Vinodsrinivasan Profile picture
Apr 28 9 tweets 3 min read Read on X
UAE just left OPEC.

After 59 years. Effective May 1.

Third largest producer in the cartel. Walking out in the middle of a Middle East war.

This isn’t an oil price story. It’s a regime change story.
🧵
OPEC was founded in 1960. The UAE joined in 1967.

Qatar left in 2019. Indonesia suspended membership in 2016. Angola left in 2023.

But UAE is different. It’s the third largest producer behind Saudi and Iraq. Capacity above 4 million barrels a day. ADNOC targeting 5 million by 2027.

You don’t replace that with a press release.
The official reason: “national interest” and “production flexibility.”

The real reason has two parts.

One. UAE is held to a 3 mbpd quota while sitting on 4+ mbpd of capacity. It has wanted to pump more for years. Saudi Arabia said no.

Two. UAE asked Gulf partners to back it militarily during Iranian attacks. The response was weak. Anwar Gargash said so publicly on Monday.

The cartel discipline broke before the announcement did.
Why this matters for prices in the short run.

Less than the headline suggests.
EIA estimates Gulf producers have shut in 9.1 million barrels a day in April because of the Hormuz crisis. UAE can leave OPEC, but it cannot ship what it cannot move through the Strait.

Brent at $113. WTI broke $100 for the first time since April 10. The move is real but it is reacting to ceasefire risk, not UAE supply.
Why this matters in the long run. This is the actual story.

OPEC’s leverage was always coordination. Saudi Arabia, UAE, Kuwait, Iraq, Iran moving in the same direction. That coordination is now visibly broken.

Saudi Arabia loses its biggest production partner.

The political cover of a unified Gulf bloc is gone.

Trump gets a public win on his “OPEC is ripping off the world” line.

Russia’s OPEC+ partnership weakens further.

Three of the last four years of OPEC+ cuts were possible because UAE held the line despite wanting to pump more. That constraint is gone.
The signal to watch is not what UAE does next. It is what Saudi Arabia does next.

Two paths.

Path A. Saudi cuts production hard to defend prices. Loses market share to UAE. Internal pressure on MBS rises because fiscal breakeven is around $90.

Path B. Saudi floods the market to punish UAE and reset discipline through pain. Prices crash once Hormuz reopens. Every high-cost producer globally takes the hit.

Neither path is good for the cartel.
What this means for India.

Short term. Nothing changes. Hormuz is the binding constraint, not OPEC quotas. Brent at $113 is the immediate problem. Rupee under pressure. OMC margins squeezed. LPG and fuel inflation already in the system.

Medium term. If UAE pumps to capacity once Hormuz reopens, the supply picture flips. India is the world’s third largest crude importer. A fragmented OPEC with one major producer pumping freely is structurally bullish for Indian consumers.

But that requires Hormuz to reopen. And that requires the war to end.
What I am watching from here.
Saudi response in the next 7 days. Statement, production guidance, anything.

Russia response. Putin met Iran’s foreign minister Monday. OPEC+ without UAE is a different animal.
Iran position. UAE leaving while Iran is the reason for the energy shock is its own message.

Other GCC members. If Kuwait or Bahrain follow, OPEC is structurally finished.

ADNOC production guidance. The number that matters.
For 60 years OPEC has been the most successful commodity cartel in history. It survived the 1973 embargo, the 1986 collapse, the 2014 shale shock, and a global pandemic.

It may not survive a war it had no part in starting.

Watch the facts, not the statements.

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Vinodsrinivasan

Vinodsrinivasan Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @vinodsrini_

Apr 29
The most powerful banker in America just said something at a polite Norwegian conference that most CEOs will not say out loud.

“There will be some kind of bond crisis.”

Jamie Dimon is not given to drama. That makes the sentence heavier, not lighter.

A thread on what he said, and what it means for India 🧵
Dimon named the ingredients.

Geopolitics. Oil. Government deficits.

His point was not that any single one of them breaks the market. His point is they are all stacking at the same time, and we do not get to choose which combination becomes the trigger.

“They may go away, but they may not.”
The precedent he reached for is recent.

UK gilts, September 2022. Liz Truss announced a mini-budget on a Friday. By the following Wednesday the gilt market had broken down so badly that the Bank of England had to step in as buyer of last resort to stop pension funds from collapsing.

It took a week.
Read 10 tweets
Apr 26
Everyone is talking about the dollar dying.

Petrodollar collapsing. BRICS settling oil in yuan. Bitcoin tolls in the Strait of Hormuz.

The story most people are telling is wrong. Not because the data is wrong, but because they are watching the wrong system.

A 🧵
The popular story:

The US Navy guards the Gulf. Saudis price oil in dollars. Saudis park profits in US Treasuries. America projects power, the world holds dollars.

Take away the Navy, take away the petrodollar deal, the dollar dies.

It is a clean story. It is also backwards.
Oil producers priced barrels in dollars in the 1970s because the offshore dollar plumbing already existed.

Banks in London were creating dollars on their own balance sheets from the 1950s.

The petrodollar did not build the system. The system absorbed the petrodollars.
Read 16 tweets
Apr 23
Scott Bessent just told a Senate subcommittee that Gulf allies and several Asian nations have quietly requested dollar swap lines from the US.

The UAE is confirmed. Indonesia, Korea are stressed. Markets haven’t broken. Yet.

A queue is forming. That’s the story. 🧵
Swap lines are insurance.

They let a foreign central bank access dollars in a crunch, without selling US Treasuries in a fire sale.

The Fed has used them exactly three times at scale. 2008. 2012. 2020.

Each time, after the crisis hit. Not before.
This time is different.

Countries are asking before the stress has shown up in their bond spreads or equity markets.

The request itself is the leading indicator. Counterparties can see a tail risk the chart hasn’t priced yet.

Watch the queue, not the quote screen.
Read 11 tweets
Apr 22
Everyone reading the Trump-UAE swap line story as American generosity has it backwards.

The UAE’s central bank governor walked into Washington last week and asked for it. Not the other way round.

That reframe changes everything.
Gulf sovereigns do not ask the Fed for swap lines.

ADIA alone is estimated above one trillion dollars. UAE runs a current account surplus. They have been the lender, not the borrower, for two decades.

If their central bank is asking, their internal stress tests are showing scenarios they do not want public.
Standing Fed swap lines exist with ECB, BoJ, BoE, SNB, Bank of Canada. That is the club.

Temporary lines went to Brazil, Mexico, Korea, Singapore in 2008 and 2020 crises.

A UAE swap line would be historically unprecedented. The Gulf has never been inside this perimeter.
Read 9 tweets
Apr 19
India’s weight-loss drug market just ran a live experiment in price elasticity.

Novo Nordisk’s semaglutide patent expired 20 March 2026.

Within 3 weeks:

15+ generics launched

Cheapest at Rs 2,000/month (branded was Rs 10,000+)

Novo cut Ozempic and Wegovy prices by 36-48%

But here is the part nobody saw coming.
🧵
Eli Lilly’s Mounjaro is STILL under patent in India.

Nothing changed legally for Mounjaro.

And yet. In one month:

Tirzepatide share fell 71% → 64%

Semaglutide share rose 25% → 33%

Mounjaro sales dropped $14.6 mn → $12.3 mn

A patented monopoly product lost 15% of its share to a competing molecule’s generics. In 30 days.
This is the signal most people missed.

When the cheaper cousin arrives, even the patent-protected branded product loses pricing power.

Prescribers rotate. Patients switch. Wedding-diet buyers take the cheap pen.

The cross-molecule price elasticity in India is steeper than Novo or Lilly modeled.
Read 13 tweets
Apr 17
Iran just declared the Strait of Hormuz “completely open.”

Oil fell 9 percent. Stocks ripped to all-time highs.

Before you celebrate, read the next tweet.
“Open” comes with three words buried in the announcement.

“On the coordinated route.”

Iranian state TV then clarified: passage “is not possible without coordination of the IRGC navy.”

That is not open. That is permissioned access.
The facts the tape is ignoring:

US naval blockade of Iranian ports still in full force. Trump confirmed it today.

Two gatekeepers. One waterway. Ten-day clock.

This is a managed standoff, not a resolution.
Read 12 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Don't want to be a Premium member but still want to support us?

Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us!

:(