OPEC+ Oil Production Cut Meeting: 3 Key Players And Where They Stand

 | Apr 08, 2020 08:08

OPEC and its OPEC+ partners plan to hold a virtual meeting on Thursday to discuss cutting oil production in the face of plummeting prices and a growing oversupply. About a month ago, the OPEC+ group seemed to have optimistic about the prospect of a 10-15 million bpd cut in oil output that President Trump mentioned in his tweets last Friday. However, the process is not nearly as clear-cut as the President’s tweet described it.

Although OPEC+ has yet to meet, Saudi Arabia and the UAE have already indicated that any production cut from OPEC+ will also invited to the OPEC+ meeting as observers, it is not clear which, if any, will attend. The U.S. has already declined to join.

Some analysts have been insisting that OPEC+ is taking a wise stance by pressuring non-OPEC+ producers to take part in cuts. Whether it is wise or not is irrelevant to traders. It is crucial to understand that this is an unprecedented maneuver. OPEC used to act on its own with rare requests for engagement from outsiders. In 2014, Saudi Arabia pushed over-production when it could not balance the market, but it did not make a serious attempt to pressure any producers except its OPEC partners. Then OPEC extended participation to OPEC+. Now, it seems that OPEC+ is insisting that all other producers participate with them—a major diversion from past behavior.

As has been the case at almost every OPEC+ meeting, Saudi Arabia and Russia are the key players. In a departure from OPEC’s traditional stance, the U.S. will apparently also play an important role. Here’s a look at each of these country’s positions:

h2 Saudi Arabia/h2

Saudi Arabia precipitated the one-day 30% drop in oil prices in March after it reacted to Russia’s anti-cut position by committing to more output and lower prices for some of its customers. That was a month ago.