Most Read
Most Commented
Read more like this
mk-logo
News
Opec’s disarray looks like 1990s slump all over again

There are several striking parallels between the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries’ (Opec) current situation and the period from 1997 to 1999, when the group lost control of the market and oil slipped to less than US$10 a barrel. While investors may wonder whether markets will follow a similar trajectory this time, it’s important to remember that Opec emerged from the crisis to see oil prices surge all the way to almost US$150 a barrel.

If the parallels hold, markets could be in for a wild ride.

Nearly two decades ago, Venezuela had a growth spurt that lifted its output from 2.2 million barrels a day in 1992 to 3.5 million barrels a day six years later. Saudi Arabia responded by increasing its own production, flooding the market.

This time around, Saudi Arabia has embarked on a production spree - pumping a record of 10.6 million barrels a day earlier this year - while Iran plans to boost daily output by as much as 1 million barrels next year after sanctions are lifted.

As Opec lifted production in 1997, Asia headed into economic meltdown. The devaluation in July that year of the baht, the currency of Thailand, triggered a financial crisis that pushed Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore and Thailand into recession. The group’s GDP contracted 8.3 percent in 1998, compared to growth of 7.5 percent on average the previous decade, according to data from the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

While Asia isn’t collapsing this time around, China is experiencing the slowest expansion in 25 years.

Back in 1997, Opec decided at a meeting in the Indonesian capital to raise production quotas just as the Asian economic crisis began, sending oil prices as low as US$10. Veteran oil ministers still refer to the “ghost of Jakarta” that haunts their decisions. Indonesia has now returned to the centre of Opec after the nation rejoined the group last week after suspending its membership in 2009.

The oil slump of 1997 to 1999 was compounded by El Nino, which curbed demand for heating fuel by warming the ocean surface in the equatorial Pacific and making fall and winter in the Northern hemisphere milder than normal.

Fast forward to 2015 and El Nino is already comparable to the record events of those years, according to the Bureau of Meteorology of Australia. Heating oil stockpiles in the US and northern Europe are high, potentially affecting overall crude demand.

Just as they were nearly two decades ago, Saudi Arabia’s al-Naimi and Iranian Oil Minister Bijan Namdar Zanganeh stand in opposition across the conference table in Vienna. Both have a long history of working together to resolve oil gluts, but the differences loom larger this time as their nations’ conflicting positions on Syria, Yemen and Iraq get in the way of the business of oil.

Venezuela saw an abrupt political change in December 1998 when Hugo Chavez won presidential elections, ushering in a new era of socialism and triggering an oil U-turn. Chavez joined Saudi Arabia in cutting production, ending a decade of increases, while his policies slowly drove out many of the country’s foreign oil investors.

After 16 years of uninterrupted ‘Chavismo’, the nation’s crude production has fallen by 10 percent and the opposition has just won its first elections, taking a majority in congress.

- Reuters

ADS