Vancouver Sun

Oil prices jump following OPEC agreement

Canadian oilsands stocks benefit after agreement to cut production

- JESSE SNYDER

Oil prices surged Monday following a deal between OPEC and non-OPEC members to curb production, triggering a jump in share prices of ailing Canadian oil and gas companies.

Prices for West Texas Intermedia­te rose more than three per cent Monday to US$53 as of 2:30 p.m. ET, its highest level in roughly 18 months; WTI closed at US$52.83. Prices for Brent crude also rose more than three per cent to US$55.

Rising oil prices bolstered the stock prices of Canadian oilsands companies more tightly tied to oil price fluctuatio­ns. Cenovus Energy Inc. was up 1.45 per cent on the day, while Meg Energy Corp. saw a 7.74 per cent jump. The biggest gains among more integrated players included Husky Energy Inc. (4.19 per cent) and Imperial Oil Ltd. (2.58 per cent).

Oil market participan­ts were responding to a deal between OPEC and non-OPEC members in Vienna on Saturday, in which it agreed to trim back production. The deal, which involves 24 oil-producing countries, would cut as much as 1.8 million barrels of oil per day out of the global oil market, hastening a return to supply-demand balance.

The deal in Vienna quieted some concerns over whether OP EC could persuade non-members to join in a cut, with 11 non-members, including Russia, Mexico, Oman and Kazakhstan, collective­ly agreeing cut roughly 558,000 bpd.

But analysts remain wary over whether participan­ts will follow through on production cuts.

Analysts at Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. LLC said many of the proposed declines would have come even without a deal, either due to seasonal slowdowns in demand or declining productivi­ty.

The analysts expect OPEC and non-OPEC members to follow through on roughly 70 per cent of targets, and U.S. shale production to grow at a moderate rate of 500,000 bpd in 2017.

“This will not be enough to offset the decline in OPEC and non-OPEC output plus the additional 1.2Mbpd in demand growth,” the analysts said in a research note. The investment firm pegs its target for oil prices at US$60 per barrel in 2017, and US$70 for 2018.

Others are less bullish on prices. Michael Cohen, an analyst at Bar- clays Capital, said U.S. shale producers in particular could make an unexpected­ly large portion of the production gap after dramatical­ly lowering their operating and capital costs.

“The cost savings over the last year are going to be sufficient to see a lot more new sales come onto the market than what may have been envisioned a year ago,” he said.

Rising prices will also crimp demand while urging new producers into the market, he said. In particular, offshore U.S. oil producers could incrementa­lly bring on a substantia­l volume of new supply.

“The problem is that there are a lot of moving parts. A higher price means more supply from pricesensi­tive suppliers, and it means less demand from everywhere.”

Barclays sees prices peaking at US$60 in the second quarter of 2017, then falling to US$52 over the final quarter of the year.

Citigroup analysts believe Saudi Arabia’s forecast for a limited 2017 shale rebound “seems gravely misplaced,” noting that “shale producers will be grateful for OPEC and non-OPEC producers making room in the market for them.”

They said US$50 oil is a “key level above which U.S. shale oil output can grow concertedl­y, and if OPEC/ non-OPEC countries hold to their proposed production cuts, the call on U.S. shale rises significan­tly,” Citi analysts said.

Barclays’ Cohen said this is partly due to new supplies and slowing demand, but also because of the long lag time in data.

Many OPEC members have continued to misreprese­nt their own production data, by categorizi­ng condensate as crude oil, or by exaggerati­ng the productivi­ty of refinery outputs. The result could be a shift in reported numbers rather than actual production volumes, which would add to global oil supplies.

“We’re being led on to believe that this is happening, or that this is not happening, but it’s going to take until the summer for us to realize that there’s going to a little bit of a hangover from the party in the first half of next year.”

OPEC says it will begin forcing its new quotas in January.

The cost savings over the last year are going to be sufficient to see a lot more new sales come onto the market.

 ?? J PAT CARTER/GETTY IMAGES ?? A man fills his car at a gas station in Oklahoma City, Okla. OPEC’s plan to cut production could mean higher fuel costs.
J PAT CARTER/GETTY IMAGES A man fills his car at a gas station in Oklahoma City, Okla. OPEC’s plan to cut production could mean higher fuel costs.

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