I wrote the following piece originally for IRNA,
the official news agency of the Islamic Republic of Iran, on 22 January 2016.
Since
the end of 2015, both international crude oil benchmark prices, US West Texas
Intermediate and UK Brent, lost more than 20% and expectations are that this
decline will likely continue at least until mid this year because of a simple
reason. Severe oversupply and weak demand unite to reduce oil prices.
In
its latest oil market report on 19 January 2016, the International Energy
Agency said the world could face an estimated excess 1.5 million b/d (barrels
per day) of crude supplies in the first half of 2016. The same day the
International Monetary Fund revised its global growth forecast downwards by 0.2
percentage point, to 3.4% for 2016, due mainly to a weaker pickup in emerging
market economies and a weaker-than-expected US expansion than was forecast in
October 2015. This means that supply demand imbalance can be expected to widen.
In other words, the excess could be even more than what the IEA estimates. In
its report the IEA’s answer whether the oil price could continue to fall was
“an emphatic yes”. Today, it would perhaps use a stronger phrase.
Already
weakened markets cannot absorb new supplies. Iranian exports will most likely
add to already oversupplied world oil markets. The US and EU lifted key
sanctions against Iran in January, removing constraints that have capped Iran’s
oil exports at 1 million b/d over the past four years. Iran’s return to the oil
market brings three main questions forward: Quality, quantity and timing of oil
that Iran can and will offer to the market.
How
much Iran can ramp up its production and export is a debated issue. It is yet
to be seen whether Iran will boost its output by an immediate 500 kb/d plus an
additional 500 kb/d within six months as was proclaimed by Iranian officials. What
is clear so far is that Iran will have to reduce its big piles of condensates
stored at sea. This might be not as easy as thought previously because current
market conditions may make it difficult to market.
In
fact the delicate issue is not so much about the quantity of additional Iranian
oil could be flowing to world markets or the quality of it, but what kind of policy
Iran will be aiming for inside OPEC and in international markets.
Inside
OPEC Iran, who was the second largest producer inside the organization before
sanctions, may fight for its desired place in terms of production capacity and
quota. This would create another tension between Saudi Arabia and Iran who are
already not in good terms due to their contrasting policies in the region. This
means that Saudi Arabia and Iran will unlikely to agree on anything within
OPEC.
It
seems that Iran will try to regain its market share in Euro-Mediterranean
market by offering attractive terms if necessary and hence compete directly not
only with Saudi, Iraqi and Russian oil but also with the US oil. It should be
noted that after restrictions were lifted on the US crude exports, now US crude
will compete with others. The first US oil tanker arrived in Europe on January
20.
On
the demand side, growth has remained fragile because of weak economic sentiment
in major emerging markets as well as in some advanced economies, the
expectation of rising interest rates in the US dampened indirectly economic
growth and slowed the increase in oil consumption, mild winters in major oil
consumers which undercut seasonal demand for heating oil, shrinking subsidies
in some markets which sharply increased fuel prices, and a strong US dollar
which has also exerted downward pressure on crude oil.
A
combination of new supplies to already oversupplied market and weakened markets
due to sluggish demand growth will lead to an increasing inventory builds and
hence put more pressure on prices to go down. At least this is the case for the
physical barrel market. Current market fundamentals and expectations of traders
about the future are reflected in the prices in the paper barrel market, where
many other factors which are not directly related to oil market fundamentals
come into play. When looked at this angle, it would not be surprising that oil
prices declined along with declining stock market indexes worldwide. The daily
average traded volume during December in Nymex WTI and ICE Brent crude futures was
equivalent to around 1.5 billion barrels, 16 times more than the daily world
oil production. Currently the paper barrel market is in contango (whereby near-month
futures are cheaper than those expiring further into the future).
So,
what should Iran do in this highly volatile price environment? Flood the market
with additional oil which makes the over-supply situation worse, and let the
oil prices, which trade near a 12 year low, slide further? Insist on bringing
an extra 1 million barrel per day of oil into the market within this year, and
hence cause further irritation in the paper barrel market?
Maybe
the first thing Iran should do is to avoid aligning with the Saudi oversupply
strategy. That strategy was supposed to pressure Russia and other OPEC members,
cause delays in large conventional upstream projects, crowd out higher-cost
producers from the market and at the same time preserve its market share even
with low prices. Instead, it helped brining the oil prices below $30 per
barrel. Seen from this perspective, what Iran should not do is to significantly
increase its production before selling its stored oil and get into a price war with
Saudi Arabia.
It
is better for Iran to think long term: invest today in future production
capacity and aim to sell the oil at the highest possible price possible. In the
short term this translates into increasing oil production only gradually and
giving priority to the stored oil for exports. Equally important Iranian officials
should speak with one voice, and avoid making statements that would create further
negative sentiment in oil markets. Last but not least, time has come for Iran
to be more active inside OPEC. Iran should help setting a new course for the
organization which is in danger of becoming irrelevant.
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