OPEC
sees oil drop as short-term, expects stronger demand:
delegates
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[July 22, 2015]
By Alex Lawler and
Rania El Gamal
LONDON/DUBAI (Reuters) - A drop in oil
prices this month is likely to be short-term and will not deflect OPEC
from its policy of keeping output high to defend market share, delegates
from Gulf OPEC members and other nations said.
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Falling Chinese stock markets and the Greek debt crisis have raised
concern about demand, while the Iranian nuclear deal could lead to
higher oil exports from the Islamic Republic. Benchmark Brent crude
<LCOc1>, trading below $57 a barrel on Wednesday, has fallen more
than 10 percent in July.
OPEC, in a major policy shift, decided in November against cutting
its production target of 30 million barrels per day (bpd) to prop up
prices, seeking instead to defend market share against U.S. shale
oil and other competing sources. The group reconfirmed the strategy
at a meeting in June.
Kuwait's oil minister, Ali Saleh al-Omair, was quoted on Tuesday
expressing confidence in the outlook, saying producer countries
expected stronger global economic growth to boost prices.
And three delegates from members of the Organization of the
Petroleum Exporting Countries speaking this month said the price
drop was unlikely to last and OPEC would not alter strategy, also
citing expectations for stronger demand.
"I don't think so, it is not time for OPEC to change," said a Gulf
OPEC delegate. "Demand will be more than in the first half (of the
year) although there is some uncertainty about the economy. The
prices will remain around $60."
A second Gulf delegate said even if prices fell slightly below $50 a
barrel, as long as the drop is for a short time it is unlikely OPEC
would lower its output ceiling. "Prices will not stay down forever,"
the delegate said.
The OPEC policy shift was led by Saudi Arabia, supported by its Gulf
allies, despite calls for supply cuts from Iran and smaller
producers concerned about the impact of lower prices on oil revenue.
OPEC does not meet again until Dec. 4.
To be sure, some OPEC countries may renew calls for supply cuts
following the price drop. Algeria's energy minister said on July 14
an extraordinary OPEC meeting could be called, and Iran has been
lobbying for other OPEC members to curb supply to make way for the
hoped-for rise in its exports.
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But even OPEC delegates from countries that favor a higher oil price
don't expect the Saudis to change course - at least for now.
"It does seem that the Saudi tactic of beating the U.S. shale oil
producers is not being successful," said an official from an OPEC
country outside the Gulf. "But they probably will maintain it."
While Iran hopes to boost crude exports rapidly once sanctions are
lifted, Gulf OPEC delegates do not expect significant volumes before
2016 and are betting higher global demand next year will absorb the
extra oil.
A fourth OPEC delegate from a country that usually supports supply
curbs agreed with the Gulf delegates that no action from the
producer group was needed at present.
"I see it as short-term and expect prices to recover," the delegate
said of the price drop.
(Editing by Dale Hudson)
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