New 'OPEC' Of U.S. Oil Super Majors Could Seize Control Of Global Pricing

 | Mar 12, 2019 19:18

Morgan Stanley sees Brent crude anchored at $65 per barrel over the long term while cross-town rival Goldman Sachs) expects a “fleeting” high of $75.
Whatever the forecast, the unprecedented depth of Saudi Arabia’s oil cuts now seems both a boon and bane for Riyadh, which is earning more for a barrel while risking precious market share to rivals in both the U.S. and Asia.

Of particular danger to the Kingdom: oil super majors like Exxon Mobil (NYSE:XOM) and Chevron (NYSE:CVX) usurping so much production capacity in U.S. shale oil in coming years that they become as influential as the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) in shipping to the coveted Asian markets and dictating prices there.

h3 A New 'OPEC' Of Super Majors?/h3

That, in the words of John Kilduff, founding partner of New York energy hedge fund Again Capital, would present “a very precarious landscape for the future of Saudi oil” as well as “an incredible opportunity for the super majors to become an OPEC of their own kind.”

The world got a glimpse of what that future might look like after Exxon Mobil and Chevron recently announced plans to ramp up by almost another one million barrels per day their existing production at top U.S. shale basin Permian. Exxon Mobil went further to say that it expected double-digit returns on its Permian investments, even at low oil prices. For example, at $35 per barrel, Permian production will have an average return of more than 10%, it said.