The OPEC+ cartel’s production policy will be the main factor influencing oil prices over the coming months, according to Vitol Group.
There’s little chance of Iranian barrels returning to global markets this year and U.S. shale producers aren’t investing enough to raise output quickly, according to the world’s largest independent oil trader.
“Control of pricing is very much in the hands of OPEC+,” Mike Muller, the head of Asia for Vitol, said on a Sunday webinar hosted by Dubai-based consultancy Gulf Intelligence. In the U.S., “the rig count is simply not there for production to catch up in a way that would be necessary if you needed extra oil.”
The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries and its partners — a 23-nation grouping led by Saudi Arabia and Russia — meet on Monday. With Brent crude climbing above $80 a barrel last week for the first time since 2018, some traders and the White House have called on OPEC+ to announce faster-than-planned production increases.
The group is gradually easing cuts that began as the coronavirus pandemic ravaged energy markets last year. It has previously signaled that it will boost daily output by 400,000 barrels for the next several months.
A shortage of natural gas in Europe has added to the oil market’s tightness, with businesses being forced to switch to crude for power production.
Some OPEC+ members give the impression they’re not concerned that oil surpassing $80 may crimp demand, Muller said.
They “want to make a fair chunk of money before competition enters the picture” from Iran or the U.S., he said.
Tags Bloomberg News Agency Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC)
Check Also
Russia’s Natural Gas Flows to Austria Rise despite OMV Cutoff
Requests from customers in Austria and Slovakia for Russian natural gas supply via Ukraine rose …