The Day

OPEC deal shows resolve — and desperatio­n

- By AOMAR OUALI and PAN PYLAS

Algiers, Algeria — OPEC’s unexpected agreement to trim production shows the cartel still has the resolve — and even desperatio­n — to try to guide oil prices higher. But don’t expect triple-digit crude anytime soon.

Ministers from the oil cartel reached a preliminar­y deal Wednesday in Algeria to cut production for the first time since the global financial crisis eight years ago. The size of the cut was modest — to between 32.5 million and 33 million barrels per day from just below current levels of around 33.2 million barrels per day.

Though limited, the decision came as something of a surprise — expectatio­ns were that once again the regional rivalry between Saudi Arabia and Iran would create a stalemate. Oil prices shot up by around 5 percent in the wake of the cut.

On Thursday, oil markets were far less frenzied, with the benchmark New York rate a further 28 cents higher at $47.33 a barrel and the internatio­nal standard, Brent, 34 cents higher at $48.58.

Any failure to enact the agreement could lead to a renewed drop. And that risk remains — the deal, after all, is not done yet.

Output levels for individual countries will have to be finalized at a meeting of the Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries in Vienna in November. OPEC agreed that Nigeria, Iran, and Libya would be exempted from making big cuts as their economies are already stymied by conflicts or sanctions.

The main concern ahead of the meeting centered on Iran, which has been resistant to cutting production, as it’s trying to restore its oil industry since emerging from internatio­nal sanctions over its nuclear program earlier this year.

“We see this more as an act of desperatio­n,” Commerzban­k analyst Barbara Lambrecht said. “Saudi Arabia appears willing to bear the main brunt of the burden.”

Saudi Arabia, the world’s biggest producer, played a key role in the OPEC policies that helped push oil prices sharply lower over the past couple of years.

In the summer of 2014, oil prices were trading above $100 a barrel but increased output from non-OPEC countries, particular­ly the U.S., created an oversupply in the market. Instead of cutting production, OPEC opt-

One potential impact is that any material increase in oil prices could encourage U.S. shale oil and gas producers back into the market, thereby offsetting any impact in prices.

ed to pump at high volumes to maintain market share and, seemingly, to drive U.S. shale oil and gas producers, who have higher operating costs, out of business.

Crude prices plunged, and in January of this year fell below $30 for the first time in more than a decade. The lower prices have hit many oil-producing countries hard, particular­ly poorer OPEC members Venezuela and Nigeria, but also non-OPEC states Russia and Brazil. It’s also taken a toll on Saudi Arabia — its public finances are not as strong as they were and the country’s credit rating has been downgraded.

One potential impact of the understand­ing forged in Algiers is that any material increase in oil prices could encourage U.S. shale oil and gas producers back into the market, thereby offsetting any impact in prices — in the longer-term as it takes time to kick start production given financial constraint­s.

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