OPEC oil ministers met in Vienna on Saturday against an uncomfortable backdrop: uncertain demand, volatile oil prices and questions about whether their Russian allies are sticking to their side of the bargain.
(Bloomberg) — OPEC oil ministers met in Vienna on Saturday against an uncomfortable backdrop: uncertain demand, volatile oil prices and questions about whether their Russian allies are sticking to their side of the bargain.
A production cut is one option being discussed by the group, said one delegate before the meeting, but the final outcome was wide open, according to others. “Everything is on the table,” Iran’s OPEC Governor Amir Zamaninia told reporters in the Austrian capital.
An initial meeting of OPEC ministers on Saturday didn’t address policy, delegates said, leaving the main discussion for Sunday when Russia will also join. But Gulf ministers held a separate meeting on the sidelines, and African ministers also spoke to Saudi Energy Minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman, the group’s de facto leader.
A supply reduction of as much as 1 million barrels a day is the most likely outcome, according to RBC’s Chief Commodities Strategist Helima Croft. “We think that the continued macro worries and soured sentiment will lead the group to make another downward adjustment,” she said in a note.
The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries and its six-year-old alliance with Russia has held firm despite Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine, and the group has presented a united front in the face of calls from the US for more oil.
But sanctions have redrawn the oil map, with Russia sending more crude to Asia, competing with Saudi Arabia in its traditional market. And there’s little sign that Russia is sticking to the promises it had made on cuts. Both countries need strong oil prices for their budgets — Russia to fund the war and Saudi Arabia to fund its ambitious infrastructure projects at home.
OPEC+ is only a month into the production cuts announced in April. Those surprise curbs caused a brief price rally, but oil traders have since amassed short positions in crude futures as the slowly global economy threatened demand. Prices fell by 11% in New York in May, ending the month at about $68 a barrel.
Even with the recovery in the first two days of June, crude was about 14% below its mid-April peak as concern about the Chinese economy weighs on sentiment.
When asked about this bearish trend last week, Saudi Energy Minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman, who has sought to hurt short sellers with previous rounds of cuts, told speculators to “watch out.”
That message wasn’t enough to shift sentiment though, particularly after Russia’s Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak told Izvestia that the group was unlikely to take “any new steps.”
Novak later moderated that statement, saying the group could decide to take any action that’s necessary. Yet with Russia’s promised cuts failing to show up in international markets, it’s not clear if the group will be able to find consensus for another round of reductions so soon.
The run-up to the meeting was overshadowed by that difference in views between the two largest members, as well as by a decision to bar journalists from Bloomberg, Reuters and the Wall Street Journal from attending the gathering at the Vienna headquarters.
Read more: OPEC+ Faces Oil Market Torn by Demand Rebound and Recession Fear
The surprise cuts announced in April amount to about 1.2 million barrels a day — on top of a 500,000 barrel-a-day reduction already announced by Russia — and will run until the end of the year. It’s difficult to gauge their impact after just a few weeks, analysts at JPMorgan Chase & Co. said in a note.
The cuts “became visible in export data only in the second week of May,” according to the bank. “It will likely take several more weeks to ascertain their implementation and effectiveness.” They should be sufficient to tighten oil markets in the second half of the year assuming there’s no recession, JPMorgan said.
“The main objective of OPEC and its allies is to preserve the stability of the oil market and avoid any volatility,” Hayyan Abdul Ghani, Iraq’s minister of oil and deputy prime minister for energy affairs, told reporters as he arrived in Vienna on Friday. “We will not hesitate to take any decision that would bring more balance and stability.”
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