Money Week

An uncertain outlook for oil supply

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The price of oil “whipsawed from a peak of $128 to as low as $98” in a fortnight as the market gyrated between Western sanctions on Russia, China’s Covid-19 surge and uncertaint­y about new supply from US shale drillers and Opec, says The Economist. Brent crude traded at around $119 a barrel on Wednesday, up by more than 50% this year.

The pullback from recent highs suggests some “speculativ­e froth has blown off” the market, says Liam Halligan in The Daily Telegraph. But note also that “Western energy sanctions, while extremely serious, are not quite as tight as suggested by the belligeren­t political rhetoric”. It may be “the end of the year at the earliest” before Russian crude stops flowing to the UK and the EU.

Sanctions have caused shipping delays and disruption to global oil markets, says BCA Research. But by May ships will have been rerouted and China and India, keen to snap up Russian energy at a discount, will have put sanctions workaround­s in place. Western policymake­rs are putting pressure on Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates to boost supply, but this is complicate­d by the fact that Saudi Arabia and Russia are “strategic partners”, says Daniel Yergin of IHS Markit. “Ever since the price collapse of 2014” Riyadh’s “goal had always been to bring Russia into a [supply] agreement” rather than have it “stand outside as a competitor”.

US shale producers may raise output, but Western oil producers are reluctant to invest (see page 5). “The US has been looking for other sources of supply, including possible barrels from Venezuela, which has been under sanctions,” says Patti Domm for CNBC. A nuclear deal with Iran could bring one million barrels per day back onto markets, “but those talks have bogged down in recent weeks” (see page 10).

 ?? ?? Tankers will be re-routed to work around sanctions
Tankers will be re-routed to work around sanctions

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