Oil falls as investors
doubt OPEC can seal output deal
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[October 26, 2016]
By Amanda Cooper
LONDON
(Reuters) - Oil fell for a third day on Wednesday, nearing $50 a barrel
for the first time in three weeks, as investors grew increasingly
doubtful that OPEC members will agree to cut output and as U.S.
inventories staged a surprisingly large increase.
Iraq, the second-largest member of OPEC, does not want to join in with a
proposed production cut that the group has said it will approve at a
regular meeting in Vienna next month.
With Iran, Nigeria and Libya already expected to be excluded, along with
potentially Venezuela and Indonesia, whose state oil producer said on
Tuesday it was targeting a 42-percent increase in output next year,
traders and investors are growing less confident in the chances for an
effective deal.
"The market is definitely in need of some kind of soothing words once
again, but it's a 'cry wolf' thing. The talking has to get louder and
louder to attract any attention, because scepticism is on the rise and I
think rightly so," Saxo Bank senior manager Ole Hansen said.
"No doubt, the difference now compared to earlier this year, back when
the market was primarily reacting to verbal intervention, is now
something has been promised and if that promise cannot be fulfilled or
delivered, then we obviously have a problem," he said, adding that his
near-term target for Brent was $49.40, followed by $48.40.
Brent crude futures were down 74 cents at $50.05 a barrel by 0720 ET,
having touched a session low of $50.02, the weakest level since Oct. 3.
U.S. crude futures also fell 74 cents on the day to $49.22 a barrel.
Iraq, the second-largest producer within the Organization of the
Petroleum Exporting Countries, has argued it needs its oil revenues to
fight Islamic State.
At the Algiers meeting, Iraq said OPEC had underestimated its output,
which it pegged at 4.7 million bpd, compared with the group's
assessment, based on secondary sources, of 4.2 million bpd.
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A worker walks past a drilling rig at a well pad of the Rosneft-owned
Prirazlomnoye oil field outside the West Siberian city of
Nefteyugansk, Russia, August 4, 2016. REUTERS/Sergei Karpukhin/File
Photo
"Just the fact that there can be such a huge disagreement over what Iraq
is actually producing creates doubts in the market over how OPEC is
going to handle a cap on production in terms of verifying that the
members are actually adhering to the individual targets," SEB chief
commodities analyst Bjarne Schieldrop said.
And unless top world producer Russia, which does not belong to OPEC,
joins in, that leaves the onus of a potential cut with Arab producers in
the Middle East such as Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and the United Arab
Emirates.
Adding to the pressure on the oil market was data late on Tuesday from
the American Petroleum Institute that showed an unexpected rise in U.S.
crude inventories. [API/S]
Official data by the Energy Information Administration (EIA) is due
later on Wednesday.
(Additional reporting by Henning Gloystein and Keith Wallis in
SINGAPORE; editing by xxxxx)
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