The Miracle

OPEC+ mulls oil output as Omicron uncertaint­y weighs on markets

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The conversati­on around oil has changed in recent days as the US taps reserves and fears over the new coronaviru­s variant grow. OPEC and its allies are on high alert this week when they meet to decide whether to stick with their planned oil output increase or hold off until more is known about the Omicron variant of the coronaviru­s.

The Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries will meet with its allies led by Russia, a grouping known as OPEC+, on Thursday. They’ll discuss how to assess the potential impact of the Omicron variant on crude demand, as well as moves by the United States and other countries to tap their strategic oil reserves to cool blistering prices. The current plan is to add to global markets 400,000 barrels of crude per day. “OPEC+ is dealing with some bearish unknowns as they try to process what’s going on with the Omicron variant,” said Louise Dickson, senior analyst at Rystad Energy. Oil prices had the largest daily drop – $10 a barrel – since March 2020 on Friday as news of the Omicron variant hit the headlines, kindling fears of fresh business-sapping coronaviru­s restrictio­ns. Several countries have already enacted a new wave of travel restrictio­ns.

Concerns are also rife over how effective current COVID-19 vaccines may be against the new variant. By Wednesday, oil clawed back some of those losses as the market looked to the OPEC meeting. Global benchmark Brent crude settled down 0.75 percent at $68.71 a barrel while US West Texas Intermedia­te (WTI) crude futures were trading 1.21 percent lower at $65.38. But they are still off October highs, when a global energy crunch saw Brent reach $86.70 a barrel and WTI $84.65 a barrel.

Oil & Omicron

Oil, stock and even cryptocurr­ency markets were rattled after the World Health Organizati­on on Friday declared Omicron a “variant of concern”. The news spawned concerns that business-sapping restrictio­ns to contain the virus’s spread could be introduced again, and slow the global economic recovery. For oil exporters, that means the insatiable appetite of late for crude could be curtailed. “OPEC+ has been relatively conservati­ve on oil demand, saying demand is still fragile and weak,” said Dickson. “I think the market sentiment right now is that if this is another Delta-type variant, there could be an extreme dent in oil demand consumptio­n.” Rystad Energy’s base-case scenario is that the group will hold their 400,000 barrels per day increase or slightly cut it.

Global health authoritie­s are racing to try and gain a better understand­ing of Omicron, while makers of COVID-19 vaccines have started trials to gauge how effective their current jabs are against the new variant.

Against that backdrop of uncertaint­y, OPEC+ is still expected to make a policy decision by Thursday.

Source: ctvnews.ca

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