Russia's President Vladimir Putin and Saudi King Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud
Barring additional oil production cuts by OPEC in 2020, Rystad Energy forecasts a substantial build of global crude stocks and a corresponding drop in oil prices.
A
showdown is taking place in Vienna as OPEC countries plus Russia will
gather in the Austrian capital on 5-6 December to discuss oil output
levels in 2020.
“We have a clear message to the OPEC+ countries: A
‘roll-over’ of the current production agreement is not enough to
preserve a balanced market and ensure a stable oil price environment in
2020,” says Bjørnar Tonhaugen, head of oil market research at Rystad
Energy. “The outlook will be bleak if OPEC+ fails to agree on additional
cuts.”
According to Rystad Energy’s estimates, the global oil
market will be fundamentally oversupplied to the tune of 0.8 million
barrels per day (bpd) in the first half of 2020.
Empirical
evidence has demonstrated that a 1 million bpd surplus of oil can be
expected to cause an oil price decline of around 5% per month, implying a
potential drop of 30% over six months.
“If OPEC and Russia don’t
extend and deepen their cuts, we could see Brent Blend dip to the $40s
next year for a shorter period,” Tonhaugen said.
“In order to ensure a balanced market, our research
indicates that OPEC would need to reduce crude production to 28.9
million bpd – a drop of 0.8 million bpd from the level seen in the
fourth quarter of 2019-levels – given our forecast for demand, non-OPEC
supply and the impact of new IMO 2020 regulations on global crude runs,”
Tonhaugen added. Related: How Much Crude Oil Do You Unknowingly Eat?
New
shipping fuel regulations, the so-called IMO 2020 effect, are expected
to create more demand for crude oil in the near-term. However, if the
actual effect of the IMO rules on crude demand turns out to be zero the
“call on OPEC” - the amount of OPEC oil needed to meet demand - drops by
1.9 million bpd year-on-year to 28.3 million bpd.
“Despite decent cut compliance
from the group as a whole and large involuntary declines in Iran and
Venezuela this year, OPEC’s current crude production of about 29.7
million bpd is far above the ‘call’ for 2020. Alas, without deeper cuts
taking effect in January 2020, large global implied stock builds are on
the cards,” Tonhaugen remarked. Related: OPEC’s Number Two Suggests Deeper Oil Output Cuts
Rystad Energy sees three alternative OPEC+ decision scenarios:
**Base case:
Extension of current production cuts to June 2020. Global oil market
will be oversupplied to the tune of 1.2 million bpd in 2020. Significant
oil price correction, possibly down to the low $40s for a short period,
is likely.
**Deeper cuts: Additional cut of 0.75
million bpd on top of the 0.3 million bpd in the extension scenario
would reduce the supply overhang and ensure stable prices.
**No deal/market share war:
A ramp-up to maximum production capacity in all countries could have
devastating effects. With potential stock builds of 2.3 million bpd, oil
prices could fall below $30/bbl – lower than during the previous lows
of 2016. Such a scenario would be devastating for the forward curve
structure as potential stock builds would be larger than what we have
observed historically.
Rystad
Energy finds that OPEC+ as a whole has cut oil production by 2.6
million bpd year-to-date, compared to October 2018 reference levels and
the cut target of approximately 1.2 million bpd. The additional 1.4
million bpd of “cuts” are owed entirely to involuntary declines from
Iran and Venezuela, both of which are exempt from the agreement. Saudi
Arabia has led the group’s compliance by cutting 870,000 bpd in 2019, or
2.7 times its target cut of 322,000 bpd.
“Saudi Arabia has
signaled that it seeks stricter compliance by other producers and is no
longer willing to shoulder the burden of sub-compliance by others, such
as Russia, Iraq and Kazakhstan, which have all failed to reach 100%
compliance with their target cuts,” Tonhaugen said.
The challenge
for OPEC+ is the strong supply growth elsewhere in the world. Rystad
Energy forecasts a supply growth of 2.6 million bpd year-on-year in
2020, led by US shale, Norway and Brazil against weak global demand
growth of only 1.0 million bpd year-on-year. Rystad Energy forecasts
that non-OPEC non-US supply will grow 1.2 million bpd year-on-year in
2020, OPEC estimates this number at 0.6 million bpd year-on-year.
By Rystad Energy
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