homemarket NewsOil prices surge as much as 5% after OPEC+ announces surprise output cut

Oil prices surge as much as 5% after OPEC+ announces surprise output cut

The cuts bring the total volume taken off the market to 3.66 million barrels per day, or 3.7 percent of global demand.

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By Reuters Apr 3, 2023 10:58:15 PM IST (Updated)

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Oil prices surge as much as 5% after OPEC+ announces surprise output cut
Oil prices jumped by more than 6 percent on Monday, headed for its biggest daily rise in nearly a year after OPEC+ jolted markets with plans to cut more production.

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Brent crude was up $4.91, or 6.2 percent, at $84.80 a barrel by 1 p.m. EDT (17:00 GMT) after touching its highest since March 7 at $86.44. West Texas Intermediate crude US was up $4.83, or 6.4 percent, at $80.50 a barrel, after hitting its highest since late January.
The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and allies including Russia, a group collectively known as OPEC+, shook markets with Sunday's announcement that it is cutting its production target by a further 1.16 million barrels per day (bpd).
The group had been expected at its monthly meeting on Monday to stick with its previous decision to target output cuts of 2 million bpd until December.
The latest pledges bring the total volume of cuts by OPEC+ to 3.66 million bpd, according to Reuters calculations, equating to 3.7 percent of global demand.
Here are the quantum of the recent cuts:
CountryOutput Cut (Barrels Per Day)
Saudi Arabia5,00,000
Iraq2,11,000
UAE1,44,000
Kuwait1,28,000
Kazakhstan78,000
Algeria48,000
Oman40,000
Gabon8,000
Russia also said that it will extend a voluntary cut of 5,00,000 barrels per day until the end of the year. The nation had unilaterally announced a cut in production in February following the introduction of price caps.
"The Sunday production cut was on no one's radar... With US oil producers focused on capital discipline, OPEC+ remains in control of the oil market," UBS analyst Giovanni Staunovo said.
US President Joe Biden's administration said it was given a "heads up" on the move and told Saudi officials that it disagreed with it.
Meanwhile, some analysts pointed to a weakening economy and rising stockpiles as a rationale for the cuts.
US manufacturing activity slumped to the lowest level in nearly three years in March as new orders plunged. Activity could decline further as interest rate hikes have pushed borrowing costs higher, cooling demand for goods.
J.P. Morgan analysts said they view the OPEC+ cuts as a preemptive measure to whittle down the market surplus into the second half of 2023, while Barclays now sees a $5 upside to its $92 per barrel forecast for Brent this year.
Goldman Sachs lowered its end-2023 production forecast for OPEC+ by 1.1 million bpd and raised its Brent price forecasts to $95 a barrel for 2023 and $100 for 2024, it said in a note.
"Until last week, we had US crude storage at multiyear highs ... there are plenty of cargoes, mostly Russian, floating around in the seven seas looking for a home," Mizuho analyst Robert Yawger said.
Brent fell last month toward $70 a barrel, its lowest in 15 months, on concerns that a global banking crisis and rising interest rates would hit demand despite lower OPEC oil output in March after a halt in some of Iraq's exports.
While the OPEC+ cuts may lift oil prices in the near term, they also raise the possibility of more rate hikes from central banks fighting inflation. Refiners also may lower activity to counter high crude oil input costs, he said.
The RBOB gasoline futures contract rose almost 8 percent during Monday's session to its highest since January. It was last trading at $2.76 a gallon, up about 3.1 percent.
(With inputs from Agencies.)

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