Oil prices pause after
sharp falls
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[June 19, 2017]
By Libby George
LONDON
(Reuters) - Oil prices edged higher on Monday, pausing for breath after
coming under pressure over the past month from rising production in the
United States, Libya and Nigeria, which has taken the edge off an
OPEC-led initiative to support the market by cutting production.
Brent crude futures were trading 17 cents higher at $47.54 per
barrel by 1015 GMT.
U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude futures were 15 cents higher at
$44.89 per barrel.
Both benchmarks are down some 13 percent since late May, when producers
led by the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries extended a
pledge to cut output by 1.8 million barrels per day (bpd) for an extra
nine months.
Analysts said a steady rise in U.S. production, along with output
increases in Libya and Nigeria, which are exempt from the OPEC cuts,
were undermining the OPEC-led effort in the near term.
"There is no reason to be overly optimistic at the moment," said
Commerzbank analyst Carsten Fritsch.
Libya's oil production has risen by over 50,000 bpd to 885,000 bpd after
the state oil firm settled a dispute with Germany's Wintershall, a
Libyan oil source told Reuters on Monday.
In May, OPEC supplies jumped on the back of recovering output from Libya
and also Nigeria.
In the United States, data on Friday showed a record 22nd consecutive
week of increases in the number of U.S. oil rigs, bringing the count to
747, the most since April 2015.
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A worker walks past oil
pipes at a refinery in Wuhan, Hubei province March 23, 2012.
REUTERS/Stringer/File Photo
Investment bank Goldman Sachs said if the rig count holds, U.S. oil production
would increase by 770,000 bpd between the fourth quarter of last year and the
same quarter this year in the Permian, Eagle Ford, Bakken and Niobrara shale
oilfields.
There are also indicators that demand growth in Asia, the world's biggest
oil-consuming region, is stalling, despite new crude oil import quotas issued
for Chinese refineries on Monday.
Japan's customs-cleared crude imports fell 13.5 percent in May from a year
earlier, while India took in 4.2 percent less crude in May than the year before.
In China, oil demand growth has been slowing for some time, albeit from record
levels.
Saudi Arabia's crude exports in April fell to 7.006 million bpd, official data
showed on Monday, while Saudi Energy Minister Khalid al-Falih said the oil
market simply needed time to rebalance.
"All signs point to significantly tightening in the oil market in the coming
months," Fritsch said.
(Additional eporting by Henning Gloystein in Singapore; Editing by Dale Hudson
and Jane Merriman)
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