Limited Market Backlash From The Doha Meeting

 | Apr 24, 2016 06:02AM ET

Some of the world’s major oil producers met in Doha on April 17 to discuss possible steps to support the oil market. Market participants had expected a deal involving a stabilisation of production at January levels, perhaps until October.The deal was expected to exempt Iran, which had just returned to international markets following the lifting of sanctions in January. But the meeting ended without a deal as producers said they needed more time to reach agreement. In our view, a production freeze that excludes Iran would not materially alter the outlook for oil supply. Therefore, the failure to reach an agreement in Doha, does not significantly change the fundamentals of the market. The oil market is rebalancing thanks to supply cuts among high-cost US shale producers and robust demand growth.

The proposal to impose an oil production freeze that excludes Iran would not have changed the oil market dynamics for three reasons. First, Iran is the main growth country for oil production. It has already added 370k barrels per day (b/d) since January and we expect its production to continue rising, eventually adding a total of 600k b/d by June. Meanwhile, Goldman Sachs expects the rest of OPEC plus Russia to collectively add only 243k b/d on average in 2016. Unless Iran joins in the freeze agreement, the outlook for oil supply is unlikely to change materially.

Second, the production freeze was proposed at January levels, when output among the producers involved was already at historic highs. Since then, total production by Russia and OPEC (excluding Iran) has fallen by nearly 500k b/d. Therefore, a freeze at January levels still leaves these countries significant scope to raise output.

Below freezing point

(m b/d)