石油价格


OPEC+本月再次延长石油减产期限。这一决定绝非出乎意料,与之前的生产政策公告不同,它对价格产生了预期的影响。然而,它只能工作这么长时间。很快,欧佩克将需要做出决定。

去年,石油交易商几乎完全关注需求及其威胁,尤其是在中国。今年,他们开始认识到,在全球需求实际增长的情况下,每天扣留 220 万桶石油将在某个时候开始侵蚀供应。石油价格正在上涨。

诚然,一些欧佩克+成员国的产量一直超过其分配的配额,他们被要求采取措施进行补偿,这通常意味着暂时进一步减产。但似乎生产过剩——以及免配额的伊朗、委内瑞拉和利比亚产量的增加——并没有影响减产的目的。只是他们无法永远持续下去。

一些分析师在过去几个月指出,OPEC+将不得不在某个时候开始解除减产,特别是如果布伦特原油价格突破每桶100美元的话。这些分析师的论点是,到那时,价格将像往常一样开始破坏需求。

然而,总部位于迪拜的咨询公司 Qamar Energy 首席执行官 Robin Mills 表示,OPEC+ 可能会决定坚持减产,直到油价远高于 100 美元。在《国民报》最近发表的一篇评论 文章中 ,米尔斯表示,坚持减产是欧佩克面临的两条道路之一,这将带来所有可预见的后果,例如通胀上升和美国产量增加。

米尔斯描述的另一条路是欧佩克相信自己强劲的需求预测并取消减产。这绝对是规划未来道路的一种方式。然而,同样地,有人可能会说,坚持减产也是对欧佩克强劲需求预期的一种表现:如果需求如此有弹性并且易于扩大,那么即使在价格较高的环境下,需求也会扩大。

这正是 2022 年发生的情况,当时俄罗斯/乌克兰冲突的爆发将油价推升至每桶 100 美元以上,并保持在该水平足够长的时间,使年平均价格接近每桶 95 美元。在那一年高油价期间,需求 每天增加 超过 250 万桶。那是在中国从 2022 年底才结束的大流行封锁中恢复过来之前。

因此,虽然预期 OPEC+ 开始考虑结束减产是有道理的,但维持减产可能更有意义——尤其是因为取消减产会对价格产生大致相同的影响去年美国页岩油产量增长超过 100 万桶/日的消息。

OPEC预计今年石油需求将增长 220万桶/日。随着削减的到位,这种需求增长率肯定会导致全球市场出现赤字。对赤字规模的估计各不相同,国际能源署认为,由于欧佩克+减产和红海局势引发的需求强劲,赤字“轻微”。然而,Qamar Energy 的 Mills 预计今年晚些时候将出现高达 400 万桶/日的赤字。

如果发生这种情况,对于欧佩克来说,没有什么比宣布结束减产或至少进行调整以避免油价暴跌更容易的了。赤字环境将是进行这些调整的最佳时机——由于价格高且需求弹性大,基本面因素将减轻此类公告对价格的影响。因为减产不可能永远持续下去,尤其是在一些欧佩克成员国已经对配额表示不满的情况下。

 

作者:Irina Slav for Oilprice.com


原文链接/oilandgas360

Oil Price


OPEC+ once again extended its oil production cuts this month. The decision was anything but unexpected and, unlike previous production policy announcements, it had the desired effect on prices. However, it could only work for so long. Soon, OPEC will need to make a decision.

Last year, oil traders were almost exclusively focused on demand and threats thereof, especially in China. This year, they are beginning to understand that withholding 2.2 million barrels of oil daily while global demand actually rises will, at some point, start eating into supply. Oil prices are on the rise.

True, some OPEC+ members have been producing more than their assigned quota, and they have been asked to take steps to compensate, which normally means temporary deeper cuts. But it seems that overproduction—and the rising output of quota-exempt Iran, Venezuela, and Libya—has not interfered with the purpose of the cuts. Only they cannot continue forever.

Some analysts have noted in the past few months that OPEC+ will have to start unwinding the cuts at some point, especially if Brent crude tops $100 per barrel. The argument made by these analysts is that at that point, prices will start destroying demand as they usually do.

Yet OPEC+ may decide to stick with the cuts until oil is well above $100, according to the CEO of Dubai-based consultancy Qamar Energy, Robin Mills. In a recent opinion piece for The National, Mills suggested sticking with the cuts is one of the two roads ahead of OPEC, with all foreseeable consequences, such as higher inflation and higher U.S. production.

The other road Mills describes as OPEC believing its own strong demand forecasts and unwinding the cuts. This is definitely one way of framing the road ahead. In the same vein, however, one could argue that sticking to the cuts is also a sign of belief in OPEC’s strong demand expectations: if demand is so resilient and prone to expand, it will expand even in a higher-price environment.

This is precisely what happened in 2022 when the start of the Russia/Ukraine conflict pushed oil above $100 per barrel and held it there long enough for the annual average to come in at close to $95 per barrel. Demand during that year of high oil prices rose by over 2.5 million barrels daily. And that was before China came roaring back from the pandemic lockdowns, which only ended in late 2022.

So, while it would make sense to expect OPEC+ to start thinking about putting an end to its production cuts, it might make more sense to keep them in place—not least because an unwinding of the cuts would have about the same effect on prices as the news that U.S. shale output grew by over 1 million bpd last year.

OPEC expects oil demand this year to grow by 2.2 million bpd. With the cuts in place, this rate of demand growth is certain to push the global market into a deficit. Estimates of the size of this deficit vary, with the IEA seeing a “slight” deficit as a result of the OPEC+ cuts and stronger demand prompted by the Red Sea situation. Qamar Energy’s Mills, however, sees a deficit of as much as 4 million barrels daily developing later in the year.

Should this happen, there would be nothing easier for OPEC than announcing an end to the cuts, or at least a tweak, to avoid a price slump. And a deficit environment would be the best time to make these tweaks—with prices high and demand resilient, the effect of such an announcement on prices would be mitigated by the fundamentals. Because the cuts can’t go on forever, not when some OPEC members are already grumbling against the quotas.

 

By Irina Slav for Oilprice.com