When we talk about “energy” we often are referring to both the sector and the commodities as they often move together in the same direction. When oil and natural gas are rallying, the stocks of the companies that are involved in their sale and exploration often are going higher as well, and vice versa. However, there are times where the correlation breaks, which we’re seeing right now with energy stocks showing strong recent performance as oil prices struggle.
Energy Sector Performance
As for energy stocks, they’ve been the strongest corner of the equity market. Here’s the YTD and 1-year performance of the S&P sectors.
Stocks vs. Commodity
Below is a look at the Energy Sector (XLE) and Crude Oil. Both saw strong up trends at the start of the year and after a stumble in June, energy stocks have resumed going higher. In fact, XLE is the best performing sector by a long shot, up nearly 40% YTD. But look at Oil. It’s continued to move lower.
Energy stocks aren’t the only area of the financial market we’re seeing up trend against a weakening commodity.
Below we have the Crack Spread, the spread between the price of a barrel of crude and the price of produced refined from oil. Typically, the Crack Spread moves with the price of oil. Similar to energy stocks, the Crack Spread peaked in June but did not make a lower-low, instead it tested its prior low and bounced higher (blue arrows) and is close to rallying back to its prior high.
Here’s the same chart as above but with a historical study shown in green of when the Crack Spread was in the upper 80th percentile of its historical range while oil was in the bottom 40th percentile. Since 2010, when the Spread was showing strength relative to crude, the price of oil often played “catch up.” November ’14 was the exception, as crude continued to decline
Looking For The “Why”
What’s likely the likely cause of the break in correlation? In August, Bloomberg ran an interview with the Saudi Energy Minister, who cited the dislocation paper and physical markets. Suggesting the need for OPEC to cut production to bring the two markets more inline.
Saudi Arabian Energy Minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman said “extreme” volatility and lack of liquidity mean the futures market is increasingly disconnected from fundamentals and OPEC+ may be forced to cut production.
“The paper and physical markets have become increasingly more disconnected,” he said in response to written questions from Bloomberg News.
Paulo Macro has some great threads on Twitter as well looking at changes in the COT data, specifically the large drop in Open Interest and Net-Longs.
Energy Sector Valuation
Has the strength in energy stocks caused the sector to become ‘overvalued’ (if you’re into that kind of analysis)? Based on the work by JPM, no. Instead, JPM shows the spread in the energy sector’s forward P/E vs. the broad market has never been lower in thirty years.
European & American Energy Crisis
Meanwhile, the crisis in Europe continues to intensify and is only being made worse (in my opinion) by the government attempts to treat the symptoms instead of the cause of the pain. Most recently, the inflation rescue package which will simply increase demand and put more pressure on prices to rise. Household energy costs in Germany are up 43% YoY. Gameshows in the UK are now a “Wheal-of-Fortune” type game to pay off viewers electric bills. It’s not just household energy costs that are squeezing Europeans. Farmers in Europe are facing natural gas bills that have gone from are up 17x. In Italy, consumers are publicly burning their energy bills in protest of rising prices.
Americans are also feeling the squeeze with 1 in 6, which equates to 20 million homes, falling behind on their utility bills according to the NEADA. The chart below from Bloomberg shows the average American has seen a 15% rise in prices from last year. In California, consumers have experienced a 40% rise since Feb. 2020.
All of this has occurred before Russia turned off Nord Stream 1 and stopped the flow of natural gas to Europe. Klaus Meuler, the president of the Fed’l Network Agency said that while gas storage is 95% full, Europe is still just 2.5 months of demand. What’s the worst case scenario? That the rise in energy prices becomes Europe’s “Lehman moment” and begins a domino effect of companies going under. In July we saw Germany bail out Uniper with a 15 billion euro ($15.2 billion) rescue package. Several European countries are now discussing or have already implemented price caps on utilities. In the U.S., the government continues to empty its reserves with the SPR falling to the lowest level since 1984.
What’s the bearish argument for oil?
Demand destruction. We’re not likely to see the energy crisis be resolved from the supply side outside of some massive coordinated effort by OPEC and/or Russia leaves Ukraine and their flows to Europe return to normal. Instead, prices could continue lower if demand dries up which would likely be associated with an economic slowdown that puts pressure on not just commodity prices but all financial markets. And even then, the drop in demand would need to outstrip the crisis on the supply-side.
What’s Next
From here, I think we could still a rise in energy markets and the respective energy commodities. European governments will continue to put band-aids on the crisis that throw more fuel on the fire than extinguish it. However, I’m a technician first and will allow price action to dictate my bias. I think the divergences in the Crack Spread and Energy Sector are bullish for oil, natural gas, and gasoline.
Disclaimer: Do not construe anything written in this post or this blog in its entirety as a recommendation, research, or an offer to buy or sell any securities. Everything in this post is meant for educational and entertainment purposes only. I or my affiliates may hold positions in securities mentioned in the blog. Please see my Disclosure page for full disclaimer.