Oil prices gyrate as OPEC
heavyweights head to Vienna
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[November 28, 2016]
By Libby George
LONDON
(Reuters) - Oil prices gained more than one percent on Monday in
volatile trading after falling as much as 2 percent, recouping the
losses as the market reacted to the shaky prospect of major producers
being able to agree output cuts at a meeting on Wednesday.
Brent crude futures were 38 cents higher at $47.62 per barrel by 1238,
after falling in early morning trade, clawing back losses and falling
again.
U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude futures also fluctuated widely
before trading at $46.36, 30 cents higher.
Trading turned choppy after prices tumbled more than 3 percent on Friday
as doubts grew over whether the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting
Countries (OPEC) would reach agreement to help curb a global supply
overhang that has more than halved prices since 2014.
Market watchers expected prices to remain reactionary until OPEC's
Wednesday meeting offers the market a definitive answer as to whether
the cartel would make cuts.
"There's going to be speculation until the meeting that makes prices
very difficult to predict between now and Wednesday," said Hamza Khan,
head of commodities strategy at ING. "Whatever small fundamental news we
get will be drowned out by the shouting from Vienna."
On Sunday, Saudi Arabian Energy Minister Khalid al-Falih said the oil
market would balance itself in 2017 even if producers did not intervene,
and that keeping output at current levels could therefore be justified.
The statement stoked simmering disagreement between OPEC and non-OPEC
crude exporters such as Russia over who should cut production by how
much.
By Monday, OPEC was scrambling to rescue the deal, with analysts warning
of a sharp price correction if they fail, and prices spiked as Iraq's
oil minister said the country would cooperate with the group to reach an
agreement "acceptable to all."
A meeting scheduled for Monday between OPEC and non-OPEC producers was
called off after Saudi Arabia declined to attend, while concerns over
the feasibility of a deal pushed the crude oil volatility index close to
a nine-month high.
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An employee holds a gas pump at a petrol station in Sao Paulo,
Brazil, November 8, 2016. REUTERS/Paulo Whitaker/File Photo
Others warned that even if some form of an output restriction is
announced after producers meet in Vienna on Wednesday, the details
matter greatly.
"Do not take an announcement of a headline cut of 1 million barrels per
day (bpd) at face value. It could still imply an OPEC production level
considerably in excess of 33 million bpd, depending on developments in
Libya and Nigeria and the speed and rigor of compliance," David Hufton,
managing director of brokerage PVM Oil Associates Ltd. said in a note.
Even if a cut is agreed, oversupply may not end soon.
The U.S. oil rig count rose by three last week, and Goldman Sachs said
that "since its trough on May 27, 2016, producers have added 158 oil
rigs (+50 percent) in the U.S.".
(Additional reporting by Henning Gloystein in Singapore and Yuka
Obayashi in Tokyo; editing by Jason Neely/Ruth Pitchford)
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