Zero Hedge reports elsewhere that crude oil has gone below $50 a barrel
Putin's
Meeting With Saudi Crown Prince At G-20 Could Overshadow OPEC
29
November, 20148
With
oil prices in free fall and diplomatic crises raising the threat of
more Western sanctions, Russian President Vladimir Putin and Crown
Prince Mohammad bin Salman are planning to meet on sidelines of the
G-20 summit later this week, Bloomberg reports.
Even if President Trump snubbed Salman, and threatened
to snub Putin,
energy traders will be watching closely as the two leaders meet for
the first time since both countries started pumping oil at the
fastest pace since the 2016 OPEC+ production cuts.
Specifically,
traders will watching for any indication of what both countries,
which have formed an alliance allowing them to exert unrivaled
influence over global oil markets (though producers in the Texas oil
patch are struggling to change that), have planned for a meeting of
the OPEC+ nations set for the following week in Vienna.
As
one energy analyst told CNBC,
the OPEC+ meeting could turn into a formality if the two leaders
decide on a new course for the cartel and its allies.
The heads of the world's 20 largest economies are due to arrive in the Argentinian capital this weekend, where leaders will try to build a consensus on key issues. It comes a week before a much-anticipated meeting between OPEC and non-OPEC producers in Vienna, Austria, on December 6.
"All eyes are now on the upcoming OPEC meeting, but the get-together could easily turn out to be a formality," Tamas Varga, senior analyst at PVM Oil Associates, said in a research note published Tuesday.
The
meeting between the two leaders is happening at a critical time for
both Russia and KSA. They are struggling to defend their share
of the global oil market from producers in the Texas oil
patch. Meanwhile,
falling oil prices -
Brent crude futures for delivery next month
traded below $60 a barrel on Wednesday - are putting pressure on both
countries' budgets. Though Putin has repeatedly brushed off these
concerns, saying Wednesday that Russia is "fine" with oil
prices at $60 a barrel, not long after he said something similar
about oil at $70.
Though
MbS could risk arrest on 'war crime' charges as soon as he steps off
his plane, the Khashoggi scandal and the international backlash
against what's seen as MbS's heavy handed rule likely won't factor
into discussions between the two leaders.
But
any discussion of oil prices between the two leaders will be hindered
by the fact that Trump might not meet with either of them during the
summit, sensitive about the scandals encircling both leaders, whom
he has taken pains to defend in the face of a mounting public
backlash. After all, the three leaders have become part of a
triumvirate that, should
they choose to work together, could
effectively dictate prices in global oil markets.
Then
again, while Trump has threatened to cancel his meeting with Putin,
and has no plans to meet with MbS, traders can't rule out the
possibility that the three could gather for a 'casual' chat on the
sidelines of the summit.
And
given the ramp in US shale production, the three would have plenty to
discuss.
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