OPEC urges compliance with oil cuts
Last Update: 1:47 AM ET Mar 22, 1999 NewsWatch
VIENNA, Austria (AP) -- Iraq Oil Minister Amer Mohammed Rasheed minced no words in summing up the goal of OPEC ministers meeting here this week.
"We are here ... to save the situation of the collapsing prices of oil. That is our main objective," Rasheed said Sunday.
OPEC ministers expressed hope that oil-exporting nations would abide by production cuts designed to slash total output by more than 2 million barrels a day.
The new quotas, which are to begin April 1, would remain in effect for a full year, Venezuelan Oil Minister Ali Rodriguez said ahead of Tuesday's meeting of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries.
The meeting is expected to result in formal approval of production cuts agreed upon earlier this month.
Excess supply and a weak demand for winter heating oil sent prices plunging to 12-year lows late last year. Although consumers have benefited from cheaper oil and gasoline, the soft market has inflicted economic pain on producers, including Britain, Norway and the oil-patch American states of Texas and Louisiana.
Prices finally began surging two weeks ago, when representatives of OPEC's three biggest members - Saudi Arabia, Iran and Venezuela - along with Algeria and non-member Mexico agreed at a meeting in The Hague, Netherlands, to reduce output.
On the New York Mercantile Exchange, crude oil for April delivery has traded in the $15-range. In comparison, crude was trading at about $12 a barrel a month ago.
Under the deal reached at The Hague, Saudi Arabia, which currently produces more than 8 million barrels a day, will take the biggest cut - 585,000 barrels. No. 2 producer Iran will pump 264,000 fewer barrels a day, while Rodriguez confirmed that Venezuela will trim daily output by 125,000 barrels.
Saudi Arabian Oil Minister Ali Naimi, speaking after arriving at a hotel, said he expected full compliance with the new, lower levels of production.
OPEC estimates the current output of its 11 members at 27.66 million barrels a day. At this level, supply exceeds demand by about 500,000 barrels, according to the Paris-based International Energy Agency.
The success of OPEC's effort to buoy prices by pumping less oil depends upon the compliance of each member, Rodriguez said. Cheating has been a chronic problem for the group.
Libya, one of the last OPEC members to confirm the size of its planned production cut, will pump 96,000 fewer barrels a day beginning April 1, said Libyan Oil Minister Abdalla Salem El-Badri.
"I hope that everybody will abide by the agreement," El-Badri said.
More ministers were scheduled to arrive today, when delegates were expected to meet in small groups of two or more prior to Tuesday's group meeting.
Non-OPEC members pledging to reduce production include Mexico, Russia, Oman and Norway.
© 1999 The Associated Press - All Rights Reserved. The information in this report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press.
cbs.marketwatch.com
+++++++++++++++++ Energies up on eve of OPEC meeting CRB index jumps 1.2%; copper futures stage rally
By Myra P. Saefong, CBS MarketWatch Last Update: 4:34 PM ET Mar 22, 1999 Agriculture Outlook New! Futures News
NEW YORK (CBS.MW) -- Energy futures rallied Monday, reversing earlier lows as the market anxiously waits to see if the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries keeps its promise for cuts in oil production amounting to 2 million barrels per day.
Members from OPEC gathered in Vienna, Austria Monday to prepare for deliberations Tuesday. The cartel controls 55 percent of the international crude oil trade.
On the New York Mercantile Exchange, May crude oil rose 38 cents to $15.74 a barrel -- a height unseen since the $16.36 per-barrel price in October 1998. April heating oil rose 1.76 cents to 42.45 cents a gallon -- a 4.3 percent leap in price. April unleaded gasoline rose 1.78 cents to 49.42 cents a gallon.
The rally sparked a large hike in the Bridge/Commodity Research Bureau Index, a broad-based measure of commodity futures markets. The index jumped 1.2 percent to 190.44.
Investors are waiting for details of the cuts and hope that both OPEC and non-OPEC producers stick to their agreements. Crude oil prices have risen 8 percent since the 2-million-barrel-per-day output reduction plan was announced on March 12.
Meanwhile, oil minister Sergei Generalov said Russia will reduce exports by 100,000 barrels per day starting April 1.
The market may be finding some support from the weekend bombing by Kurdish separatists of a crude oil pipeline that pumps one million barrels per day from Iraq to Turkey. Witnesses say damage is light, but the slowdown in crude transports, coupled with the planned production cuts provided some additional bullish news for energy futures. The market, however, remains fixated on the outcome of the OPEC talks and prices of energy futures will likely take their cue from those discussions.
But Senior Analyst Tim Evans from Pegasus Econometric Group believes the summit will not yield any more bullish news for the sector since the cutbacks have already been announced. The meeting will merely be a photo opportunity and a chance for members to sample "some really good strudel."
Additionally, Tuesday's American Petroleum Institute crude inventory report is another development traders will watch closely, analysts say.
(snip)
Natural gas rises
Natural gas futures rose 4.2 percent Monday as the market experienced the buying of futures contracts to offset the selling amid traders' attempts to control losses.
On the New York Mercantile Exchange, April natural gas rose 7.1 cents to $1.77 per BTU.
Meanwhile, no positive weather news is on the horizon. Temperatures are expected to be seasonally normal to above-normal in the Northeast and Midwest throughout the week. The winter, which has now been replaced by spring, provided no relief from the surplus of natural gas stocks as temperatures were 8.9 percent warmer than usual.
cbs.marketwatch.com
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Monday March 22 7:05 PM ET
Oil At 5-Month High, Copper, Grains Surge
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Oil prices rose Monday to the highest level since October as expectations spread that world oil exporters meeting this week would adopt effective new curbs on production.
In other commodity markets, large speculators operating as pooled ''funds'' continued to play a major role as they bought futures contracts to cash in profitable, previously sold ''short'' positions. Copper, cotton and grains surged.
At the New York Mercantile Exchange, crude oil for April delivery closed 26 cents higher at $15.50 a barrel, up more than $3 a barrel or 25 percent in the last month amid signs that oil exporters would finally cooperate to cut the oil glut.
Officials of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries meet in Vienna Tuesday to ratify a deal to cut production by more than 2 million barrels a day.
Under the deal pushed two weeks ago by top OPEC producer Saudi Arabia, OPEC members other than Iraq are expected to cut production by 1.717 million barrels a day, while non-OPEC producers Mexico, Norway and Oman are to cut back another 286,000 barrels daily.
Two agreements last year that sought to cut output by a total of 3.1 million barrels a day failed to revive prices, which had plunged to 25-year lows in real terms because of spotty compliance with the deals by debt-strapped producers.
Market confidence that the latest accord would be followed with a high degree of compliance has grown, mainly because Saudi Arabia agreed to shoulder the biggest sacrifice -- cutting output by 585,000 barrels a day. It officially told customers last week that the cuts would begin on April 1.
Oil product prices also jumped Monday, partly on news that oil giant Exxon Corp. (NYSE:XON - news) shut down a big gasoline-making unit at its Benicia, Calif., refinery for repairs last week. The closure, which is expected to last several weeks, is the latest of several shutdowns at California refineries.
Unleaded gasoline for April delivery closed 1.78 cents higher at 49.42 cents a gallon, while April heating oil rose 1.70 cents to 42.39 cents.
dailynews.yahoo.com
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There are reasons for OPEC countries to stick to the deal.
03/21/99- Updated 05:54 PM ET Pampered Kuwaitis in for rude awakening?
Oil's slide threatens world of hired help, 5-car families
By David J. Lynch, USA TODAY
KUWAIT CITY - The flip side of the cheap-gas bonanza that American motorists have enjoyed for the past year can be found in the elegantly appointed suburban villa of Abdullah Marafie.
Three dozen men wearing headdresses and robes called dishdashas are seated beneath gleaming chandeliers on plush red banquettes. Cradling sleek cell phones in one hand and traditional prayer beads in the other, these engineers, lawyers and businessmen while away hours talking over bottomless cups of sweet tea.
With the driveway full of Mercedes and BMW sedans, there are no obvious signs of economic distress. But the talk tonight, at this traditional weekly gathering known as a diwaniya, is of a global oil glut that has driven the price of Kuwait's chief product to historic lows. "The life of Kuwait depends on oil. That's why we are suffering," says Maher Marafie, Abdullah's cousin. "Ask the people in this room: Most have lost 60% to 70% on the (local) stock market in the past year."
Despite a rally the past month, oil prices of $15 a barrel are still well below the $26 level of January 1997. The decline - at one point to under $12 a barrel - has shaken Kuwaitis' sense of security to a degree unseen in this pampered state since the 1990 war. The oil slump illuminates both the need for fundamental reform in a country where more than nine of 10 citizens work for the state and the difficulty of winning change from a status-quo-oriented regime.
"This is an economic emergency," says consultant Ahmad Bishara. "Kuwait is not in as dire a situation as Saudi Arabia perhaps. But if we don't use this opportunity (to reform), we'll regret it for a long time."
Persistently low oil prices may be the most important economic phenomenon of this decade. Without them, U.S. inflation last year would have been 50% higher. Subdued inflation allows the Federal Reserve to keep interest rates low, buoying the stock market and the global economy. Cheap oil also frees American consumers to indulge in gas-guzzling sport-utility vehicles.
But the price plunge has terrorized producers. Industry giants, such as Exxon, Mobil, BP and Amoco, have taken refuge in mergers. Tens of thousands of workers have been laid off, and independent drillers are going out of business at a steady clip.
The oil price collapse also has exacerbated instability in major producers such as Russia and Indonesia and threatens to end the oil boom in the Caspian Sea nations almost before it has begun.
But nowhere have the effects been more keenly felt than in the Persian Gulf, home to two-thirds of the world's known oil reserves. Oil revenue is down by 50% or more for Kuwait and Saudi Arabia, forcing them for the first time to consider scaling back generous welfare states that would make even the most ardent socialist blush. "It is a terrible thing. All oil-producing countries are losing a lot of money," says Iranian Foreign Minister Kamal Kharrazi, who has closed several embassies for lack of cash.
With the recent rally and with oil suppliers now proclaiming a tentative agreement on a 2 million barrel-per-day production cut, prices may head higher still. But that won't erase the damage: For Kuwait, the price slide has opened a $7 billion hole in its budget, says Cambridge Energy Research Associates.
Whether the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) will implement the latest cut remains to be seen. The cartel, meeting Tuesday in Vienna to apportion the reduction among individual countries, is notorious for cheating on its own deals. Previous accords, including a trumpeted 2.6 million barrel-per-day cutback a year ago, have been far less effective than anticipated.
Better off than some
Of the Persian Gulf states, Kuwait remains among the best positioned financially. It recalls Houston in its petrodollar heyday, clogged with Jaguars, Range Rovers and Porsches. Upscale shopping malls, offering Swiss watches, Italian suits and Belgian chocolates, mimic those of Newport Beach.
A nation roughly the size of New Jersey, Kuwait has the fourth-largest oil reserves in the world plus an estimated $45 billion in public savings invested abroad, according to former Kuwaiti Central Bank economist Jasem Al-Sadoun.
That's why the current budget shortfall is a problem, not a disaster. But disaster may yet loom. "The level of social services and entitlements built into the system is not supportable," says James Placke, a retired Foreign Service officer. "And they've got a limited number of years to make the transition to another economic system."
Beginning in the 1970s, expensive oil proved a windfall for Persian Gulf producers. And Kuwait responded by creating a cradle-to-grave welfare state that smoothed all the rough edges off of life. Kuwaitis get free education, free health care, low- or no-interest mortgages up to $220,000 and a virtual guarantee of a job with the government. Electricity and water are virtually free. The government pays a monthly stipend of $170 for each child.
For each of the roughly 700,000 Kuwaitis, there are two expatriate Pakistanis or Filipinos to wait tables, wash cars and take out the trash. And there is no income tax. Whoever said there is no such thing as a free lunch never visited Kuwait.
But the cost of these benefits is a system hard-wired with inefficiency. The local phone system in this country of fewer than 2 million people uses the same computerized switch as a Manhattan phone network serving 3 times as many. The outsized gear is needed because Kuwaitis, encouraged by free local calling, misdial more than 10 times as often as Americans.
Kuwaitis acknowledge the government can't keep its promises to the next generation. There's already a list of 45,000 people waiting for housing. And with 44% of the population under age 15 - more than twice the percentage in the USA - a flood of new workers is about to hit the labor force. They can't all work for the government, but there are few opportunities in the private sector. Higher unemployment could threaten political stability within a decade, says Al-Sadoun.
A few adjustments
So far, the brunt of the government's limited retrenchment has fallen on capital spending. Construction of Subiyah, a planned "second city" north of here, has been postponed, as have plans for a new university and a wastewater treatment plant.
Firms in construction and related businesses have been hit hard. Jassim Qabazard, a civil engineer, says he's laid off seven foreign nationals, about one-third of his staff. "Design and feasibility work on construction projects just isn't being done," he says.
Elsewhere, there have been only minor adjustments. Tarek Alrujaib, a prominent businessman, says he just paid $30 to renew his driver's license and almost $500 for his annual business license. Both were once free.
Other equally minor proposals were shouted down by a parliament afraid of provoking voters before elections scheduled for October 2000. Last year, when the government cautiously proposed increasing the price of gasoline to 60 cents a gallon from 40 cents, one lawmaker - with no apparent sense of irony - worried aloud about the impact on the five-car family.
Now the government wants to dip into the "Fund for Future Generations," the investment account created to ensure that today's oil wealth isn't all spent by today's Kuwaitis. It's only the second time the government has proposed selling assets from the multibillion-dollar fund; the first was to finance postwar reconstruction.
Welcome back?
And the government has accelerated plans to do something that once would have been unthinkable: inviting foreign oil companies to return to Kuwait, which evicted them in a 1975 nationalization. The move is part of a major regional shift that also has seen Saudi Arabia, Iraq and Iran open their energy sectors to foreigners.
Throwing out the foreigners demonstrated Kuwait's sovereignty. But without input from abroad, the state-run oil business became about as innovative as the post office. Between 1981 and 1997, as drilling costs elsewhere fell by a third, they increased in Kuwait, says Placke, an analyst with Cambridge Energy Research Associates. Without innovation, the country eventually could find it difficult to produce as much oil as OPEC quotas allow.
Earlier this decade, Kuwait hired Chevron and BP-Amoco for technical assistance on existing fields. Now, the country wants about $7 billion of new investment to boost production in aging fields. That's part of an ambitious $13 billion effort to increase capacity to 3 million barrels a day to capitalize once world oil demand recovers.
Parliament is still considering a government proposal that would involve foreign companies in so-called "upstream" exploration and development activities. The proposal has sparked controversy among Islamic members of parliament, who see it as a reminder of a bitter colonial past and are suspicious of the country's oil minister, whom they suspect of pro-Americanism. But if political hurdles can be surmounted, agreements could come by next spring.
Some say the oil price decline offered a perfect opportunity to mobilize Kuwaitis for needed sacrifices. But now, with prices moving up, the sharp impetus for reform may have dulled.
Back at the diwaniya, cigars are lighted as the tea and talk continues to flow. "We are aware of what needs to be done," says Qabazard, the civil engineer. "But we have to get used to thinking about it. Getting to actually doing it, actually stepping down from one way of life to a less glamorous way of life - it's very difficult."
usatoday.com
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