OPEC, keen to defend its market share against the US shale oil
boom, is expected to hold output levels steady at its Vienna meeting
this week, analysts say.
The influential 12-nation
Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), which pumps
about 30 percent of the world's oil, will make the decision Friday at
its semi-annual production meeting in the Austrian capital.
Gulf
members, led by cartel kingpin Saudi Arabia, will probably resist calls
to cut output as they seek to safeguard their share of a market that is
plagued by a vast supply glut — fuelled partly by the boom in shale
oil.
"OPEC is likely to confirm its output target of 30
million barrels per day given that its strategy of defending market
shares is bearing fruit," said Commerzbank analyst Carsten Fritsch.
"The rapid rise in US crude oil production has been stopped and the oil price has recovered considerably since February."
"The rapid rise in US crude oil production has been stopped and the oil price has recovered considerably since February."
In
recent weeks, oil prices have fought back after the market plunged 60
percent between June and January on the back of abundant supplies.
OPEC
refused in November to cut its official daily oil output target of 30
million barrels — where it has stood for more than three and a half
years — despite the glut.
The move, which sent prices
sliding further, was widely regarded as a tactical attempt to boost
demand and hurt non-OPEC output, particularly US shale producers which
have higher costs.
"The OPEC meeting... is expected to
result in a continuation of the status quo — with no change to the 30
mbpd quota," agreed Citi analyst Seth Kleinman.
While
higher prices boost producers' revenues they can also weigh on demand —
and in turn economic growth — harming the cartel in the long run.
However,
faced with a precipitous slump in their earnings, some OPEC members —
led by Iran and Venezuela — have publicly urged the cartel to cut
production to support prices.
SAUDI ARABIA ON TRACK
But Saudi Arabia appears determined to pursue its strategy.
"When
OPEC decided not to cut output in November, Saudi Arabia outlined its
strategy to moderate runaway growth from high-cost non-OPEC suppliers,
as well as stimulate global oil demand. The kingdom seems to be on track
to achieve these goals," noted Barclays analysts.
The oil market meanwhile remains well down from year-earlier levels.
Oil
prices have lost almost half their value since June 2014, when Brent
traded at about $115 and New York crude at almost $108 per barrel.
Experts
at consultancy Energy Aspects say that the current level of $60 per
barrel is causing "ample damage" to non-OPEC supplies outside of the
United States.
And in reaction to the price collapse,
major oil companies have slashed their exploration budgets and massively
reduced their capital expenditure.
At the same time,
some OPEC members — notably Saudi Arabia, Iran and Iraq — are in fact
pumping additional supplies, taking actual OPEC output above the agreed
collective ceiling.
Actual OPEC production stood at
31.21 mbpd in April, the highest level since September 2012, according
to recent data from the International Energy Agency.
In Monday morning trade, the oil market slid on renewed supply glut concerns ahead of the OPEC gathering.
US
benchmark West Texas Intermediate (WTI) for July delivery dropped 59
cents to $59.71 per barrel, while Brent for July shed 63 cents to
$64.93.
AFP
AFP
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