Commodities Week Ahead: Libya Poses New Oil Dilemma; Palladium Eyes $3,000

 | Jan 21, 2020 10:19

Two weeks after oil appeared to have survived its biggest risk test in years, Libya has tossed a new political grenade at the market. And this too may come to pass.

It’s a different story in precious metals, however, with palladium keeping to its explosive streak and likely to target $3,000 an ounce next.

Libya, which sent crude prices back above $100 a barrel just a year after the financial crisis when the Arab Spring of 2010 ousted dictator Muammar Gaddafi, is back at the oil market’s forefront.

But traders don’t seem unduly worried about the threat Libya poses, possibly because their attention is now more on the monstrous builds in U.S. fuel stockpiles over the past two weeks.

Supply Crunch Threat/h2

Talk swirled on Tuesday that Libya’s oil output could soon fall to 72,000 barrels per day from a regular 1.2 million bpd. The crunch is due to a blockade on oil shipments out of the North African state forced by Khalifa Haftar, a Libyan warlord that Tripoli’s internationally-recognized government says could become the next Gaddafi.

The Libyan threat comes exactly 14 days after the United States and Iran retreated from the brink of war, leaving the Middle East, which produces 40% of the world’s oil, at relative peace.

Yet the calm that followed the Jan. 6 rocket launches by Tehran at American air bases in Iraq — after the killing of Iranian general Qassem Soleimani — may be questionable. There were reports of two more rockets landing outside the U.S. embassy in Baghdad on Monday, although again, there were no reports of casualties.

In Libya's case, analysts estimate that at least 800,000 barrels per day may have been disrupted since Saturday, including 300,000 bpd from El Sharara, its biggest oilfield. Libya’s National Oil Corp had declared force majeure, or a waiver on contractual obligations, on crude loadings from El Sharara and the El Feel oilfield in the country’s southwest.

Libya Could Be Game Changer For Oil … Yet Might Not/h2

The Libyan situation could be a game changer for oil, if allowed to persist.

Yet, at the time of writing, Brent, the global benchmark for crude, was down 17 cents, or 0.3%, to $58.41 in Tuesday’s Asian trading.