Saudi Arabia & Russia Oil partnership breaks down : UPDATE - OPEC+ drops output, Oil prices plunge! Angola leaves OPEC!

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How a Saudi-Russian Standoff Sent Oil Markets Into a Frenzy
By Stanley Reed
12-15 minutes
Moscow refused to accept production cuts to offset the effect of the coronavirus outbreak. Now Saudi Arabia is trying an alternative: inflicting pain.

merlin_164545269_8ee21ec1-d7f8-403a-a17b-37e75af385d0-articleLarge.jpg

Rather than cutting back on output, Saudi oil fields are now being positioned to produce more, despite a worldwide glut.Credit...Ahmed Jadallah/Reuters


  • March 9, 2020, 1:49 p.m. ET
For the last three years, two factors have been hugely influential in the oil markets. The first has been the surge of shale oil production in the United States, which has turned the country from a large oil importer to an increasingly important exporter. The second is the alliance between Saudi Arabia and Russia, which recently have cooperated in trimming production to try to counter shale’s impact.

Now that cooperation between two of the world’s three largest oil producers — the third is the United States — appears to be at an end. Saudi Arabia, as the dominant member of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, last week proposed production cuts to offset the collapse in demand from the spreading coronavirus outbreak. Russia, which is not an OPEC member, refused to go along. And the impasse has turned into open hostilities.

After talks with OPEC members in Vienna, Russia’s energy minister, Alexander Novak, had returned to Moscow for consultations on Thursday. In his absence, OPEC officials met and came up with what amounted to an ultimatum. The group as a whole would trim production by 1.5 million barrels a day, or about 1.5 percent of world supply. OPEC, meaning largely the Saudis, would make the bulk of the cutbacks, one million barrels, as long as Russia and other producers trimmed the rest.

The gambit was “something of a boss move,” said Helima Croft, an analyst at RBC Capital Markets, but it backfired badly. Russia had played hard to get before, but this time Mr. Novak was not playing. The answer was “no” again, and the Saudi oil minister, Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman, and other officials headed back to their hotels with no results and no communiqué.


Failing to tighten supplies, the Saudis threatened to flood the market.
The standoff was ominous for the industry. Not only had OPEC and a wider group of producers — together known as OPEC plus — failed to agree on new cuts, but they had also failed to sign off on the extension of 2.1 million barrels a day in previous trims that would expire at the end of March. That created the danger of a tremendous flow of oil coming onto a market that was already hugely oversupplied and experiencing a steep slump in demand.

“From April 1, neither we nor any OPEC or non-OPEC country is required to make output cuts,” Mr. Novak said after the meeting, according to Reuters.

The Saudis struck back, notifying buyers on Saturday that they would offer deep discounts on their oil sales for April. The price cuts will probably be followed by other producers in the region, like the Saudi allies Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates. The intent, Saudi officials said, is to create more demand for their oil with lower prices.

The Saudis have been producing about 9.7 million barrels a day. The International Energy Agency, a Paris-based organization advising governments and industry, figures that the Saudis could produce more than two million additional barrels, while Kuwait, Iraq, and the United Arab Emirates could add another million barrels a day.

The market was spooked by this potential deluge of crude. At one point on Monday, prices were down by more than 30 percent. By afternoon, they had recovered to around $36 a barrel for Brent crude, the international benchmark, still a steep 21 percent drop.

“The market really was banking on this alliance between OPEC and Russia,” said Neil Beveridge, an analyst at Bernstein, a market research firm. With that relationship apparently sundered, “there is just no support,” he added.

The Russians and the Saudis have long had a fraught relationship.
Despite having enormous oil reserves, Russia and the Saudi Arabia have rarely seen their way to cooperation. In his autobiography, “Out of the Desert,” Ali Naimi, the longtime Saudi oil minister, recounts that on the eve of what became a crucial OPEC meeting in November 2014, he met with Mr. Novak to ask for help in dealing with a growing oil glut. Joining in the talks was Igor Sechin, a close associate of President Vladimir V. Putin who is chief executive of Rosneft, Russia’s largest oil company.

The Russians refused to go along, Mr. Naimi says, and he packed up his papers and washed his hands of trying to stabilize the market through cuts.

A price slide to below $30 a barrel focused minds, eventually persuading the Russians to join forces with the Saudis. A kind of bromance developed between Mr. Novak and Khalid al-Falih, who succeeded Mr. Naimi as Saudi oil minister in 2016, who put on what seemed natural displays of camaraderie at OPEC news conferences.

But there were tensions, and for at least a year the Russians hinted that they were tiring of the arrangement, which capped the growth of oil companies like Rosneft. As production from shale continued to rise, OPEC and its allies had to keep cutting. “They could see an endless series of cuts going forward, “ said Bhushan Bahree, a senior director at IHS Markit, a research firm. “They wanted to go back to growth rather than continue this arrangement with the Saudis.”

For their part, the Saudis absorbed most of the cuts to keep Russia on board, a situation that also stoked tension.
In addition, Mr. Falih was fired last year by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and replaced by the prince’s older half brother, Prince Abdulaziz, who is a veteran oil official, but does not seem to have the warm relationship with Mr. Novak that Mr. Falih enjoyed.

In addition, power brokers like Mr. Sechin in Moscow appeared to be turning Mr. Putin against the Saudi deal. The Saudis have been pushing for cuts since at least early February as it became clear that the epidemic was going to hit demand hard. The Russians also argued in meetings that there was an opportunity to damage the shale industry in the United States, which had hurt both of the big producers. And Russia has built up a $570 billion fund that Moscow hopes will tide the country through an oil-revenue famine.

Russia may well damage the shale industry, but at great cost. The International Energy Agency forecast that shale output might decline in a $40-a-barrel environment. But a price war carries huge risks for the world, including depriving oil-producing countries of the wherewithal to finance social programs including health care at a time when they are threatened by the virus.


“Playing Russian roulette in oil markets may have grave consequences,” said Fatih Birol, the agency’s executive director.

Stanley Reed has been writing from London for The Times since 2012 on energy, the environment and the Middle East. Prior to that he was London bureau chief for BusinessWeek magazine. @stanleyreed12Facebook
 

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Russia is screwed
Saudi Arabia is more screwed than Russia. Back in 2015/2016 when prices was hella low Saudi Arabia had to burn through a large amount of their cash reserves to the point the IMF said that if prices stayed low Saudi Arabia would go bankrupt. This was when oil was $65 a barrel. The Saudis need oil to be $86-88 a barrel to balance their budget. We are at oil at $30 a barrel they cannot sustain that for long. Before the last oil drop Saudi Arabia had $770 billion in cash reserves. From 2015-2017 that number dropped to $500 billion. Prices went back up again but things haven’t changed for the Kingdom. They have a very expensive war in Yemen, have a bloated military budget and plans to build a new city in the desert. So the Saudis can’t maintain this for long. Because if oil stays below $80 for the next 2 years they will have their cash reserves drop to $100 billion and we will see a insolvency crisis in the Kingdom. Bin Salman has made another rash decision which could bite him.
 
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Oil crash: why Saudi Arabia has started a global crude price war
Anjli Raval and David Sheppard in London 16 hours ago
7-9 minutes
Oil prices crashed by as much as 30 per cent after Saudi Arabia fired the first shots in a price war, in crude’s biggest one-day fall since the early 1990s Gulf war.

Riyadh’s threat to discount its crude and raise production prompted the price of Brent crude, the international oil marker, to fall to as low as $31.02 per barrel. West Texas Intermediate, the US benchmark, fell to $27.71 a barrel.

But why did the world's top exporter decide to move so aggressively, with demand reeling from the coronavirus crisis? And what does it mean for the wider oil industry?

Why is Saudi Arabia launching a price war?
Saudi Arabia had wanted to lead Opec and Russia in making deeper cuts to oil production to support crude prices in the face of the coronavirus outbreak, which has disrupted global economic activity. But when Russia baulked at the plan, the Gulf kingdom turned on an ally it had worked with to prop up the oil market since 2016.

Riyadh responded by raising production and offering its crude at steep discounts. Analysts said that was an attempt to punish Russia for abandoning the so-called Opec+ alliance.

Saudi Arabia may also have wished to cement its position as the world’s top oil exporter, analysts added. The move demonstrated that Riyadh was willing to openly take on Russia and other higher cost producers.

“There was a consensus among Opec [to cut production]. Russia objected and has said that from April 1 everyone can produce whatever they like. So the kingdom too is exercising its right,” said one person familiar with Saudi oil policy.

Analysts have questioned the wisdom of Saudi Arabia’s approach. Its economy is not immune to a price crash, even if it believes it can win market share from its rivals.

But under Mohammed bin Salman, crown prince, the kingdom has gained a reputation for risky and unpredictable moves when it has felt the need to assert itself.

Why did Russia not agree to cut production?
Russia said it wanted to see the full impact of the coronavirus on oil demand before taking action.

But Moscow has also been keen to test the US shale industry. It believes that cutting output would only hand a lifeline to a sector whose growth has turned the US into the world’s largest oil producer, gaining customers at Russia’s expense.

US sanctions on Russian energy companies, including those that targeted the trading arm of state-backed oil champion Rosneft last month, and attempts to halt the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline to Germany, have infuriated the Kremlin.

US shale has struggled to be profitable despite its growth over the past decade. People briefed on Moscow’s strategy said Russia thought there was an opportunity to hurt the US oil industry.

“The total volume of oil that was reduced as a result of the repeated extension of the Opec+ agreement was completely and quickly replaced in the world market with American shale oil,” a spokesman for Rosneft said on Sunday.

Saudi Arabia’s approach to a possible deal with Russia was a take-it-or-leave-it demand to join them in reducing an additional 1.5m barrels a day, taking total cuts to 3.6m b/d or roughly 4 per cent of global supply. That is thought to have riled Moscow, which does not see itself as a junior partner.

What will happen to the US shale industry?
The price crash came at a difficult time for US shale. While production has soared over the past decade, leapfrogging that of Russia and Saudi Arabia, the industry has burnt through borrowed cash, alienating investors.

That has left it vulnerable to a drop in prices. The huge oil price fall since the start of the year has thrown any remaining expansion plans into doubt.

The hit to production, however, may be muted. Many of the small independent producers that make up most of the US shale sector have hedged their output at higher prices. Supply is unlikely to fall immediately.

“In our view, US shale production will not decrease fast enough to vindicate the Russian views on curbing it,” said Ayham Kamel, head of Eurasia Group’s Middle East and North Africa practice.

But many shale producers could struggle to secure new financing to roll over their existing debts. Many junk bonds — those rated as below investment grade — issued by energy companies are traded in distressed territory.

For President Donald Trump the price crash had posed a conundrum. Lower oil prices are an important part of his pitch to voters, frequently calling on Opec to bring them down. But a prolonged price fall could spell economic trouble for energy-producing states such as Texas and North Dakota.

Will prices keep falling?
Hopes for an oil price recovery in the short-term have been pinned on the coronavirus outbreak being contained faster than expected.

Traders have warned that global oil demand in 2020 could contract for the first time since the financial crisis more than a decade ago. Oil consumption could be at least 1-2 per cent lower this year than what analysts had expected at the beginning of the year, with demand taking a hit from restrictions on air and road travel.

But with the possibility of the coronavirus developing into a global pandemic, crude’s short-term prospects look bleak.

This new Saudi approach will only harden Russia’s position

Much depends on how aggressively Saudi Arabia will raise production. It has more spare capacity than any other country, so it can boost output quickly and potentially add more than 1m b/d in the coming months. It can also pull oil out of storage to increase exports.

Russia’s ability to boost its output is probably more constrained. Lower prices could jeopardise President Vladimir Putin’s longer-term promises to invest in areas such as infrastructure and social spending.

Saudi Arabia may have hoped that the enormity of the price fall would force Russia to return to the negotiating table, but that seems unlikely.

“This new Saudi approach will only harden Russia’s position,” said Amrita Sen, chief oil analyst at Energy Aspects.

If very low prices persist, other oil producers will eventually be forced to scale back expansion plans or their output could drop owing to a lack of investment. But that could take a long time and oil demand growth was already forecast to slow in the second half of the decade. Betting on a quick price recovery looks premature.

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Why our oil addiction is not just about cars and planes
What does it mean for big oil?
After oil prices crashed in 2014 the likes of Royal Dutch Shell, BP and ExxonMobil retrenched.

They cut costs aggressively, sold off assets and streamlined their operations to stay profitable at lower oil prices and protect their business from market slides.

But while they have become more efficient, generating more cash when prices averaged around $65 a barrel over the past two years than when they traded at $100, they face different pressures.

Companies have been desperate to maintain dividends and payouts to shareholders unsettled by predictions oil demand could peak in the next decade. At the same time they need to reduce debt and look to new energy sources such as renewables, fearing a long-term shift away from fossil fuels.

With oil at less than $40 a barrel, many investors doubt this is possible. Share prices will probably come under pressure in the coming days.

“Highly leveraged companies will be most impacted by the decline in crude prices,” said Bernstein analyst Neil Beveridge.
 

MoneyTron

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Saudi Arabia is more screwed than Russia. Back in 2015/2016 when prices was hella low Saudi Arabia had to burn through a large amount of their cash reserves to the point the IMF said that if prices stayed low Saudi Arabia would go bankrupt. This was when oil was $65 a barrel. The Saudis need oil to be $86-88 a barrel to balance their budget. We are at oil at $30 a barrel they cannot sustain that for long. Before the last oil drop Saudi Arabia had $770 billion in cash reserves. From 2015-2017 that number dropped to $500 billion. Prices went back up again but things haven’t changed for the Kingdom. They have a very expensive war in Yemen, have a bloated military budget and plans to build a new city in the desert. So the Saudis can’t maintain this for long. Because if oil stays below $80 for the next 2 years they will have their cash reserves drop to $100 billion and we will see a insolvency crisis in the Kingdom. Bin Salman has made another rash decision which could bite him.
Yup, that was the primary reason MBS started the initiative for Saudi Vision 2030. They need to diversify their income streams, quickly.
 

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Saudi Arabia puts the squeeze on US shale producers
The editorial board 2 hours ago
4-5 minutes
It has been dubbed the oil market equivalent of a declaration of war. A split between two of the world’s largest crude producers, Saudi Arabia and Russia, on how to respond to the demand shock from the spreading coronavirus has sent markets into freefall. Oil prices crashed by as much as 30 per cent on Monday — the biggest drop since the Gulf war in 1991. Share prices have followed suit, with billions of dollars wiped off stock markets around the world. It is hard to overstate the consequences of the rout.

The split has underlined the diminished influence of Opec, the club of oil-producing nations that in its heyday held the world in its thrall. Its governing statute stipulates that the group’s goal is, among other things, to “work together to ensure stable oil prices”. What this has meant in practice is that prices should be low enough to support global growth but, most importantly, high enough to sustain the budgets of member countries. But Opec’s grip on world production is not what it was. The rising dominance of homegrown American production — the US has become the world’s largest producer of oil over the past decade — has upended the global energy industry.

Since 2016 Saudi Arabia has relied on other countries outside of the cartel, notably Russia, to help it influence the market as part of a wider, so-called Opec+, alliance. It was Russia’s refusal late last week to join in production cuts that prompted Saudi Arabia to pull the trigger and launch a price war, boosting its own output and selling crude at a discount. But Riyadh’s gambit, driven in part by a desire to undermine debt-laden US shale producers and to gain market share from Moscow, is likely to prove costly for everyone involved.

The alliance with Russia has all but unravelled. Moscow made clear on Monday it is digging in for a price war, declaring it could withstand oil prices of $25-$30 per barrel for six to 10 years. Russian state group Rosneft is expected to raise output next month.

A period of sustained low oil prices would be bad news for an industry already out of favour with investors over its damaging impact on the climate. It could force larger producers to rethink their dividend policies and curb spending. Energy companies have been the biggest issuers of junk bonds, accounting for more than 11 per cent of the US high-yield market. America’s shale industry would be among the biggest losers. Even before the coronavirus hit demand, there had been rising concerns about the sector’s health given the accumulation of dangerous levels of debt. A persistent low oil price — West Texas Intermediate, the US benchmark, dropped to $30 a barrel on Monday — will hurt smaller players. Hedging strategies may cushion the blow but at an oil price of $30-$35 a barrel, vast swaths of the US shale industry will be unprofitable. There is also little appetite among investors to help refinance these companies.

There will be silver linings to a price war. The lower oil price will benefit some industries including aviation, although hedges will delay any upside and for many carriers it will not make up for a collapse in passenger demand. US motorists will reap the benefits of lower pump prices. Yet unlike 2014 — the last time Saudi Arabia flooded the market with oil — this time there is little evidence of demand for more of its supplies. The International Energy Agency on Monday warned global oil demand will fall this year for the first time since 2009. Saudi Arabia’s game-playing would be risky at any time, but when the world is battling coronavirus it looks irresponsible.
 

Secure Da Bag

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Problem is, Trump has no leverage with Saudi Arabia or Russia.

He let both of them run rings around him, and they seem to have some leverage on him.

Trust me. They BOTH are running rings around him NOW. This isn't a squabble. Trust me.
 

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Saudi Arabia is more screwed than Russia. Back in 2015/2016 when prices was hella low Saudi Arabia had to burn through a large amount of their cash reserves to the point the IMF said that if prices stayed low Saudi Arabia would go bankrupt. This was when oil was $65 a barrel. The Saudis need oil to be $86-88 a barrel to balance their budget. We are at oil at $30 a barrel they cannot sustain that for long. Before the last oil drop Saudi Arabia had $770 billion in cash reserves. From 2015-2017 that number dropped to $500 billion. Prices went back up again but things haven’t changed for the Kingdom. They have a very expensive war in Yemen, have a bloated military budget and plans to build a new city in the desert. So the Saudis can’t maintain this for long. Because if oil stays below $80 for the next 2 years they will have their cash reserves drop to $100 billion and we will see a insolvency crisis in the Kingdom. Bin Salman has made another rash decision which could bite him.

:gucci:
 
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