QNB Weekly Commentary OPEC Deal Looks To Maintain Oil’s Sweet Spot

 | Jul 01, 2018 01:35AM ET

OPEC deal looks to maintain oil’s sweet spot

OPEC and Russia (‘OPEC+’) wound up their meetings last week by agreeing on a production increase for the first time in nearly two years. While details remain cloudy with no formal output targets provided, a supply increase of up to 1 million barrels per day (bpd) over the next six months looks likely. Partly reflecting the agreement’s lack of precision, spot oil prices have been volatile in the aftermath. The key Brent benchmark initially surged around 4% before falling back close to the $75 level seen before the meetings.

The background to the decision to lift production is, of course, OPEC’s agreement to reduce and then freeze its output by 1.2 million bpd from October 2016 levels with several non-OPEC members (primarily Russia) weighing in with a further 600k bpd of cuts. These reductions were spurred by the cocktail of then sluggish global demand and surging US shale supply which was leading to a supply glut, surging inventories and benchmark prices tumbling below $40/b.

Fast forward 18 months and the output cuts, which were extended to mid-2018,have helped restore balance to the oil market. OECD inventories have pulled back towards longer-run norms and spot prices are back above $70/b. In fact, with Brent crude recently briefly touching $80/b, prices are in danger hitting levels that could crimp global demand and spur a global capex wave that could reignite severe downside risks over the longer haul. The desire to keep oil prices relatively stable around current levels, which are close to a sweet spot, therefore underpins OPEC’s decision to relax its output curbs.

But while the ‘OPEC+’ deal has certainly played a role in returning the oil market to health, it has not been decisive. Over the period of the deal, US oil output has continued to surge. In fact, since October 2016, US supply has surged by almost 1.7 million bpd to over 10.4 million bpd; close to a 20% increase.

The US’ supply surge would have completely nullified the impact of the ‘OPEC+’ deal had the cuts in reality not been substantially deeper than intended. Rather than the combined 1.8 million bpd agreed reduction, the group’s output has actually fallen by over 2.3 million bpd vs. October 2016. The key driver of ‘over-compliance’ has been the collapse of Venezuelan output which has slumped by some 700k bpd; more than 600k bpd less than its agreed commitment!

Global oil supply dynamics