Trump rails against high oil prices, OPEC pushes back
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[April 21, 2018]
By Susan Heavey and Rania El Gamal
WASHINGTON/JEDDAH, Saudi Arabia (Reuters) -
U.S. President Donald Trump accused OPEC on Friday of "artificially"
boosting oil prices, drawing rebukes from some of the world's top energy
exporters.
"Looks like OPEC is at it again. With record amounts of Oil all over the
place, including the fully loaded ships at sea. Oil prices are
artificially Very High! No good and will not be accepted!" Trump wrote
on Twitter.
It was unclear what triggered the tweet, Trump's first mention of OPEC
on social media during his term.
U.S. oil prices are near a three-year high, at close to $70 a barrel,
and have been rising since OPEC and non-OPEC producers including Russia
cut supply in January 2017 to end a global oil glut and price collapse.
Trump's tweet came shortly after officials from top oil exporter Saudi
Arabia said they would like to see prices climb even higher and that
they were still far from their goal of ending the supply glut.
The cartel is expected to restrain supply through the end of this year,
and possibly into 2019.
Three Saudi officials told Reuters this week they would be happy to see
oil hit $80 or $100 a barrel. Higher prices drive up gasoline prices for
motorists worldwide and rising energy costs feed inflation. But higher
oil prices have also benefited the U.S. energy industry, feeding rapid
growth in output from shale fields. U.S. oil output is at record levels.
Despite Trump's comments, oil benchmarks ended the day modestly higher,
rebounding from early losses.
Several members of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries
responded to the tweet, saying prices were not artificially inflated.
Delegates at an OPEC/non-OPEC monitoring committee meeting in Jeddah,
Saudi Arabia said oil prices were higher partially because of global
political tensions, mentioning sanctions on Venezuela, threats to the
Iran nuclear agreement, strikes on Syria and saber-rattling over North
Korea.
OPEC Secretary General Mohammed Barkindo said the output cut agreement
halted the collapse in global oil prices, and is "on course to restore
stability on a sustainable basis in the interest of producers, consumers
and the global economy."
"We don't have any price objective in OPEC, and not in this joint
endeavor with non-OPEC," Barkindo said on Friday, in response to Trump's
tweet.
The group is next slated to meet in June to discuss output policy.
Ministers from both Iraq and the United Arab Emirates also disagreed
with Trump on Friday, with Iraqi Oil Minister Jabar al-Luaibi saying
prices are "not very high" and that the market is stabilizing.
Trump gave no details on what action his administration might take
regarding oil or OPEC, and the White House did not respond to elaborate
on the issue on the record.
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"We have a difficult time seeing how OPEC would in any way be swayed here in
terms of changing course, in terms of policy," said Michael Tran, commodity
strategist at RBC.
OPEC's output fell in March to an 11-month low, according to a Reuters survey.
The cartel has targeted the five-year average of inventories in 35 Organization
for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) countries as a barometer for the
deal's success.
As of mid-April, those inventories were 2.85 billion barrels, or 43 million more
than the five-year average; a year ago, it was 268 million barrels above that
benchmark.
This week, crude futures benchmarks Brent <LCOc1> and U.S. West Texas
Intermediate (WTI) <CLc1> hit their highest since November 2014, with Brent
touching $74.75 and U.S. crude $69.56 per barrel. [O/R]
That has raised fuel costs, with average U.S. prices for gasoline hitting $2.75
a gallon on Wednesday, according to motorist advocacy group AAA, up more than 30
cents from a year earlier and at their highest since July 2015.
Trump is "just trying to relate to his base when it comes to the retail gasoline
prices, so he's blaming OPEC for this," said Josh Graves, senior market
strategist at RJO Futures in Chicago.
Beyond OPEC's supply management, crude prices have been supported by
expectations that Washington will re-introduce sanctions on OPEC-member Iran,
and might expand sanctions against Venezuela after that country's presidential
election next month.
"If one concern about reinstating sanctions on Iranian oil is the impact that it
could have on oil prices, then it could be a preemptive measure to blame OPEC
instead," said Antoine Halff, senior research scholar at the Center on Global
Energy Policy at Columbia University.
Hedge funds and other speculators hold a record level of bullish bets on Brent,
on expectations of further price rises.
The U.S. government cannot legally influence oil prices other than through
releasing oil from its strategic reserve which it does occasionally.
This year's budget agreement includes the sale of about 100 million barrels of
crude oil - about 15 percent of the reserve - as U.S. oil production recently
hit a record at more than 10 million barrels a day. That release is not related
to high oil prices, and analysts said it signaled Washington was not concerned
about the potential for future global shortages.
"Washington has fully given up this idea of scarcity. You don't get to the point
of selling your strategic reserves to balance your budget if you think the world
is short," said Kevin Book, managing director at Clearview Energy Partners.
(Additional reporting by Alex Lawler in London and Stephanie Kelly, Ayenat
Mersie and Scott DiSavino in New York, and Roberta Rampton in West Palm Beach,
Florida; Writing by David Gaffen; Editing by Simon Webb and Tom Brown)
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