Bearish sentiment has taken hold of oil markets after OPEC+
underwhelmed
with its commitment to extend its voluntary cuts into Q3 2024
and its base cuts until the end of 2025.
- Combining an in-person meeting
in Riyadh with a hybrid online option for smaller producers, OPEC+
has agreed to extend existing production cuts into next year, whilst
also paving the way for a gradual unwinding of most curtailments.
- The last round of voluntary production cuts agreed in November
2023 are set to be phased out over a 12-month period, lifting OPEC+
collective target to 36.27 million b/d, more than 2 million b/d
higher than current output.
- The UAE was the big winner of the OPEC+ meeting, having secured
another upgrade to its official production quota, allowing it to
ramp up output by 300,000 b/d in several steps throughout 2025.
- Even though Saudi energy minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman
maintained that OPEC+ has the choice to pause or even reverse the
upcoming relaxations, the market at large saw it as a sign of more
supply in a period of uncertain demand.
Market Movers
- The shipping arm of ADNOC, the national oil company of the UAE,
has
agreed to
buy UK-based shipowner Navig8 for $1.5 billion, taking over a fleet
of 32 tankers and the operatorship of six shipping pools.
- US midstream major Energy Transfer (NYSE:ET) has
agreed to
buy Midland-focused pipeline operator WTG Midstream in a deal valued
at $3.25 billion, including a $2.45 billion payout in cash.
- Japan’s largest gas supplier Tokyo Gas (TYO:9531)
is
seeking
to invest into US natural gas assets, building on its recent $2.7
billion purchase of Rockcliff Energy and its 49% farm-in into
trading firm ARM Energy.
Tuesday, June 04, 2024
The OPEC+ meeting over the weekend extended voluntary production
cuts into Q3 2024 and the original 3.66 million bpd cuts until the
end of 2025. That pledge was not enough to persuade market
participants that the future of oil is bright, with Brent shedding
almost $3 per barrel in just one trading day and sliding below the
$77 per barrel mark. With the promise of more supply coming back to
market in 2025, the list of bullish factors out there has shrunk to
a bare minimum.
OPEC+ Extends Voluntary Production Cuts to Q3.
Swiftly organizing an in-person meeting in Riyadh, OPEC+
members
agreed to
extend the 2.2 million b/d of voluntary cuts until the third quarter
of 2024, whilst also charting the course for a gradual relaxation of
remaining cuts into 2025.
Norway Outage Sends European Gas to 2024 Highs.
European TTF gas futures
soared to
their highest this year so far, at €37 per MWh, after
Equinor's (NYSE:EQNR) offshore Sleipner hub halted
operations due to a crack, also prompting a shutdown at the Nyhamna
processing plant.
Nationwide Strike Paralyzes Nigeria’s Industry.
Nigeria’s main labor unions have
shut down
the country’s power grid and halted flights across the country as
they demand a 1500% increase in minimum wage amidst unprecedented
inflation, so far sparing the country’s oil production.
Hedge Funds Come Back to Oil Speculation.
After six straight weeks of shorting their positions, portfolio
investors have
ramped up
their net length held in the six main oil futures and options
contracts in the week ending May 28, mostly by closing out their
shorts ahead of the OPEC+ meeting.
South Korea May Have Found Oil. One of the
most import-dependent countries globally, South Korea has
approved
exploratory drilling for potentially huge oil and gas reserves off
the country’s east coast, with KNOC leading the appraisal that could
unearth as much as 14 billion boe.
Exodus of Oil Majors from UK North Sea Continues.
Global oil majors Shell (LON:SHEL) and
ExxonMobil (NYSE:XOM) are
nearing
an agreement with independent UK producer Viaro Energy to sell their
jointly-owned gas fields in the southern North Sea for $0.5 billion,
ending Exxon’s 60-year presence in the country.
Indonesia Postpones Copper Concentrate Export Ban.
Indonesia, one of the largest copper producers
globally, has
postponed
the start of a ban on its copper concentrate exports until the end
of 2024 due to delays in the construction of smelters, potentially
deflating copper prices into the summer.
US Resumes Buying Oil for SPR. The US
Department of Energy has
resumed
purchasing 3 million barrels of oil for the country’s Strategic
Petroleum reserve, buying at an average price of $77.69 per barrel
for November delivery, taking the repurchased total to 38.6 million
barrels.
Sheinbaum’s Landslide Victory Worries Mexico’s Oil
Industry. The landslide victory of Mexico’s
president-elect Claudia Sheinbaum will allow the ruling party to
officially
dismantle
the 2013 energy market liberalization by changing the constitution,
capping future oil production growth in the country.
Indian Heatwaves Ratchet Up Gas Consumption.
As heatwaves across India have claimed dozens of lives, the
country’s natural gas-based power generation has
surged to
record highs in May, almost doubling year-on-year to 4.7 million
KWhr, all the while coal still accounts for 75% of generation
capacity.
China’s Emission Rules to Cap Fuel Demand.
Beijing is set to mandate a 5% cut from 2020 levels of carbon
emissions intensity by the end of 2025, removing purchase limits on
non-fossil-fuel cars and boosting the electrification of industrial
vehicles, capping growth in gasoline and diesel demand.
US Oil Major Takes Venezuela to Court. A
court in Trinidad and Tobago has
granted
US oil major ConocoPhillips (NYSE:COP) the right to
enforce a $1.33 billion claim against Venezuela for the
appropriation of its oil and gas assets, potentially derailing the
development of offshore gas fields such as Dragon or Cocuina-Manakin.
Australian LNG Comes Back in Force. US
energy major Chevron (NYSE:CVX) has
resumed
LNG production at its Gorgon liquefaction facility on Australia’s
Barrow Island after a mechanical fault prompted a halt in operations
for a month, bringing back 5.2 mtpa of output capacity.
Tom Kool
Editor, Oilprice.com
Green Play Ammonia™, Yielder® NFuel Energy.
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