OPEC+ to Saudis: ‘You Keep Cutting, We’ll Keep Producing’

 | Jun 05, 2023 04:37

For the benefit of the rolling cameras, Saudi Energy Minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman triumphantly declared that the rest of OPEC+ will keep to promised oil cuts till 2024 while the kingdom itself will slash an additional million barrels per day next month. Beaming, he added:

“It is really a great day for us because the quality of the agreement is unprecedented and I would have to say the quality of cooperation is unprecedented.”

The OPEC+ delegates around him were smiling, too, probably because they knew they’d be producing while the Saudis were vowing to double down on cuts.

The journalists in the room scribbled into their notepads, wondering but probably afraid to ask the obvious of the prince, who despises dissenting reporters as much as he hates the short-sellers in oil. And that question would be:

“Your Excellency, doesn’t this deal actually suck for the Saudis?”

The real deal of the just-concluded OPEC+ meeting, held in person for only the second time since the pandemic, was there was no unprecedented deal — not at least the kind described by Abdulaziz.

This is because, in the three years since the COVID outbreak that took oil prices to minus $40 per barrel, demand for the commodity is almost back to pre-pandemic levels, with several caveats though. And those are:

  • Slower-than-anticipated oil demand in top importer China
  • Fears of a global recession
  • Inflation in the United States that refuses to go down as quickly as the authorities want, despite more than a year of aggressive rate hikes by the Federal Reserve

Enter OPEC+ and its production cuts.

Oil revenue is the lifeblood of the economies in OPEC, or the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, a 13-member Saudi-led group whose main objective is to be the price-setter of the commodity.

Ten other oil-producing states, including Russia that aren’t OPEC members have also been keeping their output closely in line with the group’s for the sake of price. The 23-nation alliance is collectively known as OPEC+.

For core OPEC members like Kuwait and Iraq, more than 90% of all their revenue comes from oil. In the United Arab Emirates, oil accounts for 13% of exports and 30% of GDP, and in Algeria, it’s 25% of GDP.

In Saudi Arabia, OPEC’s largest member, oil accounts for 70% of total export value and 53% of government revenue. That’s not all. Media reports say the Saudis need at least $500 billion or as much as $8.5 trillion (the numbers keep fluctuating) to successfully diversify their economy away from oil.

Thus, it’s easy to see why OPEC — particularly Saudi Arabia, which needs a barrel at more than $80 to realize its ambitious plans — would go to any extent to get the price it wants.

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