Arab Times

Oil market shrugs off rising threat to Iran deal

Saudi, Kuwait, UAE could make up any loss of crude from Tehran

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is a Reuters market analyst. The views expressed are his own.

— Editor

But the president and his new secretary of state, assuming the nominee is confirmed by the USSenate, will still face the same diplomatic constraint­s in ending the deal and renewing the boycott of Iranian oil.

European countries, including Britain, France and Germany, are no more eager than before to abandon the nuclear deal or re-impose broad economic sanctions.

Russia is also unlikely to cooperate since relations and cooperatio­n with the United States are at the lowest ebb since the end of the Cold War.

And the United States has embarked on a trade war with China, which is further complicati­ng a relationsh­ip already beset by multiple other disputes.

In the circumstan­ces, traders may have concluded even a failure to recertify the deal will not lead to the removal of a significan­t amount of crude from the market.

They may also have concluded any loss of crude from Iran would be made up by increased production and exports from Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates, Iraq and Russia.

Compliance with the OPEC/nonOPEC output curbs has left all these countries with actual or potential spare capacity to increase production to offset any loss from Iran.

Corporate tax cuts approved by the USCongress and the president at the end of 2017 have been broadly welcomed by investors and the business community.

Tax reductions for businesses and many individual taxpayers should increase the economy’s productive potential as well as stimulatin­g short-term consumptio­n and investment.

Overall, the tax reductions should have a positive impact on economic growth and oil consumptio­n in the short term, which should be bullish for oil prices. But the medium term impact is more uncertain because tax reductions are boosting the economy at a time when the business cycle already appears relatively mature.

The fiscal stimulus may be accelerati­ng the final stages of the economic cycle and bringing forward the date of the next recession.

The current expansion is already the third-longest on record and it will become the second-longest in May 2018 and the longest in July 2019.

The business and financial community has broadly welcomed the tax cuts even if it has doubts about other elements of the president’s programme.

But the departure of the president’s chief economic adviser and the secretary of state have unsettled the same business leaders who have vocally supported the administra­tion on tax.

Most business leaders are opposed to the president’s more populist and nationalis­t policies even as they support his tax cutting.

There is little enthusiasm among business leaders and investors for increased tariffs, tougher restrictio­ns on investment and “de-globalisat­ion”.

The administra­tion’s more hawkish and nationalis­t turn in recent weeks may therefore be fuelling increased concern about the medium-term economic outlook with negative implicatio­ns for oil demand and prices.

Benchmark crude oil prices and calendar spreads have been softening slowly but steadily for the last two months.

Global oil consumptio­n is growing rapidly and inventorie­s have fallen, but supply is now expected to increase by more than 2 million barrels per day in 2018. Production from the USshale fields is surging in response to the increase in prices and drilling since the middle of last year.

Coupled with extra oil from Canada, Brazil and Norway, production should be more than enough to meet the rise in demand in 2018.

Brent spot prices and calendar spreads had been rallying strongly since the end of June 2017 in the expectatio­n the market would move into a sustained supply deficit.

But the surge in shale production has made that much less likely and traders have started to revise their expectatio­ns for a deficit in the second half of the year.

The shift has flowed through into spot prices and more importantl­y into spreads, which track the supply-demand balance closely.

Brent spot prices and spreads have essentiall­y shown no net increase since the middle of December as the earlier rally has stalled. (RTRS)

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