In This Article:
Crude oil (CL=F) dipped below $70 per barrel on Wednesday, weighed down by demand concerns. Tortoise Senior Portfolio Manager Rob Thummel believes negative demand sentiment is fueling oil prices to the downside. He expects prices to stay lower as shifts in the energy market finish playing out.
Thummel outlines how evidence of declining global inventories due to OPEC+ production cuts and demand recovery will be needed to shift sentiment — all factors requiring time.
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Video Transcript
JOSH LIPTON: It has been a wild year for the energy market. And in recent weeks, the market reaction to wars in Ukraine and Israel changes in government policy and, of course, production cuts. But its concerns about demand weighing on crude today oil falling below $70 a barrel. And our next guest believes prices will stay low heading into 2024. Rob Thummel, Tortoise Senior Portfolio Manager, joins us with his take on the energy sector next year. So Rob, thank you for joining us. Appreciate it.
ROB THUMMEL: Thanks for having me.
JOSH LIPTON: So US crude today, Rob, drops about 4%. So now we close at the lowest level, I think, since June. Help us, Rob, just understand what you see as driving those moves and also just what you see ahead for next year.
ROB THUMMEL: Well, for right now, it's sentiment. So when you get this negative sentiment, it's really hard to turn that ship and get it to turn to be positive. So what will change that? Well, it will be actually fundamentals. It will be inventories, global oil inventories starting to fall.
How is that going to happen? Well, you're going to need the OPEC Plus members to basically cut their production. You're going to need the US to not grow as much. And you're going to need demand to come back in 2024. However, we've got a long time yet before we're going to see that actually that data show lower global oil inventory demand.
JULIE HYMAN: So is your base case then that oil prices stay at this level or in a range near this level for the foreseeable future?
ROB THUMMEL: Yeah, Julie. So the way that the reporting works is you won't actually see global oil inventories for January until March or April of next year. So you actually won't see that actual data showing global oil inventories declining until then. And so I see-- I don't see oil prices rising dramatically anytime soon, which, oh, by the way, that's not a bad thing for us as consumers. And that's also a good thing to keep inflation lower as well and maybe help keep the Federal Reserve from raising rates anymore.