Largest oil trader says US has left OPEC in control of global crude prices

Largest oil trader says US has left OPEC in control of global crude prices OPEC+ appears in control of crude prices as US production is lagging pre-pandemic levels, according to a senior executive at the world’s biggest independent oil trader, Vitol Group.
Energy
June 9, 2021 10:01
Largest oil trader says US has left OPEC in control of global crude prices

OPEC+ appears in control of crude prices as US production is lagging pre-pandemic levels, according to a senior executive at the world’s biggest independent oil trader, Vitol Group, Report informs, citing Bloomberg.

The decline in US drilling and output leaves little competition to efforts by the producers’ group to manage markets, Mike Muller, Vitol’s head of Asia, said during an online conference on Sunday. Brent crude closed above $70 a barrel last week for the first time in two years, as buyers demand more oil than producers are pumping.

US oil producers are still employing only half the rigs they used before the coronavirus struck. Meanwhile, OPEC+, as the group led by Saudi Arabia and Russia is known, is easing barrels back on to the market as demand recovers.

“There’s a perception in the market that control is with OPEC+,” Muller said at the event hosted by the consultancy Gulf Intelligence. “It will take a long time for US oil to come back” to production levels seen before the coronavirus outbreak, he said.

The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries and partners agreed last week to continue easing production restraints in July but left markets guessing about what it will do for the rest of the year. After cutting production by some 10 million barrels a day, or a tenth of daily global demand, the group still has about 6 million barrels a day of idle capacity.

Muller said that China’s economy will continue to grow, helping bolster oil demand and bringing down crude stockpiles. Economic expansion and regulatory changes there will likely cause domestic refineries to process more crude, he said. “It doesn’t pay to hold inventory at all,” Muller said. “De-stocking must continue from a purely commercial perspective.”

More Iranian crude oil is likely to hit markets this year after an expected deal to limit the country’s nuclear program in return for the US easing sanctions. Iran is limited in how quickly it can bring oil back to the market since a lot of its stored barrels are condensate, a light and sulfurous liquid which may be harder to sell, he said.

Given delays in negotiations last week, Muller said it’s less likely more Iranian barrels will hit the market before the fourth quarter.

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