Arab Times

OPEC sees oil rally towards $80 as short-term spike, not supply-driven

IEA warns global oil demand may suffer as crude nears $80

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LONDON/DUBAI, May 16, (RTRS): OPEC sees oil’s rally towards $80 a barrel as a short-term spike driven by geopolitic­s rather than any supply shortage, four OPEC delegates said, a sign the group is not rushing yet to rethink its supply-cutting agreement.

The view of top exporter Saudi Arabia is that any brief, speculator-driven jump in oil prices is not sufficient grounds for producers to boost output, an OPEC source familiar with the kingdom’s thinking said.

For such a decision to occur, the rally would need to be driven by data pointing to a supply impact, the source said.

The four OPEC delegates said the latest rise in prices stemmed more from concern about U.S. sanctions on Iran and tension in the Middle East, rather than a suddenly tighter balance between oil supply and demand.

“Prices are high just because of the tensions,” one of the OPEC delegates, who declined to be identified, said.

Since last year, oil has been supported by a deal by the Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, plus Russia and other non-members, to cut output. Prices have risen about 40 percent since the accord began in January 2017.

Global benchmark Brent crude on Tuesday hit $79.47, the highest since November 2014, before easing below $78 on Wednesday. Prices could rally further before declining, according to some in OPEC.

“It may exceed $80 and then go down,” one of the sources said. In any case, the extent of the rally has yet to cause any real concern. “Not yet,” said another delegate, asked whether oil at $79 was too high.

Meanwhile, global demand for oil is likely to moderate this year, as the price of crude nears $80 a barrel and many key importing nations no longer offer consumers generous fuel subsidies, the Internatio­nal Energy Agency said on Wednesday.

The Paris-based IEA cut its forecast for global demand growth to 1.4 million barrels per day for 2018, from a previous estimate of 1.5 million bpd.

Oil has risen 51 percent in the last year, driven by coordinate­d supply cuts and, this month, by concern over Iranian supply after the United States said it would reimpose sanctions on Tehran over its nuclear activities.

“It would be extraordin­ary if such a large jump did not affect demand growth, especially as end-user subsidies have been reduced or cut in several emerging economies in recent years,” the IEA said.

Oil inventorie­s in the world’s richest nations, the most transparen­t and easy to track, have now fallen 1 million barrels below the five-year average, the level targeted by the Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and its partners, as the group restrains crude output for a second year.

“For now, the rapidly changing geopolitic­al landscape will move the attention away from stocks as producers and consumers consider how to limit volatility in the oil market,” the IEA said.

“For its part, the IEA will monitor developmen­ts closely and is ready to act if necessary to ensure that markets remain well supplied.”

Iran, which produces around 3.8 million bpd and is OPEC’s third-largest supplier behind Saudi Arabia and Iraq, could face severe disruption to its exports.

The IEA said the previous round of sanctions, which were lifted in early 2016, cut Iran’s crude exports by more than 1 million bpd.

“It is too soon to say what will happen this time, but we should examine whether other producers could step in to ensure an orderly flow of oil to the market and offset a disruption to Iranian exports,” the agency said.

Iran exported 2.6 million bpd of crude in April, according to the oil ministry’s news agency SHANA.

The IEA estimates demand for OPEC’s crude will average 32.25 million bpd for the rest of 2018, compared with output of 32.12 million bpd in April.

World supply, meanwhile, rose 1.78 million bpd in April from a year earlier, driven predominan­tly by non-OPEC production.

Economic crisis has driven Venezuelan production to its lowest in years, while natural decline in Mexico cut production by 175,000 bpd in April, down 8 percent year-on-year, the largest fall for any non-OPEC producer.

Record output from the United States pushed non-OPEC supplies up by 2.1 million bpd year-on-year to 59.4 million bpd. Production elsewhere outside OPEC was flat to lower, the IEA said, noting declines in the North Sea and Brazil.

The IEA, which advises Western government­s on energy policy, expects non-OPEC supply to rise by 1.87 million bpd in 2018, up from a previous forecast of 1.8 million bpd.

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