Arab Times

Oversold: Oil traders punish OPEC for promising too much

Market wanted deeper cuts, exit strategy

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VIENNA, May 27, (RTRS): As OPEC’s latest meeting wrapped up in Vienna on Thursday night, ministers congratula­ted each other on its rare spirit of amity and consensus. The talks were, without a doubt, a success.

But two hours later, one veteran delegate was staring in despair at the numbers flashing red on his smartphone showing crude down some 5 percent to $51 a barrel. “That is a disaster,” he said. While OPEC has worked hard in recent years on improving communicat­ion to ensure the right message is delivered to financial markets, Thursday’s experience showed the 14-member group and its non-OPEC allies still have a long way to go.

The problem was not what was delivered, but what appeared to have been promised beforehand, industry analysts said.

OPEC agreed on Thursday to extend its existing production cuts by nine months — more than the initially suggested six months — in tandem with non-OPEC producers, including Russia.

But hints from the group that it could deepen supply cuts, extend them by as long as 12 months, curtail exports and tell the market how exactly it would terminate supply curbs in 2018 had raised market expectatio­ns much higher.

“OPEC oversold the meeting to the market way too early,” Amrita Sen, from the consultanc­y Energy Aspects, told Reuters in Vienna.

The market reaction was all the more disappoint­ing given that from OPEC’s perspectiv­e, the meeting went very well.

“I have been in OPEC close to 20 years. It’s the first time that I witness 100 percent compliance (with cuts) from OPEC and close to 100 percent from non-OPEC,” Iranian Oil Minister Bijan Zanganeh told Reuters afterward.

OPEC’s No. 3 producer, Iran has repeatedly clashed in past meetings with OPEC’s de-facto leader, its political arch-rival Saudi Arabia.

Russia, which effectivel­y is fighting a proxy war with Saudi Arabia in Syria, said on Thursday its energy cooperatio­n with Riyadh would last well into the future.

In its statement, OPEC said it could extend curbs further or cut more.

Normally, all this would be more than enough to trigger a bull rally.

“It’s strange. I don’t know why (the market crashed)” Zanganeh said.

OPEC and non-OPEC oil producers first agreed to cut output in December 2016 — the first joint deal in 15 years — and said the curbs could be extended by a further six months.

The extraordin­ary move was aimed at battling a global glut of crude that halved prices from 2014, forcing Russia and Saudi Arabia to tighten their belts and leading to unrest in Venezuela and Nigeria.

The cuts helped push oil prices back above $50 per barrel but also spurred growth in the US shale industry, which does not participat­e in the output deal. That slowed a rebalancin­g of supply and demand, with global inventorie­s still near record highs.

As the price fell back towards $47 in early May, near a six-month low, Saudi Energy Minister Khalid al-Falih said OPEC would do “whatever it takes” to rebalance the market, including a longer extension for the output cuts.

“If you declare nine months in advance, people are bound to expect more,” Sen said. Russia also added to the expectatio­ns by saying this week that cuts could be prolonged by 12 months.

The market was also disappoint­ed OPEC did not mention its previously stated plan to bring stocks down from a record high of 3 billion barrels to their five-year average of 2.7 billion, said Olivier Jakob from the Petromatri­x consultanc­y.

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