RPT-COLUMN-As Saudi Arabia blows up crude oil market, stand by for fallout: Russell

Published 09/03/2020, 14:00
© Reuters.  RPT-COLUMN-As Saudi Arabia blows up crude oil market, stand by for fallout: Russell
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(Repeats item published earlier with no changes in text. The

opinions expressed here are those of the author, a columnist for

Reuters.)

By Clyde Russell

LAUNCESTON, Australia, March 9 (Reuters) - Saudi Arabia has

detonated a metaphorical nuclear weapon in the global oil

market, blowing up prices and trade relationships with its

decision to slash the cost of its own crude while ramping up

output.

The Saudi move was no shot across the bows aimed at Russia's

reluctance to extend and boost a deal to curb production.

Instead, it was a full-on declaration of war.

Saudi Aramco 2222.SE aims to lift its output above 10

million barrels per day (bpd) in April, possibly as high as 11

million bpd, two people with knowledge of the matter told

Reuters on March 8. Given its current output is around 9.7 million bpd, this

means as much as an extra 1.3 million bpd could flood the market

next month - just as demand is taking a major hit from the

economic fallout of the global coronavirus epidemic.

But pumping more oil was only one of the two barrels fired

by the Saudis. The other was a massive cut to their official

selling prices (OSPs) for April.

Saudi Aramco prices its crude against various benchmarks for

the different regions it supplies. While the exact formula isn't

disclosed, the price moves generally reflect a combination of

demand by refiners in each of the main consuming regions of

Asia, Europe and North America, as well as movements in the

benchmarks.

But the collapse of talks between OPEC and its allies on

March 6 prompted a huge cut to the Saudi OSPs, much more than

what was justified by even the current weakness in demand from

refiners.

The OSP for Saudi Aramco's benchmark Arab Light grade was

cut by $6 a barrel for Asian customers, the destination of about

two-thirds of the kingdom's exports. This was the largest

monthly cut in Refinitiv records stretching back to 2003.

The OSP was cut to a discount of $3.10 a barrel to the

Oman/Dubai average for April, down from a premium of $2.90 for

March cargoes.

It wasn't just Asian refiners getting a massive price cut.

The Saudis slashed the Arab Light OSP for Northwest Europe by $8

a barrel to a discount of $10.25 a barrel to Brent, and the

United States got a reduction of $7 a barrel to a discount of

$3.75 against the Argus Sour Crude Index.

SAUDI MESSAGING

When OPEC and its allies, including Russia, failed to agree

to extend their output cut of 2.1 million bpd, which expires at

the end of this month, or agree a further 1.5 million bpd

reduction, it was always likely the Saudis would take action.

The prevailing logic was that the Saudis wanted to send a

message to Russia: Extending and increasing output restrictions

would have been a good idea, and that it would have been in all

the producers' interests to make this happen.

But there was nothing subtle in the eventual Saudi actions -

the largest cut to the OSP in at least three decades and a

threat to deluge an already swamped oil market.

Other Middle Eastern producers such as Kuwait, Iran and Iraq

will have little choice but to match the Saudi price cuts, as

will other exporters around the world, unless they are prepared

to lose market share or shut-in wells.

It may also be the case that Saudi Arabia has more than just

a lesson for Russia in mind. It may also be trying to curtail

U.S. shale oil output, hoping price weakness forces producers

into losses and the idling of drilling rigs.

The evidence that this will work is patchy, with the price

collapse in 2014 seen as a failed attempt to crush shale

producers, one that ultimately led to the OPEC and allies

agreement.

While the output restrictions, agreed by OPEC and allies in

November 2016 and implemented from the start of 2017, may not

have delivered significantly higher prices, it did stabilise the

market in a fairly broad range around $60 a barrel.

PRICES IN FREEFALL

The initial reaction to the Saudi gambit saw prices in

freefall, collapsing to the lowest in four years. Brent futures

LOCc1 tumbled as much as 31% in early Asian trade on Monday to

a low of $31.02 a barrel, before recovering slightly to trade

around $36.

While refiners will cheer the lower oil costs as helping

their margins amid coronavirus-hit fuel demand due, it also

creates some dilemmas for them.

Chinese refiners will be mindful that they are supposed to

be buying huge volumes of U.S. crude as part of undertakings in

the recent trade truce between Beijing and Washington.

That hasn't happened so far. While the coronavirus outbreak

can take some of the blame, that excuse will no longer wash as

China finally looks to have made some domestic breakthroughs in

containing the epidemic.

What still has to become clear is what do crude oil

exporters do in response to the Saudi action, beyond the

short-term move of also cutting prices?

Also, will importers actually buy more crude, or switch

their supplier mix in response to cheaper oil? The coronavirus

is still hitting demand and it's likely that storage tanks will

soon be filling up, with only China likely in a situation where

it can meaningfully add to its strategic inventories.

(Editing by Kenneth Maxwell)

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