Trump dealt a blow as the world is flooded with oil
The current Brent oil price is about $US68 a barrel but analysts from major banks like JPMorgan Chase and Goldman Sachs have forecast oil prices of around $US60 a barrel by the end of the year.
The shift in OPEC+ strategy could be regarded as self-destructive. The key Middle Eastern producers have very low production costs (the Saudi's are less than $US15 a barrel) but need prices ranging from about $US65 a barrel (United Arab Emirates) to $US80 to $US85 a barrel (Saudi Arabia) to balance their budgets. Flooding the market with more oil will almost inevitably push prices down.
Having accepted reality, however, the cartel is now trying, again, to implement a strategy it has attempted twice before – first between 2014 and 2016 and then in 2020 – where it tried to take market share away from the US shale producers by driving the price below their production costs.
It underestimated the dynamic nature of the shale producers who, after an initial drop in their production, cut their costs and increased their productivity at a startling rate.
Will OPEC+ be any more successful this time?
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The US producers are more returns-focused than they were during those earlier episodes and, with some of the major basins' reserves depleting, more likely to respond to a lower oil price by mothballing their wells. Already, with West Texas Intermediate prices around $US66 a barrel, there are about 46 fewer rigs operating onshore in the US than there were a year ago.
Trump might want the US companies to 'drill, baby, drill,' but a recent Dallas Federal Reserve Bank survey showed most would reduce their drilling if the US price fell towards $US60 a barrel. Breakeven costs for US producers average around the mid-$US60 dollars a barrel.
There could be something of a safety valve for both the core OPEC producers and the US shale oil sector.
This Friday is the deadline Trump has set for Russia to agree a ceasefire in Ukraine, with Trump threatening secondary tariffs of 100 per cent on Russia's oil customers if it doesn't comply. India which, with China and Turkey, has been one of the major buyers of Russian oil during the conflict, has been specifically targeted by Trump.
Russia's new production target will be 9.45 million barrels a day next month. Any material reduction its oil sales would create space for the increased production of other OPEC+ members and take some of the pressure off oil prices.
Absent the withdrawal of Russian supply, even if Russia is eventually able to find a workaround (as it has throughout the war in Ukraine and the sanctions regime the G7 has imposed), the outlook for demand in the near term isn't great.
China's economy has been spluttering and is further threatened by Trump's trade wars. The US economy has weakened sharply because of, initially, the uncertainty Trump's trade and immigration policies and his assault on government agencies have created and now the reality and increasing economic impacts of his tariffs.
The global economy will slow as a result of Trump's assault on global trade. Some of the faster-growing economies, and those most dependent on imported energy – the Asian, South American and African developing economies – are, perversely, among those facing the most punitive tariffs.
Having accepted reality, OPEC+ is now opening the spigots.
While lower oil prices might help keep a lid on inflation rates, particularly the US inflation rate, and provide some offset for those import-dependent economies from the effects of Trump's tariffs, the trade-off will be reduced economic growth.
The longer-term outlook for oil is clouded.
OPEC believes demand, fuelled by developing economies, will continue to grow through to 2050, rising from just over 100 million barrels a day to 123 million barrels a day. The International Energy Agency believes demand, impacted by electric vehicles and electrification more widely, will peak at about 105 million barrels a day in 2030.
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While the long-term outcome matters for the members of the cartel, who are still overly reliant on oil revenue despite increasingly urgent attempts to diversify their economies, it's the near term outlook for oil prices that matters for an increasingly messy and threatened global economy.
It also matters for Trump's economic strategy, as articulated by his Treasury Secretary, Scott Bessent.
Bessent's '3-3-3' strategy has three major components. He aims to reduce the federal deficit to 3 per cent of gross domestic product, raise GDP growth to 3 per cent per year and add 3 million barrels per day of domestic oil production.
Thanks to Trump's 'One Big Beautiful Bill,' which could increase US deficits by about $US3.4 trillion over the next decade, the impact of his tariffs on US inflation and growth (already running at less than half the rate achieved last year) and OPEC+'s flooding of the market with increased oil supply, each of those objectives (which never looked likely or added up to a coherent strategy) now seem wildly unrealistic.
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