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Why did world oil prices rise after OPEC+ policy decisions?

Báo Công thươngBáo Công thương08/04/2024


World oil prices increase thanks to OPEC+ decision to increase production World oil prices increase because demand is greater than supply

The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies (OPEC+) held a meeting of the Joint Ministerial Monitoring Committee (JMMC) in early April and kept its supply policy unchanged until mid-2024, while pressing some oil-producing countries to increase compliance with output cuts.

The April 3 OPEC+ policy decision sent international crude oil prices soaring to a five-month high. With the surge in prices, benchmark Brent crude futures are now trading at $90 a barrel, a level last seen in October 2023.

Tại sao giá dầu thế giới tăng cao sau quyết định chính sách của OPEC+ và tác động có thể xảy ra?

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The OPEC+ group's Joint Management Committee (JMMC) met online in early April to review the market and members' implementation of production cuts. In a statement after the meeting, OPEC+ said several member countries had promised to improve compliance with supply targets. OPEC+ said in the statement that the committee welcomed commitments from Iraq and Kazakhstan to achieve full compliance and offset overproduction and Russia's announcement that second-quarter cuts would be based on production, not exports. Russian Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak also said last week that Russia was fully complying with its commitments to reduce oil supply as part of the OPEC+ deal.

Last month, OPEC+ members, led by Saudi Arabia and Russia, agreed to extend voluntary production cuts of 2.2 million barrels per day (bpd) until the end of June to support the market. Saudi Arabia, OPEC’s de facto leader, said it would extend voluntary cuts of 1 million bpd until mid-2024, leaving its output at around 9 million bpd – well below its 12 million bpd capacity. Following the OPEC+ policy decision, crude oil prices stabilized at their highest since October, with Brent crude futures above $89 a barrel, due to supply disruptions in the Middle East and the prospect of tighter conditions for the rest of the year.

Crude oil prices remained largely range-bound until February 2024, but the Ukrainian drone attack on Russian refineries sent prices soaring. Crude hit a five-month high of $87 a barrel in March amid persistent geopolitical tensions and is now hovering around $90 a barrel. Following the latest OPEC+ policy decision, WTI, the US benchmark, topped $85 a barrel for the first time since October last year.

Commodity market analysts fear that now that the $90/barrel risk has been overcome, crude could return to $100, potentially triggering a new round of inflation in importing countries, as well as hurting expected demand growth.

Stronger oil prices could also dampen demand, especially in price-sensitive developing economies in Asia, the world’s top importer. As for the possibility of Brent hitting $100 a barrel in fiscal 2025, analysts say it’s unlikely Brent will hit $100 unless the Middle East war escalates into a full-blown war involving major producers in the region.



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