Oil holds near 2016 highs
after U.S. inventory drop
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[October 06, 2016]
By Amanda Cooper
LONDON
(Reuters) - Oil prices held steady on Thursday, underpinned by a
surprisingly large drop in U.S. inventory levels the previous day to
stay within sight of this year's highs hit in June.
Brent crude futures were virtually unchanged at $51.85 per barrel at
1120 GMT, after hitting a high of $52.09 the previous day. U.S. futures
<CLc1> were down 9 cents at $49.74 a barrel
Both contracts hit their highest in nearly four months on Wednesday
after U.S. data showed crude oil stockpiles fell 3 million barrels last
week to 499.74 million barrels, confounding expectations for an
increase.
Still, inventories are near record highs and even the prospect of a
modest cut in production from the world's largest exporters might not be
enough to fuel a more sustained rally, analysts said.
"Optimism on the OPEC deal and surprising storage declines pushed oil
prices to the upper end of the recent trading range. Both trends are
temporary and unlikely to mark the easing of the oil supply glut," said
Norbert Ruecker, head of commodity research at Swiss bank Julius Baer.
"We see more downside than upside from today's price levels," he added.
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Traders said a decline in prices early in Thursday's session reflected a
weaker physical crude market after top exporter Saudi Arabia cut the
price of its crudes to Asia for November in a sign that the global fuel
glut is persisting.
Hefty refinery maintenance in Europe, and the ensuing drop in demand for
crude, has also put the physical North Sea oil market under pressure,
forcing sellers to offer barrels of grades such as Forties at their
weakest since July. [CRU/E]
Overall, however, analysts said the market was well supported at current
levels, especially because of the proposed output cut announced last
week by the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC).
"We expect that Saudi will shoulder the bulk of the production cuts with
a reduction of 5 percent or 0.5 million barrels per day (bpd), with
other Gulf States cutting by 0.3 million bpd," Bernstein Energy said in
a note
"With Iran, Libya and Nigeria getting a 'pass', remaining cuts will be
on the shoulders of some of the less reliable members in OPEC," it
added.
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A worker checks the valve of an oil pipe at an oil field owned by
Russian state-owned oil producer Bashneft near the village of
Nikolo-Berezovka, northwest of Ufa, Bashkortostan, January 28, 2015.
REUTERS/Sergei Karpukhin/File Photo
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Algeria's Energy Minister Nouredine Bouterfa told local media on
Thursday OPEC could cut production at its late November meeting in
Vienna by another one percent more than 700,000 bpd agreed in Algiers
last month, if needed.
Barring any unforeseen output disruptions, analysts did not expect
prices to shoot up much further as production remains high even with an
OPEC cut.
"Resilient production in the U.S. and Russia will postpone crude market
rebalancing and keep the market in surplus into 2017," BMI Research
said.
"With an insufficient demand response to counteract strong supply, the
result is a downward revision of our 2017 Brent forecast to $55 per
barrel from $57 per barrel," BMI said.
(Additional reporting by Henning Gloystein in SINGPORE; editing by
William Hardy)
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