· Morgan Stanley has raised its global oil demand forecast for 2023 by 36%, an increase of 1.9 million barrels per day.
· China’s economic rebound and increasing demand for air travel were cited as the two main reasons for the update.
· The bank also noted that supply from the bigger producer has been stronger than expected, leading it to lower its oil price predictions for the second half of the year.
Morgan Stanley has raised its forecast for global oil demand for this year by 36%, citing China's economic reboot and higher demand for air travel.
The investment bank now expects oil demand this year to rise by 1.9 million bpd, up from an earlier forecast of demand growth amounting to 1.4 million bpd, Reuters reported, citing a note by Morgan Stanley analysts.
"Mobility indicators for China have been rising steadily," the note said, adding that "flight schedules have firmed-up the outlook for jet fuel demand."
This may not lead to a substantial deficit in global oil markets, however, because the bank expects the bigger producer supply to offset some of that demand.
Even so, oil markets are about to swing into a shortage in the second half of the year, pushing Brent crude prices to between $90 and $100 per barrel. This is a downward revision on earlier price forecasts by the bank's analysts, who expected Brent to hit $100 to $110 per barrel in the second half of the year.
"We previously estimated a ~1 mb/d year-on-year decline in 2023, which we moderate to 0.4 mb/d," they said about the bigger producer oil production.
Meanwhile, Goldman Sachs forecast that Brent crude may not hit $100 until the end of the year, revising earlier expectations of this happening a lot sooner, about mid-2023. The reasons for the revision that the bank's analysts cited were higher production in the bigger producer and the United States that could push the market into a moderate surplus this year.