The agreement could come as worrying development for consuming nations as they grapple the inflationary squeeze from oil prices at $95 a barrel and the prospect of a winter energy crunch. Markets are on track to tighten as the European Union sanctions Russian crude over its invasion of Ukraine.
Although the cut is “is inconsequential in volume terms, it is rather intended to send he signal that OPEC+ is back into a price-watch mode,” said Bill Farren-Price, head of macro oil and gas research at Enverus. The group may hope this move “will be enough to deter any short-sellers.”
Brent crude was 3.2% higher at $96.03 a barrel as of 1:16 p.m. in London.
While traders mostly expected the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies would hold steady, the coalition’s leading producer had indicated it might be about to pivot. Saudi Energy Minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman said a couple of weeks ago that the OPEC+ alliance — which has just finished restoring the output halted during the 2020 pandemic — was now considering cuts as a way to stabilize excessive volatility in global markets.
Crude futures had lost 20% in the past three months on fears of a global economic slowdown, imperiling the revenue windfall being enjoyed this year by the Saudis and their partners. China, the biggest oil importer, has exhibited signs of an “alarming” economic slowdown, with apparent consumption sinking 9.7% in July to a two-year low amid weaker business activity and harsh Covid-19 curbs. Meanwhile, the US has skirted close to recession and pursued stricter monetary policy.
Nonetheless, the decision to cut clashes somewhat with the OPEC+ alliance’s own outlook. Analysis from an OPEC+ committee that met last Wednesday showed that global demand will be higher than supplies in the fourth quarter, causing inventories to draw down at a rate of 300,000 barrels a day.
OPEC’s newly-appointed Secretary-General, Haitham Al Ghais, said in mid-August that he expects a “bullish” surge of demand from consumers eager to resume normalcy after two-years of Covid restrictions.
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