OPEC is cutting more oil from the market than planned, says former Saudi Aramco executive

FAN Editor

The oil market should prepare for a bullish surprise from OPEC in January, according to a former Saudi Aramco executive

The 14-member oil producer group will likely deliver a deeper production cut in January than it promised last month, says Sadad al Husseini, founder of Husseini Energy. Market analysts could see OPEC production fall by about 1 million barrels per day from October levels this month, Husseini says.

Last month, OPEC agreed to take 800,000 bpd off the market. Pledges from 10 other producers aligned with OPEC, including Russia, brought total production cuts to 1.2 million bpd.

“It’s working very well,” Husseini told CNBC’s “Squawk on the Street” on Thursday. “There’s already been a significant drop in OPEC production and it’s continuing on target to come down to about 32 [million] and 100,000 barrels in January.”

OPEC pumped just under 33 million bpd in October, the month that serves as the benchmark for production cuts. If Husseini’s forecast is correct and OPEC pumps roughly 32.1 million bpd in January, it would equal a cut of 876,000 bpd.

But Husseini says it’s possible that OPEC cuts more than 1 million bpd by the end of January, and the group could potentially throttle back output by nearly 1.2 million bpd, essentially doing the work of its allies for them.

Husseini is the former executive vice president of exploration and production operations at Saudi Arabia‘s state-owned oil company Aramco. Saudi Arabia is OPEC’s top oil producer and the world’s biggest crude exporter.

There are already signs that OPEC will over-deliver in January, the month its production deal begins.

Saudi Oil Minister Khalid al Falih said last month that Saudi Arabia will pump about 10.2 million bpd in January, down from nearly 11.1 million bpd in November, according to the kingdom’s figures.

That represents a bigger drop than the 3-percent cut from October levels that 11 participating OPEC members are reportedly being asked to shoulder. Three members — Iran, Libya and Venezuela — are exempt.

The Saudis consistently cut production more than required throughout OPEC’s initial deal with its allies to cap production, which ran from January 2017 to June 2018. The alliance agreed to reverse course and hike output in June, as U.S. sanctions on Iran threatened to leave the world short of oil supplies.

However, President Donald Trump granted exemptions to some of Iran’s biggest customers when sanctions snapped back into place in November. The move came just as a big slug of OPEC supply was hitting the market. That deepened a sharp slide in oil prices.

“Clearly there was an excess supply. This was largely due to the plans to impose sanctions on Iran that were supposed to be very stringent,” Husseini said.

On Wednesday, oil prices rallied on tanker-tracking data that indicated Saudi exports fell by 464,000 bpd in December. On Thursday, a Reuters survey suggested Saudi output fell by 400,000 bpd and OPEC’s production was down 460,000 bpd in December.

OPEC releases its official report on December output in two weeks. A first reading of January production is scheduled for Feb. 12.

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