Running out of fuel
Finweek English|22 October 2021
There are a couple of factors driving global supply constraints. Where does it leave traders?
Petri Redelinghuys
Running out of fuel

The US is not alone, though, as most governments around the world are very focused on ESG investing with their 2050 & 2060 carbon emissions targets in mind.

Like a slow-motion train wreck, the energy crisis is unfolding and hardly anybody has taken notice. Perhaps “hardly anybody” is not entirely true, but when you look at positioning in both natural gas and oil futures contracts, it seems that the recent rally, well, the recent rip in energy prices, has been met with traders taking short positions.

While speculating with mean reversion strategies is often touted as one of the more successful ways to trade the markets, in this case, it’s almost as if people are not looking at the fundamentals.

So, what are the fundamentals? In previous editions of finweek we’ve spoken about supply constraints in the oil market, and particularly how the Covid-19 pandemic temporarily shifted demand dynamics to such a low level, and subsequently price, that some oil and natural gas producers basically went out of business. This only further exacerbated the supply constraints that the market was facing. Now that the world is “coming back to life”, we can see that energy demand is picking up considerably. Which has the market imbalanced and thus is fuelling higher energy prices.

This story is from the 22 October 2021 edition of Finweek English.

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This story is from the 22 October 2021 edition of Finweek English.

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