Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

NO REBOUND in oil prices any time soon, experts say at Davos forum. Page 1D.

Iran’s output to add even more to supply, forum told

- JAVIER BLAS AND GRANT SMITH BLOOMBERG NEWS

DAVOS, Switzerlan­d — The first mantra of the oil crisis was “lower for longer.” Then “lower for even longer.” Now in Davos, oil executives are starting to talk — or rather, whisper — about a new nightmare scenario: “A lot lower for a lot longer.”

Oil executives, policy makers and banks said in the first days of the World Economic Forum that a recovery will remain elusive in 2016 as major producers keep pumping and China’s fuel appetite slackens. And they fret that prices could take another hit as Iranian crude freed from sanctions flows back on to world markets.

“It is the third year in a row we have more supply than demand,” Fatih Birol, executive director of the Internatio­nal Energy Agency, told Francine Lacqua in a Bloomberg Television interview. “Prices will be still under pressure. I don’t see any reason why we have a surprise increase in the price in 2016.”

Things won’t get better until energy markets have weathered the “supply shock,” said Tony Hayward, chairman of Glencore Plc, one of the world’s largest trading houses. Quite simply, there’s “too much oil,” he said.

The end of nuclear-related sanctions on Iran on Saturday has freed the member of the Organizati­on of Petroleum Exporting Countries — once the group’s second-biggest producer — to revive crude exports cut in half by almost four years of restrictio­ns. Impatient to claw back lost revenue, the Persian Gulf nation issued a directive to restore

daily output by 500,000 barrels as soon as possible.

“The lifting of Iran sanctions will in my view continue to add supply, so I don’t see a bottoming-out of oil prices and a re-spiking any time soon,” said UBS Group AG Chairman Axel Weber. Depressed prices give Iran’s rivals, such as OPEC leader Saudi Arabia, all the more incentive to keep pumping, he said.

Unpreceden­ted cutbacks in spending on new supply — a 16 percent investment reduction this year will follow last year’s 20 percent decline — is setting the stage for a recovery, but it will be 2017 before this materializ­es, the IEA’s Birol predicts. The scale

of the spending cuts means the rebound will be all the harder when it comes, according to Crescent Petroleum Co.

“This will have an impact in the future, making the cycle more extreme,” Majid Jafar, chief executive officer of U.A.E- based Crescent, said in an interview.

The rebound is more likely to take place in the second half of 2017 than the first, when Chinese economic growth will improve, according to Saudi Basic Industries Corp. Chief Executive Officer Yousef Al-Benyan. Sabic, as the company is known, is the largest publicly traded company in the Middle East and among the world’s top five petrochemi­cal groups.

“There is a lot of pressure from the supply side” preventing a recovery in the meantime, Al-Benyan said.

“The second half of 2017 is going to be the time for a rebound.”

Still, crude won’t recover to levels seen during the boom years, said Daniel Yergin, vice chairman of consultant­s IHS Inc. Oil prices will probably be a “good deal higher than they are today” in the second half of 2016, but “not $100, not $70, not $60,” Yergin said.

For Crescent’s Jafar, “$50 is a possibilit­y.” That’s about half the value oil was trading at only 18 months ago.

Venezuela wrote Wednesday to fellow OPEC producers requesting an emergency meeting as the collapse in oil prices hurts the group’s most vulnerable members, according to people with knowledge of the matter.

The letter was sent to the 12 other cartel members, the people said, asking not to be

identified as the document isn’t public.

Venezuela has repeatedly called for OPEC members to meet as slumping oil prices sap government revenue. De facto leader Saudi Arabia, which has insisted it won’t cut production unless nonOPEC exporters cooperate, signaled again on Jan. 17 that it will stick to its strategy of defending market share.

Ecuador is the only country to have publicly backed the move since Bloomberg News reported Venezuela’s request for a meeting after President Rafael Correa said Wednesday an output cut would support prices.

OPEC’s secretaria­t in Vienna declined to comment.

 ?? AP/MICHEL EULER ?? A police officer guards a checkpoint at the Seehof hotel on Wednesday in Davos, Switzerlan­d. The world’s political and business elite are meeting at the resort town this week for the annual World Economic Forum.
AP/MICHEL EULER A police officer guards a checkpoint at the Seehof hotel on Wednesday in Davos, Switzerlan­d. The world’s political and business elite are meeting at the resort town this week for the annual World Economic Forum.

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