The Crude Calculus: Predicting Oil’s Next Moves Amid Global Uncertainties

OPEC+ strategies and geopolitical tensions could roil markets.

Our 2024 oil price forecast is cautiously optimistic. Yet many investors are anxious and unsettled by persistent Red Sea conflicts and the pivotal OPEC+ announcement on production cuts in early March. How these events unfold could sway oil prices significantly in either direction. Moreover, higher oil prices could amplify inflationary pressures from higher shipping costs, potentially delaying Federal Reserve interest rate cuts.

A critical factor is whether OPEC+ will opt to maintain its current output levels, a decision expected by the first week of March. Last October, the group committed to cut 7.2 million barrels per day (mbd). PIMCO estimates this equals nearly 7% of global demand, with a third of this reduction – about 2.2 mbd – being “voluntary.”

Failure to extend these cuts could dampen market sentiment and suggest OPEC+ might step back from a policy that has underpinned price stability. PIMCO estimates the reductions have resulted in about 4.5 mbd of spare production capacity, the highest in nearly a quarter-century. In a scenario where 2.2 mbd reenters the market in April without other adjustments, our model predicts crude oil could drop by $20, falling into the mid $60s per barrel of crude oil (bbl).1

Despite market consensus leaning toward an extension of the voluntary cuts into the second quarter of 2024, history suggests such measures are not permanent. This introduces a considerable downside risk should OPEC+’s strategy shift.