Scraping the Barrel
Asia Oil: so long as the current OPEC+ compliance commitment argument for price recovery holds water, oil prices could stabilize at higher ranges.
Oil prices fared well overnight. And while another fall in the US rig count may have helped, it was bulls on parade after the market got wind of reports that the OPEC+ meeting will be brought forward to this week where discussions will center on extending 9.7Mbd 2Q cuts, which applied to April and May.
Now the waiting game sets in to see if the "sources said" media reports yield positive results for the markets.
Indeed, favorable news from OPEC+ is supporting oil prices: the group is considering a short extension of the initial phase of the production cut agreement, maintaining reductions at 9.7mb/d for an additional 1-3 months rather than beginning a phased easing of cuts from July 1 as originally planned.
The reports are putting to rest the split that seemed to have been emerging last week when Russia signalled it would begin to ease production cuts from July in line with the original OPEC+ agreement. Still, a high-level phone call between the leaders of Russia and Saudi Arabia late in the week seems to have resulted in a deal from Russia to follow Saudi Arabia's lead.
This is yet another indication of the sense of urgency within the OPEC+ group and it provides OPEC+ producers a platform to signal continued commitment to do whatever it takes to offset risks to demand with expedience and a highly coordinated supply management.
Dropping global supply and nascent signs of improving demand as consumers emerge from their government-enforced lockdowns have triggered Brent prices to nearly double since mid-April. Still, oil prices will remain sensitive to any symptoms that fundamentals are not improving as quickly as expected, and that traders keep their trade war playbooks shelved.
The three tenets for oil market recovery to extend
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