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Oil up Over 2% as Market Buys Into OPEC Output Hike Plan 

Published 04/01/2021, 11:38 AM
Updated 04/01/2021, 03:19 PM
© Reuters.

By Barani Krishnan

Investing.com — Crude prices swung from green to red and back on Thursday before settling up more than 2% as traders bought into OPEC+’s assurances that the global oil producing alliance could manage with higher output from May, despite questionable demand.

London-traded Brent, the global benchmark for crude, settled up $1.32, or 2.1%, at $64.86 per barrel. It reached as high as $64.95 earlier, from a session low of $62.45. 

New York-traded West Texas Intermediate, the benchmark for U.S. crude, settled up $2.29, or 3.9%, at $61.45. WTI’s intraday high was $61.58 versus a low of $58.88. 

Members of the 23-nation OPEC+, meeting via a two-day video hook-up, agreed to raise output by 350,000 barrels per day in May and June, and 400,000 bpd in July.

Saudi Arabia was initially reported to be considering another 250,000 barrels per day of cuts in May, and 250,000 bpd in June, to provide continued support to the market. It terminated that idea after reaching a consensus with the other producers that an output hike may not be a bad thing after all, especially if demand for crude spiked in the coming months, allowing the kingdom greater market share.

Since OPEC+ production cuts began a year ago, the Saudis have single-handedly led the reductions, conceivably allowing U.S. crude producers, who aren't a part of the alliance, to grow their oil exports at the expense of the kingdom.  

After weeks of remaining trapped at around 2.5 million bpd, U.S. crude exports jumped last week to 3.2 million bpd, data showed. 

U.S. oil production also rose last week to 11.1 million barrels daily, suggesting that American energy firms were responding positively to crude prices trading at $60 per barrel or more. A daily production of 11 million barrels or lower had been the norm for the United States over the past few months. 

The rise in U.S. crude production has been in tandem with the increase in the US oil rig count, as drillers put more rigs to work to extract additional supply. As of Friday, the rig count, which is a measure for future production, stood at 337. That was up 193, or 80%, from an August record low of 244.   

Iran, which officially remains under Trump-era sanctions banning exports of its oil, has also been shipping with immunity to China since President Joe Biden came into office in January, those with knowledge of the matter say.

While Iran is a founding member of the original OPEC cartel, it has never contributed a single barrel to the production cuts of the past year due to the Trump sanctions. Its stepped up exports to China could thus be depriving other producers trying to legitimately grow their oil sales.

"If anything, the Biden administration could move soon to do a deal with the Iranians that would officially remove the sanctions on them, and it might be prudent for the Saudis to try and increase their market share ahead of that," said Tariq Zahir, crude trader at New York macro fund Tyche Capital Advisors.  

Saudi Oil Minister Abdulaziz bin Salman seemed to acknowledge the weight of Iran’s role in the matter when he told reporters after the OPEC+ meeting that once Iran returns to pre-sanctions output, “we may remove the limit” on production.

Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS) global head of commodities research Jeff Currie, meanwhile, predicted that Brent will hit $80 a barrel by the third quarter. Such lofty projections have often led to a crash instead.

Whatever the case, the diverse factors in play sent oil prices all over the place on Thursday, with the market rallying more than $2 a barrel, after dropping nearly $1 earlier.

Since April last year, OPEC+ — made up of the 13-member Saudi-led OPEC, or Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, and 10 non-OPEC nations steered by Russia — has withheld at least 7.0 million barrels per day of supply from the market. 

Those cuts helped WTI rise from a little under $36 per barrel on Oct. 30 to just below $68 by March 8. Brent went from beneath $38 to just above $71 in that same stretch. But over the past fortnight, the two benchmarks have lost about 10% from those highs.

Russian Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak told the OPEC+ meeting that global oil demand was anticipated around 5.0- 5.5 million bpd this year.

But while the alliance’s production cuts had slashed much of the Covid-19 related oil glut seen from March 2020, oil stocks remained above the 2015-2019 level, an OPEC+ document circulated at the meeting said.

The rollout of coronavirus vaccines and supply curbs had underpinned the oil rally of the past four months. But that’s fraying now on concerns that near-term consumption was at risk, particularly in Europe where France has announced a new month-long lockdown. 

Mohammad Barkindo, secretary-general of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, pointed this week to the market’s recent volatility as “a reminder of the fragility facing economies and oil demand.”

Latest comments

Officials from Tehran and Washington will travel to Vienna next week as part of efforts to revive the 2015 nuclear deal between Iran and global powers, although they will not hold direct talks, diplomats said on Friday.  https://www.investing.com/news/world-news/iran-world-powers-to-hold-nuclear-talks-in-vienna-on-tuesday-2464639
once they allow the production increases, all the usual cheating from member states will begin again
OPEC being OPEC, my bet is that too. What's happening now is very uncharacteristic, as discipline is a strange word for this cartel, which has had its hands bound by the pandemic.
im gonna buy the dip when it comes i think we will see over $80 a barrel next summer
I like Opecs lets block the Shipping lanes to pump oil prices back up plan better.
Wishful thinking. They'd rather get the oil to the customer and sell more than artificially delay shipment. Probably an 1st April prank from Saudi Minister AbS, who watches too much Clint Eastwood to be believed :)
I guess it's very likely a range-bound trading month for Apr-21. Even $1 volatility per day could make me lots of money. :P
Sharp as always on the money, Ernest, my man! :)
 thanks man. Enjoy your Easter break :)
It's really a money issue. Aramco and global oil producers cut budgets for 2021, how can they increase outputs? They need capitals to make energy transitions.
 They probably have to wait for Ayatollah 12.0 then. You really think the Iranians believe in near $400 oil? Or do you? The highest crude ever got to was $147 pre-financial crisis. Even that the global economy couldn't sustain. Iran will take whatever price it gets now. Word is Tehran has enough crude suppressed by the Trump sanctions to put on the market in very short order. That's the Saudis will give up all their production controls to compete on the market the moment the Iran sanctions come off.
  $60 oil makes Iran poor. Iran counts on China to develop its oil.
 You don't seem to understand that Iran doesn't have the power to make oil prices go higher now. On the contrary, every barrel they put on the market tends to devalue oil, because their trades are off OPEC+ books. And it doesn't help that in order to win customers, the Iranians are reportedly offering barrels in the cash market at $3 or $5 discount to Brent. That is directly undercutting the Saudis and rest of OPEC+. How will that send oil prices higher, you tell me? Iran can make the market when world supply becomes super tight and they have the luxury to "play" with sentiment. At the moment, they are barely surviving.
Oil swings.... means go higher.
Swings mean "both" ways. One-way trade -- up -- is over for now.
A hedge fund manager I just got off the phone with, after discussing this story, told me: "Usually the higher it goes, the harder it falls."
A hedge fund manager I just got off the phone with, after discussing this story, told me: "Usually the higher it goes, the harder it falls."
""Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS) global head of commodities research Jeff Currie, meanwhile, predicted that Brent will hit $80 a barrel by the third quarter."" yeah yeah yeah what's the cost to "predict"??? LMAO!
  Ha ha .. that's why I couldn't resist adding the bit after that such "lofty predictions" have often resulted in a crash
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