Regardless Of What OPEC Decides, Saudi Influence Is Waning By The Day

 | Dec 07, 2018 19:26

When Saudi Energy Minister Khalid al-Falih leaves Vienna on Friday, he may be beset by two bigger worries than the current oil price crisis. The first is that Russia, rather than Riyadh, has become more powerful in OPEC without even being a member. The other is that with U.S. oil exports hitting record highs last week, President Donald Trump could be resort to Twitter more than ever to tell the cartel what to do.

How different the world must seem to Falih compared to six months ago when Moscow found no reason to disagree with the Kingdom on raising oil production at Trump’s behest—after 18 months of output cuts by the enlarged OPEC+ collaboration between the two countries that boosted crude prices by over 35 percent, to the U.S. president’s ire.

Fast forward to Thursday’s session and Russia’s Energy Minister Alexander Novak, prominently by Falih’s side in previous meetings on global oil market rebalancing, was conspicuously missing as the two nations struggled to find common ground to agree again on a large output cut like in 2016, so they could restore—ironically—the same 35 percent they had lost on oil prices over the past two months alone.