At its 171st official meeting on November 30, OPEC announced that it will reduce oil production by 1.2 mb/d to 32.5 mb/d from reference October levels, effective for 6 months, starting from January 1, 2017.
Not many people expected that OPEC would agree to bring its crude
oil supply down to 32.5 million barrels per day (mb/d) from almost 33.8 the
previous month. It was because negotiations were thought to be in deadlocked
over the issue of who would cut by how much. Biggest surprise was Russia which changed
its position from freeze to reduce output by 300 kb/d from the 11.2 mb/d it
reached in October.
In Algiers meeting three months ago, OPEC ministers announced that
they need to freeze daily output between 32.5 to 33 million barrels. Since then
they have been working on the formulation of such a freeze and possibly a cut.
It took a while because the intention was not to upset anyone. On November 30
meeting the OPEC announced that they agreed to cut daily production level from
33.7 to 32.5 million barrels per day, between January and June 2017. The best
way for not upset anyone and hence come up with a reasonable agreement or face
saving deal was to have proportionate cuts of 4,5% in members' output. Nigeria and
Libya are exempted from the deal because they are still trying to recover from
previous outages due to civil unrest and war. Angola's reference level was
backdated to September 2016 in order to take account of scheduled maintenance
which lowered output in October. Iran's reference level was backdated to
pre-sanction period so that the country is in fact allowed to increase its
output by 90 kb/d. Indonesia, currently a net oil importer, decided to suspend
its OPEC membership. At the end only a few countries have pledged to cut
output. At the end of the day, the deal is indeed a production freeze for some
members, a cut for some others, and an increase for a few. We should keep also
in mind that usually OPEC production in the first half of the year is lower
than the second half.
Table:
OPEC Crude oil production levels and adjustments
|
Production allocations agreed in Nov 2016
|
|||
|
Production in Oct 2016
(OPEC MOMR)
|
Reference production
level
|
Adjustment
|
Committed production from
Jan-2017
|
Algeria
|
1088
|
1089
|
-50
|
1039
|
Angola
|
1586
|
1753
|
-80
|
1673
|
Ecuador
|
549
|
548
|
-26
|
522
|
Gabon
|
202
|
202
|
-9
|
193
|
Iran
|
3690
|
3975
|
90
|
3797
|
Iraq
|
4561
|
4561
|
-210
|
4351
|
Kuwait
|
2838
|
2838
|
-131
|
2707
|
Qatar
|
646
|
648
|
-30
|
618
|
S. Arabia
|
10532
|
10544
|
-486
|
10058
|
UAE
|
3007
|
3013
|
-139
|
2874
|
Venezuela
|
2067
|
2067
|
-95
|
1972
|
sub-total
|
30766
|
31328
|
-1166
|
29804
|
Indonesia
|
722
|
|||
Libya
|
528
|
|||
Nigeria
|
1628
|
|
|
|
Total
|
33644
|
|
|
|
Notes: Reference
production levels are generally Oct 2016 from Secondary sources.
|
||||
For Angola reference level is Sept 2016. Iran is given an
enhanced reference production level.
|
On 30 November 2016, the day when the OPEC meeting was held, the
oil market was very volatile. Combined volumes in the ICE and CME crude oil
contracts on that day hit all-time high on 30 November 2016. The total amount
of crude traded on both exchanges (futures+options) was around 5.3 million
contracts, equivalent to 54 times the daily world oil supply.
Market fundamentals and expectations of traders about the future
are reflected in the prices in the paper barrel market, where many other
factors also come into play. Seen from this perspective, the recent erratic oil
price dynamics are indeed due to the weighted combination of expected market
fundamentals and speculation, which, again, are affected by many factors. The
main driver of market sentiment should be the facts, and not fears, concerns
and worries of traders against perceived risks. But since the oil market is not
transparent, free and efficient market, traders' expectations will continue to
put additional pressure on prices.
Look at the pathetic oil market data, especially monthly data, you
will understand what I mean. World oil statistics are very far from perfect.
Data on spare capacity, production, consumption and inventories are mostly
estimates or best guesses, particularly for most of the non-OECD countries.
Even OPEC doesn't believe what its members report to the Secretariat, which is
why OPEC uses data from secondary sources to monitor the market, including
production in its member countries. But where do those secondary sources get
the data from is a question nobody asks. What an irony! In an environment where
nobody can verify and prove the real production, cheating will prevail. This
means the implementation of the deal in terms of self-compliance and the
commitment to reduce production is vital for the "deal" to be
successful. Production levels is said to be monitored by a committee of
representatives from Kuwait, Venezuela and Algeria, plus two non-OPEC
participants. I really wonder how they will monitor it. Cheating has been a
common feature of the OPEC production cut decisions in the past. I don't see any
reason why this tendency should change this time because of the concerns about
losing or defending market shares of big producers particularly in Asia.
This brings us to another issue which is crucial for the oil
market. The OPEC "deal" is supposed to remove 1,8 mb/d of oil from
the market for 6 months - 1.2 mb/d from OPEC plus 0.6 mb/d from non-OPEC
countries. Will we see a 1.8 mb/d cut? I don’t think so. In my opinion, OPEC
will produce more oil next year than it produced this year. Besides, reducing
production levels from an already high level won’t bring the oil market back
into balance. But this is not too important either. In fact, the agreement, if
succeeds, will remove that amount from the world oil production, not from the
world oil trade. In other words, we should indeed be talking about the exports
from the producer countries, rather than production. But it seems that nobody
cares about that.
It is too early to forecasts how the OPEC deal will impact the
global oil market. If this "deal" somehow achieves its intended aim
it is highly likely that oil prices will rise, to $60 or above per barrel
according to many observers. This could weaken demand growth in 2017, erasing
the benefits of production cut. Moreover, price increase may accelerate the
drawdown in stocks and tighten the supply/demand balance in the first half
2017. The problem is that crude inventory levels are above historical averages.
This is why the question whether the inventory overhang can be brought down to
historical range, and if yes, when, can still not be answered. Of course, if
the OPEC deal is implemented successfully and important non-OPEC crude producers cooperate fully, we could see gradually eroding high
inventories which would potentially move the market into “backwardation.”
(Backwardation is a situation in which prices in the forward curve are lower
than they are today; the normal state of the market, called “contango,” is when
future prices are higher than today’s)
Higher prices will bring along two more crucial issues: the
reactions of the Trump administration coming to power in the US in January, and
the US shale oil industry which might be a big beneficiary of the OPEC deal. US
crude oil supply expectations for 2017 change quite fast in relation to the price
of oil. Current expectation is about 8.5 mb/d throughout 2017. In addition,
shale oil production in Permian has so far been very resilient. Break-even
price levels for majority of shale oil producers are estimated to range between
$50-$70 per barrel. This means that cutting OPEC production and an increase in
oil prices may have a double effect to open the door for shale oil producers as
well as other non-OPEC producers to ramp up their output at the expense of
those OPEC members who promised to cut production.
A tightening in the world oil balance will take time, surely more
than 6 months what OPEC agreed for now. The production cuts are planned to last
for six months. Then what? After six months OPEC will review the market fundamentals
and decide at its next formal meeting on 23 May 2017 whether to extend its
ill-fated policy. We can be sure that between December 2016 when OPEC plans to
hold a meeting with non-OPEC countries and OPEC's next ministerial meeting on
May 2017, there will be plenty of formal and informal meetings that will make
oil prices a permanent item in global agenda in 2017. Whether the immediate
upward push to oil prices following the OPEC meeting will be kept or lost is
not easy to judge but optimism created for prices to stay well above $50 in
2017 might fade away faster than thought. The current Brent forward price
curves do not show a long-term impact of OPEC deal on the oil market.
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