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Oil hit $80 but OPEC isn't about to start ramping up production

opec oil ministers discuss caps
Iraq Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi left, listens to Oil Minister Jabar Ali al-Luaibi, right, during the Iraq Energy Forum in Baghdad, Iraq, Wednesday, March 28, 2018. Iraq says OPEC will decide by the end of this year whether to extend production cuts and by how long. AP/Karim Kadim

  • Despite rising oil prices, OPEC has yet to decide to wind down production cuts. 
  • Saudi Arabia in particular is said to be looking fo a $80 barrel or more price first in order to balance its budget. 
  • The countries will meet on June 22 to discuss the state of the oil market. 
  • Watch Oil trade in real-time here. 

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OPEC is not in a rush to start winding down the production cuts despite oil prices continuing their strong rally, with Brent briefly breaking above $79a barrel on Tuesday. The cartel sees the price spike as only a short-term rally driven by geopolitical concerns rather than the fundamentals of a much tighter oil market, OPEC delegates and sources have told Reuters.

Saudi Arabia, OPEC’s largest producer and de facto leader, views the temporary speculator-driven oil price rally as not enough to start raising production, according to an OPEC source familiar with Riyadh’s thinking.

Supply and demand data need to point to an impact on supply in order for OPEC to make a decision to start winding down the cuts, the source told Reuters.

Asked if $79 oil is too high, one OPEC delegate told Reuters: “Not yet.”

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OPEC’s original goal in the production cut pact was to bring oil inventories in developed economies down to their five-year average, and according to the cartel itself, as of March those stocks were just 9 million barrels over that level, and are probably below it by now.

Yet, OPEC—especially Saudi Arabia—is now trying to justify a prolonged period of cuts to tighten the market further, signaling that the five-year average metric would be revised and/or complemented by other data points, such as forward coverage, longer average periods to consider, or even investment in necessary new longer-term supply.

OPEC and friends are meeting on June 22 in Vienna to discuss these metrics and the state of the oil market.

Meanwhile, Saudi Arabia is said to be pushing for $80 a barrel oil or even $100 a barrel, to balance its budget and boost the valuation of Saudi Aramco ahead of a much-anticipated IPO.

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Iran, however, is reportedly at odds with Saudi Arabia on the oil price that the cartel should target (although none of them admit there is a price target at all). According to senior Iranian oil officials, the reasonable oil price for Tehran would be $60-65 a barrel.

Read the original article on OilPrice.com. Copyright 2018.
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