Saturday 18 November 2023

OPEC Plus may opt for deeper supply cut

OPEC Plus is most likely to consider additional oil supply cuts when the group meets on November 26. It may be prudent approach because oil prices have dropped by almost 20% since September 2023.

Brent crude has fallen to US$79 per barrel from US$98 in September this year. Concern about subdued demand and a possible surplus next year have kept prices under pressure, despite OPEC Plus production cuts and conflict in the Middle East.

Saudi Arabia, Russia and other members of OPEC Plus have already pledged total oil output cuts of 5.16 million barrels per day, or about 5% of daily global demand, in a series of steps that started in late 2022. The cuts include 3.66 million bpd by OPEC Plus and additional voluntary cuts by Saudi Arabia and Russia.

There is a growing perception that the existing curbs might be not enough and the group will likely consider if deeper cuts could be implemented.

"It is not pleasant to see that market volatility is greater ahead of the next meeting while fundamentals overall remain solid," one of the OPEC+ Plus sources said.

Ministers are likely to express some thoughts on what to do more, to secure a stable trend.

Ministers from OPEC Plus, which comprises of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and allies led by Russia, are scheduled to meet on November 26. The group already has a plan to curb supplies by 3.66 million bpd into 2024 made during its last meeting in June.

The price drop has deepened this week, even after OPEC in a monthly report said the oil-market fundamentals remained strong despite negative sentiment and stuck to its relatively high 2024 oil demand growth forecast.

The International Energy Agency, which also updated its outlook this week, has a lower 2024 demand growth forecast and said the market could shift to a surplus in the first quarter.

While some believe more cuts are required, two others say it is too early to say whether further cuts will be discussed. Some believe they may opt for "wait and see".

Most of OPEC Plus members depend on oil as a primary source of government income.

Analysts believe Saudi Arabia's oil cut extension raises the risk of economic contraction this year.

Saudi Arabia has repeatedly stressed during previous meetings it wants to see strong compliance with cuts so all members share the burden of producing less.

At its last policy meeting in June, OPEC Plus agreed on a broad deal to limit supply into 2024 and Saudi Arabia pledged a voluntary production cut for July of one million bpd that it has since extended to last until the end of 2023.

Some analysts including Energy Aspects expect Saudi Arabia to keep the voluntary cut to at least the first quarter of 2024.

 

 

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