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OPEC Policy in the Age of Trump

OPEC Policy in the Age of Trump

Full Title: OPEC Policy in the Age of Trump
Author(s): Bassam Fattouh and Andreas Economou
Publisher(s): The Oxford Institute for Energy Studies
Publication Date: March 1, 2019
Full Text: Download Resource
Description (excerpt):

President Trump’s tweet on February 25 urging OPEC to ‘relax’ and to take it ‘easy’ with their cuts,
and that a ‘fragile’ global economy can’t tolerate a higher oil price, did have an immediate price
impact, with the Brent price declining by 4 per cent on the day, from nearly $67/b down to $64/b (see
Figure 1). But the ‘Trump tweet’ impact faded fairly quickly with oil prices gaining again towards the
end of the same week. A clear signal from the Saudi energy minister Mr. Khalid Al-Falih in which he
confirmed that OPEC and its partners would continue with their output cuts with the objective of
achieving a more balanced market was a key factor behind the fast recovery. As argued in Fattouh
and Economou (2019), extrapolating Saudi Arabia’s behavior in 2018 into 2019 is risky and the
assumption that Saudi policy will reverse its current strategy under Trump’s pressure does not reflect
the shift in Saudi thinking and the current uncertainties and weaknesses engulfing the oil market. This
Energy Comment sheds some light on the current market uncertainties pertaining to the drivers and
prospects of global demand growth in 2019, the clearing of the stocks overhang and the dilemma that
OPEC and its partners currently face.

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