OPEC on Monday forecast lower demand for its crude next year as rivals
pump more and said top oil exporter Saudi Arabia, eager to avoid a
return of oversupply, had cut production.
In a monthly report, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting
Countries said the world will need 32.05 million barrels per day (bpd)
of crude from its 15 members in 2019, down 130,000 bpd from last month’s
forecast.
The drop in demand for OPEC crude means there will be
less strain on other producers in making up for supply losses in
Venezuela and Libya, and potentially in Iran as renewed U.S. sanctions
kick in.
Crude
LCOc1 edged lower after the OPEC report was released, trading below $73
a barrel. Prices have slipped since topping $80 this year for the first
time since 2014 on expectations of more supply after OPEC agreed to
relax a supply-cutting deal and economic worries.
OPEC in the
report said concern about global trade tensions had weighed on crude
prices in July, although it expected support for the market from refined
products.
“Healthy global economic developments and increased
industrial activity should support the demand for distillate fuels in
the coming months, leading to a further drawdown in diesel inventories,”
it said.
OPEC and a group of non-OPEC countries agreed on June
22-23 to return to 100 percent compliance with oil output cuts that
began in January 2017, after months of underproduction by Venezuela and
others pushed adherence above 160 percent.
In the report, OPEC said its oil output in July rose to 32.32 million
bpd. Although higher than the 2019 demand forecast, this is up a mere
41,000 bpd from June as the Saudi cut offset increases elsewhere.
In
June, Saudi Arabia had pumped more as it heeded calls from the United
States and other consumers to make up for shortfalls elsewhere and cool
prices, and sources had said July output would be even higher.
But
the kingdom said last month it did not want an oversupplied market and
it would not try to push oil into the market beyond customers’ needs.
DEMAND SLOWING
Rapid
oil demand that helped OPEC balance the market is expected to moderate
next year. OPEC expects world oil demand to grow by 1.43 million bpd,
20,000 bpd less than forecast last month, and a slowdown from 1.64
million bpd in 2018.
In July, Saudi Arabia told OPEC it cut
production by 200,000 bpd to 10.288 million bpd. Figures OPEC collects
from secondary sources published in the report also showed a Saudi cut,
which offset increases in other nations such as Kuwait and Nigeria.
This
means compliance with the original supply-cutting deal has slipped to
126 percent, according to a Reuters calculation, meaning members are
still cutting more than promised. The original figure for June was 130
percent.
OPEC’s July output is 270,000 bpd more than OPEC expects
the demand for its oil to average next year, suggesting a small surplus
in the market should OPEC keep pumping the same amount and other things
remain equal.
And the higher prices that have
followed the OPEC-led deal have prompted growth in rival supply and a
surge of U.S. shale. OPEC expects non-OPEC supply to expand by 2.13
million bpd next year, 30,000 bpd more than forecast last month.
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