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OPEC+ to Saudis: ‘You Keep Cutting, We’ll Keep Producing’

Published 06/05/2023, 04:37 AM
Updated 09/02/2020, 02:05 AM

For the benefit of the rolling cameras, Saudi Energy Minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman triumphantly declared that the rest of OPEC+ will keep to promised oil cuts till 2024 while the kingdom itself will slash an additional million barrels per day next month. Beaming, he added:

“It is really a great day for us because the quality of the agreement is unprecedented and I would have to say the quality of cooperation is unprecedented.”

The OPEC+ delegates around him were smiling, too, probably because they knew they’d be producing while the Saudis were vowing to double down on cuts.

The journalists in the room scribbled into their notepads, wondering but probably afraid to ask the obvious of the prince, who despises dissenting reporters as much as he hates the short-sellers in oil. And that question would be:

“Your Excellency, doesn’t this deal actually suck for the Saudis?”

The real deal of the just-concluded OPEC+ meeting, held in person for only the second time since the pandemic, was there was no unprecedented deal — not at least the kind described by Abdulaziz.

This is because, in the three years since the COVID outbreak that took oil prices to minus $40 per barrel, demand for the commodity is almost back to pre-pandemic levels, with several caveats though. And those are:

  • Slower-than-anticipated oil demand in top importer China
  • Fears of a global recession
  • Inflation in the United States that refuses to go down as quickly as the authorities want, despite more than a year of aggressive rate hikes by the Federal Reserve
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Enter OPEC+ and its production cuts.

Oil revenue is the lifeblood of the economies in OPEC, or the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, a 13-member Saudi-led group whose main objective is to be the price-setter of the commodity.

Ten other oil-producing states, including Russia that aren’t OPEC members have also been keeping their output closely in line with the group’s for the sake of price. The 23-nation alliance is collectively known as OPEC+.

For core OPEC members like Kuwait and Iraq, more than 90% of all their revenue comes from oil. In the United Arab Emirates, oil accounts for 13% of exports and 30% of GDP, and in Algeria, it’s 25% of GDP.

In Saudi Arabia, OPEC’s largest member, oil accounts for 70% of total export value and 53% of government revenue. That’s not all. Media reports say the Saudis need at least $500 billion or as much as $8.5 trillion (the numbers keep fluctuating) to successfully diversify their economy away from oil.

Thus, it’s easy to see why OPEC — particularly Saudi Arabia, which needs a barrel at more than $80 to realize its ambitious plans — would go to any extent to get the price it wants.

WTI 30-Minute Chart

OPEC’s answer to low oil prices has always been production cuts that deprive the market of millions of barrels of crude per day to create an artificial supply squeeze that ultimately pushes the market higher.

But in a global economy with the sort of caveats mentioned earlier, short-sellers, or those betting on lower oil prices, have won more often than OPEC — despite world oil supplies being at one of their lowest in years.

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This has rankled Abdulaziz enough that he has repeatedly warned since he took his post in 2019 that he will make the speculators who are short on oil “ouch” — his favorite expression for causing hurt.

On several occasions over the past four years, the Saudi prince has gloated at his ability to produce this so-called ouch — typically each time after he announced a substantial and unexpected production cut. To the detriment of the prince, however, the pain has often moved quickly from the short-sellers back to OPEC, which had seen prices drop despite the cuts.

It was this setting that the latest OPEC meeting came into. Some two weeks before the event, the Saudi energy minister again warned the short-sellers in oil to “watch out,” triggering speculation that he was planning another production cut.

But the real surprise was in what Abdulaziz’s Russian counterpart Alexander Novak had to say. Novak said he did not think a cut was necessary. The seeds of dissent had already been planted, though, in the storm that followed after Novak’s comments were published, the Russian minister quickly singled out Bloomberg for misquoting him without refuting similar accounts carried by other news services, including a Russian paper.

Then under bizarre circumstances, Bloomberg, Reuters, and The Wall Street Journal were denied media passes to cover the June 4-5 OPEC meeting. No reasons were given. Online searches by Investing.com showed that prior to the meeting, all three published stories on oil or OPEC that defied the sort of glowing narratives that Abdulaziz loved to espouse.

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As the meeting itself began, things couldn’t have gone more wrongly.

Tensions between Saudi Arabia and Russia were real, and Moscow refused to add meaningfully to the 500,000 barrels it claimed to be cutting on a daily basis — which no one else in OPEC+ believed anyway but had to pretend was true to paint a picture of solidarity within the alliance. What everyone knew to be true, of course, was that to fund its war against Ukraine, Russia would sell every drop of oil it could at any price within the $60 per-barrel limit set by G7. Ask the Indian and Chinese buyers for proof of that.

Another major headache for Abdulaziz was posed by the energy ministers of the African states. They refused at first to lower the production quotas handed to them before the pandemic, despite their troubles in producing enough barrels now to meet those targets due to underinvestment in their oilfields.

Their reluctance was understandable: Once they surrendered their higher quotas for lower ones, they could not go back to producing more under the rules of Abdulaziz — who was instead trying to boost the quota of the Saudis’ closest ally, the UAE.

Abdulaziz took some of the African ministers into his suite to try and get them to agree. There’s no clarity on how many willingly succumbed to his charm offensive (or browbeating or bullying if you will). But in the end, Angola, which had been in a standoff with the Saudis from the start, gave in, according to media reports, allowing Abdulaziz to declare victory at the post-meeting news conference that followed.

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But what victory was this actually?

Abdulaziz said in addition to existing OPEC+ cuts of 3.66 million barrels daily, an additional 1.4 million would now come off. But as Reuters observed in a report:

“Many of these reductions will not be real as the group lowered the targets for Russia, Nigeria and Angola to bring them into line with actual current production levels.”

Reuters also added,

“By contrast, the United Arab Emirates was allowed to raise output targets by around 0.2 million bpd to 3.22 million bpd.”

The Wall Street Journal confirmed something Investing.com had been saying for a while in its reports — that OPEC+’s production targets are typically decided by Abdulaziz himself (and, we add, his half-brother and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman — the chief architect of the grandiose Saudi economic remaking plan). The targets are then dressed up as OPEC+ decisions “often without consulting with other group members,” The Journal said, reinforcing our reporting on this.

Market reaction to Abdulaziz’s announcement was interesting, to say the least.

Prices for both U.S. West Texas Intermediate, or WTI crude, and U.K. Brent jumped more than $2 a barrel each ahead of their regular New York trading on Monday, opening a 'gap up' in Asian electronic trade.

But in the hours that followed, their gain on the day dropped to about 50 cents a barrel at one point before steadying at above $1 at the time of writing, at 02:30 ET (06:30 GMT). Sunil Kumar Dixit, chief technical strategist at SKCharting.com, said:

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“WTI opened with a runaway gap left at $72, taking prices to $74.30. However, the gap has been largely filled in follow-up downside price action.”

“Now, $71.70 is immediate support, below which consolidation towards $71.40 and $70.50 can be witnessed. If it moves back higher, it can capture $74.30 in the near-term, and only if it sustains momentum, can the next bullish level of $75.60.”

WTI Daily Chart

Sticking out for the benefit of the world to hear was the Saudi pledge to cut a million barrels daily in July and repeat the same in August, if necessary. “I would have to call it the Saudi lollipop,” Abdulaziz said, likening it to a sweet Saudi gift to all those who want higher crude prices.

With the oil market at the cusp of what is typically the start of peak summer demand, crude prices should be on a higher trajectory from here. On the flip side, some of the best-laid plans in history have fallen to the wayside for the most unexpected reasons. And OPEC+ has eight months of price failure to show from two major production cuts.

Said John Kilduff, partner at New York energy hedge fund Again Capital:

“The only real thing we can see is the Saudi pledge to drop their production to 9 million barrels daily in July, after all cuts. That’s 3 million below the U.S, production of 12 million barrels. If the Saudis don’t get prices up as much as they want, they’ll drop production to 8 million next. That will be 4 million short of U.S. output. The Russians will continue to max out at 9 to 10 million barrels. So, who’s losing market share here, if not the Saudis?”

“The reality of this situation is, the rest of OPEC+ is telling the Saudis: ‘You keep cutting, we’ll keep producing.’ As for the lollipop gift, their reply would be: ‘You suck on it, Excellency.’”

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**

Disclaimer: The content of this article is purely to educate and inform and does not in any way represent an inducement or recommendation to buy or sell any commodity or its related securities. The author Barani Krishnan does not hold a position in the commodities and securities he writes about. He typically uses a range of views outside his own to bring diversity to his analysis of any market. For neutrality, he sometimes presents contrarian views and market variables.

Latest comments

Interesting and informative article Barani, much appreciated.
hi
8000 leases to drill? I wouldn’t buy for a Dollar
Now thats just Funny lol Too many restrictions to pump out more crude dingleballs
I don't see any real interest in the era of AI and beyond to invest in oil. This lack of interest alone may drive prices higher temporarily since the shift from oil may take longer than expected, but the higher the prices the more urgent it will be to be released from its dependence along with the pressing environmental issues. Thanks for the article.
Making Sex Dolls and Wives maan… Come on watch the movie The Stepford Wives
Get a real job Barani.
Try getting a real understanding of opinion that's contrary to yours, Stephen. Your comment yesterday on the latest Saudi cut being another defense of Russia shows how "well-informed" you are.
Lots of words here. Could do without half the fluff. Just give us what was last year, what is present and whats the out look. He said she said doesn’t matter just give me simple numbers. Go OPEC.
Dear Ge K, I'm not here to just throw numbers at you -- if really that's what you want, you can find it yourself and quite easily too. On the contrary, my job is to articulate the mood in the market -- he "animal spirits", if you will -- and why people are inclined to do this versus that. What "he said, she said" is interesting because it shows variance and consensus on market think. Read the comments field here, and you'll find there are those who appreciate a narrative like this, long as it may be. Thanks and bests.
* "the" animal spirits (typo)
So who will win? Fed rate hikes or opec cuts ?
Today's prices are indicative of immediate think. Beyond that, there are so many other things in the grinder.
Okay, now we know its covid oil wars, where every body wanted to destroy the other, I’ll start shorting oil regardless of any upcoming fundamentals
OK cut production to 1 gallon, and the market will pay you a BAZILLION $$'s for it; then what?
Another FU from once allied Saudi Arabia to team Biden to help OPEC+ member, Russia.
Yas 😁
This comment of yours proves how clueless you are of the real politics going on now between the House of Saud and the Kremlin behind the walls of this august building in the Austrian capital. The Saudis are pis(sed) really with their Russian brothers for selling Urals left, right and center at well below Brent rates to India and China to keep feeding the Kremlin's war chest for Ukraine. The Russians care only about the war in Ukraine and not a shred about the rest of OPEC despite the early moral support extended by Riyadh, when it declared that OPEC's cooperation with Russia was "apolitical". At the weekend that just passed, Saudi-Russian ties were near the lows of March 2020. The difference is Abdulaziz chose not go on a warpath with Novak because there'd be no Donald Trump this time to patch things up between the two and bring the market back from doom. What the Saudis are doing now is 100% for themselves. They have zero care for Russia except to keep OPEC together.
Outch! Watch out! Just A member of Bearish Club
No more bearish than the members of the Ultra Bull Club called OPEC :)
Being 'Bullish' on oil, is flat out Un-American. So you make some $$ on the long side, but you lose it at the register. Cap gain taxes, Heat your house taxes, all the rubber dog crap purchased from Amazon tax, fill your tank tax, and every single item trucked, planed, and trained to where ever you shop tax. 0 sum game.
Mr Barani, great article. One question i have is if the actual/real supply or stored oil levels are very accurate. I am saying this from a perspective not knowing how they are actually tracked. Is it based on numbers reported from various agencies throughout the producing countries and if it is, is there any fudging of the numbers. It is easy to see when there is over abundance worldwide as the full tankers start to stack up in ports and finding additional tankers is difficult and this data is easy to come by from the tanker companies as well as any company that provides land storage tank farms. But from a global perspective, is the current consensus that supplies are low from a historical perspective based on estimates, actual numbers provided, or a little of both? Thank you sir.
Mr Dole, thanks much for the feedback on the story, as well as the question. Visibility on global supplies is fairly good. Most of the mainstream observations are based on actual numbers and as noted tanker tracking is an art form now. And the major hubs in Asia (Singapore), Europe (ARA) and the US are closely tracked. And supplies are at the lower end of the five year average, based on actual numbers provided. But as you know, there are extenuating circumstances where demand is concerned. That's what the story above is all about. Thanks and bests.
 Thank you for the clarification.
 You're most welcome.
Wow this guy is definitely working for the Bears. Was this supposed to be serious journalism? Now I understand why they only wanted a limited amount of real journalists at the OPEC+ meeting.
It's an analysis of the just concluded OPEC meeting based on my opinion/commentary and you don't agree with anything here, as I see you already don't. And I don't work for any bear; I work for myself :)
john, what Barani is writing about, has been true for some time. he is stating and giving details on an Important meeting. his opinions gives insight into present political division of the opec+ members.
 Thanks, Ac. We're both aware, of course, of how powerful this lobby called OPEC is. To me, OPEC is one mass collusion built upon collusion, making it an antithesis of everything WTO is about.
Well, if Saudi would see fit they would tell the other members to cut aswell, missleading article headline. Saudi is the boss in the opec+ cartel, they do as they wish when they wish, America and Isrel cant really do anything against them anymore, as they have more money then american and isrel now. Seems the rules based order is vanishing quickly. XD
The headline is based on the rest not agreeing to anymore cuts, at least real ones. They will continue producing based on demand. From story: “Many of these reductions will not be real as the group lowered the targets for Russia, Nigeria and Angola to bring them into line with actual current production levels. By contrast, the United Arab Emirates was allowed to raise output targets by around 0.2 million bpd to 3.22 million bpd.”
The Saudis are, of course, the bosses at OPEC -- no one denies that. It's an exclusive Saudi-run club where you play 100% by Saudi rules. For the rest in the club, they have their own economies to feed as well. So, they play along but constantly overproduce as necessary. That's what's been happening and will continue happening.
you have been for some time biased in your articles
Thanks for the feedback. You are welcome to challenge my views.
 I am biased towards making a profit. I appreciate views on both sides. It keeps me honest and aware of possibilities I may not have considered. Keep the good articles coming.
hi
Gap up does say something, as the gap has been filled in rather quickly.
Indeed, Sunil.
writer who get paid to spam Saudi name
Writer who writes as he sees it.
Hy
If OPEC+’s production targets are decided by the Saudis, as the article describes, doesn’t that dismess the claim that members are saying: ‘You keep cutting, we’ll keep producing.’ ? It has to be one of the two. As for speculations about the future, there is a track record for the Saudis’ manegemnt of Oil market that puts them in advantage. It’s worth remembering that if the Saudis are losing market share now, they had gained extraordinary market share in 2020 at the expense of Russia.
the biasis in the article are proven even more with this comment. If you’d followed Saudia closely, you’d know that there hadn’t been any time in history that they had as much regaularions and governance as they do now. At every level, governance and regulations for decision-making are put in place, with the help of top mamagement consultants.There are trusted reports that even for decisions within boards of which MbS chairs, the decision is taking by vote.
loool
 The top management consultants you are talking about are mostly Westerners/outsiders paid to be an echo chamber for his Excellency, the Crown Prince. Of course, there is due diligence but ultimately it's all reported to him for his consideration and he decides, and once he decides, there is virtually no dissent. Everyone knows this nature of MbS and no one wants to tread the wrong path with him. This is communicated to me actually by people close to those management agents themselves. I'm not simply speaking out of conjecture, sir.
Believe me, everyone will abide by the prescribed quota for the benefit of all producers.
Said anonymous user
“Many of these reductions will not be real as the group lowered the targets for Russia, Nigeria and Angola to bring them into line with actual current production levels. By contrast, the United Arab Emirates was allowed to raise output targets by around 0.2 million bpd to 3.22 million bpd.” (from story)
Us oil rigs fall to lowest level since 2020 it means us production is declining as well at these oil prices.
You'd have to get them all on the same table and ask. Whatever the case, EIA wins for transparency. That's why its numbers are followed so diligently.
US wells, especially horizontal wells, are being drilled 3 times are far horizontally these days. When i was a drilling engineer a wells max lateral footage was typically about 5,000’ give or take. Now wells are almost all drilled with 10,000’ of wellbore lateral and many are pushing to 15,000. So you have effectively drilled 2 wells in a lot less time as the vertical section/rig moves etc time isn’t wasted and so the “productive” footage is the same with fewer rigs. That is why US companies are making so much money and can do well in a much lower prices than when shale well drilling/horizontal with large fracking became the normal way to do business. It is an efficiency gain per rig and this fewer are needed.
I have been looking for a proper answer to this for a while, knowing that rig efficiency is at the root of it. I searched high and low all over Google and the results gave me everything back as far as 2015 but not what I wanted on the current state. NK, you've answered this most comprehensively in just a take. This answer is going to sit in my backpocket after this. Thank you and bests!
"Your Excellency, doesn’t this deal actually suck for the Saudis?” -- I wish you had been there Barani.
LOL, he would have thrown me out of the room, Brad! 😆
Lol how come some are saying its a 500k cut and others a 2 mil cut?
No, I don't think I said 500k cut anywhere, Jason. You might be referring to the so-called Russian pledge -- which we both know is b(s) :)
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