Thursday, April 23, 2026
newmoneyfront.com
Advertisement
  • News
  • Share Market
  • Commodoties
  • Forex
  • Crypto
No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Share Market
  • Commodoties
  • Forex
  • Crypto
No Result
View All Result
newmoneyfront.com
No Result
View All Result
Home Commodoties

BofA: The Saudis Are Readying for a Long Oil Price War

For your consideration by For your consideration
June 11, 2025
in Commodoties
0
BofA: The Saudis Are Readying for a Long Oil Price War
74
SHARES
1.2k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Alex Kimani

Alex Kimani

Alex Kimani is a veteran finance writer, investor, engineer and researcher for Safehaven.com. 

More Info

Premium Content

By Alex Kimani – Jun 10, 2025, 7:00 PM CDT

  • Bank of America: Saudi Arabia is preparing for a prolonged oil price war to regain market share.
  • U.S. shale is more vulnerable than in past price wars, needing $65+ WTI to stay profitable amid rising costs and geological limits.
  • Bank of America: The oil price war is likely to be long and shallow instead of short and steep.
Aramco

Saudi Arabia is getting ready to engage in a protracted oil price war with its rivals, Bank of America’s leading commodities expert told Bloomberg on Monday. According to Francisco Blanch, BofA’s head of commodities research, the unfolding oil price war is going to be “long and shallow”, rather than “short and steep” as the Kingdom tries to claw back lost market share, especially from U.S. shale producers.

Last month, OPEC+ announced a third output increase of 411,000 b/d for the month of July, a similar clip to the previous two months. Commodity experts began warning last year that Saudi Arabia was willing to ditch its traditional role as OPEC’s swing producer by abandoning its unofficial price target of $100 a barrel in favor of increased output. Saudi Arabia accounted for 2 mb/d of the group’s 3.15 mb/d in output cuts before it started unwinding in April.

Traders are now bracing for hard times, with oil futures traders betting that the ongoing unwinding of production cuts by OPEC+ will eventually lead to a supply glut and even lower oil prices. According to the latest Commitment Of Traders (COT) report by CME Group, open interest in calendar spread options hit record levels in the current week, with speculators holding the biggest net position bets on weaker U.S. crude futures curve since 2020.

Oil futures charts are flashing an unusual “hockey-stick” shape of the curve, with oil markets pricing tight supply through 2025, followed by an oversupply in 2026, according to the report. The spread between the WTI July contract and the August contract narrowed 3 cents on June 5 to $0.93 a barrel, while the spread between the December 2025 contract and the December 2026 contract widened by 10 cents to $0.53.

Related: Saudi Aramco To Send Less Crude to China in July

“There is a lot of risk in the trade,” Nicky Ferguson, head of analytics at Energy Aspects Ltd, told Yahoo Finance, adding that rising activity is being driven by “strong prompt, weak deferred balances, and a very changeable geopolitical environment that makes holding futures difficult.”

This is hardly the first time that Saudi Arabia is engaging in a race to the bottom with its rivals. The kingdom has undertaken a similar strategy at least twice over the past decade, with varying degrees of success. U.S. shale producers successfully weathered the 2015 oil price war by rapidly reorganizing into a meaner and leaner production machine that could breakeven at WTI price of as low as $35 per barrel, down from $70 per barrel just a few years earlier. Five years later, the U.S. Shale Patch required the direct intervention of then U.S. President Donald Trump, whose threats of withdrawing military support for Saudi Arabia persuaded de facto Saudi ruler Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman to toe the line and abandon the oil price war.

Unfortunately, U.S. shale producers are more vulnerable this time around: a March Dallas Fed Energy Survey found that the U.S. Shale Patch requires WTI prices of $65 per barrel or more to drill profitably. U.S.  rig counts have declined 4% Y/Y and are now 7% below the 5-year average as producers scale back drilling activity amid rising costs. Tariffs on U.S. steel imports are partly to blame here, increasing the price of fracking equipment. Meanwhile, geological constraints are also posing a significant obstacle to efforts to ramp up production as the nearly two-decades-old U.S. shale boom plateaus. The EIA has predicted a small increase in U.S. crude output to 14 million barrels per day in 2027, up from 13.2 million barrels in 2024.

That said, Saudi Arabia and OPEC+ do not have carte blanche to continue flooding the markets with oil: the Kingdom needs Brent price of at least $96.20 per barrel to balance its books in fiscal year 2025, approximately $30 per barrel higher than current Brent price. Further, the country drew down considerably on its foreign exchange reserves in past oil price wars, limiting its ability to sustain another long war now.

However, Saudi Arabia is likely to gain more leverage in future showdowns as it continues to diversify its economy. The country is accelerating its $2.5 trillion mining plans, while also investing in technologies to optimize oil production and lower carbon emissions. Saudi Arabia’s mineral reserve potential has grown dramatically over the past decade, from $1.3 trillion forecasted eight years ago to $2.5 trillion currently. The Kingdom has set a goal to rapidly grow the mining sector, with its contribution to the economy expected to jump from $17 billion to $75 billion by 2035. 

By Alex Kimani for Oilprice.com

More Top Reads From Oilprice.com

  • Permian or Bust? U.S. Oil Growth Has a One-Basin Problem
  • Putin Extends Russian Oil Export Ban to Price Cap Countries Through 2025
  • Gasoline, Distillate Builds Spook Oil Markets

Download The Free Oilprice App Today

Download Oilprice.com on Apple
Download Oilprice.com on Android

Back to homepage

Alex Kimani

Alex Kimani

Alex Kimani is a veteran finance writer, investor, engineer and researcher for Safehaven.com. 

More Info

Related posts

Leave a comment

You might also like

Pizza Hut Introduces New Hut Rewards, Evolving Loyalty Into a Membership That Delivers More Value and Access

Tokenized Real-World Asset Market Cap Surges 20x in Three Years, Topping $29 Billion

Updated Walmart US Laboratory Assignment List expands SGS testing scope

Alex Kimani

Alex Kimani

Alex Kimani is a veteran finance writer, investor, engineer and researcher for Safehaven.com. 

More Info

Premium Content

By Alex Kimani – Jun 10, 2025, 7:00 PM CDT

  • Bank of America: Saudi Arabia is preparing for a prolonged oil price war to regain market share.
  • U.S. shale is more vulnerable than in past price wars, needing $65+ WTI to stay profitable amid rising costs and geological limits.
  • Bank of America: The oil price war is likely to be long and shallow instead of short and steep.
Aramco

Saudi Arabia is getting ready to engage in a protracted oil price war with its rivals, Bank of America’s leading commodities expert told Bloomberg on Monday. According to Francisco Blanch, BofA’s head of commodities research, the unfolding oil price war is going to be “long and shallow”, rather than “short and steep” as the Kingdom tries to claw back lost market share, especially from U.S. shale producers.

Last month, OPEC+ announced a third output increase of 411,000 b/d for the month of July, a similar clip to the previous two months. Commodity experts began warning last year that Saudi Arabia was willing to ditch its traditional role as OPEC’s swing producer by abandoning its unofficial price target of $100 a barrel in favor of increased output. Saudi Arabia accounted for 2 mb/d of the group’s 3.15 mb/d in output cuts before it started unwinding in April.

Traders are now bracing for hard times, with oil futures traders betting that the ongoing unwinding of production cuts by OPEC+ will eventually lead to a supply glut and even lower oil prices. According to the latest Commitment Of Traders (COT) report by CME Group, open interest in calendar spread options hit record levels in the current week, with speculators holding the biggest net position bets on weaker U.S. crude futures curve since 2020.

Oil futures charts are flashing an unusual “hockey-stick” shape of the curve, with oil markets pricing tight supply through 2025, followed by an oversupply in 2026, according to the report. The spread between the WTI July contract and the August contract narrowed 3 cents on June 5 to $0.93 a barrel, while the spread between the December 2025 contract and the December 2026 contract widened by 10 cents to $0.53.

Related: Saudi Aramco To Send Less Crude to China in July

“There is a lot of risk in the trade,” Nicky Ferguson, head of analytics at Energy Aspects Ltd, told Yahoo Finance, adding that rising activity is being driven by “strong prompt, weak deferred balances, and a very changeable geopolitical environment that makes holding futures difficult.”

This is hardly the first time that Saudi Arabia is engaging in a race to the bottom with its rivals. The kingdom has undertaken a similar strategy at least twice over the past decade, with varying degrees of success. U.S. shale producers successfully weathered the 2015 oil price war by rapidly reorganizing into a meaner and leaner production machine that could breakeven at WTI price of as low as $35 per barrel, down from $70 per barrel just a few years earlier. Five years later, the U.S. Shale Patch required the direct intervention of then U.S. President Donald Trump, whose threats of withdrawing military support for Saudi Arabia persuaded de facto Saudi ruler Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman to toe the line and abandon the oil price war.

Unfortunately, U.S. shale producers are more vulnerable this time around: a March Dallas Fed Energy Survey found that the U.S. Shale Patch requires WTI prices of $65 per barrel or more to drill profitably. U.S.  rig counts have declined 4% Y/Y and are now 7% below the 5-year average as producers scale back drilling activity amid rising costs. Tariffs on U.S. steel imports are partly to blame here, increasing the price of fracking equipment. Meanwhile, geological constraints are also posing a significant obstacle to efforts to ramp up production as the nearly two-decades-old U.S. shale boom plateaus. The EIA has predicted a small increase in U.S. crude output to 14 million barrels per day in 2027, up from 13.2 million barrels in 2024.

That said, Saudi Arabia and OPEC+ do not have carte blanche to continue flooding the markets with oil: the Kingdom needs Brent price of at least $96.20 per barrel to balance its books in fiscal year 2025, approximately $30 per barrel higher than current Brent price. Further, the country drew down considerably on its foreign exchange reserves in past oil price wars, limiting its ability to sustain another long war now.

However, Saudi Arabia is likely to gain more leverage in future showdowns as it continues to diversify its economy. The country is accelerating its $2.5 trillion mining plans, while also investing in technologies to optimize oil production and lower carbon emissions. Saudi Arabia’s mineral reserve potential has grown dramatically over the past decade, from $1.3 trillion forecasted eight years ago to $2.5 trillion currently. The Kingdom has set a goal to rapidly grow the mining sector, with its contribution to the economy expected to jump from $17 billion to $75 billion by 2035. 

By Alex Kimani for Oilprice.com

More Top Reads From Oilprice.com

  • Permian or Bust? U.S. Oil Growth Has a One-Basin Problem
  • Putin Extends Russian Oil Export Ban to Price Cap Countries Through 2025
  • Gasoline, Distillate Builds Spook Oil Markets

Download The Free Oilprice App Today

Download Oilprice.com on Apple
Download Oilprice.com on Android

Back to homepage

Alex Kimani

Alex Kimani

Alex Kimani is a veteran finance writer, investor, engineer and researcher for Safehaven.com. 

More Info

Related posts

Leave a comment

Share30Tweet19
For your consideration

For your consideration

Recommended For You

Pizza Hut Introduces New Hut Rewards, Evolving Loyalty Into a Membership That Delivers More Value and Access

by For your consideration
April 22, 2026
0
Pizza Hut Introduces New Hut Rewards, Evolving Loyalty Into a Membership That Delivers More Value and Access

Following its March Madness debut, Hut Rewards is designed to bring more under one roof by combining everyday value with member-only experiences. Plano, TX  (RestaurantNews.com)  Pizza Hut just...

Read moreDetails

Tokenized Real-World Asset Market Cap Surges 20x in Three Years, Topping $29 Billion

by For your consideration
April 22, 2026
0
Tokenized Real-World Asset Market Cap Surges 20x in Three Years, Topping $29 Billion

The market capitalization of tokenized real-world assets ( RWA) has grown nearly 20-fold over the past three years, surpassing $29 billion as institutional adoption accelerates across private credit,...

Read moreDetails

Updated Walmart US Laboratory Assignment List expands SGS testing scope

by For your consideration
April 21, 2026
0
Updated Walmart US Laboratory Assignment List expands SGS testing scope

Walmart US has updated its Laboratory Assignment List, broadening the range of general merchandise departments in which SGS is listed as an approved testing provider. (1888PressRelease) April 21,...

Read moreDetails

Iran war: Six weeks in, how have food prices changed?

by For your consideration
April 17, 2026
0
Iran war: Six weeks in, how have food prices changed?

Iran conflict commodity prices summaryFood prices rose after war but impacts remain seasonally limitedCommodities such as vegetable oils saw biggest gains as substitutes for crudeSoybean oil futures hit...

Read moreDetails

UAE firm to enrich fleet with two LNG carriers by 2027, first vessel deal now in the bag

by For your consideration
April 16, 2026
0
UAE firm to enrich fleet with two LNG carriers by 2027, first vessel deal now in the bag

Home Fossil Energy UAE firm to enrich fleet with two LNG carriers by 2027, first vessel deal now in the bag April 15, 2026, by Melisa Cavcic On...

Read moreDetails
Next Post
Blockpass partners with CryptoSwift to deliver global Travel Rule Compliance

Blockpass partners with CryptoSwift to deliver global Travel Rule Compliance

Related News

Is SPDR S&P Semiconductor ETF (XSD) a strong ETF right now?

Is SPDR S&P Semiconductor ETF (XSD) a strong ETF right now?

September 19, 2025
Ripple News: Evernorth Plans to Expand Beyond $1 Billion as XRP Demand Surges

Ripple News: Evernorth Plans to Expand Beyond $1 Billion as XRP Demand Surges

November 11, 2025
Ether and related stocks gain amid the latest crypto craze: Tokenization

Ether and related stocks gain amid the latest crypto craze: Tokenization

July 2, 2025

Browse by Category

  • Commodoties
  • Crypto
  • Finance News
  • Forex
  • Share Market
newmoneyfront.com

We bring you the best Premium WordPress Themes that perfect for news, magazine, personal blog, etc. Check our landing page for details.

CATEGORIES

  • Commodoties
  • Crypto
  • Finance News
  • Forex
  • Share Market

BROWSE BY TAG

asx AUSTRALIA Bitcoin china christians Cryptocurrencies donald trump E-Commerce Economy Fed Tapering freedom INVESTMENT jpy Market Stories money Obligation peace profit russia shares stock market stocks Strategy Tax Trading truth

Copyright © 2024 newmoneyfront.com! Design by Freelancing Solution. All Rights Reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Share Market
  • Commodoties
  • Forex
  • Crypto

Copyright © 2024 newmoneyfront.com! Design by Freelancing Solution. All Rights Reserved.

Are you sure want to unlock this post?
Unlock left : 0
Are you sure want to cancel subscription?