No Single Oil Producer Can Drive Prices Right Now. Here's Why

 | Dec 19, 2019 11:07AM ET

For oil traders focused on the production side of the industry, a serious concern is always the ability to identify the so-called swing producers, usually identified by a country, capable of moving the price of crude up or down based on their own policies.

In order for a swing producer to shift the price of the commodity, they must be able to either flood the market with enough additional oil to cause oversupply or cut production significantly enough to effect undersupply or at least create the impression of oversupply or undersupply among speculators. For a swing producer to have the power to push prices up, there must be no other player in the global market with significant spare capacity to make up the difference.

Right now, as we head into the new decade, there are no swing producers. Here's what that means for the market: