OPEC slashes production; crude continues to tumble

VIENNA, Austria (AP) — OPEC said at an emergency meeting Friday that
it will slash oil production by 1.5 million barrels to stem the
"dramatic collapse" of oil prices, but crude prices plunged 5 percent
anyway as financial markets spiraled downward across the globe.

Demand for crude has evaporated and the supply levers held by the
Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries appear to have little
influence in the current economic climate.

Iran and Venezuela pushed for a cut of 2 million barrels a day, but
there were concerns among other OPEC members that a more severe
production cut would exacerbate a deteriorating economic crisis and
further destroy demand.

OPEC officials, however, signaled they were prepared to slice deeper
quickly if crude continues its freefall.

The world's biggest crude consumer immediately blasted OPEC.

"It has always been our view that the value of commodities, including
oil, should be determined in open, competitive markets, and not by
these kinds of anti-market production decisions," White House deputy
press secretary Tony Fratto said Friday. "The high oil prices from the
past year contributed to the slowdown in demand and the subsequent
downturn in the economy, and we would ask that everyone keep that in
mind going forward."

OPEC is already producing 300,000 barrels a day above its own quota of
about 29 million barrels.

If that overproduction is stopped, and all members comply with the 1.5-
million cut, OPEC would produce about 1.8 million fewer barrels of oil
a day.

OPEC officials, however, left no doubt that they were ready to slice
production again quickly if Friday's decision does not end the price
freefall.

The emergency meeting was initially scheduled for Nov. 18, but that
was abruptly rescheduled for Friday in response to prices that have
entered a tailspin since their historic high of nearly $150 in July.

Crude has tumbled 56 percent since then. A barrel of oil costs $41
less than it did just 30 days ago.

OPEC President Chakib Khelil said OPEC was ready to convene another
emergency session before its next planned gathering in December in
Algeria "if there are further decisions that have to be made.

Analyst John Hall of London-based John Hall Associates said the OPEC
decision will not have a dramatic effect, adding he assumed any upward
trend would stop at between $80 and $90.

But there was no such trend Friday as markets plunged global and fear
of an extended recession spread.

Wall Street joined world stock markets in a sharp sell-off Friday,
with the Dow Jones industrials dropping more than 200 points in early
trading and all the major indexes falling more than 4 percent.

Oil futures slid $3.33 to $64.51 a barrel on the New York Mercantile
Exchange. Prices at one point tumbled to below $63, prices not seen
since June 2007.

"It's clear that the ministers are attempting to underpin at $60 a
barrel," said James R. Crawford an analyst with Inter Emirates. "But
where the market will settle remains open."

OPEC statement Friday reflected alarm over the erosion of revenues for
oil producing nations, as did the unusually short deliberations
leading to its decision.

"Oil prices have witnessed a dramatic collapse — unprecedented in
speed and magnitude," said the 13-nation organization. "This slowdown
in demand is serving to exacerbate the situation in a market which has
been oversupplied with crude for some time.

It also warned of hard times ahead for suppliers, saying "the fall in
demand will deepen" in the coming months.

OPEC indirectly asked Russia and other major oil exporters outside the
organization not to undercut efforts to prop up prices.

"OPEC cannot be expected to bear alone the burden of restoring
equilibrium," said the statement.

OPEC Secretary-General Abdullah El-Badri said before a meeting with
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev on Wednesday that he would not ask
Russia for oil production cuts as global prices fall. Some analysts
have said Russia was unlikely to agree to production cuts, given that
it already is battling with falling output as West Siberian oil fields
mature.

But others spoke of behind the scenes negotiations between Moscow and
OPEC on the issue.

The fall in crude prices despite OPEC's move suggested the
organization's power to raise prices by cutting supply may be fading
amid a global economic crisis that has crimped demand for oil. In the
past, sizable cuts in OPEC production have led to significant jumps in
prices.

The latest weekly report from the U.S. Department of Energy shows that
demand has fallen in 38 of the past 42 weeks. U.S. demand is down
nearly 10 percent during the past four weeks year on year. The U.S.
still consumes one out of every four barrels of oil produced.

El-Badri on Friday took pains to emphasize that OPEC's move was
predicated by a need not to raise prices but to put a floor underneath
them. Iran, Venezuela and other OPEC members have suggested that for
them, selling oil under $80 was a loss-maker, and Iraq on Thursday
said it would have to rethink next year's national budget if prices
remain under that level.

That line of thinking did not rest well with U.S. lawmakers.

"OPEC has a talent for cutting its nose to spite its face," said Sen.
Charles Schumer, D-N.Y. "At a time when oil prices are declining
because the world economy has stalled, OPEC's actions will only make
things worse."


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