Reuters
Poll: Oil prices to stabilize as demand rises
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[March 30, 2015]
By Anupam Chatterjee
(Reuters) - Oil prices should stabilise in
the second half of this year and rise in 2016 and 2017 as consumers
respond to a period of much cheaper fuel, a Reuters poll of analysts
showed on Monday.
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The survey of 34 analysts predicted North Sea Brent crude would
average $59.20 a barrel in 2015, up from around $55 so far this
year. The forecast is up just 20 cents from the projection in last
month's Reuters survey.
Brent is expected to rise to $72.10 in 2016 and $78.70 in 2017, the
poll showed.
Oil prices fell more than 60 percent between June 2014 and January,
and although they have recovered a little since then, they are still
around half their level a year ago.
This has encouraged motorists to make more use of their cars and let
factories and other businesses boost fuel consumption.
London-based consultancy Energy Aspects expects world oil demand to
rise by up to 1.5 million barrels per day this year. That's double
the rate of oil demand growth seen last year, according to the
International Energy Agency.
"Strength is broad-based," Energy Aspects analyst Virendra Chauhan
told Reuters Global Oil Forum. "On-road diesel demand has continued
at a stellar pace."
Intesa Sanpaolo analyst Daniela Corsini agreed, saying the rise in
consumption appeared to be worldwide.
"Global oil demand will surprise upwards, driven by the United
States, China and emerging Asia," Corsini said.
Increasing demand should help absorb any extra oil coming onto the
market from Iran, if it can agree a nuclear deal with the West that
would bring an end to sanctions.
And some analysts see demand outstripping supply.
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"The global market is expected to move into supply deficit in the
second half (this year), with that deficit reaching 1 million bpd in
the fourth quarter," Standard Chartered analyst Paul Horsnell said.
Standard Chartered, one of the most bullish banks, expects Brent to
average $76.00 in 2015.
Twenty of the 32 analysts who contributed to both the February and
March Reuters polls left their 2015 Brent forecasts unchanged. Six
of them increased their outlooks, with equal numbers seeing lower
prices.
European investment bank Barclays raised its Brent forecast for 2015
by $7 to $51, the biggest increase by any contributor.
The poll forecasts U.S. light crude <CLc1> will average $53.60 a
barrel this year and $66.50 in 2016.
(Additional reporting by Nallur Sethuraman and Koustav Samanta in
Bengaluru; Editing by Christopher Johnson and Dale Hudson)
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