The OPEC+  alliance on Oct. 5 agreed to cut oil output by as much as 2 million b/d—a figure  that could push oil and gas prices higher after weeks of downtrends. 
The move comes  despite calls from the US to boost output to help with ease inflation and boost  the global economy and represents a reversal in the alliance's production  policy. 
OPEC+  slashed output by a record 10 million b/d in early 2020 when demand collapsed  due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The group has since gradually lifted record  production cuts, even as several OPEC+ countries struggle to meet their quotas.  
However, White  House national security spokesman John Kirby downplayed the new OPEC+ deal. “In  some ways, the cuts announced this time are really just bringing them back into  line with actual production,” he said.
JPMorgan  analysts expected Washington DC to put in place counter measures by releasing  more oil stocks.
Goldman  Sachs analysts said they estimated the real production cuts would therefore  amount to 400,000-600,000 b/d mainly by Gulf OPEC producers such as Saudi  Arabia, Iraq, UAE, and Kuwait.