Green health

Is OPEC’s plea for an oil production cut nothing but cheap talk?

Julian Lee, an analyst at Bloomberg, said in a note to clients: "Don't get too excited about talk of oil output cuts."

ANALYSIS

Battered oil markets perked up on faint hopes that OPEC may convince rival Russia to orchestrate a production cut and rein inside a supply glut.

Oil traders shunned news of weak economic data from China and a World Bank oil price forecast downgrade, taking oil past US$31 per barrel after OPEC secretary-general Abdullah al-Badri said “it is crucial that all major producers sit down and are available up with an answer.”

Markets were also buoyed by Iraq oil minister Adel Abdel Mahdi suggesting that he “saw more flexibility” on the deal from Saudi Arabia and Russia. U.S. crude shot up 3.7 percent, at US$31.45 per barrel.

But some long-time OPEC watchers shrugged off the latest pronouncements as only cheap talk.

“I don’t believe them would actually be prepared to cut whether it dropped into it,” Thomas Pugh, commodities economist at London-based Capital Economic said in an interview. “The issue is all of them want somebody else to chop.”

Julian Lee, an analyst at Bloomberg, said in a note to clients: “Don’t get too excited about talk of oil output cuts.”

Since November 2014, OPEC, led by Saudi Arabia, has increased output to drive prices down and squeeze out more expensive non-OPEC producers. Wood Mackenzie estimates projects worth US$380 billion mostly in non-OPEC countries happen to be axed as oil prices have shed 72 per cent since their peak in July 2014.

Even OPEC members aren’t spared with the group’s collective revenues from oil receipts declining by up to 50 % to US$380 billion last year when compared with 2014, based on the U.S. United states doe estimates.

Cash-strapped Venezuela reportedly sought an urgent situation OPEC meeting recently to discuss output cuts, but its appeal was rejected.

A deal is not likely, as Saudi Arabia – the only OPEC country that matters inside a cut – and Russia don’t see eye to eye on most issues. Riyadh and Moscow actively compete with one another in Asian and European markets, and also the two are also on opposite sides of the political stalemate in Syria.

Related

To Top