石油价格


自从沙特阿拉伯宣布取消将石油产能扩大 100 万桶/日的计划以来,关于这一决定背后原因的猜测甚嚣尘上。

首先,分析师推测长期石油需求前景受到质疑。

接下来,投行表示,过去两年OPEC+协议之外产油国的供应增长令市场感到意外,全球最大原油出口国沙特可能已经认识到自己面临问题,必须更加努力地应对为了它的市场份额。

人们相信,沙特阿美公司的意外声明可能会更长时间地支撑油价。

最后,停止扩张预计将为沙特石油巨头阿美公司节省数十亿美元的大型新项目资本支出,缓解资产负债表的压力,并可能为沙特王国的金库留下更多现金,沙特王国正在计划巨额资金投入。NEOM 项目等未来项目的支出,该项目是 沙特阿拉伯 2030 年愿景计划的关键支柱,旨在提振经济并实现经济多元化,摆脱对石油的依赖。

沙特阿美公司本周表示, 沙特领导层下令 停止将最大可持续产能扩大至每日 1300 万桶的工作,而将其维持在每日 1200 万桶。这家全球最大的石油公司周二在一份 声明中表示 ,将在 3 月份公布 2023 年财务业绩时更新今年的资本支出计划。

 路透社周三援引一位行业消息人士的话说,沙特阿拉伯的这一宣布可能令市场感到意外,但由于担心世界最大原油出口国没有充分货币化其过剩产能,该决定已经考虑了至少六个月 

石油需求担忧?

沙特阿美和沙特阿拉伯均未提供决定放弃产能扩张计划的理由。分析师和市场参与者的下意识反应是,全球最大的石油出口国可能已经下调了对长期石油需求的预期。

沙特和欧佩克在公开场合继续表示,需求将继续增长,世界将需要更多的石油和天然气来抵消成熟油田产量下降的影响。

OPEC甚至 大幅上调了 长期石油需求展望,目前预计2045年全球石油需求约为1.16亿桶/日,比去年的评估增加了600万桶/日,因为能源消耗持续增长,将需要所有的石油需求。能量的形式。

然而,国际能源署(IEA)表示,到 本十年末,石油需求将达到峰值。

由于沙特阿拉伯正在带头管理 OPEC+ 的石油供应,考虑到其目前拥有 300 万桶/日的闲置产能,该国可能认为目前 1200 万桶/日的最大可持续 产能就足够了。

例如,2020 年初,在与俄罗斯的全面价格战中,沙特向市场的供应量很少超过 1100 万桶/日,而新冠疫情破坏了需求,导致价格暴跌。

目前,沙特阿拉伯的原油产量为 900 万桶/日,其领导 OPEC+ 努力“稳定市场”。

非欧佩克国家的供应竞争

许多分析师表示,除了对长期需求的担忧之外,沙特在扩大产能方面态度大转变的另一个最受讨论的原因是近年来非欧佩克+生产国(尤其是美国)的供应增长强劲。

咨询公司拉皮丹能源集团(Rapidan Energy Group)总裁、前白宫官员鲍勃·麦克纳利(Bob McNally)告诉彭博社,“雅德认为未来几年平衡将趋于疲软,主要是欧佩克+以外的供应。 

摩根士丹利全球石油策略师Martijn Rats表示,由于美国和其他非OPEC+产油国的供应强于预期,“OPEC石油的石油市场空间面临压力。”

巴克莱银行则认为,沙特停止扩张更多是由于欧佩克+联盟之外令人惊讶的强劲供应反应,而不是需求预测的下调。

巴克莱银行在路透社发表的一份报告中表示,“如果需求前景恶化,作为成本最低的生产国之一,沙特阿拉伯可能会增加产量,以减缓国际产能转型和投资的步伐,效果会更好 。”

花旗表示,沙特的决定可能意味着 OPEC+ 已经开始认识到自己存在问题。

花旗研究 表示,“即全球石油市场产能过剩的规模不断扩大,以及沙特阿拉伯需要继续让出市场份额以适应竞争对手(美国页岩油、圭亚那、巴西)的增长。”

“市场或许应该假设沙特愿意不惜一切代价捍卫 70 美元/桶,至少在短期内如此。”

沙特预算  

由于扩张停止,沙特阿美资本支出下降,可能会增加沙特王国的收入,该国希望投资旅游业、数字城市和尖端的未来新企业。

阿联酋国民银行 预计, 今年沙特阿拉伯的预算赤字将扩大至 GDP 的 -4.3%,而官方估计为 GDP 的 -1.9%。

阿联酋国民银行 (Emirates NBD) 在 1 月份表示,“我们预计 2024 年油价平均为 82.5 美元/桶,与 2023 年类似”。

“然而,由于沙特阿拉伯目前将其每日 100 万桶的自愿减产期限至少延长至 2024 年 3 月,此后才逐渐恢复,我们预计石油销售量将比 2023 年平均水平下降 -4% 左右,从而给预算收入带来压力.”

 

作者:Oilprice.com 的 Tsvetana Paraskova


原文链接/oilandgas360

Oil Price


Since Saudi Arabia’s announcement that it is scrapping plans to expand its oil production capacity by 1 million barrels per day (bpd), speculation has flourished about the reasons behind the decision.

First, analysts speculate that the outlook on long-term oil demand has come into question.

Next, investment banks suggest that supply growth from producers outside the OPEC+ agreement has surprised the market in the past two years, and the world’s top crude oil exporter, Saudi Arabia, may have recognized that it faces a problem and has to fight harder for its market share.

Then there is the belief that the surprise announcement from Saudi Aramco could support oil prices for longer.

Finally, the halted expansion is expected to save Saudi oil giant Aramco billions of U.S. dollars from capital expenditure on massive new projects, easing the pressure on the balance sheet and potentially leaving more cash for the coffers of the Kingdom, which is planning an enormous amount of spending on futuristic projects such as the NEOM project—a key pillar of Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030 program to boost its economy and diversify it away from oil.

Aramco said this week it was ordered by the Kingdom’s leadership to stop work on expanding its maximum sustainable capacity to 13 million barrels per day, instead keeping it at 12 million bpd. The world’s biggest oil firm said in a statement on Tuesday that it would update its capital spending plans for the year in March when it announces its 2023 financial results.

Saudi Arabia may have surprised markets with the announcement, but the decision was being deliberated for at least six months due to concerns that the world’s top crude exporter wasn’t fully monetizing its excess capacity, Reuters reported on Wednesday, quoting an industry source.

Oil Demand Concerns?

Neither Aramco nor Saudi Arabia provided reasons for the decision to abandon plans for capacity expansion. The knee-jerk reaction from analysts and market participants was that the world’s biggest oil exporter may have revised down its expectations of oil demand in the long term.

Publicly, the Saudis and OPEC continue to say that demand will continue growing and that the world will need more oil and gas to offset declining output from mature fields.

OPEC has even raised significantly its long-term oil demand outlook and now expects global oil demand at around 116 million bpd in 2045, up by 6 million bpd compared to the previous assessment from last year, as energy consumption continues to grow and will need all forms of energy.

The International Energy Agency (IEA), however, says peak oil demand is in sight by the end of this decade.

As Saudi Arabia is leading efforts to manage oil supply from OPEC+, it may have decided that its current maximum sustainable capacity of 12 million bpd is enough, considering that it now has 3 million bpd of spare production capacity.

The Kingdom has only rarely supplied more than 11 million bpd to the market, for example, in the early months of 2020 amid the full-blown price war with Russia while prices were tanking as Covid was destroying demand.

Currently, Saudi Arabia produces 9 million bpd of crude as it leads OPEC+ efforts to “stabilize the market.”

Non-OPEC Competition for Supply

Apart from concerns about demand in the long term, the other most discussed reason for the Saudi U-turn on expanding capacity is the stronger supply growth from non-OPEC+ producers in recent years, most of all, the United States, many analysts say.

“Riyadh sees softer balances in the next few years, mainly on supply outside OPEC+,” Bob McNally, president of consultancy Rapidan Energy Group and a former White House official, told Bloomberg.

According to Martijn Rats, global oil strategist at Morgan Stanley, with the stronger-than-expected supply from the U.S. and other non-OPEC+ producers, “the room in the oil market for OPEC oil came under pressure.”

Barclays, for its part, believes the Saudi halt to expansion is driven more by the surprisingly strong supply response outside the OPEC+ alliance, rather than a lowered demand forecast.

“If the demand outlook were deteriorating, as one of the lowest cost producers, Saudi Arabia would arguably be better off increasing its output to slow the pace of transition and investments in international capacity,” Barclays said in a note carried by Reuters.

Citi says the Saudi decision could mean that OPEC+ has started to recognize that it has a problem.

“Namely the size of the growing capacity overhang in global oil markets and the need for KSA to continue to cede market share to accommodate growth of competitors (US shale, Guyana, Brazil),” Citi Research said.

“The market should probably assume that KSA is willing to defend $70/barrel at all costs, at least in the short-term.”

Saudi Budget  

The lower capex from Aramco, now that the expansion is halted, could boost income for the Kingdom, which looks to invest in tourism, digital cities, and cutting-edge futuristic new ventures.

Bank Emirates NBD expects Saudi Arabia’s budget deficit to widen to -4.3% of GDP this year, versus the official estimate of -1.9% of GDP.

“For 2024, we expect oil prices to average USD 82.5/b, similar to 2023,” Emirates NBD said in January.

“However with Saudi Arabia now extending its 1mn b/d voluntary production cut at least through March 2024 and only gradually recovering thereafter, we expect the volume of oil sold to decline by around -4% from average 2023 levels, weighing on budget revenue.”

 

By Tsvetana Paraskova for Oilprice.com