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Mixed signals from OPEC ministers caused fresh volatility on oil
markets Monday ahead of a meeting in Vienna meant to nail down a deal
reducing the cartel’s output by up to a million barrels per day.
Saudi Arabia’s energy minister appeared to suggest on Sunday that
Riyadh could live with OPEC failing to agree its first cut in output in
eight years, saying recovering demand would “stabilise” prices next year
anyway.
“We don’t have a single path which is to cut production at the OPEC
meeting, we can also depend on recovery in consumption, especially from
the US,” Saudi media quoted Khaled al-Falih as saying.
But Iraqi Oil Minister Jabbar al-Luaibi sounded an upbeat note Monday
as he arrived in Vienna ahead of Wednesday’s meeting, saying he was
“optimistic” that the 14-country group would strike an accord.
This was echoed by Venezuela’s similarly “optimistic” Oil Minister
Eulogio del Pino as he arrived in Algiers for talks with his Algerian
counterpart.
The two were due to head to Moscow together to persuade non-OPEC
Russia to also tighten the spigots. “OPEC and non-OPEC countries must
take action,” del Pino was quoted by local news agency APS as saying.
Russia is currently pumping some 11 million barrels per day (bpd), a
level not seen since Soviet days. Hit hard by the low price and Western
sanctions, Moscow has said it is ready to freeze output but not to cut.
Around 1715 GMT, US benchmark West Texas Intermediate for delivery in
January was up $1.59 to
$47.65 per barrel, winning back most of
Friday’s heavy losses.
“Just as everyone in the market feared, there is intense volatility,”
said ETX Capital analyst Neil Wilson. “No one knows if an agreement to
freeze output is just wishful thinking or pretty nearly a done deal.”
– Devil in the detail –
In September the cartel agreed in principle to lower production to
32.5-33.0 million bpd, meaning a cut of between 600,000 bpd and 1.1
million bpd from current levels.
In addition it reportedly wants non-OPEC countries to reduce output by 600,000 bpd.
This, OPEC hopes, will reduce the mammoth global supply glut and push the market price of oil above $50 a barrel.
It also marks a reversal of OPEC kingpin Saudi Arabia’s two-year-old
strategy of flooding the market to squeeze out rivals, in particular US
shale oil producers, which need a higher oil price to make a profit.
But it remains to be agreed what size cuts, if any, each of OPEC’s
members will make, particularly Iraq and Iran, the cartel’s next-biggest
producers. Libya and Nigeria want to be exempted.
Iraq has said it will cut output but that it is short of money needed
to fight Islamic State extremists. It also disputes with OPEC the level
of its current output. Luaibi was tight-lipped on Monday.
Iran, free to export oil since last year’s nuclear deal, won’t cut
production until it has reached pre-sanctions levels. It is also a
fierce regional rival of Saudi Arabia, engaged in a proxy war in Yemen
and backing different sides in Syria.
– Prices at the pump –
If OPEC does manage to get a deal and oil prices rise — though the
increase may be modest — then this will hit the wallets of billions of
consumers worldwide, although on balance it could give the global
economy a fillip, experts say.
Low oil prices have blown a massive hole in producers’ finances in
recent years, hurting not just more vulnerable OPEC members like
Venezuela and Nigeria but even the Gulf states.
Saudi Arabia, once seen as fabulously wealthy, is projecting
a budget deficit of $87 billion in 2016. Low prices have also hit
investment in oil facilities, raising the prospect of supply problems in
the medium term.
But at the same time, the bad news for OPEC is that higher oil prices
may also see more US shale oil producers return to the market.
The US industry could also be given a helping hand by president-elect Donald Trump.
Trump has promised to eliminate regulations restricting fracking,
support oil and gas pipeline construction and open restricted federal
lands and offshore areas for exploration, including Alaska.
AFP.
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