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EMD054 - Macro Context: Energy Demand Divergence

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Manage episode 519014508 series 3686527
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Welcome to Energy Markets Daily, brought to you by DailyDominanceNow.com. Wednesday, November 12, 2025 — Macro Context: Energy Demand Divergence. Today, we examine the global economic conditions driving the split between crude oil's bearish sentiment and natural gas's structural strength. **Global Economic Outlook** The IMF projects global GDP growth at 3.2% for 2025—steady, but uneven. Advanced economies are slowing. The U.S. is cooling from 2.8% in 2024 to 2.2% in 2025. The Eurozone remains weak at 1.2%. China, the world's largest crude importer, is decelerating to 4.5%, down from 5.0% in 2024. This matters because crude demand is tied to industrial activity and transportation. When China slows, crude feels it first. **Federal Reserve Policy** The Fed held rates at 4.5%–4.75% last week. Core PCE inflation sits at 2.8%—still above the 2% target. Chair Powell signaled patience. Translation: rates stay higher for longer. Higher rates strengthen the dollar. A stronger dollar makes crude more expensive for foreign buyers, pressuring demand. It also signals tighter financial conditions, which slow economic activity and energy consumption. **Inflation Dynamics** Core PCE at 2.8% reflects sticky services inflation—wages, housing, healthcare. Goods inflation has cooled, but services remain elevated. For energy markets, this creates a split. Crude, tied to global goods and transport, faces demand headwinds. Natural gas, tied to domestic power generation and heating, benefits from steady U.S. consumption and export demand. **China's Slowdown** China's 4.5% growth is the slowest in decades outside of COVID. Property sector stress, weak consumer confidence, and manufacturing overcapacity are all weighing on crude imports. China consumes 15 million barrels per day—second only to the U.S. When China slows, crude markets feel it globally. Natural gas, however, is less exposed. U.S. LNG exports to Europe and Asia remain strong, driven by energy security concerns and coal-to-gas switching. **The Divergence** Crude: Bearish sentiment driven by slowing global growth, Fed policy, and China's deceleration. Natural gas: Structural strength from domestic demand, LNG exports, and energy transition dynamics. This isn't a short-term trade. It's a macro regime shift. **Catalyst Watch** Thursday: EIA inventory reports. Watch crude builds vs. gas draws. Friday: Retail sales data. A proxy for consumer health and energy demand. Next week: China's industrial production and retail sales. Critical for crude outlook. **The Levels That Matter** WTI crude: Support at $68. Resistance at $72. Natural gas: Support at $2.80. Resistance at $3.00. **Final Word** Macro context drives energy markets. Right now, that context favors natural gas over crude. Position accordingly. For inquiries: [email protected]. Subject: Energy Capital. This is Energy Markets Daily. We'll see you Thursday for EIA inventory reports.

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55 episodes

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Manage episode 519014508 series 3686527
Content provided by EMD. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by EMD or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Welcome to Energy Markets Daily, brought to you by DailyDominanceNow.com. Wednesday, November 12, 2025 — Macro Context: Energy Demand Divergence. Today, we examine the global economic conditions driving the split between crude oil's bearish sentiment and natural gas's structural strength. **Global Economic Outlook** The IMF projects global GDP growth at 3.2% for 2025—steady, but uneven. Advanced economies are slowing. The U.S. is cooling from 2.8% in 2024 to 2.2% in 2025. The Eurozone remains weak at 1.2%. China, the world's largest crude importer, is decelerating to 4.5%, down from 5.0% in 2024. This matters because crude demand is tied to industrial activity and transportation. When China slows, crude feels it first. **Federal Reserve Policy** The Fed held rates at 4.5%–4.75% last week. Core PCE inflation sits at 2.8%—still above the 2% target. Chair Powell signaled patience. Translation: rates stay higher for longer. Higher rates strengthen the dollar. A stronger dollar makes crude more expensive for foreign buyers, pressuring demand. It also signals tighter financial conditions, which slow economic activity and energy consumption. **Inflation Dynamics** Core PCE at 2.8% reflects sticky services inflation—wages, housing, healthcare. Goods inflation has cooled, but services remain elevated. For energy markets, this creates a split. Crude, tied to global goods and transport, faces demand headwinds. Natural gas, tied to domestic power generation and heating, benefits from steady U.S. consumption and export demand. **China's Slowdown** China's 4.5% growth is the slowest in decades outside of COVID. Property sector stress, weak consumer confidence, and manufacturing overcapacity are all weighing on crude imports. China consumes 15 million barrels per day—second only to the U.S. When China slows, crude markets feel it globally. Natural gas, however, is less exposed. U.S. LNG exports to Europe and Asia remain strong, driven by energy security concerns and coal-to-gas switching. **The Divergence** Crude: Bearish sentiment driven by slowing global growth, Fed policy, and China's deceleration. Natural gas: Structural strength from domestic demand, LNG exports, and energy transition dynamics. This isn't a short-term trade. It's a macro regime shift. **Catalyst Watch** Thursday: EIA inventory reports. Watch crude builds vs. gas draws. Friday: Retail sales data. A proxy for consumer health and energy demand. Next week: China's industrial production and retail sales. Critical for crude outlook. **The Levels That Matter** WTI crude: Support at $68. Resistance at $72. Natural gas: Support at $2.80. Resistance at $3.00. **Final Word** Macro context drives energy markets. Right now, that context favors natural gas over crude. Position accordingly. For inquiries: [email protected]. Subject: Energy Capital. This is Energy Markets Daily. We'll see you Thursday for EIA inventory reports.

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