Oil falls as investors
weigh up odds of output freeze
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[August 17, 2016]
By Amanda Cooper
LONDON (Reuters) - Oil fell for the first
time in a week on Wednesday, but remained in sight of six-week highs, as
investors weighed up how successful potential talks among producers to
rein in ballooning oversupply would be.
Brent crude futures were down 47 cents at $48.76 a barrel by 1055 GMT,
while U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude was down 18 cents at
$46.40 a barrel.
Prices have risen by nearly 20 percent in just two weeks to their
highest since early July, after speculation surfaced that top producers
within and outside of OPEC could finally reach a deal on freezing
output.
"The market is totally dominated by short speculators facing OPEC talk,"
SEB commodities strategist Bjarne Schieldrop said.
"The 'pain trade' is probably still to the upside. And now we are a
dollar away from $50 so it seems almost unavoidable that we’re at least
going to take that (level) out," he said.
The fight for market share among some OPEC producers has made market
watchers doubtful that talks to rein in oversupply by freezing output
levels would be successful.
"Should this rally be believed? Do words speak louder than action for
the second time this year? Or is the current strength one to be sold
into?," PVM Oil Associates Tamas Varga said in a daily report.
"The advocates of a sustained price rally are firm believers in some
kind of agreement between OPEC producers possibly together with non-OPEC
countries. Recent history is not on their side and the Doha failure back
in April is likely to encourage bears with itchy fingers to soon start
selling short."
An OPEC meeting in June also failed to reach an agreement to limit
production, and the group's output has since reached new record highs.
A Reuters survey at the end of July showed OPEC's oil output was likely
to have reached its highest in recent history last month, led by
increases in Iraq and as Nigeria managed to export additional crude
despite militant attacks on oil installations. [OPEC/O]
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A worker at an oil field owned by Bashneft, Bashkortostan, Russia,
in this January 28, 2015 file photo. REUTERS/Sergei Karpukhin/Files
Production was expected to have touched 33.41 million barrels per day,
up from 32.01 million bpd in a Reuters survey a year earlier.
That said, Angola's crude oil exports are set to fall by 366,000 bpd in
October to a 10-year low of 1.43 million bpd as a key grade enters
maintenance, a provisional loading programme showed on Tuesday.
Traders said weekly U.S. EIA oil inventory data due on Wednesday could
show the glut in crude and oil products supplies had widened and this
expectation may have triggered Wednesday's profit-taking.
(Additional reporting by Henning Gloystein in Singapore; editing by
Jason Neely)
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