Oil Market Selloff: Is It A Saudi 'Trust Deficit' Issue?

 | Nov 20, 2018 19:55

It doesn’t matter whether Saudi Arabia announces a one-million-barrel cut when OPEC meets in December—or, for that matter, a two-million curb. What matters is whether the market will have faith in the oil-rich Kingdom to do as it says.

Indeed, that might be the Saudis’ real problem: a “trust deficit” since the summer, caused by a series of missteps on production versus pledges by the world’s largest crude exporter.

Once inclined to simply buy the party line coming out of Riyadh, oil traders are finding it a lot harder to do so when the prospect of a world swimming in oil from ramping US shale output appears more believable. As this analysis from a few weeks ago points out, the Saudi Energy Minister usually has the final word on oil, though, interestingly, the last time that didn’t hold true was during the shale-led 2014-2017 supply glut.

London-based Energy Aspects, known for insights into both the fundamentals and politics of energy trading, alluded in a note on Monday that the recent historical 12-day selloff in crude had as much to do with Saudi blundering as with US President Donald Trump’s weaker-than-expected sanctions on Iranian oil exports.

h3 Saudi Arabia Is Undergoing A 'Crisis Of Confidence'/h3

The agency wrote:

“Whether Saudi Arabia realizes it or not, there is a crisis of confidence over the Kingdom's policy. Saudi Arabia's commitment to stabilize inventories at or near the five-year average is being questioned and fears of 2014 are ringing all around, especially as US crude inventories are surging.”

When did this Saudi crisis of confidence begin? It began in June, when, at the behest of Trump, who had just announced the Iranian sanctions, Riyadh decided to end 18 months of production curbs that the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) had coordinated with Russia. The so-called OPEC+ cuts were what reined in a three-year long oversupply and price collapse which brought crude to multiyear lows of nearly $25 a barrel in 2016.

Since June, however, Trump needed additional Saudi output to put the brakes on an out-of-control oil rally triggered by the sanctions the US president planned to levy on Iran. Until then, the Middle Eastern country had exported a peak of 2.5 million barrels per day (bpd). Midterm elections in the US were approaching, and the president couldn’t afford to anger voters with high prices at the gasoline pump.

Publicly, Saudi Arabia’s Energy Minister Khalid al-Falih resisted Trump’s calls for additional supply, letting benchmark Brent soar to nearly $87 a barrel between May and October. But privately, the Kingdom’s heir and Trump ally Crown Prince Mohamad bin Salman, known as MbS, assured Washington that output would be raised as needed to compensate for the lost Iranian barrels. Complicit in this collaboration was Russia’s Energy Minister Alexander Novak, tacitly backed by his boss President Vladimir Putin.

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The authority these three powers had on the oil market was spelled out in a all-time highs and millions of barrels of new stockpiles began piling up.