logo
Oil below $65 comes as boon for consumers, but burden on producers

Oil below $65 comes as boon for consumers, but burden on producers

Qatar Tribune2 days ago

Agencies
U.S. President Donald Trump's tariffs, his famous call to 'drill baby drill,' but particularly a decision by a group of the world's top producers to hike crude output quotas have oil prices trading at lows not seen since the COVID-19 pandemic.
That is good news for consumers but not so much for producers, analysts say.
A barrel of Brent North Sea crude, the international benchmark, stands below $65, a far cry from the more than $120 reached in 2022 following the invasion of Ukraine by major oil producer Russia.
The fall in oil prices has contributed to a global slowdown for inflation, while also boosting growth in countries reliant on importing crude, such as much of Europe.
The U.S. Consumer Price Index, for example, was down 11.8% year-over-year in April.
Cheaper crude 'increases the level of disposable income' consumers have to be spending on 'discretionary items' such as leisure and tourism, said Pushpin Singh, an economist at British research group Cebr.
The price of Brent has fallen by more than $10 compared with a year ago, reducing the cost of various fuel types derived directly from oil.
This is helping to push down transportation and manufacturing costs that may, in the medium term, help further cut prices of consumer goods, Singh told Agence France-Presse (AFP).
But he noted that while the drop in crude prices is partly a consequence of Trump's trade policies, the net effect on inflation remains difficult to predict amid threatened surges to other input costs, such as metals.
At the same time, 'cheaper oil can make renewable energy sources less competitive, potentially slowing investment in green technologies,' Singh added.As prices retreat, however, the undisputed losers are oil-producing countries, 'especially high-cost producers who at current and lower prices are forced to scale back production in the coming months,' said Ole Hansen, head of commodity strategy at Saxo Bank.
Oil trading close to or below $60 'will obviously not be great for shale producers' either, said Rystad Energy analyst Jorge Leon.
'Having lower oil prices is going to be the detriment to their development,' he told AFP.Some companies extracting oil and natural gas from shale rock have already announced reduced investment in the Permian Basin, located between Texas and New Mexico.
For the OPEC+ oil alliance, led by Saudi Arabia and Russia, tolerance for low prices varies greatly.Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Kuwait have monetary reserves allowing them to easily borrow to finance diversified economic projects, Leon said.
Hansen forecast that 'the long-term winners are likely to be major OPEC+ producers, especially in the Middle East, as they reclaim market shares that were lost since 2022 when they embarked on voluntary production cuts.' OPEC+ includes the countries members of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and allies such as Russia.
The 22-nation group began a series of cuts in 2022 to prop up crude prices, but Saudi Arabia, Russia and six other members surprised markets recently by sharply raising output.
On Saturday, the countries announced a huge increase in crude production for July with an additional 411,000 barrels a day, the same target set for May and then June, according to a statement, which is more than three times greater than the group had previously planned.
In recent years, the group within OPEC+ that is known as the 'Voluntary Eight,' or V8, had agreed to daily reductions of 2.2 million barrels with the aim of boosting prices. But in early 2025, OPEC+ members decided on the gradual output increase and subsequently began to accelerate the pace.
Analysts say the hikes have likely been aimed at punishing OPEC members that have failed to meet their quotas, but it also follows pressure from Trump to lower prices.
That is directly impacting the likes of Iran and Venezuela, whose economies depend heavily on oil revenues.
A lower-price environment also hurts Nigeria, which, like other OPEC+ members, possesses a more limited ability to borrow funds, according to experts.
But non-OPEC member Guyana, whose gross domestic product (GDP) growth has surged in recent years thanks to the discovery of oil, risks seeing its economy slow.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

US factory orders slump in April as tariff anticipation spending fades
US factory orders slump in April as tariff anticipation spending fades

Al Jazeera

time3 hours ago

  • Al Jazeera

US factory orders slump in April as tariff anticipation spending fades

Orders from United States factories have tumbled in April after a surge in March when businesses had front-loaded purchases in anticipation of tariffs. New orders for US manufactured goods dropped by 3.7 percent on a monthly basis, worse than economists had expected, according to Census Bureau data released on Tuesday. Economists polled by the Reuters news agency expected a 3.1 percent drop. Dow Jones forecast a 3.3 percent drop. On an annual basis, however, factory orders rose by 2 percent. April's report is in sharp contrast to the 3.4 percent increase in March, which topped five straight months of increases. Manufacturing, which accounts for 10.2 percent of the US economy, has been put under pressure by President Donald Trump's aggressive tariffs. Trump sees the tariffs as a tool to raise revenue to offset his promised extension of tax cuts and to revive a long-declining industrial base, a feat that economists argued was impossible in the short term because of labour shortages and other structural issues. Orders in the transportation sector fell 17.1 percent, led by a sharp drop in the commercial aircraft sector. Aircraft orders fell by 51.5 percent in April. Orders for motor vehicles, parts and trailers dropped 0.7 percent. Electrical equipment, appliances and component manufacturing fell by 0.3 percent. But manufacturing for computers and other electronic products actually grew by 1 percent. Machinery orders also rose 0.6 percent. Excluding transportation, which led the surge in March orders, orders fell 0.5 percent, matching March's decline of non-transportation goods. The government also reported that orders for nondefence capital goods excluding aircraft, a measure of business spending plans on equipment, decreased 1.5 percent in April rather than 1.3 percent as estimated last month. Shipments of these so-called core capital goods fell by an unrevised 0.1 percent, or $1.8bn. An Institute for Supply Management survey showed manufacturing contracted for a third straight month in May and suppliers took the longest time in nearly three years to deliver inputs to factories.

Oil jumps after OPEC+ sticks to same output hike in July
Oil jumps after OPEC+ sticks to same output hike in July

Qatar Tribune

timea day ago

  • Qatar Tribune

Oil jumps after OPEC+ sticks to same output hike in July

Agencies Singapore Oil prices rebounded more than $1 a barrel on Monday after producer group OPEC+ decided to increase output in July by the same amount as it did in each of the prior two months, which came as a relief to those who expected a bigger increase. Brent crude futures climbed $1.46, or 2.33 percent, to $64.24 a barrel by 9.26 am Saudi time after settling 0.9 percent lower on Friday. US West Texas Intermediate crude was at $62.45 a barrel, up $1.66, or 2.73 percent, following a 0.3 percent decline in the previous session. Both contracts were down more than 1 percent last week. The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and their allies decided on Saturday to raise output by 411,000 barrels per day in July, the third month the group known as OPEC+ increased by the same amount, as it looks to wrestle back market share and punish over-producers. The group had been expected to discuss a bigger production hike. 'Had they gone through with a surprise larger amount, then Monday's price open would have been pretty ugly indeed,' analyst Harry Tchilinguirian of Onyx Capital Group wrote on LinkedIn. Oil traders said the 411,000-bpd output hike had already been priced into Brent and WTI futures. 'The headline motive has centered on punishing OPEC+ members like Iraq and Kazakhstan that have persistently produced above their pledged quotas,' said the Commonwealth Bank of Australia in a note on Monday. Kazakhstan has informed OPEC that it does not intend to reduce its oil production, according to a Thursday report by Russia's Interfax news agency citing Kazakhstan's deputyenergy minister. Looking ahead, Goldman Sachs analysts anticipate OPEC+ will implement a final 410,000 bpd production increase in August. 'Relatively tight spot oil fundamentals, beats in hard global activity data, and seasonal summer support to oil demand suggest that the expected demand slowdown is unlikely to be sharp enough to stop raising production when deciding on August production levels on July 6th,' the bank said in a note dated Sunday. Meanwhile, low levels of US fuel inventories have stoked supply jitters ahead of expectations for an above-average hurricane season, analysts said. 'More encouraging was a huge spike in gasoline implied demand going into what's considered the start of the US driving season,' ANZ analysts said in a note, adding that the gain of nearly 1 million bpd was the third-highest weekly increase in the last three years. Traders are also closely watching the impact of lower prices on US crude production which hit an all-time high of 13.49 million bpd in March. Last week, the number of operating oil rigs in the US fell for a fifth week, down four to 461, the lowest since November 2021, Baker Hughes said in its weekly report on Friday.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store