AMERICAS OIL: EIA forecasts Alaska crude oil production will grow in 2026

Mar-19 13:51

EIA forecasts Alaska crude oil production will grow in 2026 for the first time since 2017

  • In the March 2025 Short-Term Energy Outlook, EIA forecast crude oil production in Alaska will increase by 16,000 b/d in 2026 to 438,000 b/d after remaining relatively flat in 2025.
  • Two new oil developments in Alaska, the Nuna and Pikka projects, are expected to raise crude oil production in the state after decades of decline, also the first increase since 2017 and the largest since 2002.
  • Average annual crude oil production in Alaska peaked at 2.0 mb/d in 1988, and production has since fallen largely because of the production decline of mature oil fields, limited lease availability, and high exploration and production costs.
  • ConocoPhillips produced first oil from the Nuna project in December 2024.
  • EIA forecast annual crude oil production in Alaska to average 422,000 b/d in 2025, an annual increase of 1,000 b/d, compared with the previous five-year (2020–24) average annual decline of 9,000 b/d.
  • The decline in existing well production is offset by the added production from the Nuna project on the North Slope. ConocoPhillips expects the Nuna project’s 29 wells will produce a combined 20,000 b/d of oil at its peak.
  • The Pikka development project on the North Slope is one of the most significant oil developments in Alaska in recent years. At the project’s peak, the companies plan to produce 80,000 b/d from 45 wells.
  • The increased crude oil production will go to supply refineries in Alaska, the Pacific Northwest, and California.

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EGB OPTIONS: Bund outright call buyer

Feb-17 13:49

RXJ5 132.50c, bought for 46 in 6k.

AUD: Continuing to Monitor Bullish AUDUSD Threat

Feb-17 13:48
  • The USD index has spent Monday consolidating its most recent decline near two-month lows. Bullish dollar positioning and notable technical developments are threatening a more protracted move lower for the greenback, and the ongoing strength for equities appears favourable for the likes of AUDUSD.
  • Last week, we noted AUDUSD’s first close back above the 50-day EMA since October last year. Since then, the pair has extended higher, eroding the FOMC-induced decline on Dec 18, and now reaching a fresh 2-month high at 0.6374.
  • Developments are significant given the RBA is widely expected to ease the 4.35% cash rate overnight, though former staffers point to reservations within the Board regarding the labour market and wages. This may place a degree of uncertainty around the actual decision, as well as a high likelihood that Governor Bullock will attach some hawkish rhetoric to any easing measure, to ward off market expectations of much deeper easing this year. Our full preview is here: https://mni.marketnews.com/40Wnomy
  • Above here, 0.6384 (Dec 13 high) and 0.6429 (Dec 12 high) remain the most notable short-term targets for the move. A stronger rally would open 0.6471, the Dec 9 high.

AUSTRALIA: Australia And China Hold First Strategic Defence Dialogue Since 2019

Feb-17 13:46

MNI London: Chinese and Australian military officials met in Beijing today for the first Australia-China Defence Strategic Dialogue since 2019. 

  • An Australian government statement noted: "...both countries exchanged views on bilateral, global and regional security issues, as well as military transparency and communication. Australia reiterated the importance of all countries in the region operating in a safe and professional manner at all times to avoid the risk of miscalculation or escalation." 
  • The Chinese Minister of Defence said in a statement, "both sides agree to continue to strengthen strategic communication in defence, properly handle conflicts and differences, carry out exchanges and cooperation." 
  • The meeting is a significant milestone in an ongoing thaw between the two countries, since the election of Prime Minister Anthony Albanese in 2022 and subsequent lifting of trade restrictions in 2024.
  • The relationship between Beijing and Canberra is likely to be tested by US President Donald Trump's trade policy, which could seek to disrupt Australia's trade in high-quality iron ore to China.
  • The Australian federal election in May also appears set to return the Liberal–National Coalition back to power, and likely bring about a more hawkish China policy.