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OPEC+ Pauses Oil Supply Hike in Effort to Reverse Price Slump

Hussein Allidina, Managing Director and Head of Commodities at TD Asset Management, speaks with MoneyTalk about the outlook for oil prices and why they could fall to the $60 a barrel range.

(Bloomberg) -- OPEC+ postponed its oil supply hike by two months, but the move wasn’t enough to roll back steep losses in crude prices amid fears about fragile demand. 

Key coalition members won’t now increase production by 180,000 barrels a day in October and November, according to a statement on OPEC’s website. Yet their longer-term plan to revive 2.2 million barrels a day of idle supplies gradually over the course of a year remained in place, with the completion date pushed back two months to December 2025. 

Oil showed little reaction to the news, with prices remaining near $73 a barrel in London. A delay doesn’t change many factors in the market that are unfavorable to OPEC, said Julius Baer analyst Norbert Ruecker. 

“Demand is partially stagnant, production grows in the Americas,” Ruecker said. “The oil market will likely head into surplus supplies next year.”

OPEC’s rethink came after downbeat economic data from China and the US — the biggest consumers — sent crude prices below $73 a barrel earlier this week, reaching the lowest since late 2023. The decline offers consumers some relief after years of rampant inflation, but leaves prices too low for the Saudis and others in the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries to cover their government spending.

With some members keen to ramp up supply, OPEC+ had agreed in June on a road map for gradually restoring supplies halted since 2022. But it vacillated as soon as the plan was unveiled, repeatedly stressing the increases could be “paused or reversed” if necessary. A major output disruption in Libya had seemed to offer the group led by Saudi Arabia and Russia the space to go ahead, but it opted instead for caution.

“OPEC+ faced a binary choice between delaying tapering and enduring a disorderly crude price rout,” said Bob McNally, president of consultant Rapidan Energy Group and a former White House official. “It appears to have chosen the former.”

While Brent futures have stabilized, the international benchmark remains near $73 a barrel, a reflection that the alliance’s delay amounts to only 360,000 barrels a day in paper — and likely less in reality — in a global market that burns through more than 100 million per day.

Oil prices at these levels will provide some relief to central banks as they ease interest rates, and could even play into the US election campaign. 

READ: Delaying Oil Output Return Won’t Fix OPEC+ Problem: Energy Daily

Postponing the rise might avert the surplus that prominent market-watchers such as the International Energy Agency and trading giant Trafigura Group were expecting in the fourth quarter. Conversely, opening the taps could have prompted a slump toward $50 a barrel, Citigroup Inc. had warned.

But the decision to delay may only defer the challenge for OPEC to next year.

World surpluses stand to swell in 2025 as fuel consumption growth remains subdued while output from the US, Guyana, Brazil and Canada keeps expanding, according to the IEA. BP Plc chief economist Spencer Dale warned Aug. 21 that the organization has “limited scope” to add barrels.

Nonetheless, the United Arab Emirates — one of the organization’s biggest producers  — has been keen to deploy recent investments in new capacity, which Abu Dhabi says has reached a substantial 4.85 million barrels a day. That’s roughly 5% of world supplies. The UAE’s desire to pump more has stirred tensions within the group in the past.

Libyan Wildcard

At the start of this week, OPEC+ delegates were signaling that the scheduled boost remained on track.

Output in member Libya was slashed in half last week after authorities in the eastern region shuttered more than 500,000 barrels a day in a clash with the Tripoli-based government over control of the central bank. The disruption came on top of the halt of Libya’s biggest oil field, Sharara, earlier in August.

But on Tuesday, Sadiq Al-Kabir — the central bank governor whose attempted ouster precipitated the crisis — said there were “strong” indications political factions are nearing an agreement to overcome the current deadlock.

Brent futures plunged 5% and OPEC+ officials shifted position, saying that discussions on delaying the group’s supply hike were in progress.  

While global crude markets are currently tight amid summer driving demand, they’re set to ease significantly once the seasonal peak in consumption passes.

Data from China has shown critical engines of economic growth sputtering, with factory activity contracting for a fourth month and the value of new-home sales declining. US manufacturing activity showed a fifth consecutive month of contraction. 

Also weighing on prices is OPEC+’s struggle with compliance. Iraq, Russia and Kazakhstan have dragged their heels on implementing their share of curbs as they seek to maximize revenues. Moscow is reliant on oil sales to fund President Vladimir Putin’s war against Ukraine.

The trio pledged to make extra curbs as compensation for their earlier cheating but have yet to make a start on these, and the group has a poor track record on implementation. 

--With assistance from Nayla Razzouk.

©2024 Bloomberg L.P.