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World

Saudi Arabia deepens oil cuts as weak demand weighs on prices

The Kingdom aims through this additional cut to encourage OPEC+ participants, as well as other producing countries.
Published May 11, 2020
  • The Kingdom aims through this additional cut to encourage OPEC+ participants, as well as other producing countries.
  • Saudi energy ministry official said new cuts would bring total Saudi production down by around 4.8 million bpd in June versus April.

DUBAI: Saudi Arabia will voluntarily deepen oil output cuts from June as low oil prices are causing huge pain to the kingdom's budget and global demand remains weak due to lockdowns to contain the coronavirus pandemic.

The announcement by the kingdom to add 1 million barrels per day (bpd) - equal to 1pc of global supply - to the previously announced cuts follows last week's phone conversation between US President Donald Trump and Saudi Arabia's King Salman.

Trump had worked last month to persuade Saudi Arabia, fellow OPEC members and Russia - a group known as OPEC+ - to cut oil output after a collapse in crude prices put heavy pressure on US producers.

Last Friday, the two men discussed oil and defence amid news Washington would withdraw two Patriot anti-missile batteries from Saudi Arabia that have been a defence against Iran. Washington said the withdrawal was not linked to oil.

Saudi Energy Minister Prince Abdulaziz told Reuters the deeper oil output cuts in June are designed to expedite draining a global supply glut and rebalancing the oil market.

He said the kingdom wants to be "ahead of the curve" and he sees signs of demand picking up as countries move to ease restrictions on movements imposed over the past months to stop the spread of the coronavirus epidemic.

"We want to expedite the process of returning back to normal," he said in a telephone interview.

On Monday, a Saudi energy ministry official said new cuts would bring total Saudi production down by around 4.8 million bpd in June versus April. Output would then stand at 7.492 million bpd, the lowest in almost two decades.

"The Kingdom aims through this additional cut to encourage OPEC+ participants, as well as other producing countries, to comply with the production cuts they have committed to, and to provide additional voluntary cuts, in an effort to support the stability of global oil markets," the Saudi official said.

Kuwait joined Saudi Arabia in announcing fresh oil production cuts of 80,000 bpd in June, on top of those already agreed under the OPEC+ plan. The United Arab Emirates also said it would reduce another 100,000 bpd in June.

Oil prices rose on the announcements, with the benchmark Brent and WTI futures paring earlier loses to trade at $31 a barrel and $25.12 a barrel respectively.

'DEAL WITH TRUMP'

Global oil demand has slumped by about 30pc as the coronavirus pandemic has curtailed travel and economic activity across the world, building up inventories globally.

OPEC+ agreed last month to reduce output by 9.7 million bpd for May and June, a record production cut.

Christyan Malek, managing director at JPMorgan, said he expected Saudi Arabia to further deepen cuts, possibly by another 1.0-1.5 million bpd, under pressure from Trump and its own fiscal pressures at home.

Asked whether the deeper cuts by Saudi Arabia would continue beyond June, Prince Abdulaziz declined to comment, but struck an optimistic note on the future of the oil market.

"If things are continuously hopefully improving, we will scale back (the cuts) as we have in the (OPEC+) agreement," he said, adding that he would be "more than surprised" if by time OPEC+ meet next in June "the picture may not be more brighter."

Producers will slowly relax curbs after June, although reductions in supply will stay in place until April 2022.

On Monday, Saudi Arabia said it would triple value added tax and suspend a cost of living allowance for state workers.

Malek said the Saudi fresh oil reductions were "a transitory cut to help soften the demand hit in the next few months."

"It also does appear to be a politically charged cut to meet a deal with Trump. The US energy industry is looking for a bailout from Saudi Arabia," Malek said.

The kingdom was in turn looking for US investments and the removal of anti-OPEC legislation, Malek said.

"But fast forward 12-18 months and Saudi Arabia will have a bigger market share while oil majors and shale will be severely hit," he added.

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