UAE Exit from OPEC | Impact on Oil and the U.S. Dollar

UAE Exit from OPEC | Impact on Oil and the U.S. Dollar

The UAE (United Arab Emirates) has officially announced its withdrawal from OPEC and OPEC+ effective May 1.

This is not just a simple exit.

It represents a major crack in the entire mechanism of:

“Maintaining oil prices through coordinated production cuts”

itself.

In addition, this comes at a time when:

  • The Iran conflict continues
  • Strait of Hormuz risks remain elevated
  • OPEC internal unity is weakening

This is also a major blow to Saudi Arabia.


Why UAE Leaving OPEC Matters

① UAE Is a Major Oil Producer

→ After leaving, it can freely increase production

→ More supply means downward pressure on oil prices

→ Stronger probability of crude oil weakness


② Risk of OPEC Unity Breaking Down

→ If other producers also increase output,

the market could shift into:

“A price war”

This is the real danger.


③ A Major Blow to Saudi Arabia

→ Saudi leadership inside OPEC weakens

→ Concerns rise over the long-term effectiveness of OPEC itself

→ Structural weakening of the cartel becomes a real risk


④ Lower Oil Prices = Bearish for USD

This is the most important FX impact.

Lower oil prices tend to lead to:

  • USD selling
  • USD/JPY downside
  • GOLD upside
  • Easier buying flows into NZD and other commodity currencies

Especially:

A clear break below 98 USD in crude oil

This level is extremely important.

If oil decisively breaks below it:

USD selling can accelerate quickly

which would likely trigger:

→ USD/JPY downside
→ GOLD upside
→ NZD buying
→ broader commodity FX strength

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