Energy & Precious Metals - Weekly Review and Calendar Ahead

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By Barani Krishnan

Investing.com - All hail the newly-reaffirmed OPEC tsar, Vladimir Putin.

As though Abdulaziz bin Salman hasn’t had enough surprises over the past few weeks, the Saudi Energy Minister got another jolt on Friday when he learnt Moscow wasn’t ready to agree to additional supply cuts proposed by Riyadh and other allies in the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries.

The deeper reductions, as anyone in the oil market knew, were key to restoring confidence for investors to start bidding up crude prices again in the bear market for oil.

Whether the cuts are really necessary — exactly the point that stalled Russia’s decision — is debatable, because no one really knows how much longer and worse China’s coronavirus crisis could get.

The logical theory is once a cure is found for the pathogen, demand for oil — and pretty much anything else that China buys by the gazillions — should soon fix itself.

Yet, like in any crisis, multiple remedial efforts are needed to assuage people that everything humanly possible is being done — until that definitive solution comes along.

In oil’s case, common sense tells us that the OPEC plan to curb another 600,000 barrels per day, on top of its earlier pledge to take away 1.2-2.1 million bpd, could go a long way in placating a market that Bloomberg estimates has lost 3 million bpd of Chinese buying in just three weeks.

Yet, that's not the way the Kremlin sees it.

In the words of Energy Minister Alexander Novak, Russia needs more time to decide whether to join additional oil output cuts proposed by OPEC because it believes U.S. crude production growth could slow while global demand remains solid.

Now, we've all heard of peak shale and how U.S. oil output could get into a steady decline. Despite this, the U.S. Energy Information Administration keeps forecasting higher and higher production with each passing year. For instance, Energy Secretary Dan Brouillette said on Friday that the current U.S. record production of 13 million bpd could reach as high 15-to-16 million in coming years.

Many will agree with Brouillette on shale's promising prospects, peak oil or not. But it's hard to imagine anyone agreeing to Novak's theory that demand for oil is solid when refiners are visibly taking less crude and airlines consuming less jet fuel with each passing day of the coronavirus crisis.

Of course, we also know that whatever we heard from Novak wasn't decided by him, because nothing as important as this for Russia could have been decided by anyone other than its president, Putin.