A massive oil price war has erupted between Saudi Arabia and OPEC countries after Russia refused to join the proposed production cuts announced last week.
Under the proposal, OPEC wanted its members to slash production by 1 million barrels per day, seeking an additional cut of 500,000 barrels per day from non-OPEC producing countries participating in the Declaration of Cooperation, such as Russia.
The move was aimed at curbing the impact of the COVID-19 outbreak on global economic and oil demand forecasts in 2020, particularly for the first and second quarters of the year.
Russia was not on board with the production cut as it fears the production decrease would solely aid North American shale producers.
Furthermore, over the weekend Saudi Aramco announced steep discounts to its official selling price for April, igniting a price war among major global producers. The WTI and Brent prices fell to mid USD 30s per barrel, down 25% and 24% respectively.
“It appears that OPEC’s kingpin producer Saudi Arabia seems unwilling to deepen production without Russia’s participation, and the two seem to be the only countries from the group with the capacity to increase output,” Poten and Partners said in a commentary.
“Being able to produce 5% more at a price that is 20% lower does not seem to be a great deal, but that seems to be the reality facing producers now.”
“The lack of a production deal carries risk. This would become apparent if global economic growth weakens and oil demand continues to contract more sharply than expected thanks to the double whammy of coronavirus containment measures and falling GDP,” Ann-Louise Hittle, vice president, Macro Oils, at Wood Mackenzie, said.
WoodMac expects global liquids demand to fall by 2.7 million b/d year-on-year in the first quarter of 2020, the first year-on-year decline on a quarterly basis since Q2 2009.
“A sustained bout of low oil prices will further reduce cash flow and investment into the US oil patch, causing further hits to Lower 48 production growth later this year. It takes at least six to nine months for reductions in spend to lead to lower oil production in the US Lower 48,” she added.
“In that time, their access to capital may be limited and their free cash flow badly hit, so driving bankruptcies and raising the prospect of fire sales.
“The only silver lining in a very dark cloud is for refining – the sector will be hit hard by weak demand, but it is at least saved from tightening crude differentials associated with a major cut in OPEC supplies.”
Commenting on the impact of the ongoing situation on the tanker market, Suezmax owner and operator Nordic American Tankers (NAT) said that lower oil prices were good news.
“It is an indisputable fact that a low/decreasing oil price is good for the tanker market and our ships. More transportation work will be required,” the company said.
NAT indicated earlier that political uncertainty may create positive implications for the company, as has been the case on numerous occasions for tankers that reaped fruit from trade disruptions.
Poten projects that in the short-term, increasing oil supply at significantly lower prices in a market with weak demand fundamentals should lead to an increase in demand for floating storage. That is indeed already happening.
“We are seeing several deals being negotiated for short-term (6-12 months) charters, with one already concluded. The fall in oil prices has made floating storage more attractive, although the margins are still relatively thin,” Poten said.
If oil prices remain low because both OPEC and non-OPEC producers are increasing output in an attempt to gain market share in a market that is still affected by the coronavirus, tanker trade flows could change, Poten believes.
“In a world of significantly lower oil prices, transportation costs will become more important. Everything else being equal, it will tend to favor the short-haul suppliers over the long-haul producers; i.e. Middle East producers will gain an edge in Asia relative to Atlantic Basin producers. U.S. shale producers will target more customers in the Atlantic Basin (NW Europe, Mediterranean),” the market commentary reads.
Finally, in the long term, depressed oil prices for an extended period of time are likely to result in production cuts at higher cost producers (e.g. U.S. shale, Canadian oil sands).
“Production cutbacks by U.S. shale producers will almost immediately translate into a reduction in exports. This will have a negative impact on ton-mile demand, in particular for VLCCs. Even when the coronavirus threat starts to recede and oil demand and prices are recovering, it will take some time for U.S. producers to come back,” Poten said.
Source: World Maritime News
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