OPEC needs big supply cut to stem oil’s slide

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OPEC needs to make a large cut in supplies at a meeting next week, its third reduction since September, to prevent further falls in oil prices as world demand slumps due to slowing economies.

The 12-member OPEC should cut output by at least 1 million barrels per day (bpd) at the Dec. 17 meeting, OPEC delegates and analysts said. Some even suggest the minimum reduction should be 2 million bpd.

"The whole world economy is in turmoil," Shokri Ghanem, Libya's top oil official, told Reuters. "We think this needs substantial action."

That may prove a challenge given the signs of a lack of unity among OPEC members that emerged at a meeting last month which put off taking any decision on supply until December.

Since the Cairo meeting, oil has hit a four-year low near $40 a barrel.

Apart from Libya, Iran and Venezuela have also called for the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries to cut output further. But Saudi Arabia, OPEC's top exporter, has yet to publicly back another reduction.

OPEC has implemented two-thirds of a Nov. 1 agreement to cut output by 1.5 million bpd, according to Reuters estimates. At a meeting in September, it decided to lower supplies by about 500,000 bpd.

But analysts and traders say OPEC needs to do more than improve compliance. Nauman Barakat of Macquarie Futures USA said a further cut of more than 2 million bpd was needed. Others expected at least 1 million bpd.

"To do nothing is not an option, that's what we saw last time," said Rob Laughlin, oil analyst at MF Global.

"I'm looking for a 1.0 million-barrel to 1.5 million barrel cut. If they fail to do that, they will lose further confidence in the market."

CREDIBILITY PROBLEM

While OPEC does not have a formal price target, Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah said last month that $75 a barrel was a "fair price" for oil, a view later backed by other OPEC members including Kuwait and Nigeria.

Even so, without a big supply cutback that is swifty implemented and communicated by OPEC members to their oil buyers, $75 oil may remain more of an aspiration than a reality.

"The problem OPEC faces is one of credibility," said David Hufton of brokers PVM in a report. "They need another cut of 2 million bpd, backed up by full compliance and prompt notice to lifters."

"If OPEC is indecisive and unconvincing on Dec. 17, they risk meeting again in Q1 next year with crude at $30."

OPEC's ability to prop up the market could gain a boost if it secured the cooperation of non-member countries, such as Russia.

Russia, the largest non-OPEC oil exporter, plans to attend the Dec. 17 meeting in Oran, Algeria. It has worked more closely with OPEC in recent months and agreed to cooperate with the group to study the market.

So far, Moscow has stopped short of committing to any kind of coordinated supply cut, something it last did in the economic aftermath of the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks.