#1."The question is how fast does Venezuela fail?" Helima Croft of RBC Capital Markets
said on CNBC last week. "The thing is Venezuela has no capacity to overproduce at this point. Their oil production is going in one direction and that is down," she said.
"The national oil company owes $3.5 billion due in October-November. They are unlikely to make those payments," Croft said. “We really do think a disorderly default is on the cards for Venezuela."
A default might then put some of Venezuela’s oil assets in the sights of bondholders, who could try to seize oil cargoes in lieu of repayment. The end result, one way or another, is likely a decline of oil exports from Venezuela, sending a jolt through the oil market.
Ultimately, that could push oil prices up to $70 to $80 per barrel later this year, Croft predicts.
#2. Oil futures flip into backwardation. The contango in the oil futures market has all but disappeared, with a slight backwardation emerging in the futures structure, which is when near-term contracts trade at a premium to futures further out. The backwardation is an indication that the market is tightening and the extreme bearishness drowning the market earlier this summer has diminished.
#3. From a technical perspective the chart shows a tight coiling up between 48.5 and 50. A break from this range, in either direction, will be quite intense in my opinion.