OPEC October crude oil output declines led by Saudi and Iraq – Oil glut to offset waning US production

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LONDON, Oct 30, (RTRS): OPEC oil output has fallen in October from the previous month, a Reuters survey found on Friday, as declines in top producers Saudi Arabia and Iraq outweighed higher supply from African members.

The drops are not indicative of deliberate supply cuts to prop up prices, sources in the survey said, and the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries is still pumping close to a record high as major producers focus on defending market share.

OPEC supply has fallen in October to 31.64 million barrels per day (bpd) from a revised 31.76 million in September, according to the survey, based on shipping data and information from sources at oil companies, OPEC and consultants. With one day left in October, the final figures could be revised.

Even so, OPEC has boosted production by almost 1.5 million bpd since the November 2014 switch to defending market share. Despite the decline this month, output is not far below July’s 31.88 million bpd, the highest since Reuters records began in 1997.

The OPEC increase has added to ample supplies, which have helped cut prices by more than half from June 2014 to below $50 a barrel. Still, with reductions in capital spending by oil companies expected to curb future supply, analysts see signs that OPEC’s strategy will deliver.

“Clearly, OPEC’s long-game strategy is working,” said Harry Tchilinguirian, global head of commodity strategy at BNP Paribas. “In the end, OPEC’s strategy is creating the conditions for higher prices for longer in a couple of years’ time.”

The biggest supply drop in October has come from Saudi Arabia, which trimmed output due to reduced use of crude in domestic power plants and refineries, sources in the survey said, despite higher exports.

“Supply to the market is down,” said a source who tracks Saudi output. “Exports are up but this has been more than offset by lower refinery runs due to maintenance and lower direct burn.”

Direct burn – the use of crude in Saudi power plants – usually drops in cooler months due to reduced air-conditioning needs. Maintenance was being carried out at the Saudi Yasref refinery, reducing crude consumption.

Saudi output, at 10.10 million bpd, remains not far below the record high of 10.56 million bpd it pumped in June.

Exports from Iraq’s main outlet, its southern terminals, were higher for much of October – reaching a record 3.1 million bpd in the first 27 days of the month – but have slowed since as poor weather delayed cargoes, shipping data showed.

Shipments from Iraq’s north by the Kurdistan Regional Government via Ceyhan in Turkey have edged lower, while those by Iraq’s State Oil Marketing Organisation have fallen to zero from about 20,000 bpd in September, the survey found.

Smaller increases have come from OPEC’s two west African producers, Nigeria and Angola, and from Libya.

Angola and Nigeria exported more crude this month, but a force majeure on shipments of Nigeria’s Forcados limited the increase from that country. Libyan output rose slightly, the survey found, but remains a fraction of the pre-conflict rate.

Output in Iran, OPEC’s second-largest producer until sanctions forced a cut in exports in 2012, continues to edge up, the survey found. A lifting of sanctions on Iran has the potential to boost OPEC output further in 2016.

Also:

NEW YORK: Slowing US production is unlikely to offer much respite to low oil prices into next year as high OPEC output feeds a persistent supply glut, a Reuters survey showed on Friday.

Benchmark North Sea Brent crude is expected to average $58.52 a barrel in 2016, marginally down from last month’s poll and above $55.94 seen so far this year, the survey of 32 analysts showed.

This is the lowest average 2016 forecast in the polls conducted this year.

US crude is projected to average $54.44 a barrel next year, up slightly from last month’s forecast of $54.10.

Production in the United States will continue to decline in response to cheaper oil, but this is not likely to translate into higher prices, the analysts said.

“We think prices will grind slowly higher over the next few years, which should help to ease the falls in production but we don’t expect a sharp rally in prices or a surge in output,” Thomas Pugh of Capital Economics said.

The oversupply scenario could also be aggravated by an emerging trend of build-ups in refined products.

Influential Wall Street bank Goldman Sachs said crude prices could drop sharply as storage sites for refined products come close to maximum capacity.

Goldman’s head of commodities research, Jeff Currie, said in October he did not expect oil to break above $50 a barrel next year and saw the chances of a drop to $20 at below 50 percent.

The bearish mood in the market was aggravated by a drop in refining profitability while demand growth slowed, analysts at Jefferies said in a note.

Most analysts expect the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries to stick to its stance of maintaining record-high production when it meets on Dec. 4, a year after it chose to defend market share rather than prices.

The exporter group is “about to reap the fruit of last November’s tough decision not to cut production”, Giorgos Beleris, senior analyst with Thomson Reuters GFMS, said.

OPEC would want US oil production to decline further so the supply glut is reduced without any decline in its share, said Rahul Prithiani, director at CRISIL Research.

Bernstein had the highest 2016 forecast for Brent at $86 a barrel, while Natixis had the lowest at $48.50.

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