The OPEC+ alliance still hasn’t set a date for its next meeting that’s intended to approve an extension of its deepest output curbs aimed at propping up crude prices.
Vast wealth and the promise of dramatic change make for cautious optimism concerning Saudi Arabia, the chief executive…
2228 Views | the publication reaches you by | Saudi Arabia TodayThe producer group’s unity had helped drag oil back from its plunge into subzero prices in April, with most main players delivering their agreed share of output curbs.
But some reneged on their commitments, and now Riyadh and Moscow are warning that they may phase out the supply curbs if those producers don’t change their ways.
Delaying the meeting “is for Saudi Arabia to have a chat with the rest of OPEC+ to give them time to throw trial balloons,” said Bart Melek, head of commodity strategy at Toronto Dominion Bank.
“There’s a fair amount of confidence that the mid-month meeting is likely to extend cuts,” he said.
Saudi Arabia and Russia have already reached a preliminary deal to extend output curbs for an extra month. Riyadh has delayed the release of its July crude pricing until Sunday at the earliest, according to people with knowledge of the situation.
Complicating their task is the threat of rising U.S. shale output, which has been encouraged by oil’s rally. Higher prices have already spurred some producers to bring wells back online. EOG Resources Inc. and Parsley Energy Inc. are preparing to ramp up production just weeks after turning off the taps.
“It’s not an easy exercise for OPEC to balance the market,” said Olivier Jakob, managing director of consultants Petromatrix GmbH. The Saudis likely realize “they need to be careful about not helping the U.S. crude oil to come back too quickly.”
Dwindling Demand
While oil prices have rebounded rapidly since mid-April, the rally is faltering amid gathering headwinds. Civil unrest across America is also complicating the economic recovery from the coronavirus pandemic and risking a second wave of infections.
U.S. diesel demand fell to a 21-year low last week and gasoline stockpiles swelled, according to Energy Information Administration data, suggesting that fuel consumption isn’t recovering as quickly as anticipated.
Further stymieing demand, the White House is suspending passenger flights to the U.S. by Chinese airlines as relations between the two leading economies deteriorate.
150 take part through Watani Al Emarat via the ‘Your City Needs You’ initiative Over 150 volunteers –…
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