The
collapse of talks in Doha sent oil tumbling ©Haidar Mohammed Ali (AFP)
|
Oil plunged Monday a day
after top producers failed to reach a deal in Doha to cap output, fanning fresh
fears over a supply glut that has plagued the market.
AFP
report continues:
Prices
had rebounded last week on hopes the OPEC exporters' club and other major
players, including Russia, would agree to freeze output levels at Sunday's
meeting.
However,
discussions in the Qatari capital floundered and a deal to curb abundant global
oil supplies failed to materialize, sending the market reeling once again.
At
around 1045 GMT, US benchmark West Texas Intermediate for delivery in May sank US$1.13
to US$39.23 per barrel. Brent crude for June delivery lost US$1.23 to US$41.87.
The
Doha failure "has raised the fear that the current glut and oversupply
issue is never going to be solved", GKFX analyst James Hughes told AFP.
"It
has also brought into question the relevance of the OPEC cartel, if the most
powerful voice in the group cannot affect change."
The
long-running oil glut sparked a vicious collapse from above US$100 in mid-2014
to 13-year lows of around US$27 in February.
Kingpin
Saudi Arabia insisted it would not agree to freeze production without the
participation of fellow cartel member Iran -- which boycotted the talks.
- 'Politics trumped
economics' -
"The
much-awaited meeting exposed the political rift between Saudi Arabia and Iran,
and (this) ultimately doomed the agreement," said Barclays oil analyst
Miswin Mahesh in a research note.
"Though
Iran initially planned to send their OPEC minister, his participation was cancelled
when the Qataris insisted that all attendees would also be signatories to any
deal.
"The
political tension between Saudi Arabia and Iran trumped the economics for
agreeing to a deal."
In
both June and December last year, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting
Countries -- which pumps about 40 percent of the world's oil -- refused to cut
output.
The
Saudi-backed policy is aimed at pushing the market lower to hurt
less-competitive players, including US shale producers, and maintain precious
market share.
Major
exporters from Nigeria to Venezuela, and even Saudi Arabia, have suffered
billions of dollars in lost revenue as prices have collapsed.
Iran
-- which only recently returned to world oil markets after the lifting of
nuclear-linked Western sanctions in January -- has ruled out capping its own
production.
"Iran
are more likely to increase their output, after years of sanctions, and this is
the issue," added Hughes.
"Iran
are in no place to start to cut their output and abide by an OPEC rule after
already stating they want to increase output to pre-sanction levels, levels
they are nowhere near currently."
Opinion
had been split over whether a deal on Sunday would be enough to tackle the
global oversupply, which is also due to slowing demand in major consumer China
and burgeoning US shale production.
- 'Sustained depression'
for prices? -
Rebecca
O'Keeffe, head of investment at online broker Interactive Investor, cautioned
Monday that global oil supply was being constrained by industrial action in
Kuwait and Saturday's deadly earthquake in Ecuador.
"While
there are a number of factors that might curb oil supply in the short-term --
including a strike in Kuwait and the earthquake in Ecuador -- OPEC’s main
problem is the relationship between Saudi Arabia and Iran and this problem is
not going to go away," O'Keeffe told AFP.
"Indeed,
Saudi Arabia may move to increase supply in response to higher Iranian output
in an effort to maintain their market share.
"This
impasse could see a sustained medium-term depression in oil prices."
A
walkout by thousands of Kuwaiti oil workers entered its second day on Monday,
slashing production by over 60 percent as the government looks abroad to
recruit foreign employees.
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