The theme of the OPEC+ group's most recent meeting held June 4 was lower production moving forward. This news will most likely lead to persistent future inventory drawdowns, which has caused the EIA to further adjust its latest Short Term Energy Outlook (STEO) price forecast for Brent crude oil up to the mid-$80/bbl range by the end of 2024. EIA also forecasts WTI to follow a similar path while maintaining its $5/bbl discount.
Whenever OPEC+ meets to discuss production targets, a recurring topic of interest in the crude oil world is production cuts, which come in two flavors: production target changes and voluntary cuts. The latter of these two are additional decreases in production outside of a reduction in targets for participating countries. Some member countries' voluntary cuts affect crude oil markets more than others, depending on how much volume they can produce. Saudi Arabia, the world's second-largest crude oil producer (after the U.S.) at 10.4 MMbbl/d (2022 average) is capable of sending tremors across the globe when they cuts production. After voluntarily cutting production by 1 MMbbl/d for the month of July, Saudi Arabia has announced that it will extend that cut into August, and possibly longer. Before including Saudi Arabia's most recent cut, it was slated to produce nearly 10 MMbbl/d, but after the cut is applied, that falls to 9 MMbbl/d. (Note that Saudi Arabia's latest voluntary cut of 1 MMbbl/d is not represented in the charts below.) Other member countries are following the same trend, cutting production and applying voluntary cuts on top of that. In fact, nine countries have applied voluntary cuts, two of which also lowered their production targets for 2024 relative to their May-December 2023 targets. One country (the UAE) decided to voluntarily cut production by 144 Mbbl/d, but was also granted special dispensation to raise its 2024 production target by 200 Mbbl/d, the justification to OPEC+ being that they have substanially brought on more capacity. The UAE's adjusted 2024 production will land in between its 2023 target of 3.02 MMbbl/d and its 2024 target of 3.22 MMbbl/d.Featured Articles
Everybody Wants To Rule The World, Part 3 - Coronavirus, the Crude Price Slide and OPEC Production Cuts
Oil-production restraint by OPEC and 10 cooperating countries grows more challenging with time, and just when market projections began to hint at relief for the OPEC-Plus group, the spread of the new coronavirus in China and beyond became a sudden and possibly serious impediment to global economic growth and oil demand. Yesterday’s slide in crude oil prices amid newly heightened concern about the potential pandemic’s effects will only add to the challenges that OPEC-Plus countries will face in managing crude supply. So far, the OPEC-Plus group has achieved unprecedented compliance with its production ceilings, which it implemented in January 2017 and has adapted a few times since in response to market pressure. That effort has kept the crude price above the ruinous levels of 2015, memories of which have encouraged quota discipline. But the threat of a major, coronavirus-related slowdown in global oil demand could seriously undermine OPEC-Plus’s efforts, which already had been hurt by dissent within its ranks. Today, we continue our series with a look at Monday’s price drop, the latest supply and demand forecasts and a discussion of the obstacles that might affect OPEC-Plus going forward.
Surprise, Surprise - Setbacks to Iranian, OPEC+ Talks Rattle Market for Crude Oil
Crude oil is demonstrating yet again its penchant for what markets hate most: surprise. Last month, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and collaborating governments were carefully easing the production cuts with which they steered the market through an oil-demand crisis caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. Demand was recovering as economies reopened after being locked down during most of 2020 and early 2021. And the near-month futures price for light, sweet crude on the New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX) — having closed below zero for the first time ever on April 20, 2020 — rose above $70/bbl for the first time since October 2018. Until mid-June, the market’s main concern was the potential for a supply surge if Iran escaped sanctions by agreeing with the U.S. to again suspend nuclear development. Surprise! Only days after his election as Iranian president on June 18, Ebrahim Raisi announced new limits on what his government would negotiate regarding nuclear work and said he would not meet with U.S. President Joe Biden. Suddenly, new oil supply from Iran looked less imminent than it did before Raisi’s election. Then July arrived. Surprise! OPEC members and nonmembers, collectively known as OPEC+, which had been voluntarily limiting production ended an important meeting without agreeing, as had been expected, to extend their phasedown of supply restraint. Suddenly, the market had to wonder whether the result would be too little supply or a price-crushing production spree if OPEC+ discipline collapsed. In today’s blog, we examine how these developments relate to each other in the twin contexts of a rebalancing oil market and of past oil-supply management.
Third Dimension - OPEC+ Adjusts as Crude Oil Comes into View for 2022
As the outlook for crude oil in 2022 came into three-dimensional view this month, the market’s steadying mechanism managed to right itself again after another wobble. The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) took its first formal look at next year in its July Monthly Oil Market Report (OMR), becoming the third of three widely watched prognosticators to do so. Among the other two, the International Energy Agency (IEA) began projecting 2022 oil-market data in its June Oil Market Report, and the intrepid U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) took its first analytical shot at next year way back in January in its Short Term Energy Outlook. The important third dimension that OPEC gave to the 2022 oil-market picture arrived on July 15 after two weeks of worry about whether production restraint by most of the group’s members and cooperating countries would survive. On July 18, though, the internal squabble driving that concern ended in a compromise that will result in production quota increases for several OPEC+ members. The 2022 projections by OPEC, IEA, and EIA, not to mention worry-driven elevation of crude oil prices prior to the compromise, make clear that the market needs OPEC+ to continue the orderly unwinding of its production cuts. In today’s blog, we compare the three forecasts and look at how the latest adjustment to OPEC+ supply management will affect the market.