Vitol predicts imminent oil price surge to $100 per barrel

Vitol predicts imminent oil price surge to $100 per barrel Spot crude prices could hit $100/b this year if OPEC+ maintains its production discipline and continues to withhold crude from the global markets, Russell Hardy, the CEO of independent commodity trading group Vitol, said April 9, Report informs, citing SP
Energy
April 9, 2024 19:51
Vitol predicts imminent oil price surge to $100 per barrel

Spot crude prices could hit $100/b this year if OPEC+ maintains its production discipline and continues to withhold crude from the global markets, Russell Hardy, the CEO of independent commodity trading group Vitol, said April 9, Report informs, citing S&P Global Commodity Insights.

Brent crude futures on April 8 traded above $91/b for the first time since October, an increase of almost 20% since the start of the year, as fears of widening conflict in the Middle East disrupting supplies face growing expectations of robust economic fundamentals.

OPEC+ has also taken some 5 million b/d of crude off the market under voluntary production cuts since late 2022 to help support oil prices as concerns over the pace of global economic growth dragged on demand forecasts.

"It's really a supply-constrained market but we've averaged about $83/b so far this year, so $80 to $100/b feels like a sensible range for the market given OPEC's control of inventories around the world," Hardy told the FT Commodities Global Summit in Lausanne.

On the demand side, Hardy said Vitol is expecting global growth of 1.9 million b/d this year, similar to 2023, with China, India and jet fuel from increased air travel continuing to underpin growth.

Speaking at the same event a day earlier, the head of commodities at fund manager Citadel said he expects oil markets to become "extremely tight" in the second half of this year, in part due to OPEC+ output cuts. Citadel's Sebastian Barrack said OPEC+ has "definitely regained control" of the oil market over the last few years.

Last week, OPEC+ said it would maintain its voluntary cuts until July. The cartel is expected to decide on its continued production cuts beyond then at its next full ministerial meeting scheduled for June 1.

Although Iraq, the UAE, Kuwait and Kazakhstan have recently been producing above their quotas, the two largest OPEC+ producers, Russia and Saudi Arabia, both have been pumping in line with pledged cuts. Riyadh has done the heavy lifting when it comes to cutting output since last year, with production falling to levels not seen since the coronavirus pandemic.

"We do have to recognize that OPEC has been doing a good job in managing oil prices in the last few years," the acting head of Socar Trading, Taghi Taghi-Zada, told the FT event. "So with the price at $90/b, they might be interested in acting in line with that and maintaining the price. They have been successful and I don't see a reason why they should not continue the trend as a group."

If oil prices continue to climb over $90/b, the US will likely put pressure on OPEC kingpin Saudi Arabia to pump more oil ahead of the June OPEC+ meeting, according to Frederic Lasserre, the head of research at independent commodity trader Gunvor.

"If we are close to $95/b I think that there will be a huge pressure at least to bring back some of the voluntary cuts, maybe half a million b/d [from Saudi Arabia]... We feel that it's likely that we're going to see some production coming back from Iraq and Saudi Arabia," he said.

Amrita Sen, head of research group Energy Aspects, said she doesn't expect Saudi Arabia to bow to US pressure to wind back output cuts as the US-Saudi relationship is "quite broken". However, she said she expects Riyadh to bring back "some volumes... in an incremental way rather than everything at once."

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