Oil has rallied strongly in recent months, hitting a 10-month high, thanks to the significant supply curbs from OPEC+ linchpins Saudi Arabia and Russia. Brighter outlooks in the two biggest economies, the US and China, have also supported the advance, with stockpiles declining at a rapid clip. At present, most major economies remained on track for a soft landing, Goldman Sachs said.
“We believe that OPEC will be able to sustain Brent in an US$80-to-US$105 range in 2024 by leveraging robust Asia-centric global demand growth,” analysts Daan Struyven, Callum Bruce and Yulia Zhestkova Grigsby said in the report dated Sept. 20. At the same time, “OPEC is unlikely to push prices to extreme levels, which would destroy its long-term residual demand,” they said.
The market will have a deficit estimated at 2 million barrels a day this quarter, followed by a shortfall of 1.1 million barrels a day in the final three months of 2023, Goldman said. Global consumption was at a record, it said.
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Oil’s rally has rekindled talk of the possibility of US$100-a-barrel pricing. This week, Chevron Corp’s Mike Wirth said it was on the cards, citing tighter supplies and dwindling inventories. Amrita Sen, head of research at Energy Aspects, echoed that view, predicting prices could top US$100 “for a bit.”
Even one of the market’s stauncher bears, Citigroup Inc’s Ed Morse, said that geopolitics plus technical trading “could push oil over US$100 for a short while.” However, a well-supplied market — from producers outside OPEC — should mean that “US$90 prices look unsustainable,” he added. - Bloomberg