The OPEC+ coalition appears determined to ease the global oil glut
and lift the oil prices that had cratered in April because of OPEC+
wrangling and crashing global demand in the pandemic.
Oil prices
have rallied since the start of the new OPEC+ cuts. These cuts, along
with curtailments in North America, have combined with improved global
oil demand and the new notion that the worst of the demand collapse is
likely behind us, to instill confidence in the market that it is now
heading for a deficit.
The more bullish sentiment, however, raises
another question—will producers be tempted by rising crude oil prices
to disregard quotas within OPEC+? Will U.S. shale resume drilling
activity sooner than the market needs it?
OPEC and its partners in
the pact realized early last month that they had underestimated what
turned out to be a devastating impact of COVID-19 on global demand. With
oil revenues for petro states crashing as oil demand and oil prices
collapsed, OPEC’s leader Saudi Arabia and all other producers in the
OPEC+ group soon realized that they need to quickly force the market
into balance to save their oil-dependent economies from taking an
additional hit on top of the pandemic-related slowdown.
Three weeks into the new OPEC+ deal to cut production, the market sentiment has markedly shifted.
When
the pact announced the deal on April 12, analysts were saying that
these cuts—albeit 10 percent of typical global demand—would be ‘too
little too late’ to save the oil market from the abyss.
Now the mood has improved,
and so have oil prices. The price of oil is now 80 percent higher than
it was in mid-April, and analysts are pointing out that the cuts from
OPEC+, combined with economics-driven curtailments in North America to
the tune of 4 million bpd, is bringing the oil market closer to deficit
in the coming months.
Improving global oil demand and faster-than-expected production curtailments from outside the OPEC+ pact are set to push the oil market into deficit in June, Goldman Sachs said last week.
OPEC+--with
huge help from North America’s cuts because of unsustainably low oil
prices for its producers--managed to swing the market mood to
expectations of a deficit as soon as next month. OPEC and its de facto
leader and largest producer, Saudi Arabia, have a track record for
purposefully tightening the oil market whenever Saudi Arabia and perhaps
a few other major oil producers in the cartel have a strong incentive
to see higher oil prices, Reuters analyst John Kemp wrote this week.
This
spring, the Saudis had the biggest incentive to reverse the
flood-them-all-with-oil policy from March and April—money. With oil
prices at $20 or below and demand crashing in the pandemic, the world’s
top oil exporter had to save face and its economy.
So
far, Saudi Arabia, OPEC, and Russia are declaring unwavering support to
market stabilization, promising to go the extra mile to rebalance the
market—and to see higher oil prices.
OPEC members and their ten
non-OPEC partners have slashed oil exports by a massive 5.96 million bpd
for the first 13 days of May compared to April averages, oil-flow
tracking company Petro-Logistics said at the end of last week.
Saudi Arabia has pledged an additional 1 million bpd of cuts on top of its promised cuts as part of the OPEC+ deal. Even Iraq, the biggest cheater in all the previous pacts, said that it is committed to the production cuts.
Saudi Arabia and the leader of the non-OPEC countries, Russia, put out a statement last
week, saying that they “remain firmly committed to achieving the goal
of market stability and expediting the rebalancing of the oil market.”
“We
would like to especially commend the efforts of responsible producers
around the world who have willingly adjusted their production out of a
sense of shared responsibility,” Saudi Energy Minister Prince Abdulaziz
bin Salman and Russia’s Energy Minister Alexander Novak said.
For
U.S. producers, curtailments have nothing to do with “shared
responsibility”—the economics are unfavorable, storage availability is
still scarce, and demand is still low. The U.S. shale patch has
announced more than 1.5 million bpd in cuts for Q2, lifting the oil
prices and market sentiment over the past two weeks. But with prices
rising, some producers could be tempted to resume activity, nipping a sustained market recovery in the bud.
“Further
strength in the oil market would send the wrong signal to producers,
with them likely more reluctant to cut output in a rallying market,” ING
strategists Warren Patterson and Wenyu Yao said on Wednesday.
By Tsvetana Paraskova for Oilprice.com
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