Volatility and Cyclicality in Oil Prices - will this time be different? Kemp
Extreme volatility and strong cyclicality have been the defining characteristics of oil prices and the industry since the first modern oil well was drilled in Pennsylvania in 1859.
Oil prices are much more volatile than the prices of manufactured goods or services, and in this they resemble other industrial and agricultural commodities.
Volatility is apparent at all time scales from the very short term (tick-by-tick and daily movements in futures prices) to the longer term (month-to-month and year-to-year).
But price moves are not random and display clear evidence of cyclical behaviour, again at all time horizons from the very short term to decades.
Volatility and cyclicality are not incidental features of oil markets that can be wished or managed away. Volatility and cyclicality are fundamental characteristics of oil markets.
Prices, production and consumption do not return promptly and smoothly to equilibrium following a disturbance to the market.
"The problem of oil is that there is always too much or too little", Myron Watkins, professor of economics at New York University, wrote 80 years ago ("Oil: Stabilization or Conservation?" Watkins, 1937).
"The basic feature of the petroleum industry ... that matters most is that it is not self-adjusting", according to economist Paul Frankel ("Essentials of Petroleum", Frankel, 1946).
Because of the lack of adjustment mechanisms the industry has "an inherent tendency to extreme crises" and "hectic prosperity is followed all too swiftly by complete collapse" Frankel argued.
The industry has defied repeated attempts to tame the cycle and provide greater stability ("Crude Volatility: The History and the Future of Boom-Bust Oil Prices", McNally, 2017).
LOW PRICE ELASTICITY
Frankel's description has remained accurate for six decades and his book remains the best short primer on the oil business.
Frankel blamed boom and bust on the sluggish response of both production and consumption to even a large change in oil prices.
The lack of ready substitutes for oil as a transport fuel and in petrochemicals ensures consumption responds slowly and in a limited way to a change in prices.
Capital intensity and the high ratio of fixed to variable costs in all parts of the supply chain from exploration and production to refining and marketing ensure supply is also price-inelastic in the short term.
Low price-elasticity of both supply and demand are what Frankel meant by lack of "self-adjustment" in the industry.
But other factors beside low-price elasticity contribute to the extreme instability and cyclicality of oil prices ("Oil prices: volatility and prediction", Reuters, 2016).
LAGS AND EXPECTATIONS
Given the capital-intensive nature of the oil business, investments in new production capacity and changes in production take a long time.
Bringing a complex offshore oil field onstream can take 10 years from discovery to initial production. Training experienced seismologists, drilling supervisors and petroleum engineers can take even longer.
The oil industry's mass layoffs during the price slump of the 1990s were still hampering its ability to increase production a decade later, contributing to the price boom of the 2000s.
By their nature, investment decisions must be based on expectations about where oil prices will be in three to 10 years when projects come onstream and then over the succeeding 10 to 20 years of field production.
But there is evidence that expectations, which are meant to be forward looking, are strongly influenced by the recent past, introducing a backward-looking element.
Oil companies are generally too bullish about future prices following a boom and too bearish about future prices following a slump.
Backward-looking expectations coupled with lengthy delays in bringing new capacity onstream contribute to the cycle of under- and over-supply.
The same problem is also apparent on the consumption side where households and businesses entrench often backward-looking expectations about future prices in purchases of long-lived capital equipment.
FEEDBACK MECHANISMS
The oil industry is also characterised by multiple feedback loops which affect the speed of adjustment.
Negative feedback mechanisms dampen the impact of an initial disturbance and are therefore stabilising and promote a rapid return to equilibrium.
Fuel-switching, efficiency and energy conservation policies are all negative feedback mechanisms on the demand side of the market which promote an eventual return to balance.
Capital budgets, cash flow and the availability of debt and equity finance all act as negative feedback mechanisms on the supply side.
But there are also positive feedback mechanisms which amplify and prolong the impact of an initial disturbance and are therefore destabilising and delay return to balance.
Producers' revenue needs and changes in fiscal terms and the cost of labour, raw materials and service contracts are all examples of positive feedback loops.
The GDP impact of an oil-price slump on the internal oil consumption of oil-producing countries is also a source of positive destabilising feedback.
In the longer term, negative feedback mechanisms clearly prevail because there are no examples of oil prices rising or falling without limit.
In the short and medium term, however, destabilising positive feedback mechanisms may be more important and contribute to volatility and price cycling.
EMERGENT COMPLEXITY
The oil industry is a series of closely related markets for crude, fuels, refining, services, engineering, construction, drilling equipment, skilled labour and raw materials.
Many of these markets themselves exhibit low price elasticity, delays in investment, backward-looking behaviour and feedback loops.
Each market is subject to its own feedback mechanisms, operating at different speeds and different time scales. Rebalancing the oil industry actually means rebalancing all of these markets simultaneously.
As a result, the oil industry can be thought of as a system that exhibits very complex and chaotic behaviour where small changes in one part of the system can trigger very large changes in the rest of the system.
Complex systems exhibit very dynamic and non-linear responses with a small change in initial conditions capable of producing a very large change in outcomes.
Recent experience has shown how a small change in technology (horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing) in one small part of the oil industry (U.S. shale) helped trigger a slump in prices affecting all producers.
BEYOND THE SLUMP
The worst of the slump now appears to be over but past experience implies that instability will characterise the recovery as well.
In the past slumps such as 1997/98 and 2008/2009 have usually been followed by a very large rebound in prices (http://tmsnrt.rs/2jLMB0Z).
Oil prices more than doubled between December 1998 and December 1999 and again between January 2009 and January 2010.
In the most recent episode, U.S. crude prices have already risen by almost two thirds, from an average of less than $32 a barrel in January 2016 to an average of almost $53 so far in January 2017.
The question is whether the oil market has now fully priced in the (expected) rebalancing of production and consumption.
Most energy industry professionals think the adjustment is nearly complete for the time being, with prices this year expected to average around $55-60, close to current levels, and only $60-65 in 2018.
Some analysts predict the rise of the U.S. shale industry will lead to a new oil market structure, with more flexibility in production, greater price stability and prices capped around $60 or $70 far into the future.
But past experience suggests the process of adjustment has rarely been so smooth and orderly and it would be unusual if this time was different.
By John Kemp