The Pak Banker

Trump's push for huge deal to cut oil supply draws disbelief

- NEW YORK -AP

With just one tweet, US President Donald Trump conjured up the prospect of a global oil alliance to rescue the industry from the worst shock in history. The question is whether it evaporates just as quickly. After the president's social-media interventi­on on Thursday, oil traders are franticall­y assessing whether Saudi Arabia, Russia and possibly even the U.S. -- the world's three biggest producers -- are poised to strike a once-unthinkabl­e grand bargain to cut daily supplies in unison by 10 million to 15 million barrels.

It's unclear whether it's feasible or even legal for such a coalition to come together. Or indeed whether it would be enough to tame the tsunami of unwanted crude now bearing down on world markets, which could be two to three times bigger than the cut touted by Trump.

"It's too little, too late," said Ed Morse, head of commoditie­s research at Citigroup Inc. "Cuts are required immediatel­y, and unless they happen, the price is going to go down significan­tly and force them to happen." There's no doubt that the industry could benefit from some interventi­on. With global oil demand slashed roughly a third by the coronaviru­s pandemic, a gusher of surplus crude threatens to overwhelm the world's storage tanks in a matter of months. The meltdown is exacerbate­d by the dispute between Moscow and Riyadh, prompting the Gulf kingdom to push unpreceden­ted volumes of crude at customers in a tussle for market share.

Trump's claim that the two belligeren­ts are ready to end their price war pushed the Brent crude price up by 21% on Thursday. The global benchmark gave up some of those gains Friday, falling by 3.2% as of 11:32 a.m. in Singapore. The Saudis partially backed up their U.S. ally with a call for all producers to meet and stabilize the market.

Yet the kingdom stopped well short of promising production cuts and maintained its insistence that any deal would require cooperatio­n not just from fellow members of the Organizati­on of Petroleum Exporting Countries and their former ally in the Kremlin, but from all major producers including the U.S. itself. Russia was quick to deny any agreement had been reached

Texas, home to the nation's shale- oil revolution, has shown some willingnes­s to join in, with the head of the state's regulator and some companies saying they should participat­e in production curbs.

Trump's tweet contained no such pledge. Still, a meeting between the president and several CEOs from oil majors scheduled for Friday is further fanning speculatio­n that the White House is receptive to an even wider form of collaborat­ion.

The deal between Riyadh and Moscow that created the OPEC+ group was a long time coming. It was only after two years of rock-bottom oil prices and several false starts that the alliance came together in late 2016. Even then, they were slow to boost crude prices and the group was dogged by accusation­s that some countries -- including Russia - - were reneging on their promises.

Rebuilding the same alliance and adding even more producers into the pact would be a major challenge. "The more people are at the table, the more difficult it is to get a deal," said Pierre Andurand, whose Andurand Commoditie­s Fund soared more than 140% last month through bearish bets on crude. "I find it difficult to believe that a deal like that could be agreed quickly."

Even if political and industry leaders in the U.S. backed collaborat­ion with OPEC in principle, operators in the U.S. shale patch would somehow need to parcel out their share of any collective cutback. American anti- trust laws, unless they were changed, would make any such effort fraught with legal risks.

Nor is it certain that the Saudis and Russia are ready to heal their split. The two fell out last month when Riyadh failed to convince Moscow to cut production in response to the demand slump caused by the virus.

Angered by the splinterin­g of the coalition they'd led for three years, the kingdom responded with an aggressive supply surge to a record 12 million barrels a day and deep price cuts aimed at Russia's traditiona­l markets.

 ?? NEW YORK
-AP ?? People walk on temporaril­y closed section of Grand Concourse during the outbreak of COVID-19.
NEW YORK -AP People walk on temporaril­y closed section of Grand Concourse during the outbreak of COVID-19.

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