Oil
rout over, OPEC aims for $50 anchor, says PIRA's Ross
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[March 07, 2016]
By Jonathan Leff
(Reuters) - Major OPEC producers are
privately starting to talk about a new oil price equilibrium of $50 a
barrel, adding to signs that the market's long, deep rout is officially
over, says one of the industry's leading prognosticators.
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Gary Ross, the founder, executive chairman and chief oil soothsayer
at New York-based consultancy PIRA, told clients 2-1/2 weeks ago
that he reckoned the "lows are in" for crude, which was then about
$30 a barrel. U.S. futures <CLc1> have rallied since then to close
at nearly $36 on Friday, with a handful of analysts also cautiously
calling a bottom.
In an interview with Reuters, Ross said oil should recover to $50 a
barrel by the end of the year, potentially aided by eventual supply
cuts from leading producers among the Organization of the Petroleum
Exporting Countries (OPEC).
"They want $50 oil, this is going to become the new anchor for
global oil prices," said Ross, one of the industry's most respected
forecasters for his bold price predictions and decades-long history
of consulting with OPEC members.
"While it may not be an official target price, you’ll hear them
saying it. They’re trying to give the market an anchor."
If Saudi Arabia and other powerful Gulf OPEC members begin invoking
$50 as "fair price for producers and consumers" - a once-favored
phrase that has been absent for several years - it may could signal
the end of an unusual and extended period in which the group
abandoned efforts to manage the market.
After years of signaling satisfaction with prices hovering at around
$100 a barrel, top exporter Saudi Arabia in late 2014 led OPEC in
its most dramatic policy shift in decades. No longer would the
world's top oil exporter, or its OPEC allies, agree to cut their own
production to support such high prices, which they feared would
erode their share of the world market.
Instead, they would keep pumping and allow prices to fall. While
they did not anticipate the longest and deepest oil price rout since
the mid-1980s, the effort has at last begun to curb the rise of
rival higher-cost producers such as U.S. shale drillers, another
sign that prices may have found a bottom.
In his note to clients, Ross also pointed to the recent agreement
between major OPEC members and leading non-OPEC producer Russia to
"freeze" production at January levels as a factor boosting market
sentiment after a brutal period when the only safe trade seemed to
be sell.
The pact will do little to curb immediate oversupply, especially
with Iran exports still swelling after the end of sanctions. Still,
working together on "verbal intervention" was a positive start that
"could lead to eventual cuts" after a period in which Saudi Arabia
and Russia made little effort toward any kind of cooperation, he
said.
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"Russian production is going down anyway, why not agree to a freeze
and then cuts?" Ross told Reuters.
The $50 figure was in line with analysts' consensus for 2017 U.S.
prices, according to the last Reuters poll, although much higher
than the $38 a barrel median for this year.
Ross, whose forecasts are not normally made public, was among the
few analysts to anticipate OPEC's decision to let prices fall in
2014.
While he was wrong-footed in the first part of last year, when
crude's rebound to around $60 a barrel proved temporary, he joined
others such as Goldman Sachs in taking a much more bearish view in
more recent months, predicting in December that U.S. crude would
drop below $30 a barrel in February.
Ever since the market detached from the $100 a barrel figure that
anchored it from 2010 to 2014, analysts, traders and executives have
struggled to pinpoint where it might ultimately settle, agreeing
only that it would be a period of extraordinary volatility in the
absence of any overt OPEC guidance.
Officials from less influential members such as Venezuela or Angola
have occasionally referenced specific prices, generally in the
vicinity of $70 to $80, but the bigger Gulf producers have largely
avoided any public mention of a new reference point, leaving the
market adrift.
(Reporting by Jonathan Leff; Editing by David Gregorio)
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