OPEC Options If Crude Selloff Worsens: Tougher Talk Or Emergency Meeting?

 | Nov 14, 2018 03:20AM ET

December 6 is possibly the most important day in this year’s oil calendar as the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) meets to try and end the most prolonged oil selloff in history. Yet, OPEC may not have the luxury of waiting three weeks if Tuesday’s 7 percent price plunge is any indication of what could happen to the market in the coming days. Tough talk of output cuts, or maybe even an emergency meeting before December 6, could be stronger options.

Dominick Chirichella, an energy markets veteran who’s watched OPEC for the past 35 years, professed surprise at how the 15-member cartel—led by Saudi Arabia and assisted by non-member but major oil producer Russia—has waddled through its latest crisis. He said:

“The way OPEC has worked in the past is to start to hit the market with a series of 30 second news snippets to test the waters as to the different type of strategies they may be considering for an upcoming meeting.”

Chirichella pointed out that when Saudi Arabia first hit the newswires over the weekend, stating it believed supply needs would fall by 1 million per day (bpd) by December and that it will provide half of those cuts, the market replied with Monday's half-hearted rally before the commodity ended lower.

That response, according to the director of risk and trading at the New York-based Energy Management Institute, should have told the Saudis that 1 million bpd “may not be enough of a cut.” Yet, said Chirichella, OPEC proceeded to release on Tuesday a bearish monthly outlook report where it cut 2018 oil demand growth after projecting weaker consumption in the Middle East and China, while raising non-OPEC supply growth for the year. The market’s response? An epic 7 percent drop.

h3 Tuesday’s Plunge Still A Mystery/h3

Some say Tuesday’s plunge wasn’t so much caused by the OPEC report as it was by another outlook from the International Energy Agency (IEA), whose executive director Fatih Birol had implored US oil drillers to further raise their already record high production of crude. The IEA mostly looks after the interests of Western oil importers. Birol suggested the United States over time “add a Russia” worth of 10 million bpd to their current output of 11.6 million bpd.

Phil Davis, who trades both equities and oil at PSW Investments in New York, says rumors that Russia wasn’t on board with the Saudis on the production cuts could have triggered the latest down wave in oil. He added:

“I imagine some large fund was also unwinding a big position, something we will probably hear something about later.”

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Some blamed quant or algorithmic trading models that basically sell or buy based on price targets, devoid of fundamentals and emotions. A few cited liquidation activity ahead of the expiration of December options for US crude futures on Wednesday, with traders trying to clear a huge open interest of almost 34,000 lots consisting of puts. Several others said it was the continuation of Monday’s fear factor, caused by US President Donald Trump’s tweet that OPEC should not cut production regardless.

h3 Will Oil Go Under $50 A Barrel Next?/h3

Whatever the trigger, oil prices are off almost 30 percent since hitting four-year highs in early October, on the promise of tight supplies from US sanctions on Iranian oil exports, before collapsing, ultimately due to waivers given by Washington on those sanctions.