Oil
prices rise after OPEC keeps low output target
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[June 05, 2015]
By Vladimir Soldatkin
LONDON (Reuters) - Oil prices rose on
Friday, breaking a two-day losing streak, after OPEC ministers kept
their existing oil production target for another six months at a level
below current output.
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Speaking on his way out of OPEC's biannual ministerial meeting in
Vienna, Saudi Arabia's oil minister Ali al-Naimi said the 12-member
group had agreed to maintain their production target at 30 million
barrels per day (bpd).
The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries had rolled
over its target, he said.
OPEC has been pumping over 31.2 million bpd in recent weeks, a
Reuters survey has shown, with Saudi Arabia's production near record
levels.
Brent crude oil for July rose 80 cents to a high of $62.83 before
easing back to around $62.40 by 1215 GMT.
U.S. crude futures were up 30 cents at $58.30.
Kash Kamal, senior analyst at brokerage Sucden Financial in London,
said investors were reassured that OPEC had not raised its output
target to reflect current production, a possibility raised by some
officials.
"I think it's more a sigh of relief: keeping the ceiling at 30
million bpd, which it has been since November," Kamal said.
"Markets are thankful there's no increase in the production quota,"
he added.
But the market remained oversupplied.
"The decision was pretty much in line with the consensus
expectations," said Olivier Jakob at Swiss consultancy Petromatrix
in Zug. "It does not really change anything from the current market
situation."
Andy Brogan, Global Oil & Gas Transactions Advisory Services Leader
at EY, said:
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"If this morning has taught us anything it is that the journey back
to a high oil price world will be a long one if it happens at all,"
he said.
Oil prices tumbled 5 percent in the previous two sessions as
investors expected world oversupply to continue.
With oil prices having rebounded by more than a third after hitting
a six-year low of $45 a barrel in January, OPEC officials in Vienna
saw little reason to tinker with what they see as a successful
production strategy.
Lower oil prices have helped support growth in fuel consumption and
put a damper on the U.S. shale boom.
(Additional reporting by Henning Gloystein in Singapore; Editing by
Christopher Johnson and Elaine Hardcastle)
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