Estimated surplus coming
with this new oil price is about $58.63 million per day. Despite the huge N500 billion mark up on the
Federal Government’s expenditure outlay in the 2018
Appropriation Bill as
passed by the National Assembly earlier this week, the government is still
going to hit budget surplus at end of the fiscal year as the price of oil shot
up to $80 per barrel, yesterday, the highest since November 2014.
The rise in price in the
last one week may have necessitated the National Assembly to peg the 2018
budget crude oil benchmark price at $51 per barrel instead of the initial $45
per barrel submitted by President Muhammadu Buhari.
With this development,
Nigeria’s Excess Crude Account is expected to further swell above the current
amount of $1.88 billion as at yesterday, if the current price is sustained
despite the estimated shortfall of 277,000 barrels per day (bpd) in its current
output level put at about 2.022 million barrels per day (mbpd) in March, as
against the 2.3 mbpd benchmark for budget 2018.
The bullish oil price is
attributed to the recent crises in the Middle East over relocation of United
States’ Embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, though oil prices have
been in upswing earlier due to concerns that Iranian exports could fall because
of renewed United States sanctions reducing supply in an already tightening
market.
Brent crude futures reached
$80.18 a barrel yesterday, while the U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude
futures hit $72.30 a barrel. U.S. President Donald Trump’s decision, earlier
this month to withdraw from an international nuclear deal with Iran and revive
sanctions that could limit crude exports from the Organisation of Petroleum
Exporting Countries, OPEC’s third-largest producer has boosted oil prices.
France’s Total had warned
that it might abandon a multibillion-dollar gas project in Iran if it could not
secure a waiver from U.S. sanctions, casting further doubt on European-led
efforts to salvage the nuclear deal. Meanwhile, OPEC said it is not in a rush
to start winding down the production cuts despite oil prices continuing their
strong rally.
The cartel sees the price
spike as only a short-term rally driven by geo-political concerns rather than
the fundamentals of a much tighter oil market, OPEC delegates and sources said.
Saudi Arabia, OPEC’s largest producer and de facto leader, views the temporary
speculator-driven oil price rally as not enough to start raising production,
according to an OPEC source familiar with Riyadh’s thinking. Supply and demand
data need to point to an impact on supply in order for OPEC to make a decision
to start winding down the cuts, the source said. Asked if $79 oil is too high,
one OPEC delegate said: “Not yet.”
Vanguard

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