Oil prices firm, on track
for biggest gain in five weeks
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[May 12, 2017]
By Stephen Eisenhammer
LONDON
(Reuters) - Oil prices on Friday were on track for their biggest weekly
gain in five weeks, helped by expectations of an extension of OPEC-led
output cuts and buoyed by falling U.S. crude inventories.
Benchmark Brent was trading 5 cents higher at $50.82 per barrel at 1141
GMT, on target for a 3.5 percent rise on the week. U.S. light crude oil
was up 2 cents at $47.85.
A larger-than-expected fall last week in U.S. crude inventories <C-STK-T-EIA>,
which dropped 5.3 million barrels, suggested cuts by the Organization of
the Petroleum Exporting Countries and other producers were tightening
the market, analysts said.
OPEC members and other producers including Russia pledged to reduce
their output by almost 1.8 million barrels per day (bpd) in the first
half of the year, but the impact of the initiative has been slow to show
up in global inventory data.
"The (U.S. crude) inventories turned the heads of market participants
towards the more positive side of things," said Eugen Weinberg,
Commerzbank head of commodities research.
"But nevertheless the problem remains that the oil supplies are still
there, the overcapacity is still there, the stocks are still quite
high," he added.
OPEC and other producers meet on May 25 to decide whether to extend
cuts. Saudi Arabia, OPEC's de-facto leader, has said it expects an
extension to the end of 2017 or possibly beyond.
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Islands that are used for pumping oil are shown just offshore in
Long Beach, California, U.S., May 10, 2017. REUTERS/Mike Blake
Commerzbank said in a note it was sceptical about OPEC's ability to support
prices in the long term.
"Owing to the rapid recovery in U.S. oil production OPEC obviously only has
limited influence on prices via supply curbs," it said, adding an extension "is
unlikely to be more successful than the cuts implemented so far in the
longer-term."
U.S. crude production has risen more than 10 percent since its mid-2016 trough
to more than 9.3 million bpd, close to the levels of top producers Russia and
Saudi Arabia.
A weekly report by Baker Hughes monitoring U.S. rigs drilling for new production
is due on Friday.
Norwegian consultancy Rystad Energy said U.S. output had gained "significant
momentum". Excluding Alaska and Hawaii, it said output from the other 48 states
would expand by 390,000 bpd from May 2017 to December 2017 assuming a U.S. light
crude price of $50.
(Additional reporting by Henning Gloystein in Singapore; Editing by Dale Hudson
and Edmund Blair)
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