Wednesday, February 18, 2015

The Saudi project, part two

STAGE one of Saudi Arabia’s plan—or perhaps hope—to restructure the oil market is taking longer than expected. By refusing to rein in production while prices fell, the Saudis permitted a big surplus to grow and served notice on higher-cost rivals (Russia, Venezuela, American shale-oil producers) that they would not prop up other people’s profit margins at the expense of their own market share.



That signal has been weakened by the growing amount of oil in storage, which is absorbing most of the glut. World oil stocks rose about 265m barrels last year and Société Générale, a French bank, reckons they will increase by a further 1.6-1.8m barrels a day (b/d) in the first six months of this year, adding roughly 300m barrels to the total. At the moment, global oil output is exceeding demand by about 2m b/d, so the build-up of stocks is enough to take most of the glut off the market. Oil is being stored in the hope that demand and prices will pick up later. So stocks, plus renewed political worries (flows from Libya’s largest oilfield were disrupted again this week by apparent sabotage), have pushed the price of oil back over $60...






from The Economist: Finance and economics http://ift.tt/1DrWKmv

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