Al-Jazeerah History
Archives
Mission & Name
Conflict Terminology
Editorials
Gaza Holocaust
Gulf War
Isdood
Islam
News
News Photos
Opinion
Editorials
US Foreign Policy (Dr. El-Najjar's Articles)
www.aljazeerah.info
|
|
|
For How Long Can OPEC Talk Up Oil Prices?
By Julianne Geiger
Oil Price, Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, October
14, 2016 |
|
|
|
|
|
Not a day passes without OPEC making oil and gas headlines, and
today is surely no exception. Seemingly in lockstep with OPEC, the market
is once again pacified on the promise that changes to the global oil
supply glut are a' comin'.
Yesterday, the Wall Street Journal
quoted anonymous sources close to the matter who had it on good authority
that the Saudi's were willing to cut "up to" 400,000 barrels per day (and
that they had planned to do so all along, with or without an OPEC
agreement). We can assume this figure is off August or September levels,
which are near-record highs for the oil-rich country.
Of course,
there are 400,000 different possible production cut figures included in
this "up to 400,000" range—including a big fat zero—so fundamentally
speaking, like so much of the OPEC speak, this could mean nothing.
But this isn't the first time OPEC chatter or supposition or guesswork
has moved markets, and it won't be the last. Because, as Oilprice
contributor Rakesh Upadhyay pointed out back in
August, just a month before the freeze was announced, fundamentals
aren't what's driving the oil market—speculation is. And nothing feeds
speculators like OPEC.
As Upadhyay wrote, "Though most analysts
agreed that a production freeze was not going to alter the fundamentals,
prices rose sharply, with the hedge funds adding record long positions,"
as evidenced by the chart below, which shows what happened in February
when OPEC cuts were on the table for Doha. Fundamentals didn't change—the
glut wasn't easing—yet hedge funds and speculation on OPEC rumors drove up
prices.
The hope quickly faded when the Doha meeting fell short of
expectations, but prices continued to climb. Then, the market found new
hope in the Vienna meeting. We then wondered—this time quite wistfully—if
a freeze could… maybe, possibly… happen in that meeting over the summer,
much in the same way one might hold onto hope that we might someday win
the lotto. Our hopes were dashed yet again—but not before the market
reflexively inched up again.
Soon after, Saudi comments, which
indicated that a new spirit of cooperation among OPEC members might be
taking shape, sending prices upward yet again. An unofficial meeting was
announced. Algiers, they said. "Stabilize the market" they said (which can
apparently be done with talk, rather than production cuts). Russia chimed
in, vacillating between joining the "market stabilization" efforts and
not. We asked ourselves, this time ever more cautiously, dare we hope
again? Most thought not, but speculators threw caution to the wind, moving
markets this way and that on almost a daily basis in response to every
utterance regarding the freeze.
Then the announcement came that
OPEC had reached a deal. The earth shook, moving markets again— this time
by a large percentage—and this time backed up by a more tangible hope.
Meanwhile, the industry scrambled to make sense of what it all meant.
How big would the cut be? Which members would do the cutting? How did
Saudi Arabia and Iran reach any kind of consensus when they were worlds
apart—on multiple fronts? And then there was the ultimate question that
had every analyst from here to Venezuela furiously figuring and
calculating and refiguring and recalculating: just how high could prices
go?
Speculators continued to largely disregard the ins and outs of
the deal, which were absent at the time, and we saw markets tick up
happily in response.
When the size of the production cut—between
240,000 and 740,000 barrels per day—was announced, one could feel the
weight of the disappointment within the industry overall. The analysts
wanted more; wanted deeper. Most OPEC members had been scrambling to reach
record high oil production leading up to the meeting, some successful.
Given current production levels, the small cut was seen by most analysts
as a mere token gesture that would do very little to address what most
would agree is the reason behind the price "problem"—the global supply
glut.
And further skepticism surfaced over the fact that no
specific member had agreed to any specific cut—they just agreed that as a
group, "they" would do some cutting—some months down the road—and that the
"they" in that equation wouldn't be Iran. And it wouldn't be Nigeria. And
it wouldn't be Libya.
And still, amid all this ambiguity and
mystery, and with some distant promise to shave a mere 240,000 barrels of
oil per day off OPEC's record production figures, oil climbed above $50 a
barrel. Today, Brent is trading at $52.64, which is a
12-month high-a monumental swing on mere talk.
And sure, some
minor fundamentals have changed, such as five weeks of crude oil inventory
draws in the U.S., but those inventory numbers are still way too high. In
reality, OPEC hasn't actually done anything to ease the glut. They've just
talked… about talking… two months from now. In fact, the only actions that
OPEC has taken is to pump oil at record paces, adding to the glut, and
hoping that speculators will lap up what they're dishing out in rhetoric.
That's what OPEC is doing today.
So happy are the markets on this
wispy nothingness, in fact, that some are suggesting the oil markets are
poised for a major meltdown, as speculators buy up contracts that are
equal to a year's worth of U.S. consumption—amounts that can't possibly be
delivered and will be pushed off to next month's contracts or cancelled.
To put this in perspective, there are
480 million barrels of oil on order for delivery in November to
Cushing, Oklahoma—a facility that is capable of handling only 50 million
per month.
What will also be pushed aside are some other cold,
hard facts, such as Libya's production increases, or Iraq's, or Iran's,
and how fundamentally, this means the remaining OPEC members would have to
make deeper cuts to offset these increases and still meet the
organization's promised cut. Deeper cuts that could hurt whichever member
is tasked with taking on this burden.
But to keep the market's eye
on the OPEC ball despite market saturation, the Algerian Energy Minister,
desperate to save his country from an economic collapse, made yet another
announcement on behalf of OPEC that the bloc would be willing to cut yet
another
1% "if we need to" on top of the cuts proposed out of the meeting in
Algiers, adding that there would be even more meetings forthcoming—the
first of which will be in Istanbul on Oct 9-13, again, on the sidelines of
another energy meeting, the World Energy Congress. But this time, the
informal talks about the freeze will include non-OPEC Russia and non-OPEC
Azerbaijan.
As
Reuters reports, the meeting signals that OPEC "is more serious now
about managing the global supply glut." Russia apparently doesn't share
this perceived seriousness, with Russia's Energy Minister Alexander Novak
saying on Friday that he doesn't expect to sign a deal with OPEC
during this meeting. Just more talk.
And yet another meeting is
scheduled in Vienna for October 28 and 29, according to OPEC sources,
followed by a "long-term strategy" meeting on November 1-4, and a
technical meeting again in Vienna on November 23 and 24, and possibly a
follow-up meeting of the High Level Committee a day later on November 25.
Finally, recommendations will be presented at the previously disclosed and
much anticipated meeting on November 30.
That's plenty of evenly
spaced talk that is sure to keep OPEC in media headlines, and give the oil
speculators something to play with until that time. After that, it's
anyone's guess as to how long prices will hold, but it's likely that
regardless of the outcome of the 30 November recommendation meeting, OPEC
will continue to feed the beast with talk—and the market will readily
accept the handout, even if it's in lieu of the fundamentals.
***
Share the link of this article with your facebook friends
|
|
|