Newest Friend To Oil Market Bears? Donald Trump

 | Nov 13, 2018 01:30

US President Donald Trump didn't wait long to serve up his latest twitter volley after Saudi Arabia, the world's largest oil exporter, announced at the weekend that it planned to cut half a million barrels of its oil supply beginning in December.

Before the first trading session of the week began, after the announcement was released, Trump tweeted:

“Hopefully, Saudi Arabia and OPEC will not be cutting oil production. Oil prices should be much lower based on supply!”

And the market promptly ended down for an 11th straight day on Monday, wiping out gains built earlier in Asian and European trading. Some of the industry’s most-watched analysts couldn’t hide their surprise on Monday on who had become the newest friend to oil bears: Donald Trump.

London-based Energy Aspects, known for its incisive market insights on oil, devoted a five-page note to how the president and his administration misled Saudi Arabia and the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) into thinking the world was going to suffer one of its worst supply squeezes due to sanctions on Iran.

h3 Lower Oil Prices Mattered More Than 'Punishing' Iran/h3

The ploy was key in motivating OPEC’s other major producers, Saudi Arabia included, to boost production in recent months over the Iranian fear factor—when what Trump wanted were ample crude supplies so that he could keep US pump prices for gasoline low while scoring political points against Tehran to appease his conservative base of voters ahead of the November 6 midterm elections.

This was clear when a day before the Iran sanctions kicked in on November 5, his administration announced unexpected waivers for eight major buyers of Iranian oil to continue importing from Tehran for another six months. Quotas for some of the waivers were not disclosed, adding to the deception.

“The oil bulls are angry and dejected, and dare we say rightly so,” Energy Aspects said in the note entitled ‘Broken Trust’.

The research group added:

“Having vowed to bring Iranian exports to zero, Donald Trump caved and issued waivers to import Iranian oil to eight countries. We calculate waivers will amount to just above 1.3 million barrels per day (bpd) of Iranian crude and condensate exports, but with the US refusing to confirm waiver volumes, the market is assuming the worst, with some talking of exports of up to 2 million bpd again.”

h3 OPEC Group Feeling Misled By Trump/h3

Phil Flynn of Chicago’s Price Futures Group, another prominent commentator on oil, said OPEC was also “angry that President Donald Trump misled them, and with Iran telling the Saudis ‘I told you so’".

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Flynn said the cartel would now have to defy Trump and “stop the bear bath, (or) stand to lose more billions than they already have during this selloff”.