit Library post
Matador Resources is cutting 2025 drilling plans and capital spending by $100 million amid lower oil prices, while keeping flexibility to adjust production and rig count based on market conditions.
Visit page
Visit Library post
Despite plunging oil prices and investor jitters, seasoned energy investors remain cautiously optimistic, seeing long-term value as Trump pushes for energy dominance and OPEC raises supply.
Visit page
Visit Library post
U.S. tech giants are driving a global shift in climate compliance, pressuring energy and manufacturing sectors to meet stricter European sustainability standards.

Upcoming Events

Sept. 29 - Oct. 1 | Austin, TX
Visit page
Ready to get started?
Contact our specialized teams at PEP for more information.