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Vitol: Business as normal with Iran

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The world’s largest independent oil trader Vitol Group says it’s "business as normal" with Iran after the end of economic sanctions on the country.

 

Chief Executive Officer Ian Taylor said Vitol has already bought oil from the country which has been ramping up production since last month in a bid to claw back its global market share.

“We’ve bought some, yes we have,” he told Bloomberg Monday in an interview at the company’s London headquarters.

“We’ve bought a bit of everything really. Bit of products, bit of condensate. It’s very much business as normal,” Taylor added.

He said trade arrangements with Iran, either legally or logistically, are still a bit of an issue because of financing problems but not “specially” difficult.

“Obviously, we like everybody else, did some preparatory work. It was clear that it was coming.

“We also talked to them about what would happen once it did come. So, people are relatively ready,” he said.

Taylor, however admitted that getting insurance coverage for Iranian shipments are still difficult but possible.

“Organizing financial flows and insurance in shipping is not easy; I accept that it’s not easy, but it can be done.”

Iran’s immediate plan for return to the market is to pump 500,000 more barrels per day but Taylor said he thought it would take some time because of “some inevitable teething problems with things like banks and insurance.” 

The increase in output “obviously does add to the supply weight and probably will (do so) over time, but the market will deal with that, I think,” he added.

Taylor said he thought Iran’s production would increase by 450,000 bpd by the middle of the year and 600,000-700,000 bpd by the year-end.

 

“I think a lot depends whether the Iranians are able to get everything else that goes with coming back smoothly, I mean financing particularly. They obviously do look for cash and prepayments," he said.

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"I think a lot more will depend on whether all the money that has been owed flows back to get it reinvested to get some of these wells going again,” Taylor added.

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Global growth now fraying at the edges

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The weakness in global risk assets that started in May 2015 raises a major question for macro-economists. Is market turbulence foreshadowing — or perhaps causing — a much broader weakening in global economic activity than anything seen since 2009?

Until now, the Fulcrum activity nowcasts have failed to identify a major turning point in global growth. This conclusion is still just about intact, but is subject to much greater doubt in this month’s report. There are some signs that growth in the advanced economies may be fraying at the edges, and China may be embarking on another mini downturn.

The growth rate in global activity remains broadly unchanged at around 2.8 percent, little different from the rates recorded since mid 2015. However, there has been a further slowdown in economic activity in the advanced economies (AEs), which are growing at only 1.2 percent, down from 1.6 percent late last year.

For the first time since 2012, the growth rate in the AEs is clearly below trend (estimated at 1.7 percent). Furthermore, the US nowcast is now at its lowest since the recovery began in 2009.

The nowcasts have warned of a noticeable slowdown in the US for many months, and they continue to suggest that American activity is expanding at only about 1.2 percent, little changed from the 2015 Q4 estimate.

Until now, however, this drag on global activity has been offset by fairly robust growth rates in the Eurozone. Worryingly, Eurozone growth has now sagged to about 1.3 percent. Although this remains above the US growth rate, it no longer provides a strong counterpoint to American weakness, according to the models.

This development reduces our confidence that the bout of American weakness in the industrial sector will be easily shrugged off by the global economy. Significant downgrades to consensus forecasts for US growth in 2016 now seem very likely. Although the risk of an outright recession still seems contained, the Fed must surely sit up and pay attention to this.

We judge that there has been little change in overall activity in the emerging markets this month. The China nowcast has moved down to the lower end of its recent range, but there are clear signs of stabilization in Brazil — by far the weakest of the G20 economies last year — and an up-tick in growth in India.

Full details of all the latest nowcasts are attached here. (Apologies for greater length than usual this month; there are a lot going on.)

The world ex Brazil may have slowed a fraction.

Olivier Blanchard wrote recently that the turbulence in asset prices could not be justified by any major change in economic fundamentals, but he warned that if market turbulence persisted, it could itself trigger an interruption in global growth rates. Central banks have generally agreed with this assessment, with many of them commenting that downside risks to growth rates have increased. This is an environment in which nowcasts can be particularly important in the early identification of changes in global activity.

global-growth-worldglobal-growth-worldThe latest results suggest that global growth is still running at 2.8 percent, about 0.7 percent below trend.

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