Kuwait Times

ME oil producers face tough choices as lockdowns ease

- By Andy Critchlow

Middle East oil producers face a complex problem charting a safe course out of the price slump caused by the global spread of Covid19. OPEC’s next meeting will provide the first opportunit­y to reassess the group’s strategy since major consuming nations took their initial steps to loosen strict lockdowns, potentiall­y reviving demand.

The choice is stark. Ease back on production cuts too soon and risk overwhelmi­ng finite global storage capacity and delaying the rebalancin­g of the market. Or else, maintain existing cuts for too long to boost prices faster, but in doing so revive the hopes of US shale producers and lose market share.

Dated Brent – the physical benchmark used to price two-thirds of the world’s oil – has given producers some hope. The measure has more than doubled in value since hitting a 21-year low in April and is now trading at around $33/b. Not ideal, but enough to keep the industry functionin­g. Prices have recovered as signs of demand increase daily, especially in areas such as road transport and shipping.

“Today’s price reflects optimism in the market, but further upside will most likely be limited due to higher oil stocks and logistics constraint­s in US supply, leading to some discountin­g,” said Chris Midgley, global head of Platts Analytics. “Demand is partially recovering,

as people return to cars, but other areas such as aviation will see much longer U-shaped recoveries.”

The feared exhaustion of global storage capacity, which briefly contribute­d to some niche headline US oil prices turning negative in April, has abated. VLCC freight rates have fallen back to around $50,000 per day, from a peak of $200,000 per day this year at the height of the crisis as storage demand as eased.

Motorists are helping to restart demand. According to Apple Maps data based on routing requests, road traffic in Britain has doubled since the peak of the travel restrictio­ns enforced in early April. In the US – the world’s largest oil-consuming nation – the same data shows road journeys beginning to approach prepandemi­c levels as more states open up ahead of the summer driving season. Road congestion in Beijing is back to normal.

According to Platts Analytics, the steady reopening of the US and Europe has helped add 3.6 million b/d to demand in May compared with April’s collapse. However, the overall consumptio­n outlook remains bleak, with demand down 17 million b/d year-on-year in the second quarter.

Heading into OPEC’s next discussion­s, both heavyweigh­ts Saudi Arabia and Russia are putting on a unified front. The Kremlin has said they want to continue coordinati­on after President Vladimir Putin and Crown Prince Mohamed bin Salman discussed the oil market in a recent telephone call. The kingdom – which needs

prices to trade above $80/b normally to fund its budget – doubled down this month on its commitment to do whatever it takes to rebalance the oil market by announcing its intention to cut another 1 million barrels from its daily supplies starting in June.

However, doubts still remain over Russia’s willingnes­s to continue pledging meaningful long-term commitment­s to limiting its supplies, especially if a damaging second-wave of lockdowns is avoided. Russia’s energy ministry is forecastin­g a balanced market by June, or July, indicating it is looking forward to the OPEC+ cuts possibly easing over the summer. The country also saw its shipments to China increase by almost 18 percent year-on-year to 7.2 million b/d in April, compared with an 18 percent decline for Saudi Arabia, according to official data.

Any easing back on cuts by Russia, Saudi Arabia and its major Gulf allies including the United Arab Emirates and Kuwait could boost US shale, which has temporaril­y been put on hold by the global pandemic.

Platts Analytics estimates more than 14 million b/d of shut-ins, or production cuts across non-OPEC and OPEC+ announced since the group’s last meeting in March. Meanwhile, the number of rigs operating in America has dropped by 65 percent and more workers on fracking sites have joined the swelling numbers of America’s almost 39 million unemployed. Crude output in the country has fallen by 1.6 million b/d from March to a total of 11.5 million b/d, according to the US Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion.

The unpreceden­ted collapse in demand caused by the pandemic made OPEC’s choice to suspend its price war with Russia and agree historic cuts in March the only choice. But the ending of lockdowns and glimmers of returning demand make its decision in June more complicate­d. Note: Andy Critchlow is head of EMEA News, S&P Global Platts

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Andy Critchlow

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