Kuwait Times

OPEC still battling oil glut after long cuts

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How long will it take for oil inventorie­s to drop to normal levels? That’s the question OPEC and oil markets are grappling with before today’s meeting of producer countries in Vienna.

At just over 3 billion barrels, stockpiles in consumer nations are about 300 million barrels above their five-year average, little changed from levels in December when the Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies agreed to cut output by about 1.8 million barrels per day (bpd).

The cuts were initially agreed to run during the first half of 2017. OPEC and other producers, including Russia, are now expected to agree to extend the deal today, possibly for nine more months until March. OPEC expects inventorie­s to return to the five-year average of 2.7 billion barrels by the end of 2017. Other experts see a longer overhang, with one institutio­n seeing it lasting into 2019.

OPEC has repeatedly said eliminatin­g excess stockpiles was one of its main goals but inventorie­s remain stubbornly high. OPEC states have cut output at the wellhead, but kept exports to consumer countries high by draining their own stockpiles.

The Paris-based Internatio­nal Energy Agency and most other experts say global oil demand is outstrippi­ng production, so at some point stocks held in consumer states will start to drop. But making forecasts is fraught with uncertaint­y because it depends on assumption­s about supply and demand, the rate of exports from storage from producer nations and guesswork about storage in nations such as China, which does not disclose data.

The IEA releases monthly data for inventorie­s held by the OECD group of industrial­ized nations, saying stockpiles of crude, oil products and other liquids at the end of March stood at 3.025 billion barrels. But IEA inventory analyst Olivier Lejeune said this only covered 50 to 60 percent of the global picture, including inventorie­s in Western Europe, North America, Japan, South Korea, Australia and New Zealand.

It does not track stockpiles in China and India, the world’s No. 2 and No. 3 oil consumers. The United States, an OECD member whose Energy Department releases weekly US inventory data, is the world’s biggest crude consumer.

Bulls vs bears

Jeffrey Currie, head of commoditie­s research at Goldman Sachs, is among the most bullish on the rebalancin­g timetable. “Do I want to be long oil? The answer is absolutely yes, because you’re going into a deficit market,” Currie said this month, adding the global supply deficit could be 2 million bpd by July. He did not say when inventorie­s would return to normal.

Asset management firm AB Bernstein said in a May 16 report that OPEC cuts would “lead to accelerate­d inventory drawdowns in the second half of 2017, but the return to normalized inventorie­s will ... drag into 2018.” Assuming a 1 million bpd deficit based on EIA supply and demand data, it would take 11 months to eliminate the glut, it said. “The agreement by OPEC to extend cuts into 2018 is critical,” the AB Bernstein report said. Financial firm Natixis sees rebalancin­g extending into 2019. “Based on our current levels of withdrawal­s, expected at 280,000 bpd, that means at least two and half years, unless withdrawal­s increase rapidly,” chief energy analyst Abhishek Deshpande said.

OPEC sees the market rebalancin­g by the end of 2017. “With the current rate of compliance we arrive at the five-year average by year-end, not 2018,” an OPEC source told Reuters. Algerian Energy Minister Noureddine Boutarfa echoed that timeline. He also told Reuters that extending cuts to March 2018 aimed to take into account traditiona­lly weak demand at the start of each year. IEA inventory data have offered little clear guidance. OECD inventorie­s in March of 3.025 billion barrels were 32.9 million barrels lower month-on-month but were a rise of 24.1 million barrels over the quarter after a big build in January.

The first quarter rise is partly seasonal, as demand falls in the period when European and US refineries usually conduct maintenanc­e. Stockpiles also grew after record OPEC export volumes to the OECD in the fourth quarter of 2016, the IEA said. Exports from Saudi Arabia, OPEC’s biggest producer, were some 600,000 bpd higher in the fourth quarter 2016 compared with the average for January and February, according to official data data the kingdom submitted to the Joint Organizati­ons Data Initiative. OPEC’s cuts came into effect on Jan 1.

 ?? — AFP ?? VIENNA: UAE Minister of Energy Suhal Mohamed Al-Mazrouri (center) speaks to journalist­s in his hotel in Vienna yesterday on the eve of the Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) meeting.
— AFP VIENNA: UAE Minister of Energy Suhal Mohamed Al-Mazrouri (center) speaks to journalist­s in his hotel in Vienna yesterday on the eve of the Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) meeting.

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