OPEC’s oil price strategy in tatters after Russia snub

Following Russia's refusal to cut oil output faced with a coronavirus-fuelled slump in demand, its alliance with the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) has been thrown into doubt, as has the cartel's influence on prices.

The "OPEC+ alliance looks dead after OPEC failed to reach an agreement with Russia on further production cuts," banking group ANZ said in a client note after Russia's move on March 6 sent oil prices crashing.

The losses widened massively on March 9 after Saudi Arabia, the kingpin in the OPEC, responded with the biggest cuts to the kingdom's prices in two decades, moving to snatch some of Russia's market share.

That, in turn, sent world benchmark oil prices diving, with Brent North Sea and WTI each shedding 30 percent, before recovering slightly.

"It looks like... we are in a completely different oil world than over the last three years, where OPEC+ regularly provided a floor to prices," AFP quoted analysts at JBC Energy as saying.

Faced with a vertiginous collapse in crude prices beginning in 2014, OPEC members agreed in late 2016 with ten non-member oil producing nations, including big player Russia, to limit output.

But after Russia last week placed in serious doubt the future of OPEC+, analysts said Riyadh's retaliatory move could be an attempt to get Moscow back to the negotiating table, even if they doubt it will happen.

JBC Energy said the recent meeting's failure can be explained by different expectations regarding prices - Russia seemingly satisfied with crude at $50 per barrel, while Saudis prefer $60-70.

"However, all oil producers will agree that $25 is not what they want," JBC added.

Following the slump, Brent was trading around $37 per barrel and WTI at...

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