Time:2020-04-28 Reading:9680
[Caixin Network] (Intern reporter Zhao
Xuan, reporter Luo Guoping) "Low oil prices will be a prolonged process.
This isn’t a result of the pandemic causing low prices, but fundamentally due
to the supply-demand relationship." On the evening of April 26, the former
Chairman of Sinopec Group, Fu Chengyu, at an online conference hosted by Renmin
University of China, assessed the current sluggish oil market and believes that
low oil prices will persist for 1 to 3 years.
On March 6, negotiations for deepening
production cuts led by Saudi Arabia and Russia in the OPEC+ collapsed, leading
international crude oil futures prices to plummet, which has since lost about
60%. As of press time, the WTI crude oil futures price was around $16 per
barrel; Brent crude oil futures were about $21 per barrel.
Fu Chengyu believes that the trend of oil
prices mainly depends on the development of the COVID-19 situation. Both Russia
and Saudi Arabia have lost control over the oil price trend. The demand for oil
has been severely impacted due to the COVID-19 pandemic, combined with the
geopolitical games of major powers, making it a significant driving force
behind the price war.
"Don’t be eager to consider bottoming
out the issue. Oil prices will surely be volatile and trending downwards.
During the pandemic, oil prices might have an upward shock, but they won’t rise
too high," he said.
The imbalance of supply and demand is the
fundamental issue. Fu Chengyu candidly stated that neither the COVID-19
pandemic nor the oil price war and the sharp drop in oil prices have
fundamentally addressed the problem of excessive oil supply capacity. The
supply issue has been temporarily obscured, but as soon as oil prices recover
to $50 per barrel, production will surge again.
Following the shale oil revolution, the
U.S. lifted its crude oil export ban in 2015. By September 2019, the U.S.
transitioned from net oil imports to net exports, reshaping the global oil
supply pattern.
This article is sourced from the paid news
reading website "Caixin Network".