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Given their current overproduction, OPEC "cannot say we're going to cut because no one will believe them," said John Hall, of London-based John Hall Associates. "Credibility matters." The group's current production target is just under 25 million barrels per day, but output figures excluding Iraq indicate OPEC members are pumping around 26 million barrels per day, analysts say, adding that Angola, Iran and Venezuela have been particularly lax with their quotas. In the current global economic climate, quota compliance is particularly pressing for the cartel. Even as the key U.S. driving season winds down, global crude inventories remain high in the industrialized West
-- well above the 52- to 54-day forward cover level the group sees as comfortable. Inventories of refined oil products generally in demand in winter months are also high, meaning that OPEC cannot count on refiners to churn out more products and, in the process, run down crude stocks. Kuwait's Al Sabah said Tuesday while a quick rebound in demand for crude was unlikely, he expected a "noticeable improvement" in the first and second quarters of 2010. That leaves the group will little room for error if it hopes to see current prices sustained through the year.
"I think we are going to stay where we are," said Algeria's Khelil. "There will be lots of volatility because of the uncertainty that's tied to the economy, and we're going to see ups and downs. But I think we're going to stay in that level until early next year, and then by early next year, we should see prices rising." ___ On the Net: OPEC: http://www.opec.org/
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