A Rollercoaster Ride for Oil Prices

In This Article:

A WSJ article dings oil prices and then is proved wrong … China lockdowns are getting worse … Louis Navellier remains bullish on top-tier energy stocks … the volatility might not be over yet

There’s a bit of drama playing out in the oil markets.

Yesterday, global oil prices tanked in the wake of an article from The Wall Street Journal suggesting that OPEC+ is discussing boosting oil production.

From The Wall Street Journal:

Saudi Arabia and other OPEC oil producers are discussing an output increase, the group’s delegates said, a move that could help heal a rift with the Biden administration and keep energy flowing amid new attempts to blunt Russia’s oil industry over the Ukraine war.

A production increase of up to 500,000 barrels a day is now under discussion for OPEC+’s Dec. 4 meeting, delegates said. 

Such an increase would be a partial reversal of last month’s OPEC+ decision to cut daily oil production by 2 million barrels.

In response to the news, the price of West Texas Intermediate Crude (WTIC) fell from over $80 a barrel to $75 a barrel.

Now, I began writing this Digest bullet last night. My original draft including the following commentary:

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Frankly, this OPEC+ proposal is odd. In the face of cratering oil prices, you wouldn’t expect OPEC+ to be discussing adding even more supply to the market, which would likely lower prices even further.

It turns out this proposal felt odd because it’s not true.

From Bloomberg, this morning:

Saudi Arabia denied a report that it is discussing an oil-production increase for the OPEC+ meeting next month, and said it stands ready to make further cuts if needed…

“The current cut of 2 million barrels per day by OPEC+ continues until the end of 2023,” Saudi Energy Minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman said in a statement via the Saudi Press Agency.

“If there is a need to take further measures by reducing production to balance supply and demand, we always remain ready to intervene.”

The refutation of the WSJ claim is actually more intense than Bloomberg reveals.

Here’s more from i24 News:

…The official Saudi Press Agency said on Monday night that the country’s energy minister, Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman, “categorically denies” the report.

“It is well known, and no secret, that OPEC+ does not discuss any decisions ahead of its meetings,” SPA quoted Prince Abdulaziz as saying.

So, not only is the WSJ’s takeaway incorrect, OPEC+ isn’t even having this conversation right now.

You have to wonder about the nature this WSJ error. It’s not something like misattributing a quote or getting a date wrong. This was a complete reversal of OPEC+’s stated policy from just a month ago. A policy that, as we pointed out above, runs completely contradictory to OPEC+’s incentive structure. It just doesn’t make sense.

Oil is rebounding on the news. WTIC trades at $82.20 as I write Tuesday at lunch.

We’ll keep you updated if more comes out explaining the origin of the mistake.