Lagniappe
John
Hall : OPEC: replay
?
market is well supplied with oil!
The 147th. (Extraordinary) Meeting of the OPEC Conference
Vienna, Austria, 1st. February, 2008
REPLAY ? MARKET IS WELL SUPPLIED WITH OIL!
After the last meeting, when OPEC announced that output would
remain unchanged, I was initially hopeful that today we should
see the position corrected. Instead, with many of us wondering
why this meeting was actually taking place, the Opening Session
was closed, presumably to shield the delegates from the intrusive
and challenging questions that usually preceed the closed session
and to enable the meeting and subsequent Press Conference to be
concluded as quickly as possible.
Furthermore, meetings usually
follow a report from the Ministerial Monitoring Committee (MMC)
which analyses information and data and prepares the intial
report with recommendations for the Ministers to consider in
the closed session.
This did not take place and being an ?extraordinary? meeting,
there was actually no requirement for it to be held anyway. So,
with no MMC and no Open Session, OPEC must have been sure well
an advance what the outcome would be.
Today?s meeting was held under the Chairmanship of its President,
HE Dr Chakib Khelil, Minister of Energy and Mines of Algeria
and supported by HE Abdalla Salem El-Badri Secretary General
and the Press statement made was one of the briefest possible
before the discussion commenced.
OPEC repeated that the market continues to be well supplied with
oil, and that oil stocks have remained within their five year
average and with the projected economic slowdown in the first
quarter of the year, production was sufficient to meet demand.
However, there was uncertainty at the effect of the potential
downturn and therefore OPEC would follow the market carefully
until the next meeting on 5th. March.
In effect, OPEC is in a quandry. What should it do? Leading up
to this meeting it had two options ? do nothing or increase output.
It chose to do nothing but,
now, looking ahead it may even dare to think of reducing output
in line with perceived lower demand.
In its approach today, OPEC
was guarded and has postponed any serious discussion until March
by which time it should have a clearer view of what it needs
to do. In recent months it has been under considerable pressure
to increase its output further but has argued that
there has been no need. Last September it announced that the
?quota? level would be increased by 500,000 bpd from 1st. November
and at that time I had hoped for 1mbpd. Then, in December when
some of us were very sure that there would be a further increase,
the decision was taken to roll over. I had expected an increase
of at least 500,000bpd and perhaps even 1mbpd particularly with
the prospect of recession in the US and the EU. OPEC did not
share this view and was asked today if, with hindsight, output
should have been increased further last year. Again, it did not seem
to agree.
OPEC through Saudi is under further pressure from the US to increase
output. The Middle East is a very sensitive region, hence the
geo-political tension festuring throughout and with many of the
countries wary of outside intervention and particularly from the
US, Saudi can not be seen to be acquiescing to pressure from
the US against the collective wishes of OPEC. With visits in
the last month from both President George Bush and Sam Bodman,
US Energy Secretarywithin a week of each other, a more discreet
approach is called for.
OPEC has until March to weigh up the threat to OPEC from over
production against the threat to consumers from under production.
If the recession does fully materialise in the West, will it
also impact on India and China and what will the effect be on
oil demand?
When analysing the market supply position, it is worth looking
at the individual countries which could also actually increase
output if their own situations improved. In this context there
are four main contenders ? Iran, Iraq, Nigeria and Venezuela.
Collectively they produce around 10.5mbpd. Iran and Iraq where
at war with each other for many years and their infrastructures
suffered serious damage while Iraq has not recoverd from the
US led invasion of 2003. With the right expertise and investement
they could probably increase their joint output from around 6.7mbpd
to 10mbpd. Meanwhile Nigeria and Venezuela are suffering from
domestic issues with each losing around 1mbpd. Nigeria is of
particular concern as the insurgency has recently escalated as
new factions emerge. In the Delta region in which much of the
oil exploration takes place, the local adminstration has failed
to provide any benefits from the oil wealth to the local people
and over time resentment has reached a critical level. The local
administration may be at fault but one hopes that the central
Government will intervene and bring about a resolution. The issue
in Venezuela is simply the lack of domestic expertise and investment.
Should these four countries rectify their individual issues their
combined output could, in time, rise eventually from 10.5mbpd
to 17mbpd.
The US consumes around 20mbpd while India and China consume take
half that at 10mbpd. Yet with the Asian demand set to increase
by 30% over the next five years, it is unlikely that a downturn
in the West is likely to affect overall consumption dramatically
and probably not beyong the usual seasonal fall in demand during
the second quarter. US stock data is quoted each week and with
crude stocks building in recent weeks, the market can take confidence
that the overall level is not deteriorating seriously. Howevever,
what should be appreciated is that the forward market is in backwardation
which means that prices in the near
future will be lower, so, why build up stocks today when the
price is destined to fall? So stocks are not as high as they
were last year although they must be maintained at an adeqate
level
for the future and not at higher prices.
The point that I made to Dr. Khelil and Mr. El Badri was that
it is what OPEC says that counts and not what it does. If the
market feels that OPEC will increase output, the price falls
and conversely if the market believes that OPEC will reduce output,
the price rises This undoubtedly gives OPEC some control over
price but it maintains it is a ?price taker? and not a ?price
maker?. When I asked what OPEC produces there was a delay while
the number was worked out and from a supposed target level of
27.25 mbpd for the OPEC 10, and I say target as we are no longer
using the word ?quota?, the figure of 32mbpd was given to include
Angola,
Ecuador and Iraq which sounds a lot healthier than the 27.25
that is usually quoted. OPEC needs to get the message out more
readily about what it is actually doing but we all know that
when the price is high, and traditionally that is anything over
$30, its members produce as much as they possibly can. Saudi
perhaps is the exception, holding its output at around 9.5mbpd
when it could take this to 11mbpd if required.
There was little reference to the weakness of the dollar today
although when I discussed it with one delegate the view appeared
to be that it can remain the reference price while sales transactions
can be made in any other currency. This is very much a political
issue particularly as the dollar has strengthened in recent weeks
and the argument weakend but for those members who are particularly
anti US we can expect a return to this topic later on.
OPEC will remain under pressure to reduce prices from both the
International Energy Agency (IEA) representing the OECD countries
and the US Energy Information Administration (EIA), calling for
more oil. It remains uncertain as to what OPEC will do but I
hope that the idea of reducing output is quickly dismissed. Recession
usually follows a period of higher energy prices and
with the continuing migration of industry from the West ? US & EU
? towards Asia, India and China, I do not freel that global demand
will be seriously affected. Nevertheless the price of any commodity
that has trebled in dollar terms, although only doubled in Sterling
and Euro terms, must have a detremental effect on economic growth
of all consumers.
The ?reasonable? price that OPEC has so often talked about is
somewhere between $40 and $90 and it would be useful if it could
be identified. Meanwhile OPEC continues to feel aggrieved at
the level of taxation that some western Governments continue
to collect from the taxing of OPEC oil and as one delegate mentioned
to me, the record profit just announced by Shell was far in excess
of anything they are able to achieve, while costs of producing
oil continue to rise. So there are inbalances throughout the
system and it would be unrealistic for us to believe that they
can be rectified in the short term.
For now we shall continue to support our view to OPEC that prices
should not be allowed to rise further andencouraged to fall back
to more realistic levels between $60 and $70. We can hope for
these levels but our short term forecast has to be more realisitc
within the $80 to $90 range.
John
Hall is
a
London-based analyst who runs his own oil consultancy,
John Hall
Associates. Further information please contact:- John Hall
+44 (0)7785 274530 or Damien Cox +44 (0)1403 269430. Petroleumworld
does not necessarily share these views.
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Petroleumworld
News 02/05/08
Copyright© 2008
John Hall. All rights reserved.
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