By ForexTime
Oil traders have been kept on their toes all day Thursday. Markets had a lot of new information to digest, resulting in oil prices being whipped about over the past few hours.
Here’s a quick recap:
Such rapid-fire developments resulted in heightened volatility in oil prices on a day that was initially expected to see another ho-hum session.
Free Reports:
Before we take a closer look at some of the developments stated above, let’s first revisit the basic rationale for movements in oil prices.
What drives oil prices?
Fundamentally, oil prices react to supply and demand.
Furthermore, note that markets are forward-looking in nature.
In other words, investors and traders move prices based on information or beliefs they have at present about what the future may hold. Current prices reflect tomorrow’s outlook.
And that now brings us to today’s big two, oil-related announcements: the surprise OPEC+ decision + the latest EU sanctions aimed at Russian oil imports.
1) Larger OPEC+ hike? Markets go ‘meh’
For context, OPEC+ has had an agreement in place since July 2021, whereby members ‘gradually’ restore the output that had been shuttered since the pandemic.
And by ‘gradually’, they meant raising output by 400,000 – 432,000 bpd per month.
Hence, today’s announcement of an extra 50% for July and August 2022 may seem like a big jump, at least on paper.
However, what OPEC+ says vs. what OPCE+ does are two very different things.
Markets have had their doubts for a while about whether OPEC+ can actually deliver what it says it will do, considering that OPEC+ had collectively under-delivered in recent months.
The likes of Angola, Nigeria, and Libya have struggled to meet their respective ramped-up output quotas due to the lack of investment and political unrest. Though to be fair, Nigeria did raise its output in May registered a climb for the first time in four months, up to nearly 1.5 million bpd.
Overall, while OPEC+ pledges a substantial increase in output, markets think that what will actually delivered will not be enough to satiate the world that is clamouring for more oil as they continue their post-pandemic recoveries.
2) EU sanctions provide bigger boost for oil bulls
Markets are also of the opinion that it’s the prospects of more Russian oil being inaccessible to global customers that will be more keenly felt than any additional OPEC+ output.
Contrasting those two sets of numbers would give on the immediate sense that the further choking of Russian oil is set to have a far greater impact on global oil supplies than what OPEC+ has pledged.
Overall, markets are already getting the sense that oil is set to remain scarce in the months ahead.
Countries that are already thirsting for the black commodity could well find it even harder to get their hands on the barrels of oil that they desperately need and want, more so when China further eases up on its virus-curbing measures.
Hence, oil prices are set to remain in a well-supported environment, evidenced by how quickly oil erased its losses today.
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