The Cheating Game Inside the OPEC+ Oil Cartel

(Bloomberg Opinion) -- OPEC+ officials love to make Hollywood film references. Need to bash renewable energy? Gone With the Wind. Attack whoever forecast a peak in oil demand? La La Land. Put oil speculators on notice? “Make my day,” the one-liner from Dirty Harry.

On that very same popular culture vibe, the cinematic reference I think neatly describes the biggest ill afflicting the group now is a movie called The Cheating Game.

Since the beginning of the year, the OPEC+ countries that are subject to output caps have pumped together more than 600,000 barrels a day above their self-imposed limits. The overproduction, as OPEC+ calls it (or cheating, as I prefer), last month reached nearly 850,000 barrels a day, about the same as Venezuela’s output.

The deluge is a key reason why oil prices have fallen so much over the last two months — down 20% over the last year to $75 a barrel — and why many in the energy market are increasingly skeptical the cartel can push prices higher in 2025. The group likes to blame everyone else for its problems. Typical scapegoats include the news media, Wall Street analysts and speculators. But cheating is an own goal.

The larger problem is one of trust, which is exactly what The Cheating Game is all about. If most OPEC+ members ignore what’s expected from them and do so increasingly and repeatedly, the temptation to cheat only grows. The more OPEC+ says it's going to end cheating but doesn’t, the bigger the problem. Ultimately, the oil market will assume that this becomes standard practice.

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