Oil
up as Russia mulls OPEC talks, rig count drops
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[October 05, 2015]
By Christopher Johnson
LONDON (Reuters) - Oil rose on Monday after
Russia said it was ready to meet other producers to discuss the market,
where prices have more than halved from last year's highs due to a
supply glut.
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A report showing a fifth weekly fall in the number of oil rigs
drilling in the United States also underpinned prices.
Brent was 55 cents higher at $48.68 a barrel by 1130 GMT after
ending up 44 cents on Friday. U.S. crude was 45 cents higher at
$45.99 a barrel after settling up 80 cents.
Russia, one of the world's top three oil producers, has been
unwilling to cut output to support prices and last November declined
to cooperate with the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting
Countries in order to defend its market share.
But Moscow is now prepared to meet OPEC and non-OPEC oil producers
to discuss oil markets if such a meeting is called, its energy
minister said on Saturday. A separate meeting between Russian and
Saudi officials was being planned for the end of October, he said.
Russian oil output hit a new post-Soviet monthly high of 10.74
million barrels per day in September, despite a drop in global crude
prices to 6-1/2-year lows in August.
Brent reached a low of almost $42 a barrel in August, down from a
high above $115 in June 2014.
"Geopolitical tension created by Russia's involvement in Syria makes
cooperation with OPEC highly unlikely," said Tamas Varga, oil
analyst at London brokerage PVM Oil Associates. "But talk of such
collaboration is supporting prices short-term."
Russia has angered Saudi Arabia and other Gulf Arab states by
helping support Syrian President Bashar al-Assad with air strikes
and military aid against rebel fighters.
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Russia said on Monday its planes had struck 10 Islamic State targets
in Syria.
Yoo-jin Kang, commodities analyst at NH Investment & Securities in
Seoul, said the global oil market was oversupplied and any talk of
production restraint was supportive.
"As Russia requested talks, investors seem to expect a possible
reduction in oil output to be agreed during rebalancing procedures,"
Kang said.
Data on Friday showed U.S. energy firms reduced the number of oil
rigs by 26 in the latest week, the most since April and the fifth
straight weekly fall, a sign low prices were pushing drillers away
from the well pad.
(Additional reporting by Meeyoung Cho in Seoul; Editing by Dale
Hudson)
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