Energy & Precious Metals - Weekly Review and Calendar Ahead

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By Barani Krishnan

Investing.com - Even for the Bond movie villain it’s been made out to be, Russia’s role in the disintegration of OPEC+ seemed surreal.

Forty-eight hours after its hold-out of support for deeper production cuts that could have mitigated more of the oil demand lost to the coronavirus crisis - and avoided Friday’s spectacular 10% collapse in crude prices - many were still in disbelief of the Moscow maneuver.

From Vienna, where oil’s most powerful government officials were gathered for Friday’s OPEC+ meeting, to the banks, brokerages and hedge funds on Wall Street and elsewhere, the question being asked was the same: “Why now?”

“I guess it was the Russians’ way of saying ‘Enough is enough - each time we cut output, it’s the U.S. shale drillers who benefit without doing anything’,” said Phil Flynn, senior market analyst for energy at the Price Futures Group brokerage in Chicago.

“To me, what the Russians are thinking makes perfect sense. I get it. What I don't get is why would they do it now? Especially in the context of today’s market dynamics, where you’re losing hundreds of thousands of barrels a day in demand, and $35 oil is beginning to look like a reality compared to $55 just weeks ago. That's why I'm asking: Are you sure you want to do this now?”

Since 2016, Russia has agreed to three production cut deals with OPEC kingpin Saudi Arabia. Their OPEC+ alliance, that included more than 20 countries, reduced about one million barrels per day on the average over the past three years. In that same span, the United States became the world’s biggest oil producer, turning out a record high of 13.1 million bpd as of last week.

That’s not at all. U.S. crude shipments have rocketed as well, making America a net oil exporter the first time in history, almost fulfilling its 40-year-long quest for energy independence. Just last week, U.S. crude exports reached more than 4 million bpd, matching a high from December.

It's an amazing transformation for a country that kept a ban on crude shipments for four decades until 2016, for fear of a squeeze at home should there be another 1970s-like supply shock. Not surprisingly, the Russians, who witnessed the volume of U.S. oil grow while they were in cutting mode, don’t think it’s a coincidence.

Thus, when the Russian-Saudi divorce came - just eight months after their energy ministers professed jokingly to be wedded for “eternity” - it wasn’t totally unexpected. Yet, the timing was a total surprise, given that the industry has been thrown into one of its worst periods of uncertainty, with common sense dictating that less, and not more, oil was needed.