- The ailing oil market has reached an inflection point after plummeting to historic lows in April, JPMorgan analysts said Wednesday.
- Demand will bounce back over the next two to three months to outpace the commodity glut, the bank projected.
- Even as supply surpluses give way to deficits, demand won't reach pre-outbreak levels until November 2021 due to the coronavirus' lasting impact,
JPMorgan added. - Watch oil trade live here.
Global oil demand remains at historic lows as inventory vastly outpaces storage, but JPMorgan analysts think the worst of the commodity-market carnage is over.
The coronavirus pandemic and the ignition of a price war helped push
The bank's analysts expect demand to bounce back over the next two to three months and shift oil surpluses to deficits in the second half of the year.
"While there is still a massive glut of oil that will need to be cleared before there can be any meaningful recovery in prices, we believe that the global oil market is tentatively entering an inflection phase, where rebalancing has started," the team led by Joyce Chang wrote Thursday.
Oil's recent price moves lend credence to the analysts' thesis. West Texas Intermediate crude has more than doubled from its late-April lows, and Brent crude has enjoyed a moderate rally in recent sessions.
Even if the oil market turns for the better, the coronavirus' fallout will create lasting scars, JPMorgan said. Demand won't reach pre-outbreak levels until November 2021, and the risk to own oil and gas assets "has likely been permanently elevated" due to greater uncertainty around supply and demand dynamics.
JPMorgan recommends defensive oil stocks for the near-term as months of market rebalancing is poised to fuel strong volatility. Natural gas has emerged as the bank's "obvious winner," while oil exploration and production businesses are "largely uninvestable" until oil prices match the cost of shale discovery.
WTI
Both contracts will trade at roughly $34 per barrel by the end of 2020, the analysts projected, before Brent crude climbs to $37 per barrel the following year.
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