opec’s market role: changing signs? · eia workshop on financial & physical oil market...
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![Page 1: OPEC’S Market Role: Changing Signs? · EIA Workshop on Financial & Physical Oil Market Linkages, September 19, 2017 OPEC’S Market Role: Changing Signs? James L. Smith Southern](https://reader030.vdocuments.site/reader030/viewer/2022040907/5e7cc2769bb9853d52314485/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
EIA Workshop on Financial & Physical Oil Market Linkages, September 19, 2017
OPEC’S Market Role: Changing Signs?
James L. SmithSouthern Methodist University, Dallas Texas
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Summary of OPEC’s Historical Market Role
• Restrict production to elevate price above competitive level.
• 1974-1982: Fixed posted price with agreed differentials
• 1982-2014: Official production quotas with member allocations
• 2015-2016: Abandon quotas: Maintain OPEC market share despite falling price
• 2017-2018: Return to official production quotas, include Russia, etc.
• 2018- : ???
• Slow development of incremental production capacity, to alleviate “cheating.”(If they have it, they’ll use it).
• Hold and manage spare capacity to offset shocks and dampen price volatility. (Pierru, Smith, and Zamrik, forthcoming in The Energy Journal)
![Page 3: OPEC’S Market Role: Changing Signs? · EIA Workshop on Financial & Physical Oil Market Linkages, September 19, 2017 OPEC’S Market Role: Changing Signs? James L. Smith Southern](https://reader030.vdocuments.site/reader030/viewer/2022040907/5e7cc2769bb9853d52314485/html5/thumbnails/3.jpg)
Summary of OPEC’s Historical Market Role
• Restrict production to elevate price above competitive level.
• 1974-1982: Fixed posted price with agreed differentials
• 1982-2014: Official production quotas with member allocations
• 2015-2016: Abandon quotas: Maintain OPEC market share despite falling price
• 2017-2018: Return to official production quotas, include Russia, etc.
• 2018- : ???
• Slow development of incremental production capacity, to alleviate “cheating.”(If they have it, they’ll use it).
• Hold and manage spare capacity to offset shocks and dampen price volatility. (Pierru, Smith, and Zamrik, forthcoming in The Energy Journal)
![Page 4: OPEC’S Market Role: Changing Signs? · EIA Workshop on Financial & Physical Oil Market Linkages, September 19, 2017 OPEC’S Market Role: Changing Signs? James L. Smith Southern](https://reader030.vdocuments.site/reader030/viewer/2022040907/5e7cc2769bb9853d52314485/html5/thumbnails/4.jpg)
Summary of OPEC’s Historical Market Role
• Restrict production to elevate price above competitive level.
• 1974-1982: Fixed posted price with agreed differentials
• 1982-2014: Official production quotas with member allocations
• 2015-2016: Abandon quotas: Maintain OPEC market share despite falling price
• 2017-2018: Return to official production quotas, include Russia, etc.
• 2018- : ???
• Slow development of incremental production capacity, to alleviate “cheating.”(If they have it, they’ll use it).
• Hold and manage spare capacity to offset shocks and dampen price volatility. (Pierru, Smith, and Zamrik, forthcoming in The Energy Journal)
![Page 5: OPEC’S Market Role: Changing Signs? · EIA Workshop on Financial & Physical Oil Market Linkages, September 19, 2017 OPEC’S Market Role: Changing Signs? James L. Smith Southern](https://reader030.vdocuments.site/reader030/viewer/2022040907/5e7cc2769bb9853d52314485/html5/thumbnails/5.jpg)
Defense of the Market Share Strategy
“Today OPEC is at or near the limits of its power. It is in a market share trap.”
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Defense of the Market Share Strategy
“Today OPEC is at or near the limits of its power. It is in a market share trap.”
“If they raise the price too high, they lose so much in sales that on balance they lose revenue. They can only find the optimal price or the monopoly ceiling by, again, trial and error.”
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Defense of the Market Share Strategy
“Today OPEC is at or near the limits of its power. It is in a market share trap.”
“If they raise the price too high, they lose so much in sales that on balance they lose revenue. They can only find the optimal price or the monopoly ceiling by, again, trial and error.”
-- M. A. Adelman, 1992“Deja Vu All Over Again,” Energy Journal, vol. 36, Special Issue 1, 2015
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More Defense of the Market Share Strategy
• “By my assessment, high prices were unsustainable. If prices had not collapsed, OPEC production might have all but vanished.”
• “Inroads from competing sources, both oil and non-oil, would have continued.”
• “How low should prices be in order to ensure growing future markets for OPEC’s oil? Is $14/barrel the ‘safe’ price?”
-- Thomas Stauffer, 1994“OPEC prices and non-OPEC oil production: Survivors and casualties
of the ‘market share’ strategy,” OPEC Bulletin, vol. 25, No. 4
![Page 9: OPEC’S Market Role: Changing Signs? · EIA Workshop on Financial & Physical Oil Market Linkages, September 19, 2017 OPEC’S Market Role: Changing Signs? James L. Smith Southern](https://reader030.vdocuments.site/reader030/viewer/2022040907/5e7cc2769bb9853d52314485/html5/thumbnails/9.jpg)
More Defense of the Market Share Strategy
• “By my assessment, high prices were unsustainable. If prices had not collapsed, OPEC production might have all but vanished.”
• “Inroads from competing sources, both oil and non-oil, would have continued.”
• “How low should prices be in order to ensure growing future markets for OPEC’s oil? Is $14/barrel the ‘safe’ price?”
-- Thomas Stauffer, 1994“OPEC prices and non-OPEC oil production: Survivors and casualties
of the ‘market share’ strategy,” OPEC Bulletin, vol. 25, No. 4
![Page 10: OPEC’S Market Role: Changing Signs? · EIA Workshop on Financial & Physical Oil Market Linkages, September 19, 2017 OPEC’S Market Role: Changing Signs? James L. Smith Southern](https://reader030.vdocuments.site/reader030/viewer/2022040907/5e7cc2769bb9853d52314485/html5/thumbnails/10.jpg)
More Defense of the Market Share Strategy
• “By my assessment, high prices were unsustainable. If prices had not collapsed, OPEC production might have all but vanished.”
• “Inroads from competing sources, both oil and non-oil, would have continued.”
• “How low should prices be in order to ensure growing future markets for OPEC’s oil? Is $14/barrel the ‘safe’ price?”
-- Thomas Stauffer, 1994“OPEC prices and non-OPEC oil production: Survivors and casualties
of the ‘market share’ strategy,” OPEC Bulletin, vol. 25, No. 4
![Page 11: OPEC’S Market Role: Changing Signs? · EIA Workshop on Financial & Physical Oil Market Linkages, September 19, 2017 OPEC’S Market Role: Changing Signs? James L. Smith Southern](https://reader030.vdocuments.site/reader030/viewer/2022040907/5e7cc2769bb9853d52314485/html5/thumbnails/11.jpg)
More Defense of the Market Share Strategy
• “By my assessment, high prices were unsustainable. If prices had not collapsed, OPEC production might have all but vanished.”
• “Inroads from competing sources, both oil and non-oil, would have continued.”
• “How low should prices be in order to ensure growing future markets for OPEC’s oil? Is $14/barrel the ‘safe’ price?”
-- Thomas Stauffer, 1994“OPEC prices and non-OPEC oil production: Survivors and casualties
of the ‘market share’ strategy,” OPEC Bulletin, vol. 25, No. 4
![Page 12: OPEC’S Market Role: Changing Signs? · EIA Workshop on Financial & Physical Oil Market Linkages, September 19, 2017 OPEC’S Market Role: Changing Signs? James L. Smith Southern](https://reader030.vdocuments.site/reader030/viewer/2022040907/5e7cc2769bb9853d52314485/html5/thumbnails/12.jpg)
More Defense of the Market Share Strategy
• “By my assessment, high prices were unsustainable. If prices had not collapsed, OPEC production might have all but vanished.”
• “Inroads from competing sources, both oil and non-oil, would have continued.”
• “How low should prices be in order to ensure growing future markets for OPEC’s oil? Is $14/barrel the ‘safe’ price?”
-- Thomas Stauffer, 1994“OPEC prices and non-OPEC oil production: Survivors and casualties
of the ‘market share’ strategy,” OPEC Bulletin, vol. 25, No. 4
![Page 13: OPEC’S Market Role: Changing Signs? · EIA Workshop on Financial & Physical Oil Market Linkages, September 19, 2017 OPEC’S Market Role: Changing Signs? James L. Smith Southern](https://reader030.vdocuments.site/reader030/viewer/2022040907/5e7cc2769bb9853d52314485/html5/thumbnails/13.jpg)
ALESSI BALSAMIC VINEGAR
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Available in My Local Market
A. Aged 4 years in wood $3.69 /bottle
B. Aged 20 years in wood $12.99 /bottle
Alessi Balsamic Vinegar (Modena, Italy)
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Sell More Now... or Save for the Future?
A. Aged 4 years in wood $3.69 /bottle
B. Aged 20 years in wood $12.99 /bottle
$3.69 = $12.99 / 1.0816
Current Sale = Present Value of Future Sale
Alessi Balsamic Vinegar (Modena, Italy)
Seller's Indifference:
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Available in the World Oil Market?
A. Sell Now (2015 spot) $100 /bbl
B. Sell Later (save until 2050) $1,400 /bbl ???
Saudi Arabian Light Crude Oil (Persian Gulf)
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Sell More Oil Now... or Save for Future?
A. Sell Now (2015 spot) $100 /bbl
B. Sell Later (save until 2050) $1,400 /bbl ???
$100 - $5 = ($1,400-$5) / 1.0835
Current Sale = Present Value of Future Sale
Saudi Arabian Light Crude Oil (Persian Gulf)
Seller's Indifference:
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Does $60/Barrel Pass the Long-Run Test?
A. Sell Now (2017 target) $60 /bbl
B. Sell Later (save until 2050) $700 /bbl ???
$60 - $5 = ($700-$5) / 1.0833
Current Sale = Present Value of Future Sale
Saudi Arabian Light Crude Oil (Persian Gulf)
Seller's Indifference:
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How Do High Oil Prices Impact OPEC?
Short-Run
Mostly favorable impacts,
due to demand and supply rigidities and long lead times.
Long-Run
Mostly negative impacts,
due to demand and supply reactions.
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How Do High Oil Prices Impact OPEC?
Short-Run
Mostly favorable impacts,
due to demand and supply rigidities and long lead times.
Long-Run
Mostly negative impacts,
due to demand and supply reactions (stranded assets).
![Page 21: OPEC’S Market Role: Changing Signs? · EIA Workshop on Financial & Physical Oil Market Linkages, September 19, 2017 OPEC’S Market Role: Changing Signs? James L. Smith Southern](https://reader030.vdocuments.site/reader030/viewer/2022040907/5e7cc2769bb9853d52314485/html5/thumbnails/21.jpg)
How Do High Oil Prices Impact OPEC?
Short-Run
Mostly favorable impacts,
due to demand and supply rigidities and long lead times.
Long-Run
Mostly negative impacts,
due to demand and supply reactions (stranded assets).
![Page 22: OPEC’S Market Role: Changing Signs? · EIA Workshop on Financial & Physical Oil Market Linkages, September 19, 2017 OPEC’S Market Role: Changing Signs? James L. Smith Southern](https://reader030.vdocuments.site/reader030/viewer/2022040907/5e7cc2769bb9853d52314485/html5/thumbnails/22.jpg)
How Do High Oil Prices Impact OPEC?
Short-Run
Mostly favorable impacts,
due to demand and supply rigidities and long lead times.
Long-Run
Mostly negative impacts,
due to demand and supply reactions (stranded assets).
![Page 23: OPEC’S Market Role: Changing Signs? · EIA Workshop on Financial & Physical Oil Market Linkages, September 19, 2017 OPEC’S Market Role: Changing Signs? James L. Smith Southern](https://reader030.vdocuments.site/reader030/viewer/2022040907/5e7cc2769bb9853d52314485/html5/thumbnails/23.jpg)
A Lesson Learned Too Late?
• If OPEC doesn’t expect oil to reach $1,400/barrel by 2050 (and who does?), they should produce more now.
![Page 24: OPEC’S Market Role: Changing Signs? · EIA Workshop on Financial & Physical Oil Market Linkages, September 19, 2017 OPEC’S Market Role: Changing Signs? James L. Smith Southern](https://reader030.vdocuments.site/reader030/viewer/2022040907/5e7cc2769bb9853d52314485/html5/thumbnails/24.jpg)
A Lesson Learned Too Late?
• If OPEC doesn’t expect oil to reach $1,400/barrel by 2050 (and who does?), they should produce more now.
• To produce more now, OPEC must accept low prices—substantially below $100/barrel, and expand investment in new capacity.
![Page 25: OPEC’S Market Role: Changing Signs? · EIA Workshop on Financial & Physical Oil Market Linkages, September 19, 2017 OPEC’S Market Role: Changing Signs? James L. Smith Southern](https://reader030.vdocuments.site/reader030/viewer/2022040907/5e7cc2769bb9853d52314485/html5/thumbnails/25.jpg)
A Lesson Learned Too Late?
• If OPEC doesn’t expect oil to reach $1,400/barrel by 2050 (and who does?), they should produce more now.
• To produce more now, OPEC must accept low prices—substantially below $100/barrel, and expand investment in new capacity.
• Texas shale oil producers stand up and applaud every time the Saudis urge OPEC production cuts.
![Page 26: OPEC’S Market Role: Changing Signs? · EIA Workshop on Financial & Physical Oil Market Linkages, September 19, 2017 OPEC’S Market Role: Changing Signs? James L. Smith Southern](https://reader030.vdocuments.site/reader030/viewer/2022040907/5e7cc2769bb9853d52314485/html5/thumbnails/26.jpg)
A Lesson Learned Too Late?
• If OPEC doesn’t expect oil to reach $1,400/barrel by 2050 (and who does?), they should produce more now.
• To produce more now, OPEC must accept low prices—substantially below $100/barrel, and expand investment in new capacity.
• Texas shale oil producers stand up and applaud every time the Saudis urge OPEC production cuts.
• That alone should be the most obvious signal of OPEC’s mistake!
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My View of Long-Term Prices, circa 2005
J. L. Smith, “Oil Prices, OPEC Wealth, and Cartel Cohesion,” CEEPR, MIT, April 21, 2005
3,200
3,600
4,000
4,400
$25 $30 $35 $40 $45 $50 $55 $60
OP
EC
Pro
fit
($b
illio
n 2
01
3)
World Oil Price
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My View of Discord Within OPEC
J. L. Smith, “Oil Prices, OPEC Wealth, and Cartel Cohesion,” CEEPR, MIT, April 21, 2005
700
1,000
1,300
1,600
1,900
$25 $30 $35 $40 $45 $50 $55 $60Seg
men
t P
rofi
t ($
billio
n 2
013)
World Oil Price
Saudi Arabia Other Core Fringe
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My Conclusions Have Hardly Changed Since 2005:
• The OPEC price represents a broad compromise among conflicting interests. The economic interests of OPEC members are not aligned.
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My Conclusions Have Hardly Changed Since 2005:
• The OPEC price represents a broad compromise among conflicting interests. The economic interests of OPEC members are not aligned.
• Prior to October 2014, the Saudis willingly accepted most of the burden of compromise, despite a natural interest in lower prices and risk of stranded assets.
![Page 31: OPEC’S Market Role: Changing Signs? · EIA Workshop on Financial & Physical Oil Market Linkages, September 19, 2017 OPEC’S Market Role: Changing Signs? James L. Smith Southern](https://reader030.vdocuments.site/reader030/viewer/2022040907/5e7cc2769bb9853d52314485/html5/thumbnails/31.jpg)
My Conclusions Have Hardly Changed Since 2005:
• The OPEC price represents a broad compromise among conflicting interests. The economic interests of OPEC members are not aligned.
• Prior to October 2014, the Saudis willingly accepted most of the burden of compromise, despite a natural interest in lower prices and risk of stranded assets.
• Three years later, have the Saudis already forgotten about the risk of stranded assets? Will they wake up in time?