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9月份石油研究報告翻譯(中譯英)
尼日利亞:逆勢飆漲
非洲最大的經濟體尼日利亞表現異常搶眼。在2015年2月即將舉行大選的背景之下,盡管存在安全隱憂、石油管道盜竊橫行和資本流動無常等棘手的難題,旺盛的國內需求依然帶動了經濟增長。通貨膨脹因食品價格壓力而再次走高,預計貨幣政策仍將收緊,一直持續到2015年。電力行業的私有化等重大結構化改革正在開展當中,預計將會緩解經濟增長壓力。
印度:乘風破浪
印度總理納倫德拉·莫迪當選之后提出的經濟振興計劃以及源源不斷的大規模資本流入使得印度發展前景愈發光明。政府啟動了大刀闊斧的改革,采取宏觀穩定舉措,旨在逐步為更加強勁的經濟表現打下堅實的基礎。盡管近期前景正在改善,但仍有很多國內外難題需要解決。
美國頁巖行業:中期前景亮麗,未來仍籠罩烏云
頁巖鉆探技術促使美國油氣產量回升,能源進口因此而大幅下滑,國內石油和天然氣價格明顯下降,電力和能源密集型制造行業迎來增長。美國也將因此而在2020年之前不斷降低對外國石油的依賴性,從2017年開始成為天然氣的凈出口國。盡管中期而言石油產量的持續增長看似有利,但卻可能在這十年的后半段遭遇困境,增長減速,甚至可能逆轉近年來的穩定上升之勢。全面放開能源出口可能會顯著緩解這些壓力。
委內瑞拉—市場恐慌:總統馬杜羅
昨天承諾償還國家外債,從而緩解了上周主權債券利差的大幅上揚。盡管如此,今年7月以來2027年到期的全球債券收益率已經上升了270個基點,達到13.5%,而5年期信用違約掉期(CDS)利差擴大了557個基點,達到1494個基點(參見圖標5.1)。內閣重組誘發拋售潮,前經濟首長Rafael Ramírz被調任,表明亟需的宏觀政策調整將進一步延期。委內瑞拉杰出的經濟學家Ricardo Hausmann提出的國家主權債券違約而非擴大私營部門未償債務的建議加重了市場的緊張情緒。在油價疲軟和經濟扭曲日益嚴重的情況下,委內瑞拉的經濟面臨著停滯性通脹的困境。隨著民眾認可度的下降以及馬杜羅統治聯盟的內訌,政府可以回旋的余地不斷縮小。2014年剩下的時間里,日益逼近的本金和利息償付接近70億美元。我們認為政府的經濟問題基本上是由內因而非外因造成的。該國仍有能力償還債務,并將努力避免近期違約。但是,如果進入全球市場的代價變得愈發高昂,而且經濟持續下行軌跡,那么違約仍然是一大風險。
Nigeria: Strong Growth Despite Headwinds
Nigeria’s economy, the largest in Africa, is performing remarkably well. Strong domestic demand is driving growth notwithstanding challenges which include security concerns, significant theft from oil pipelines, and volatility in capital flows against the backdrop of upcoming elections in February 2015. Inflation is rising again due to pressures on food prices and monetary policy is expected to remain tight into 2015. Important structural reforms, such as the privatization of the power sector, are underway and these are expected to ease constraints on growth.
ndia: Wind in the Sails
The economic program of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, the post-stabilization measures aimed at gradually building the foundation for a stronger economic performance. While near-term prospects are improving, there are a number of external and domestic challenges to navigate.
election boost to sentiment, and continuing large capital inflows are underpinning an increasingly buoyant outlook. The government has embarked on wide-ranging reforms along with macro-stabilization measures aimed at gradually building the foundation for a stronger economic performance. While near-term prospects are improving, there are a number of external and domestic challenges to navigate.
U.S. Shale: Medium-Term Outlook Bright, Clouds Beyond
The resurgence of U.S. oil and gas production fueled by shale drilling technologies has led to dramatic reductions in energy imports, sharply reduced domestic oil and gas prices, and provided an uplift to the power and energy-intensive manufacturing sectors. As a result, the U.S. will continue to decrease dependence on foreign oil until 2020 and will become a net exporter of natural gas from 2017 onwards. However, continued growth in oil production, which looks favorable in the medium-term, could face headwinds later in the decade, slowing down and possibly reversing the steady rise of recent years
A full liberalization of energy exports could substantially ease the constraints.
Venezuela—market jitters:
President Nicolás Maduro pledged yesterday to pay the country's external obligations, helping to ease the sharp spike in sovereign bond spreads seen over the past week. Nevertheless, the 2027 global bond yield has increased 270 bps to 13.5% since late July and 5-year CDS spreads widened 557 bps to 1494 bps (Chart 5.1). The sell-off was triggered by a cabinet reshuffling, which sidelined former economic chief, Rafael Ramírez, signaling further delays in needed macro policy adjustments. A suggestion by a prominent Venezuelan economist, Ricardo Hausmann, to default on the country's sovereign bonds, rather than continuing to accumulate debt arrears with the private sector, added to market nervousness. The economy is facing stagflation amid softening oil prices and rising distortions. With declining popular approval and infighting within Maduro's ruling coalition, the government's scope to maneuver is increasingly narrow. Looming principal and interest repayments are near $7 billion in the remainder of 2014. We believe the government's economic problems largely stem from internal rather than external sources. It has the capacity to service its debt and will strive to avoid a default in the near term. However, default remains a risk if access to global markets becomes increasingly more expensive and the economy continues its downward spiral.
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