Can OPEC Stay Consistent On Oil Messaging Till The Next Crucial Meeting?

 | May 21, 2019 17:34

If the price action that came at first was worthy of a champagne pop, it’s also because the initial messaging was just as sparkling for its unity and coherence.

Saudi Energy Minister Khalid Falih, concluding the OPEC+ preliminary meeting in Jeddah, said the Kingdom had no plans to raise oil production for now, and might not hike it for the rest of the year either. To be sure, the Jeddah meeting wasn’t supposed to yield a decision on anything. Yet Falih’s Russian counterpart Alexander Novak fell in line with him, agreeing it was too soon to talk about ending the cuts that had been on for six months. UAE Energy Minister Suhail al-Mazrouei chipped in, saying OPEC’s job “is not done yet” and relaxing cuts was not “the right decision”.

The combined effect of the soundbites from the three ministers on the energy media’s airwaves delivered a $1.20 spike to a barrel of Brent in Monday’s early trade in Singapore, sending oil bulls into bouts of glee.

h3 Russia Clearly Has Different Ideas On Output Hikes/h3

But the celebrations wouldn’t last. In fact, they would unravel in a matter of hours. Leaving the room of the Jeddah meeting, Novak would tell a different story to Bloomberg TV that seemed designed to please his boss, Russian leader Vladimir Putin, more than Falih—who had been counting on him as his most trusted ally outside of OPEC for the past three years.

OPEC+ may need "to tweak" the current production deal when it meets next month, Novak told Bloomberg TV. One option on the table is "removing the over-compliance" with current targets, he said, a move that would effectively ease output cuts in the second half of the year.

Bloomberg built out its interview with Novak into a news story that read like a semi-opinion piece, asserting that Putin might want a say too in OPEC+ policy. At the annual St. Petersburg International Economic Forum (SPIEF) in June last year, Putin said Russia "wasn’t interested in an endless rise in the price of energy and oil", Bloomberg reminded its readers.

The 2019 edition of SPIEF is scheduled for June 6 to June 8—and again the Russians appear happy with an oil price somewhat lower than the Saudis prefer. Moscow can live with $60 a barrel, while Riyadh struggles with anything less than $80, it said.

Bloomberg added that Russia has merely cut its supply as required, meeting its official target only this month. So removing the over-compliance will mean Moscow stays exactly where it is today. The powerful Russian oil industry, led by Kremlin power-broker and Rosneft PJSC Chief Executive Officer Igor Sechin, wants to be able to boost output.

That brings us to the question: will OPEC be able to stay consistent on its messaging till the more important June 25-26 meeting that will decide what the 14-member cartel and its 10 allies do with production in the second half of the year?

h3 Increasingly Hard For Saudis To Force Their Decision On All/h3
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John Kilduff, founding partner at New York energy hedge fund Again Capital, told Investing.com in a recent interview that it’ll be increasingly hard for Riyadh to force its decision on all oil producers—except, of course, the UAE and a few others in OPEC that were happy to let Saudi authority, rather than their own autonomy, speak.