By Jarrett Renshaw and Andrea Shalal
WASHINGTON (Reuters) – When OPEC+ made a surprise decision earlier this month to cut oil production, President Joe Biden responded with the political equivalent of a shrug – a far cry from his declaration that there would be “consequences” for Saudi Arabia, the de facto head of the oil cartel, when it lowered output in October.
The tepid response reflects, in part, the Biden administration’s view that the production cut may not have as much of an impact on the U.S. and global economy as last year’s cuts, which came as oil supplies were still tight. Administration officials believe the U.S. and global economy has now entered a more predictable, less volatile phase.
Last year, a rapid-fire COVID recovery that choked supply lines amid surging demand stoked inflation to 40-year highs.
This year, gasoline prices have stabilized at lower levels, U.S. oil production is approaching record highs and the job market, while still strong, is cooling down along with inflation, administration officials say. The White House slashed its estimates for GDP growth in 2023 to just 0.4% in March, down from 1.8% last August.
The OPEC move could complicate Biden’s efforts to tame nagging inflation and dampen gasoline prices at home, according to multiple interviews with U.S. officials and analysts. The recent U.S. banking crisis has added another layer of uncertainty to global and U.S. forecasts as well, forecasters warn.
Commodity analysts at Goldman Sachs Group increased their year-end price target for Brent crude, the global benchmark, by $5 to $95 per barrel. If it hits $100, that would mean another 50 cents a gallon for gasoline, analysts estimate, pushing prices at the pump above the crucial $4 level.
High energy prices have been a major driver of inflation, prompting the U.S. Federal Reserve to impose a series of rate hikes and stoke fears of a recession.
“The anticipated increase in oil prices for the rest of the year as a result of these voluntary cuts could fuel global inflation, prompting a more hawkish stance on interest rate hikes from central banks across the world,” Victor Ponsford of Rystad Energy said in a research note.
FEWER TOOLS FOR GAS PRICES
Biden came into office vowing to wean the country off fossil fuels, but Russia’s invasion of Ukraine got in the way. Record gasoline prices that topped $5 a gallon last year forced the administration to turn to the oil industry to step up production of oil and refined products like gasoline and diesel.
Biden lifted smog-reducing rules on summer gasoline to help with prices, significantly drew down the nation’s strategic oil reserves to prop up global supplies and urged the oil industry to produce more products. Current pump prices are hovering around $3.60 a gallon – compared with $4.12 a year ago.
Biden has fewer tools to combat high prices this summer, particularly after drawing 180 million barrels from the nation’s strategic reserves, bringing inventory to lows not seen since 1984. Discussions with refiners about expanding capacity or limiting fuel exports have dried up since last summer, oil executives told Reuters.
“When I saw the OPEC headline, I fully expected a call from the administration,” but it never came, a U.S. refining executive said. If prices go up, the industry is “fully expecting to once again to become the boogeyman,” the executive said.
There are warning signs that prices could be squeezed ahead of the busy summer driving season.
U.S. gasoline inventories, a potential predictor of future market conditions, enter the spring at lower levels than last year, due in part to refinery maintenance that was delayed last year as refiners chased high margins. The Biden administration floated an idea last year to impose minimum fuel storage requirements in an attempt to limit exports.
Total U.S. gasoline inventories sit at 222.57 million barrels, about 7% lower than the same time last year, according to the latest federal data. In the dense U.S. Northeast, gasoline inventories are down 7.6% from last year, federal data shows.
Lindsay Owens, executive director of Groundwork Collaborative, a liberal nonprofit group that focuses on economic issues, said oil companies had the means, motive and opportunity to raise prices following the OPEC+ output cut, just as they did last summer following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
(Reporting by Jarrett Renshaw in Philadelphia and Andrea Shalal in Washington; Editing by Heather Timmons and Matthew Lewis)