oil & gas market challenges: a trading house perspective · 2 2 oil & gas market...
TRANSCRIPT
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Oil & Gas Market Challenges: A Trading House Perspective
IEA Training Week,
Paris, 7-11 April 2014
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Disclaimer
The information contained in this presentation (the “Presentation”) is being provided by Gunvor Group Ltd (the “Company”) and its subsidiaries (together with the Company, the “Group”). The Presentation is for information purposes only and any information made available orally or in writing at the Presentation is strictly confidential and may not be distributed, published, copied or reproduced (in whole or in part) or disclosed by its recipients to any other person for any purpose, at any time or in any form other than with the prior written consent of the Company.
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This Presentation is not directed to, or intended for distribution to or use by, any person or entity that is a citizen or resident of, or located in, any locality, state, country or other jurisdiction where such distribution or use would be contrary to law or regulation or which would require any registration or licensing within such jurisdiction.
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Oil & Gas Market Challenges: A Trading House Perspective
1. Who are the traders and what do they do?
2. A changing trader business model
3. Dealing with risk & the impact of new regulations
4. New sources & new constraints in oil supply
5. The macro economy & oil demand uncertainty
6. The downstream market dimension
7. Oil price dynamics
8. Evolving gas and coal markets
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Gunvor History
• 1997: Shareholders open new trading company based in Tallinn, Estonia.
• 2000: Gunvor is formalised.
• 2003: Main trading facilities move to Geneva to take advantage of city’s trading talent.
• 2007: Opened Singapore Office
• 2009: Broaden energy portfolio and moved into coal, natural gas, LNG, power and carbon emissions.
• 2011: Began operations at Ust Luga, world’s largest oil transshipment terminal.
• 2012: Bought former Petroplus refineries in Antwerp and Ingolstadt, becoming in the process a 210 kb/d European refiner
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What is commodity trading?
source: KPMG
• Commodity trading involves the optimisation of arbitrage operations using logistics, ensuring the transformation of stock and facilitating storage and transportation towards points of consumption
• Traders deploy their global logistical presence, access to funding and market intelligence to capitalise on market imbalances & arbitrage opportunities
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Arbitrage, not absolute price, is what counts
Geographical
arbitrage
Price differentials for
same product
between different
locations
Deploy global
logistics network to
source commodity in
one place & ship to
another by tanker,
pipe, truck , rail
Commodity
(transformation)
arbitrage
Price differentials
between grades,
types or blends of
commodities
Exploit differentials
by blending,
processing,
substitution or
conversion (refinery,
power plant)
Time arbitrage Differentiated price
between prompt and
forward delivery
Carry trades via
financing and storage
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Pump It Move It Refine It Store It Sell It Move It
Traders provide liquidity across the supply chain
• The commodity trader paradox:
• Exploit episodes of supply chain imbalance & price volatility
• But, by providing streamlined, cost-effective linkage between suppliers and consumers, they help re-establish physical (& price) equilibrium
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Multiple challenges confront the ‘pure trading’ model
Challenges facing trading
companies
Low price volatility
Market structure
Emerging NOC trading
companies
Loss of competitive
advantage in market
intelligence
Regulatory ‘creep’
Razor thin (0.5-1%) trading
margins
• Encourages traders to diversify
• Diversification by geography, product and position in the value chain
• It’s less about being fully integrated…
• …than seeking assets that benefit from, & complement, core trading activity
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Gunvor: diversifying by product & geography
Asia & Middle East 20%
WesternEurope
North America
Latin America
AfricaAsia & Middle East 30%
Western Europe
North America
Latin America
Africa
2009: USD $50.4 bn 2012: USD $93 bn
Crude Oil
(60%)Fuel Oil
Gasoil
Gasoline
Naphtha
LPG Biofuel
Crude Oil
(30%)
Fuel Oil
Gasoil
NatGas +
LNG
Coal
Gasoline
Naphtha
LPG Biofuel
2009: 110 mn tons 2012: 130 mn tons
Revenue by region
Trading volumes
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Gunvor strategy – integrating along the value chain
• Ust Luga Oil Products Terminal (Russia)
• Ust Luga Crude Pipeline (Russia)
• Karimun Products Terminal JV (Indonesia)
• Novorossiysk Fuel Oil Terminal (Russia)
• Petroterminal de Panama, S.A. (Panama)
• Independent Belgium Refinery BV (Belgium)
• Gunvor Raffinerie Deutschland GmbH (Germany)
• TAL Pipeline (Italy, Austria, Germany)
• Signal Peak (United States)
• LLC Kolmar (Russia)
• Keaton Energy Holdings Ltd (South Africa)
• Lagansky Block (Caspian Sea)
• PA Resources (North Sea, North and West Africa)
Midstream
Downstream
Upstream
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Shift to assets + high prices = rising financing reqs.
• Surge in financing requirements met by either a) public flotation or b) recourse to public debt markets
• Most of the traders have preferred to retain the flexibility, speed of response and risk tolerance afforded by staying private
• But tapping the financial markets has seen trading houses open up to hitherto unprecedented financial and operational scrutiny
Public equity and debt offerings of physical commodity traders, $US billion
Source: First Reserve Corp 2013
?
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Risk management at Gunvor
Commodity Price Risk
• Offset risks on multiple purchase & sale transactions
• 95%+ of physical is hedged
• Already mostly cleared
• VaR traditionally <<1% of equity
Liquidity Risk
• Diversified pool of banks
• Policy of gradually boosting liquidity reserve
Counterparty Risk
• >80% of customers are long-standing
• Conservative credit risk policy
• No material non-payment losses (<0.1% turnover)
Currency Risk
• Trades and borrowings primarily in USD
• Exceptions are gas/LNG, biofuels and operational expenses
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Stretching supply chains and diverse price risks
• Price risk all along the supply chain
• Wellhead to petrol pump for crude & oil products can be anything from 20-90 days
• Risk management tools have to be flexible enough to cover a variety of crude and product qualities…
• …plus transport, storage, processing and blending complexities too
• Does the emerging, post-regulatory slate of risk management & financing tools provide the necessary flexibility?
source: EIG
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Regulatory changes on top of competitive pressures
• The myth of ‘unregulated’ traders (70+ banks, exchanges, natl./intl. regulators)
• Environmental regulations augment existing competitive pressures on EU refining
• Evolving and diverse supply chains require flexible risk hedging tools
• Proposals for position limits, benchmarks/PRAs, swapsclearing, one-size-fits-all disclosure & risk management requirements all pose risks
• Issues: proportionality, recognition of market specifics, international consistency
• Risk of undermining participation, transparency, liquidity, physical market function and, ultimately, raising costs to energy consumers
• Laudable post-2008 G7/G20 policy goals to a) minimise systemic financial risk & b) encourage lower, stable energy prices – but these can sometimes be inconsistent
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Trading houses: are they becoming too big to fail?
• “Commodity trading companies active in multiple markets have used easy access to finance to expand physical
holdings, creating potential ‘systemic’ risk” CEPS/ECMI
• 5 criteria for systemically important entities: large size, financial system interconnections, global reach, complex structure/difficult to unwind, difficult-to-replicate services
FSB consultation document, Jan 2014
• “Traders are less leveraged than banks, have smaller balance sheets, largely short-term liabilities, are not major
providers of credit, and their assets are re-deployable” Pirrong/Trafigura study 2014
• “As highlighted by the collapse of Enron, one of the largest energy trading companies of its time, physical traders are highly unlikely to pose systemic risks - their positions are largely physical, hedged, liquid and short-term. Trading
houses should be allowed to fail and, when they have, there has been little or no disruption to the orderly functioning of
markets or the supply of commodities.” Vitol, 2013
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…but new sources of growth too
3500
4000
4500
5000
5500
6000
6500
7000
7500
kb/d
US crude oil production
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19 19
US shale oil: mixed views on sustainability of growth
Plus points for major growth:
• Resource & reservoir behaviour becoming better understood
• Transport infrastructure is being built-out, belatedly
• High up-front cash flow continues to drive investment if prices stay robust, & there’s scope for cost reduction
• Infill drilling & well spacing improvements
• Technology – pad drilling & longer laterals
Risks:
• Energy security concerns impede decisions on export policy, logistics
• Macro-slow down, oil price risk & refinery tolerance if exports restricted
• Sweet spots targeted first, so yields could fall & costs could also rise
• Sufficient skilled workforce & supply chain resilience?
• Tighter env.reg. – flaring/fracking/rail restrictions, access to Federal lands
• Types of operators & availability of finance – nb rising interest rates
Light tight oil will continue to grow, but more slowly
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Macro-economy risks shift to emerging markets
1
1.5
2
2.5
3
3.5
4
4.5
5
5.5
6
Developed economies Emerging markets
% g
row
th
Risk shifts to emerging marketschange in IMF GDP forecast Jan 2013-Jan 2014
2013 2014
2013 2014
IEA/WEO (2013) estimate worldwide fossil fuel subsidies of $544 billion in 2012
IMF sees increased EM financial risk after
rapid credit growth, volatility in capital flows
High deficit and commodity-dependent
economies most at risk
Structural reforms needed, nb subsidies
Economic slowdown in EMs has heavier
impact on oil than in developed economies
(oil intensity)
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Assumed +1-1.5 mb/d pa demand growth: how robust?
-5000
0
5000
10000
15000
20000
1970-2000 2000-2012
kb/d
Oil demand growth now an EM story
OECD
non-OECD
‘09=-0.7mbd ‘10=+0.4mbd ‘11=-0.3mbd ‘12=-0.4mbd ‘13=+0.4mbd
‘14= zero?
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Challenging refining environment, notably in Europe
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But midstream & downstream opportunity too
• Distressed European refining assets: integrate with trading, and optimise
• New refining hubs (N.America, Mid.East), India & China also emerge as key exporters
• Global products trade growing faster than crude, much of it on new, long haul routes
• Products tanker order book is rising (86% of new orders in 2013)
• Opportunities for refiner-traders: access to flow, flexible operations, diversified arbitrage opportunities, aggressive hedging strategy
Teesside
Grangemouth
(Petrochina)
Stanlow:
Essar -> Shell
Milford Haven
WhitegateCoryton
Gothenburg:
Shell -> St1
Harburg
Heide:
Shell -> Klesch
Wilhelmshaven
Vlissigen (Lukoil)
Gonfreville-l’Orcher
Antwerp: Petroplus -> Vitol; Petroplus GunvorGelsenkirchen (Rosneft)
Dunkirk
Ingolstadt:
Petroplus -> Gunvor
Karlsruhe (Rosneft)
Lavera (Petrochina)
Berre-l’Étang
ReichstettPetite-Couronne
Priloi & Melilli (Lukoil)
Milazzo (Kuwait Petroleum)Saras
(Rosneft)
Rome
Cremona
Cressier
Petroplus -> Vitol
Ballshi
Fieri
Szazhalombatta
(Surgutneftegaz)
Brod (Zarubezneft)
Novi Sad (Gazprom)
Pancevo (Gazprom)
Gibraltar
(IPIC)
Huelva
(IPIC)
Capacity
ReductionTerminal
Closure For Sale
Sale
(Part)Owned Russian/Indian/
Chinese/ Middle Eastern
Burgas (Lukoil)
Mantova
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How long will range-bound prices persist?
• Macro-economic uncertainty and geopolitical risk/supply outages providing price ceiling & floor
• Market ‘colour’ coming from other, sometimes highly specific, policy-related events
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Costs & IOC/state reqs. provide price floor
• US light tight oil, ‘big-ticket’ IOC upstream developments and OPEC budgets all require prices at or above $80/bbl
• Long dated Brent steady in $85-$95/bbl range, leaving front of the curve to oscillate in a $100-$120 range
Saudi Arabia budget break-even prices Source: Credit Suisse
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Gas markets remain regional, globalising slowly
source: IGU, 2014
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Coal challenged, but won’t disappear overnight
Source: IEA World Energy Outlook, 2013
source: ExxonMobil, Energy Outlook 2013
Which sector drives future energy demand growth?
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Benchmark imperfections, but resistance to change
What makes a good oil
benchmark
No resale restrictions
No dominant buyer or
seller
Aligned with fiscal regime
Can it be hedged? Stable
domestic political regime
Infrastructure for exports &
arbitrage
Physical liquidity