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Oil

OPEC 2.0 Remains Sensitive To EM Demand (Part 2…
OPEC 2.0 Remains Sensitive To EM Demand (Part 1…
Oil price volatility will remain elevated, as markets transition from a pronounced demand slowdown in 1H19, which is apparent in actual consumption data, to stronger growth. We expect global fiscal and monetary accommodation will arrest and reverse this…
U.S. Gulf Production (Part 2…
U.S. Gulf Production (Part 1…
Highlights So What? Saudi Arabia’s geopolitical risks and still-elevated domestic risks reinforce our cyclically constructive view on oil prices. Why? Saudi Arabia is still in a “danger zone” of internal political risk due to the structural…
Highlights The U.S. oil market has always been dynamic, but, over the past couple of years, profound changes have been occurring at increasingly rapid rates. In Part 1 of this two-part Special Report, we presented our forecasts for U.S. independent E&P…
Oil Volatility Will Dwindle As Financial Conditions Ease…
Oil prices will remain volatile as markets work through the lingering effects of tighter financial conditions prevailing last year, which, along with extended angst over Sino-U.S. trade tensions, slowed commodity demand growth (Chart of the Week). In 2H19…
Highlights Central banks globally have turned dovish, with the Fed virtually promising to cut rates in July. But this will be an “insurance” cut, like 1995 and 1998, not the beginning of a pre-recessionary easing cycle. The global expansion remains…