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Venezuela's Maduro Says Putin Agrees to Support Oil Prices

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Venezuela's Maduro Says Putin Agrees to Support Oil Prices - Bloomberg Business


OPEC member Venezuela and Russia, the largest oil exporter outside the group, agreed on “initiatives” to bring stability to the market, according to Venezuelan PresidentNicolas Maduro.

Russian President Vladimir Putin and Maduro “have agreed on some initiatives that will be known when put in place, to achieve stability of the oil market,” Maduro said after a meeting with his Russian counterpart in China on Thursday, according to Venezuela’s state-news agency AVN. “Stable prices may be best for the world economy and, at present, prices at least above $70 a barrel are the best for ensuring energy investment in the next 50 years.”

Putin and Maduro have agreed to continue talks between OPEC and non-OPEC oil producers, but not on an output cut that would support prices, Russia’s Energy MinisterAlexander Novak told reporters in Vladivostok on Friday. No producing country is willing to reduce its output, he said.


Russia is comfortable with an oil price above $60 a barrel, Deputy Prime Minister Arkady Dvorkovich said Friday at a forum in Cernobbio, Italy.

The 12-member Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, which produces 40 percent of the world’s oil, earlier this week said in a monthly bulletin that it’s prepared to discuss “fair and reasonable prices” with other crude exporters, while adding there’s no easy fix and that it won’t shoulder the burden of propping up prices on its own.

‘Fragile Five’
Crude sank to a six-year low last week and has lost about half its value in the past year as Saudi Arabia, the world’s top exporter, led OPEC to reject demands from members including Algeria and Venezuela to cut supply to bolster prices. The group opted to maintain its production target to protect market share amid surging output from the U.S., Canada and other countries.

Cash-strapped Venezuela is among OPEC’s most vulnerable members to political turmoil, as the oil price slump has caused shortages of basic goods ahead of parliamentary elections in December, RBC analysts Christopher Louney and Helima Croft said in a report last month. Along with Algeria, Iraq, Libya and Nigeria, it’s one of OPEC’s “Fragile Five” whose currencies are weakening and current account deficits are widening, the analysts said.


“There is no quick fix, but if there is a willingness to face the oil industry’s challenges together, then the prospects for the future have to be a lot better than what everyone involved in the industry has been experiencing over the past nine months or so,” according to the opening commentary in the OPEC Bulletin, the group’s monthly magazine, published Monday. “As the organization has stressed on numerous occasions, it stands ready to talk to all other producers.”

Rising Production
OPEC has ramped up daily output in the past three months above 32 million barrels a day, the highest level since 2012, on higher supply from Saudi Arabia and Iraq. That exceeds an official target of 30 million. Iran’s nuclear deal with world powers in July may free up its oil exports, leading the group’s output to increase further.

A March initiative by Algeria’s President Abdelaziz Bouteflika to organize a coordinated effort to counter the oil price slump between OPEC and non-OPEC producers met with no response from Saudi Arabia. In a December interview to the Middle East Economic Survey, Saudi Arabian Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi said a meeting with non-OPEC producers Russia and Mexico in Vienna produced no result as the two nations declined to commit to supply cuts. The talks, also attended by Venezuela, were held before the November meeting where the decision to preserve market share was taken.
 
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I'd like to know know how these two think they can effect oil prices.

I guess Russian could cut production by a 1,000,000 barrels, but they won't and Venezuela can't cut any amount and plans on increasing it's production with $5 bln loan they got from China

this is simply out of their control




watching Venezuela squirm is enjoyable.
 
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Can they supply them with toilet paper too?
:sarcastic:
it's really sad actually how far Venezuela has fallen due to its ;bus driver' leader who has driven it into the ground along with their terrible combination of policies since the Chavez era. :(

hopefully a new leader comes to power and takes things in a different direction from today.
 
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Venezuela definitely needs a new leader. But is Maduro's problem that he only knows how to drive a bus? Maybe they should choose an ex-secret police official instead ... Or, better yet, a mullah.
 
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Putin himself has no idea about how to keep the Russian Economy afloat ...... and he is gong to support Venezuela's Oil pricing ??? :lol:
 
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OPEC Assumes Oil Price Will Recover Gradually to $80 in 2020 - Bloomberg Business

OPEC is assuming the oil price will rise gradually to $80 a barrel in 2020 as supply growth outside the group weakens, a slower recovery than several member nations have said they need.

The average selling price of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries’ crude will increase by about $5 annually to 2020 from $55 this year, according to an internal research report from the group seen by Bloomberg News. Iran and Venezuela said they would like to see a price of at least $70 this month and most member countries cannotbalance their budgets at current prices.

“It’s much harder for OPEC to lift prices” after the revolution of U.S. shale oil, saidBjarne Schieldrop, Oslo-based chief commodities analyst at SEB AB, which forecasts Brent crude at $73 by the end of the decade. “Eighty dollars by 2020 is pretty close to consensus view.”


The price of crude has tumbled more than 50 percent in the past year as OPEC followed Saudi Arabia’s strategy of defending its share of the global market against competitors like U.S. shale oil. While both OPEC and the International Energy Agency expect growth in global supply to slow as low prices bite, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. predicts that a persistent glut will keep crude low for the next 15 years.

Production from nations outside OPEC will be 58.2 million barrels a day in 2017, 1 million lower than previously forecast, according to the internal report. The impact low prices is “most apparent on tight oil, which is more price reactive than other liquids sources,” according to the report. “Supply reductions in U.S. and Canada from 2014 to 2016 are clearly revealed.”

OPEC expects little stimulus to global demand in the medium term as a result of cheaper oil, with daily consumption growing by about 1 million barrels a year to 97.4 million in 2020, according to the report. While demand from China, Russia and OPEC members will grow more slowly than forecast a year ago, developing nations with still account for the bulk the expansion, it said.



as expected. Venezuela simply wants oil to be above $70 right now!! but OPEC is saying oil won't reach $70 til 2018 and $80 by 2020!! :rofl:
 
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Can they supply them with toilet paper too?
:sarcastic:
I think with the value of the currency they are solving that problem

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