Impact of OPEC+ oil output cut to depend on deal duration, Citi says

News

Citi Research said in a note on Wednesday the final market impact of OPEC+ decision to slash oil production would depend on the agreement duration, and expects major consumers to “react with displeasure” to the deal.

OPEC+ agreed to its deepest cuts to production since the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic, despite a tight market and opposition to cuts from the United States and others.

“Our projections for 2023 without this cut was for a 2.1 million barrels per day (bpd) average oversupply, given weak demand and relatively ample supply, so such a real over 1 million bpd cut could halve this surplus,” the note added.

OPEC‘s de-facto leader Saudi Arabia said the cut of 2 million bpd of output – equal to 2% of global supply – was necessary to respond to rising interest rates in the West and a weaker global economy.

“U.S. Congress could be compelled to resurrect the so-called NOPEC (No Oil Producing and Exporting Cartels) bill again … while SPR policy might also shift, and there could be greater impetus to complete an Iran nuclear deal,” Citi said.

Oil prices rose for a fourth session on Thursday, with Brent at a three-week high.

Citi also said the possibility of further supply disruptions, potential reshuffle of trade flows amid the upcoming Russian oil price cap and European embargo, and deteriorating macro-economic environment would continue to drive volatility through the winter and 2023.

Articles You May Like

Australian Dollar recovers as traders await RBA minutes next week
Gold climbs after soft US inflation data; still set for weekly loss
Lots of balls in the air moving markets with the US government getting in the act today.
The USDCHF has fallen below the 100H MA, trendline support and swing area support @ 0.8956
Gold Price Today: Yellow metal prices trade flat in one month, gain Rs 225/10g, silver down by Rs 700/kg

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *