Showing posts with label crude. Show all posts
Showing posts with label crude. Show all posts

Wednesday, 17 September 2014

Nigeria fiscal risks increase as oil nears break-even price

Nigeria’s fiscal risks have become elevated as the retreat of oil prices is bringing them closer to the break-even point at which the Federal and State government budgets become untenable.
“Nigeria’s low levels of accumulated oil windfall savings imply that its oil-price vulnerability kicks in at a much higher threshold than the official oil price benchmark suggests,” said Standard Chartered analysts led by Samir Gadio, head of the bank’s Africa Strategy and FICC Research, in a recent report.
The 2014 Nigerian budget is based on a benchmark oil price of $77.5/ barrel; however any price cushion is eroded from the unrealistic production assumption of 2.3 million barrels per day, as output has been running close to the 1.9m bpd mark.
Nigeria’s benchmark Bonny light crude oil traded at $97.9 per barrel on September 12, down 14 percent from $111.9 per barrel in May, according to data from the Central Bank (CBN).
The Federation Account Allocation Committee (FAAC),

Thursday, 11 September 2014

OPEC cuts demand outlook by most in 3 years on US shale

OPEC reduced forecasts for the amount of crude it will need to supply by the most in at least three years as surging North American shale output reduces reliance on the group’s supplies, reports Bloomberg.
The forecast by the OPEC means that officials in Nigeria can no longer live in denial of the seismic shift in the country’s oil fortunes in the midst of the shale revolution and Nigeria must now begin to admit that it will have to become more market-friendly in managing its oil assets.
The Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) expects it will need to pump an average of 29.2 million barrels a day of crude next year, 200,000 a day less than it forecast a month ago. The group boosted estimates for supplies from countries outside OPEC by the same amount. The change implies that OPEC’s 12 members would need to cut output by about 1.1 million barrels a day from the 30.3 million they produced in August.
Brent crude futures declined below