Oil price stability on the horizon as companies cut jobs and costs

  • 9 years ago
OPEC says it expects oil prices to become more stable over the next year.

Despite oil prices dropping over 50 percent since 2014 the organisation decided in June to keep production unchanged to protect its market share. Russia adopted the same stance.

It was at a meeting in Moscow on Thursday that the OPEC Secretary-General Abdullah al-Badri
outlined his views on oil prices.

“We see signs of a more balanced market by the end of this year. And in 2016 we thus expect the continuity and stability in the oil market in the long term.”

The plunge in oil prices has caused Royal Dutch Shell to announce that its cutting 6,500 jobs. The company is also scaling back its exploration operations.

The firm saw its second quarter profits fall 35 percent to 3.1 billion euros compared to last year.

“Today’s oil price downturn could last for several years”, said CEO Ben van Beurden. “Of course we don’t have a crystal ball but Shell planning assumptions reflect today’s market realities so

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