Oil heads for third week
of gains, OPEC debates output policy
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[June 02, 2016]
By Amanda Cooper
LONDON (Reuters) - Oil prices headed
for their third week of gains on Thursday, holding steady ahead of
an OPEC meeting that analysts said was not expected to result in
restrictions on crude output.
The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries is set for
another showdown between rivals Saudi Arabia and Iran when it meets
on Thursday in Vienna, with Riyadh trying to revive coordinated
action or a formal oil output target, but Tehran refusing to
cooperate.
Brent crude oil futures were last down 5 cents at $49.67 a barrel by
1127 GMT (7.27 a.m. ET), while U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI)
crude futures were down 10 cents at $48.91.
"Expectations around today's OPEC meeting are quite low, with some
speculation about the potential for some form of quota or freeze,
but the likelihood is that nothing will change," CMC chief markets
analyst Michael Hewson said.
Despite rising output by OPEC's Middle Eastern producers, the
group's overall production has remained largely flat this year,
currently standing at 32.5 million barrels per day (bpd), capped by
disruptions especially in Nigeria, Libya and Venezuela.
"In our opinion, the only supportive item in a discussion or even an
agreement on a new global ceiling is that it confirms that Saudi
Arabia is already producing very close (or at) maximum capacity and
it has no spare production to leverage against Iran," Petromatrix
strategist Olivier Jakob said.
Citi said it expected oil prices to rise above $50 per barrel "in
the near future" as attacks on oil infrastructure in Nigeria, power
outages and payment issues in Venezuela and chaos in Libya have
reined in total OPEC production even as Iran has ramped up harder
and faster than expected.
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Because of supply disruptions elsewhere, the Middle East's low-cost producers
see little reason to restrain output as overall market conditions have improved
significantly for them this year.
That said, global manufacturing activity remained stuck in a rut last month and
analysts say concern is growing about the outlook for China's slowing economy.
"OPEC members will be keeping a close eye on China, with the low factory
activity data that has been released possibly signaling a diminishing demand for
oil – something that could do real damage to oil prices," said Mihir Kapadia,
CEO at Sun Global Investments.
Later on Thursday, the European Central Bank releases its decision on euro zone
monetary policy.
The bank is widely expected to leave interest rates on hold, but to raise its
growth and inflation forecasts, particularly in light of the near-40 percent
rise in oil prices over the course of this year.
(Additional reporting by Henning Gloystein; Editing by David Evans)
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