Oil
prices rise as big producers plan to discuss output
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[March 09, 2016]
By Amanda Cooper
LONDON (Reuters) - Oil prices broke above
$40 a barrel on Wednesday, driven by anticipation that the world's
largest exporters may agree as soon as this month to freeze output,
which could accelerate a decline in the largest global build in unwanted
crude in years.
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Producers in and outside the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting
Countries plan to meet in Moscow on March 20 to discuss an output
freeze, an Iraqi oil official told state newspaper Al-Sabah.
Russia's energy ministry said no date or place had been set for a
possible meeting, but this had little impact on the oil market.
Brent crude futures <LCOc1> gained 73 cents to trade at $40.38 a
barrel by 1200 GMT, having touched three-month highs on Tuesday
above $41. U.S. crude futures <CLc1> were up 56 cents at $37.06.
"The consensus is for supply and demand to improve in the second
half of the year. The problem was always with the first half ..
which is heavy," Petromatrix crude oil strategist Olivier Jakob
said.
"Add all this momentum for actually increased talks between OPEC and
non-OPEC - if there is a freeze agreement of some sort, then it
could (form) the bridge to the tighter supply/demand balance in the
second half, so I think that has definitely helped to support
prices."
Oil prices have risen by around 25 percent since Saudi Arabia,
Qatar, Venezuela and non-OPEC exporter Russia said in mid-February
they would leave supply at January's levels if there was enough
support from other producers.
Nervousness is running high in oil-dependent nations whose budgets
have been tattered by weak prices, such as Algeria, which warned the
recovery in crude was "very unstable" and could reverse.
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Credit ratings agency Moody's warned of the potential for more
curtailments to output from defaults arising from the low oil price,
which in January was at its weakest in nearly 13 years.
Analysts at Bernstein said poor economics could lead to more
oilfield closures.
"Only two months into 2016 we find cumulative shut-in production has
already reached 60,000 bpd (barrels per day) and up to 260 million
barrels of reserves," Bernstein said.
U.S. output is falling, but slowing demand and a global production
and storage overhang are capping any potential for bigger price
gains.
Energy consultancy Wood Mackenzie said it expected "the annual
average price for 2016 to be lower than 2015 and then recover in
2017, reflecting large oversupply and high stock levels during the
first half of 2016."
(Additional eporting by Henning Gloystein in Singapore; Editing by
Dale Hudson)
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